Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Jan. 19, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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BREVARD NEWS, BREVARD, N. C. "Ml "TTTi i ne JDim M an's topyrielit l.y Little, Hrown and Company. THE TELEGRAM Gabriel Warden, Seattle capital ist, tells his butler lie is expecting a caller, to be admitted without question. He informs his wife of danger that threatens him If he pursues a course he considers the only honorable one. Warden leaves the bouse in his ear ami meets a man whom he takes into the ma chine. When the car returns home, Warden is found dead, murdered, and alone. Tin.' caller, a vouni; man, has been at Warden's house, but leaves unobserved. Hob iVn Iiery. conductor, receives orders to hold (rain for a party. Five men and a gv board the train, the Ka-stern Kx press The father of the Mirl. Mr. Dome, is the person for whom the train was held. 1'hilip 1 . Katon. a yotiim man. also boarded the train. lorn- tills his daughter and his st- n-ta i y, I im Avery, to tind out what they can concerning him The two make Kat on's acquaint a n ce. CHAPTER III Continued. 3 "You moan " Tin sentence, obvi ously, was one slit' felt it lienor not to finish. As though lit1 recognized that now she must wish the diivitmi tion to end, he got up. She rose stiffly. "I'll see you Into your car. if you're returning there." ho offered. Neither spoke, as he went with her into the next ear; and at the section where her father s;,t. Katon bowed silently, nodded to Avery, who coldly returned his nml. and loft her. Katon wont on into his own car and sat down, his thoughts in mad confusion. How near ho had come to talking to this girl about himself, even though he hat! ft'lt from the first that that was what she was trying to make him do ! Was ho losing his common sense? Was rhe self-command on which he had so counted that he had dared to take this train deserting Mm-.- lie felt that he mnsi nt see Harriot 1 '"mo again alone. In Avery he had recognized. bv that instinct which so strangely divines rhe personalities one meet--, an enemy from th" start : Home's altitude toward him. ot' course, was mt . t ilelitieil ; as for Harriet Iionie he . 1 1 1 1 not toil whether she was prepared to lie ids enemy or friend. Eaton went into the men's compart ment 1 'I his car. where lie tug till after the train v as : again. The poller hol-;ed nioK- 1 r way Up.'ti him there to ;ik if made Up lo'W ; 1 '.; w p ;s i, en n a -sen; . ! ropping l..ll"!l tlo.;, ales later. and tifleen m.r the cold end of out into the oar reaily for him. passage of some . his ( iga r and " i ! 1 g . he found the berth A half hour later the one through tin- aisle and the sudden dimming of the crack tif light which showed above the cur tains told him that the lights in the car had been turned down. Eaton closet! his eves, hut sleep was far from him. Presently he began to feel the train beginning to labor with the increasing grade ami the deepening snow. It was Hearing the mountains, and the weath er was getting colder and the storm more severe. Eaton lifted the curtain from the window beside him and faM''l on one elbow to look out. The train was running through a bleak, white desolation; no light and no sign Eaton Went Into the Men's Compart ment of His Car, Where He Sat Smoking Till After the Train Was Under Way Again. of habitation showed anywhere. The events of the day ran through his mind agai.i with sini-ier suggestion. He had taken that train for a certain definite, dangerous purpose which re rpiired his remaining as obscure ami as inconspicuous as possible; yet al ready he "bad been singled out for at tention. So far. he was sure, he hud received no more than that--attention, curiosity concerning him. He bad not suffered recognition; but thai might come at any moment. Could he risk longer waiting to act? He dropped on his back on the bed and lay with his hands Hasped under his head, his eyes staring up at the roof of the ear. In the card-room of the observation car, playing and conversation stin went on for a time; then It dlmln- H d Eyes ishod as one hy one the passengers went away to hed. Connery, looking into this ear, found it empty and the porter cleaning up; he slowly passed on forward through the train, stopping momentarily in the rear 1 'liftman op posite the berth of the passenger whom 1'resident Jarvis had commend ed to his care. His scrutiny of the car told him all was correct here; the even breathing within the berth as sured him the passengers sley. Connery had been becoming more certain hour by hour all through the evening that they were going to have great difficulty in getting the train t-hrough. ' Though he knew by Presi dent .larvis' note that the officials of the mail must be watching the prog ress of this especial train with par ticular interest, he had received no train orders from the west for sev eral hours. His inquiry at the last stop had told him the roasMi for this; the telegraph wires to the west had gone down. To the east communica tion was still open, but how long it would remain so he could not guess. Here in the deep heart of the great mountains they had passed the Idaho boundary line into Montana they were getting the full effect of the storm: their progress, increasingly slow, was broken by stops which were becoming frequent and longer as they struggled on. At Kraeroft the station where he was to exchange the ordinary plow which so far had sufficed, and couple on the "rotary" to fight the moun tain drifts ahead Connery swung himself down from the train, looked In at the telegraph office and then went forward to the twm giant loco motives, on whose sweating, mon strous backs the snow, suddenly vis ible in the haze of their lights, melted as it fell. As they started, he swung aboard and in the brightly lighted men's compartment of the tirst Pull man checked Up his report sheets with a stub of pencil. Again they stopped oiiee imae w ent on. I 'oi inery. having put his papers mto i doed again, halted again it backed, el only to -top, and then go turb ('onnerv 11 ket. doy.ed. awoke. progress of the I rain a ga in; o era ! lime-' d forward again k and (ha rge a ga in ami ba Put this did Pot dis 'hey something went wrong. All .'it 'Mii'n he f..i:nd himself, by a trainman's instinctive am automatic action, upon hi- feet; for the shook hail been- so -light as barely to he felt, far too slight certainly t htvc awakened any of the sleeping passen gers in their berths. He went to the door of the car, lifted the platform stop, threw open the door of the vos tibulo and hanging himself by one hand to the rail, swung himself out from the side of the oar and looked ahead. He saw the forward one of the two locomotives wrapped in clouds of steam, at d men arm-deep in snow wallowing forward to the rotary still farther to the front, and the sight con formed fully to his apprehension that this halt was more important and likely to last much longer than those that had gone before. CHAPTER IV Are You Hillward? The bell in the washroom at the end of the car was ringing violently, and someone was reinforcing his ring with a stentorian call for "Porter! Porter !" Eaton realized that it was very cold in his berth -also that the train, widen was standing still, had been in that motionless condition for some time. He threw up the window cur tain as he appreciated that, and. look ing out. found that he faced it great unbroken hank of glistening white snow as high as the top t.f the our at this point and rising even higher ahead. He listened, therefore, while the Englishman for the voice calling to the porter was his extracted all available information from the negro. "Porter. vv hero are we?" "Petween Kraeroft ;,iid Simons, sub." "Yet?" "Yessuh. yit !" "That foolish snow still?'' "Yessuh ; and snow some more, suh?" 'i'.ut haven't we the plow still ahead?" "Oh. yessuh; the plow's ahaid. We still got it ; but that's all. suh. It ain't doin' much : it's busted." "Eh what ?" "Yessuh - busted 1 There w as right -mart of a slide across the track, and the crew. I understands, diagnosed it Jus' fo' a snow bank and done bucked right into it. Put they was rock in this, suh; w e's layin right below a hill ; and that rock- jus' busted that rotary like a P.elgium shell hit it. Yessuh - pieces of that rotary essen tially scattered themselves in four di rections besides i'uckwui'ils and fo' wards. We ain't dejie much t ravelin' since then." Eaton no longer paid attention. "Snowed in and stopped since four!" The realization startled him with the necessity of taking it Into account in his dans. He jerked him self up in his berth and began pulling his clothes dow n from the hooks ; then, By WilliamMacHarg Edwin Balmer as abruptly, he stopped dressing and sat absorbed in thought. He had let himself sink back against the pillows, while he stared, unseeingly, at the solid bank of snow beside the car, when the door at the farther entl of the coach opened and Conductor Con nery entered, calling a name. "Mr. Hillward.' Mr. Lawrence Hill ward! Telegram for Mr. Hillward I" Eaton started at the first call of the name; he sat up and faced about. The conductor was opposite Section Three; Eaton now waited tensely and delayed until the conductor was past ; then putting his head out of his cur tains he hailed as the conductor was going through the door. "What name? Who is that tele gram for?" "Mr. Lawrence Hillward." "oh. thank you; then that's mine." Connery held back.' "I thought your name was Eaton." "It is. Mr. Hillward Lawrence Hillward- is an associate of mine who expected to make this trip with me but could not. So I should have tele grams or other communications ad dressed to him. Is there anything to .sign ?"' "No, sir-- train delivery." Eaton drew his curtains close again and ripped the envelope open; but be fore reading the message he observed with alarm that his pajama jacket had opened across the chest, and a small round scar, such as that left by a high-powered bullet penetrating, was exposed. He gasped almost au dibly, realizing this, and (lapped his hand to his chest and buttoned his jacket. The message nine words without signature lay before him: "Thicket knot youngster omniscient issue foliage lecture tragic instiga t ion.'' It was some code which Eaton rec ognized but could not decipher at once. The conductor was still stand ing in the aisle. "When did mi get this?" Eaton asked, looking out. ".Iu-t now. That message came tim-ugh e-teiday -ome time and was waning I'm" "',i at Simons; when we got II an tl morning he" Sent it is-eft'd that e : thanks." K conductor had 'ed r.o signih. 'used his' curt; n if th, -llspe sa w . them n anything he e in w ha t lie and buttoned i r i s- en fcf Ui I . The con letor n: on. Eat i m took a small Engli-h 'hi nese pocket dictionary from his vis pocket and opened it under cover oi the blanket ; counting live words uj tl'ulil "thicket lit dow i; from "knot' found "t hey" : live gave him "know"; gster" w as "you" ; "omniscient" was from "issue" was -ix up trom "yoi -i down frm 'one ;" seven up is n i 1 1 1 so continuing, he translated the words to: '"They know you. One is following. Leave train Instantly." Eaton, nervous and jerky, as he completed the first six words, laughed as he compiled the linal three. "Leave train instantly!'' The humor of that advice in his present situation, as he looked out the window at the solid bank of snow, appealed to him. A waiter from the dining car came ba'k. announcing the first call foi breakfast, .and, spurred him into ac tion. Passengers from the Pullman at the rear passed Eaton's section for the diner. He heard Hurrtet Home's voice in some quiet conventional re mark to the man who followed her. Eaton started at it ; then he dressed swiftly and hurried into the now do sorted washroom and then on to breakfast. Harriet Home was sitting facing the door at the second of the large! tabjes; opposite her, and with his back to Eaton, sat Donald Avery. A third place was laid beside the girl, .is though they expected Dome to join them; but they had begun theit fruit without waiting. The girl glanced up as Eaton halted in the doorway ; her blue eyes brightened with a look part friendliness, pari purpose. "Oh, Mr. Eaton." she smiied 'wouldn't you like to sit with us? 1 don't think Father is coming to break fa si now; and if he does, of course there's still room." She Hilled back the hair beside hoi enticingly; and Eaton accepted it. "clood morning, Mr. Avery," he said to Miss Dome's companion formally as he sat down, and the man across the table murmured something per force. As Eaton ordered his breakfast, hi appreciated for the tirst time that his coming had interrupted a conversa tionor rather a sort of monologue of complaint on the part of Standish addressed impersonally to Avery. They engaged in conversation as they breakfasted a conversation in which Avery took almost m part, though Miss Dome tried openly to draw him in; then the sudden on lranee of Connery. followed closely by a stout, brusque man who belonged to the rear Pullman, took Eaton's at tention and hers. "Which is hinf?" the man with Con nery demanded loudly. Connery checked him, but pointed at the same time to Eaton. "That's him. is it?" the other man said. "Then go ahead." Eaton observed that Avery, who bad turned in his seat, was watching this diversion on the part of the conductor with interest. Connery stopped be side Eaton's seat. "You took a telegram for Lawrence Hillward this morning," he asserted. "YeO "Why?" "Pceause it was mine, or meant for me. as I said at the time. My name is Eaton; but Mr. Hillward expected to make this trip with me." The stout man with the conductor forced himself forward. "That's pretty good, but not quite good enough !" he charged. "Conduc tor, get that telegram for me!" Eaton got up, controlling himself under the insult of the other's manner. "What business is It of yours?" he demanded. "What business? Why, only that I'm Lawrence Hillward that's all, my friend.' What are you up to, anyway? Lawrence Hillward traveling with you! I never set eyes on you until I saw you on this train; and you take my telegram !" The charge was made loudly and distinctly; every one In the tlining car Katon could not see every one, but he knew it was so had put down fork or cup or spoon and was staring at him. "What did 1 "Mr. Eaton," She Smiled, "Wouldn't You Like to Sit With Us?" v on do it for? What did you wan: with, it?" the stout man blared on. "Did on think I wasn't on the train? What ?" Eaion felt he was paling as . f.n-e.i the blustering smaiier loan, lb- reaii.ed ilia! the passengers he i.iiiM see those at the smaller tables already had judge. i his cxtdami: i-m and found him wanting; the alers umpies; ienaldy had ! the Avef.v was gazing up at him wlih a sort of contented triumph. "The telegram was for me. Conduc tor!" he repeated. " Jet that telegra m. ( .ndneior I" t i.e stout man demanded agmin. "L mppose." Connery suggested, "you have letters or a card or s,,me thing. Mr. Eaton, to show your re lationship to Lawrence Hillward." "No. I have not." Connery gazed from one claimant I" the other. "Will you give this gen tleman the telegram ?" he asked Eaton. "I will not." "Then I shall furnish him another copy; it wits received here on the train by our express clerk as the op erator. I'll go forward und get him an other copy." "That's for you to decide," Eaton said; and as though the matter was closed for him, he resumed his seat. He was aware that, throughout the car the passengers were watching him curiously. "Are you ready to go back to our car now. Harriet?" Avery inquired when she had finished her breakfast, though Eaton was not yet through. "Surely there's im hurry about any thing today," the girl returned. They waited until Eaton had finished. "Shall we all go bad; to the obser vation car and see if there's a walk .I.e. i. tl,.. t...,.L- ..i- i-m.r. It'.- ...l "" 'i.- over she said impartially to the two. They went through the Pullmans together. The first Pullman contained four or jr,t) ;l p;1I1 nf hot water the tempera five passengers; the next, in which ture of 110; keep the water at that Eaton had his berth, was still empty temperature. When the first bubble as they passed through. The next ! appears, stir down, repeating this sev- rullman also, at first glance, seemed to have been deserted in favor of the dint;r forward or of the club-car far ther back. Tbe porter had made uj an no ' .. epi one, but someone was still sleeping behind ti,,. i ii,.. . i.,.,. . . the curtains of Section Three, for a man's hand hung over the aisle. It was a gentleman's hand, with long, well-formed fingers, sensitive and at the same time strong. That was the berth of Harriet Dome's father; Ea ton was the last of the three to pass, and so the others did not notice his start; but so strong was the fascina tion of the hand in the aisle that he turned back and gazed at it before going on into the last car. Some eight or ten passengers men and women were lounging in the easy chairs of the observation room; a couple, ulstored and fur-capped, were stantting on tne pmtiorm gazing na.-u from the train. "No, No! Isn't this isn't this Basil Santoine?" (TU I'.fc. CONT1. Tip. Vhen the girl keeps on calling your attention to wnat a toveiy ring tne moon nas, graD your nai ana go noiiia -Richuuond Times-Dispatch. the KITCHEN CABINET , 1923, Western Newspaper Union.) There ar? two things In the world to worry about; the things you can control and the things you can't con trol. Fix the first, forget the second. Hunter. SOME GOOD PUDDINGS An inexpensive pudding to make when there is a good fire in the range is the following: Graham Pud ding. Take one quarter of a cup ful of butter, one half cupful of mte lasses. one-half t Oil ST kOOO f 1 i I of 1 "' ' soua. one rgg. one-hall cupful of sour milk, one and on.-ha!f cupfuls of graham Hour, one CTtflll nf fiiL-iiw. ,,,,t ...... t r t.ii-tu . an wen anil steam tour hours. !serve with : Egg Sauce. Peat the white of an egg until stiff; add one cupful of sugar and the yolk, a pinch of salt, one-half teaspoonfui ,,f vanilla and one-half i cupful of boiling milk just as it goes i to the table. Orange Pudding. Peel and slice I four large oranges, removing all of j the w bite skin Arrange the sliced i fruH- in a glass baking dish ; sprinkle ! with a cupful of sugar. Peat three I ; egg volks; add one-half cupful of i sugar, two laldespooufuls of corn ' starch and one quart of milk. Cook ; this until smooth and thick and the starchy flavor is removed; cool and ! pour over the oranges. Peat the ; whites to a froth with a little sugar. cover the pudding and set in the oven ; to brown quickly. Too intense heat applied to fresh oranges will cause i them to become bitter. Baked Indian Pudding. Stir into j one quart of boiling milk five table- i spoonfuls of corn meal ami two-thirds ; of a cupful of molasses-, ook for five ' minutes, then add one-half cupful of , tind v-choppt'd suet, ginger, cinnamon. , . , , , I nutmeg and salt to taste. Add a few 1 raisins und sprinkle lightly with flour, Pake two to three hours. Carrot Pudding. Take one cupful lota.ng .!e but Kidney trouble, or tr, ead. of grated carrot and potato, one refu!t n K''1" ,;,r i'lHer ib-casc. , .r . , r .. egg. one-half ouptul of sugar, one-naif 1 oupim ot shortening, one-hall ouptul of raisins, one teapo..nful of soda, one full i Up of their. Mix wall; steam one hour. Serve vvilb atiV desired sauce. Syllabubs. Peat a pint oi i.oa v v en am nutii stiff: add one cunfu' of sugar : l!ao:- half of the cream with leu. on and rhe ri-ma i nder with s! .'.aw berrv. and color pink lid sfecbet 'lasses wile alternate laver- Maple Fudge. - Take two cupfuls of sugar, om-half cupful of mill.. 'Vie- third of a cupful of corn s'n.;p. a tabiesp ooliful of butter: boil to the soft hall sttiae add a t, asnooofai of . -- j ... maple flavoring and coo!. Stir and when stiff enough, to drop from a spoon drop on buttered paper or bak ing sheet. Nuts may be added if de sired; or the top of each candy may be decorated with half a walnut. Amis of a bigh order may not l.e en tirely fulfilled al'.vi Vet at that may often trove more valuable than those of a lower order entirely fulfilled. 'Tip not what we have, but what we en.ioy I hut makes us i.api y DISHES, ORDINARY AND EX TRAORDINARY I'or a roast of veal or chicken, cover with milk and place in a covered buk Ing pan to bake in a slow oven The chicken is cut ns for fricas see, and seasoned w hen half cooked. Salt Rising Bread. Into n !W'o-tUart dish or double boiler put one and one-half cupfuls of boiling water, cooled to lukewarm; add one and one-half cup fuls of fresh milk, also lukewarm on.. ' teaspooniul each of salt and sugar. two tahlespoonfuls of torn meal and enough flour to make a thin batter. Stir the entire mixture well and set ,.ral limes. Leave the d Ii uncovered and. when double its bulk, mix t knead with tlour that has bee'i warmed. .Make into small loaves- let . . ... rise again and hake in a moderate oven until well-browned. This is bread which is very popular with those who are accustomed to it. Fruit Pork Cake. Chop fine one pound of fat salt pork ; coyer with one and three-quarter cupfuls of boil ing water; let stand until cold. Meas ure two cupfuls of sugar, one-half cup ful of molasses, five cupfuls of tlour. one tablespoon!" ul of cinnamon, one teaspoonfui of cloves, one-half table- spoonful of nutmeg, one teaspoonfui of soda, one pound of raisins, finely minced. Mix the spices with the flour; add the r..isins, dusted with some of the flour; add soda to the molasses and mix all the ingredients ; together. Pake in Nreadpans in a j ierate oven. Test with a tooth- pb-k before removing front tbe oven. Ice. and the cake will keep several months, improving with age. Eor those who have home-dried apple, that may be substituted for the i r-iisins. or half raisins and half stewed apple may be used. For the boiling I'.quid use the water that the drie'i apple has been soakerj and stewed , 11 - . VjUU SJt VTJiX 1 M Aspirii Say "Bayer" and Insist! "" - ,ou mtc uir name iiavor on I .....1... . ..... i ,'"nuj;e or on tartlets you are not get- ting the genuine Paver undue, i scribed bv physicians over t w enr,-!- y,.ars r,r()V(,d saf( , millions f I 'olds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Pheumat ism Neuralgia Pain. Pain Accept ''Paver Tablets ,,f Asp;rm' only. Each unbroken package on'a Ins proper directions. Handy box... of twelve tablets eo-t few cents. 1 ifig gisfs .a No sell bottle-; of 1' ;,,,, ; i , -Asperin is ,);e ,,.a,le m;rk ',..,,.r y:"':":"ii;re of Moiioaeeticaeidester of al c lioaen).- - Advertisement. An Understanding of Holly. A m-'lher and her two sous, t .e ami throe, were -hopping. Mm - a -low mown -ton- the . hihlren I :,ihh very tpiiet. : 1 1 ; 1 Did; took IikIi ,is brother's h;ind. admoiii-iiing h:n. ma to make ;,n. noise "iii here as -.:,Ie olio mus! ,e dead." They had II"! oe.j the holly w reaths tied w ith ribb- fis that were a part of Hie Christmas dec i oration in the store. important tO All Womeil ; Readers of This Paper j , , , I nouands upon thousand' of wr,m-n h;iV(. kldn,.,;, 0I. l,1;l(llk.r troui,le aniJ n,.ver suspect it. Women's cmpl.tims often prove to be I: ae ..'Incv- arc ra t :n a act; i . , it. t lii'v aiav -in-e o-a n " g II - ,., ,,. ,,,,,, ,1,.,.,.,! . . a .: ,v -af:c: noi n the 1 c-k, head K- !- ails- n I'p ... , , :,-, a vt-rv rta ra. a - a : K ' f' IV t. M s 1 ? T m all Lenin's liemorse. Samuel Ceil. pel's .,, : ' , - banou' ; ,!i Washington : "Lenin pre tends p, i.e s..rrv for tbe ruin his 1 '.olsl.ev Is; e doctrines have brought ti Kussj... Well the sorrow of Lenin reminds me of Mr. P.olus. ".Mr. P.olus was a druggist. He made a mistake In a prescription one fia.v and kilien a man. Who!: the ter rible tidings were brought in him he crieii out in great a g. ny : " ' h. w retch thai I am and mv best customer, too I' " Cuticura Soothes Itching Scalp. On retiring gently rub spots of dan druff and itching with Cuticura Oint ment. Nest morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Make them your everyday toilet preparations and have a clear skin und soft, white hands. Adv ertisement. Mummy Urderstood. "Mumm; typewrite: chine "T! .'. s ; : . 1 ; an i "!.;: .a i n 1 1 i ' i iogd." I. w hy do gent lemon fake In the theater?" asked ug at his lather's ma ', darling. ii.'.t v ear- 1 Whoever pi;- head : '. M !'. I'.row n he was ta'r e 'I .oaol'on Nights' ft loll Til Pits. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle 01 OASTitklA. that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Pears the w'X Signature oi L&a,Z7'CUtU4L In Use for Over ." Years. Chilli ren Cry for Fietohor's-Tastona Philosophic Training. " A ' ' er a man has sM t a la uiiul in ' lu sunshine of voitr climate for a number ..f eais. what makes him think he's H pkilosop' er';" "The 'a t that In- si; around in the sunshine and Ids the w orld go bv . It he .Milt!': Inn a greal ileal of philos- : op'ty in his make-up he couldn't do ;t. Pdrmingham Age-Herald, - On.' inl- -' Pr P.-.-ry's "I'troi Shot" wall slv, y, aa.at-y time, unxi.-ty ;.nd t..',ilth ,!. su'Ii. a im witauut castor i '. it; nti.it; A :. .-rtisenu-nt. Impending Change. Patient--"i 'ode:-, I'm complete! buried in work." I tool op "Well, ituu 1 s, , n bt changed to dirt if you don't unit." Rrvi T Niht ,d Morning A eepVbur EVes Cleam-Clear Healthy Writ For Frttt fy Car Oek Nu'lt Co.Olcafa.OVi s. r-d t r n ;, .n ,.a: lb,.,- .. .. ' l,..--icra-d, I..--!: f .? a. N. Y . v.aj raa.v re k r. ho--'- l.v p.-,' Ye4 n-daua an I hrg -ic hott'.- at st.-rc- ..-A-lverti-etncT t. K
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 19, 1923, edition 1
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