Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / July 5, 1912, edition 1 / Page 5
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. .Ml... ,a ' mti; 4H.bi rbT . i:: LOCAL AND PERSONAL ::j Clover and Grass seed at James , Miss Penrose was in Asheville Wednesday. C. B. Mashburn spent Sunday out of town. Prof. Jervls is an attendant on the' Institute.1 ; . ' Senator Tilson was in town last Monday. R.' 8. Gibbs of Mars Hill was here Monday. Prof. G. C. Brown was in town last Monday. Hon. T. J. Murray was indis posed this week. Mr. Teague of Sandy Mush was here Monday. Mr. R. A. Walker of Barnard visited town on Monday. Mr. Mat Wallln of Chapel Hill was a visitor last Monday. . Mr. Frank Shelton of Allan stand was in town Monday. Miss Estelle Moore was here for a few hours last Monday. TIm UTlit.Aa41 la malrtntv tlol j i 4 ri.u Deputy Sheriff Luther Tweed whs here the first of the week. Mr. Eason Tweed was down from White Rock last Friday. Fourth of July was a Bane and safe one. Blackberries are becoming plentiful. Let's have tfbod schools in every district. Houses' in town are quite full of boarders this week. The Road Commissioners met on Monday and Tuesday A new school rally is what every district should have. The Misses Triplett are visit ing their brother Dr. R. L. Trip- . utt. " ' ;.. Mr. Allen and Mrs. Garrison are ably conducting the Insti . tute. . , , ' lung it iiiiivw w. w. Hill is visiting Mrs. Grover jted - Tlon. ' :j, , v i .., - . . .. i ' Guy Click of Tuwulunn Term., is visiting. Herman Redmon this - week. Bountiful' provision was made for the fnner man at all the cele brations. : Mr. John Ray of White Rock was a town visitor the- first of the week. ' iv ." Mr. M. L. Church returned from his visit to his home on last Friday. Mrs. N. B.Tweed and family , returned home from Laurel last Wednesday. Such stirring times have sel dom been seen in the different conventions. Miss Ruby Waddell of Spring Creek is visiting her Uncle Mr. James Smart. -. Quite a - number , of persons went to the celebration on Pine " Creek yesterday. - -. Trade at James1 Cash store and set a set of Rogers' Silver Kniv es and Forks free. (,. , Miss Helen Mitchell of Tuscu v lunr is spending some days with Mrs. W; E.'Finley. .' Hon. James Rector rep resenta ' tive candidate was mixing with people last Monday. ' Mr. Will Garrett and Mr. Mc ,Quid of Runnion were visitors the first of the week. - ' Mr, John James is attending the Institute-this weelr and . ex- . pects td teach next year. ' - Miss Hattie Runnion , . came Wednesday evening, from New ''York for a brief vacation. . Now we have it for certain ; Taft on the republican ticket and -Wilson on the democratic. - Mr. Henry Wallin A. M. is to be' principal of Spring Creek Seminary this1 coming year. " Prof. R. L. Moore of Mars nill was present at the opening of the Institute last Monday. ' The whole Board of Education was present this-weck and have been urrar.ieg school matters. 13W ii t!;e busy season for the 1 -ikcrrcr, put'Jug up. fruit s ' ' t fire Roinj for urncli. irom Saratoga JNew Yorlr ror a visit, to her mother Mrs. Hattie Runnion. Mr. Rufus Caton writes that he is well pleased with his loca tion and is soon to go to Yellow stone Park. - Mr. John Jarrctt has taken possession of tho Chipley house which he bought and will remove there shortly The County School Board has been busy making apportion ments for the different districts. Look up yours. The County Commissioners were in session Monday, and Tuesday and transacted the routine business, Many are wondering wh'atthey will do now that the presidential future is so uncertain. What shall the harvest be? Mrs. Tom Morrow and daugh ter Effie Lee and her sister Mrs. Pierce come Tuesday on a visit to Mrs Eliza Morrow. Another aviator has lost her life. She had ascended 5000 feet when a sudden gust of wind turned the machine over. Miss Fudge returned to her home at Rogersville Tenn., last Thursday after visiting Miss Effie Shelton and Cora Redmon. The Ladies Aid Society will give an ice cream supper Wed nesday July 10th at Mrs Reud's store from 4 o'clock to 10 o'clock. Different politicians will have to walk carefully now as the un certainly of which candidate wins will not be settled for some time. Mr. Murata gave a very inter esting Stereopticon lecture last Saturday evening and spoke Sunday night at the Methodist Church. There were 65 representative farmers at the Meeting of the 1ounty Union last Monday. Such a lot of important business was transacted. . The Typos are to have a half holiday on the 4th . so that the school apportionment do not get in this week. Look for them in oarrtext "Issue. Th best service possible we consider none too good for onr country patrons and the citizens of thin town. The Bank of French Broad. , The painful accident to Mr. Coot Parker which we ' noted last week left him serious but later news tell of improvaitent in his condition. ' John Hamlin who lived on' the W. C. Sprinkle farm died last Saturday night at U o'clock. He was buried Monday at the ceme tery at the Seminary. WANTED 40 men for logging work and Railroad grade. Good wages. . T. T. ADAMS CO., Woodlawn. McDowell County, N. C. R. R. Station, Sevier. The House of Representatives voted a continuance of the ap propriations for thi3 fiscal year as- the,- appropriations for the coming year had been held -up. Becanse of going, to press be fore the finishing of the games on the fourth we have to defer un til next week on discriptions of these gaines and of the celebra tions. ' ' Gov. Marshall of Indiana was nominated' for vice-president at the democratic convention. So1 the ticket' is Wilson and Marsh ail. Now for the strenuous cam paign. Mr. and Mrs. Smith of Flordia who have been staying at the Allison House for awhile left Miss Itattie Runnion' return Tuesdayfor the eastern paroflwiH purify politics move than tha state .. wh re they wiir visit f the press of tod ay. . ,f , , Mrs. Smith's relatives. , . i Mr. H. T. Hunter of Marshall Ri 3, was a visitor' at the - News Record office last' Tuesday.-V Mr,. Hunter graduated from Wake Forest this year and will be prin cipal next year at Southside Ins titute, Chase City, Va He will have-seven teachers nnder him. An increaalnjf number of people re port regularly of Uia satisfactory re sults from taking Foley Kldqey Pills and commend their healing and cura tive qualities. Poloy Kidoey Tills are a carefully prepared medicine, guar anteed to contain no harmful or haVf forming drugs. Tliey caa hav only a beneficial effect when used for kld- nar nn1 l-ilmltlr trAnhlpa fnr hnr-L'. M,,, rl.onm.ticm mat i haclr nr ' Uv. . I.E. Burnett, Xfars III! .N COUNTY irtDUSTftY. The French Broad M an f injur ing Co. shipped last weak a car (bad of handles to Liverpool and besides this they have on their books orders for 4 carloads more for SKngland. Thy have also standing ord ers for a carload of handles a month ior South America. Handle from this factory have been shipped to Shanghai, China and to the diamond mines of Africa. s- ; When our Navy made its fam ous trip around tha world at Punta Arenas they found a large consignment of handles at this place. , . Every 8 months a consignment hai been sent to this part. Punta Arenas is the point fartherest South and Mr. Walker . says that when the North Pole is ' de finitely settled upon ho expects to send handles to that place. So you see another Madison Industry is doing a great busi ness. EVERYDAY RELIGION. The following paper was read by Miss Pearl Rice at the Fifth Sunday meeting at Chapel Hill last Sunday: The great cry of the world to day is not for more men and wo men, but better men and women. The world is hungry and thirsty for leaders and teachers whose veracity and integrity are turned by the divine law of love toward God and man. for hearts made pure through righteous living every day, for souls and hearts that have familiarized themselves with the true christ ian by-laws and the golden rule, The great hindering cause to Christianity is 'our mad rush for money, for worldly goods, pleas ure and fame, that God and his plan and purpose are left almost out. We, through lack of faith loose sight of God's offer, "First seek ye the kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these things will be added unto you." Tbfa scrlptnre"'d6es-' not 'mean seeking merely - regeneration, baptism and entering the church; but it means seeking daily all the rest of our lives after God's truth, drinking deeper and deep er of his fountain of love. The lack of every day and hour religion has ruined the world; has made it next to im possible for the world to be taken for Christ. Think of the preach ers who have left us in doubt a bout their reality, by ; crooked living, only think of the' thous ands of His professed followers who are lying, stealing, cheating and defrauding in some form or other Every day,, genuine, re ligion will banish short measures from the counter or the grainery. But in this Christs religion furnishes such a. close fitting garment thai most of us throw it aside and substitute a cloak, a mother-hubbard sort of suit. Christ said man loves darkness rather than lisht, because their deeds are evil: - When, we read this scripture we apply it to the world and not the cjiurch, but oh wont it apply to the- chwch of to-day. The great trouble is that we do nof see that our religion takes in our whole being, our acts, our thoughts and our every purpose. Nothing but the practice of true, genuine, every day religion will weed all this crookedness out of our lives and sit us on a plane Where Christ intended his church to be. A shinning light to all the world. This kind of religion We want a religion that softens the step and tones tlte voice to melody, and fills the ye ; with sunshine, and checks1 the im patient exclamation and harsh rebuke; a religion that is polite and courteous to inferiors and considerate to friends; a religion that goes into the family and keeps the husband from being spiteful when- the dinner is late, and keeps the wife from fretting when the busband tracks the newly washed floor with his muddy boots, and makes the husband mindful of the scraper aid the door mat, keeps the I mother patient when the baby j is CTOSSJ RnlUSeS the children as I well as instructs them, wins as servents' besides paying them promptly looks after the appren tice in the shop, and the clerk behind the counter, and the stu dent In his labor with a fatherly care and a motherly love; setting the solitary in families and In troducing them to pleasant and wholesomo society, that their lonely feet may not be led into temptation. The test of any religion is the effect it produces upon the lives that profess it.. in tne age or the world men are not judged by what they claim to be able to do, but by what they aro. Religion is a thing of love, and it will die if commanded to be dumb. Instead of being content to live so as to escape blame. The christian is required to live so as to prove a means of bless ing. If religion is anything it is the whole of mans life, it is the carriage of the soul and of the body it is the description of our time; it is the whole being aright In brief, good works are the action's of a saved man proving his salvation; They hang upon the Christian life somehow as fruit does on a living tree. The Democratic Convention at Baltimore on the 47th ballot nominated Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey for President, Wil son was the wisest choice the convention could have mad North Carolina for the last few ballots voted unaminously for him. N. J. Gorman, Cashier Rank of Woodvllle, Woodvllle Ga., had a very severe attack of kidney trouble and the pains in 2.1s kidneys and back were terrible. "I got a bottle of Foley Kidney Pills from our druggist and they entirely relieved me, I have more benefit from them than any other medicine." I. E. Burnett, Mars Hill N. C. Read the program for the Educational rally at the new school on Upper Little Pine Several classes ' sang, Hon Jasper Ebbs, Prof. Buckner Mr Allen and W. E. Finley spokt during' the day. Quite a good dinner was laid, oil the ground A full description will, be given next week.' ' In these days of high cost of living, a medicine that gets a man up 'out . of bed and able to work In a few days Is a valuable and welcome' remedy. John Ileath, Michigan Bar, Cal., had kidney and bladder trouble, was confined to ids bed, unable to turn without help. "I commenced using Foley Kidney Pills and can truly say 1 was relieved at once." His example Is worth fol lowing. I. E. Burnett, Mars Hill N.C. Rev. Zeno Wall writes us en closing one dollar, subscription to keep the paper going. v The News-Record is, I think, one of our best weekly papers. It is doing good work and only eter nity can tell the good it is doing. We are just bask from our en campment. We had a delightful time. Ada and Zeno. Jr., are with me. Greetings to all . ZENO WALL. A. M. Nasonj farming near Canaan, Me., was badly , crippled with sciatic rheumatism due lie says to uric acid in his blood. "Foley Kidney Pills en tirely cured me and also removed nu merous black specks that were .con"' tinually before my eyes.",, Foley Kid ney Pills are a uric acid solvent and re- effective lor the vavious tonus I rheumatism. I. E. Burnutt, Mars Hill N. a THE NORTH CAROLINA ' College cf Agriculture ; and Mechanic Arts The State's Industrial College Four-year courses. In Agriculture; in Civil, Eleotrical, and Mechanical Engineering; In Chemistry;' , in Cotton' Manufacturing and Dyeing. Two-year ; courses in Mechanic Arts and In Textile Art. ; One-year and two year courses in Agriculture; ; These courses are both practical and scientific-Examinations for admission aro held by the County Suerintendent at all county seats on July the ilth. For Catalog address THE KKGISTKAR, ' - West KakdyVjK C E. J.SELVEQ JEWELER. Has opened a shop on Bridge Street -and is Teady to do all kinds of T7sJr work. ALL WORK CUARANTCCD. FOR SA1. E ' One farm of "0 acres with riewO room house, wo 1 1 liniNlied and barn, ) acres in timber, watered by creek, spring and cistern, lflOO bushels of corn Krowed on It last year. Price 2,5xi, one thousand cash, the, balance 1, 2, 3, and 4 years time. 70 acres of One land close to school and church. 4 room house and barn, irruvl nwlnrH Print l .MHV wniilil like ono-half cash and two years on uaiauce, 32 acres insight of Farnyet School, line meadow land; 4 room house, good barn, spring and creek, 7 acres in tim ber. Price 2,2oo, tMOO down balance 1 and 2 years i 40 acres on the (Southern Railroad, In 300 yards of station, nice 4 room house, pood barn, a handsome place for hotel, 3 line mineral springs which might be worth a fortune some day, 250 tine fruit trees, plenty of grapes and strawlerrtes. Price .i,00O, 1,500 down 1, 2 and 3 years on balance. 400 acres on Dike about ono-half of it in line timber that will more than iay for the place if handled right, and all lavs well: 50 acres of creek bottom, good buildings, houses and barns, Price 13, 000. Terms to suit purchaser. 1200 acres rleht on river, all Hue land and good buildings. Price .i5,- 000. 500 acres on good Pike, close to good schoos and churches. 10 1-2 miles from Knoxville; all good land, good buildings and well watered by spring anu creek, i'rice 24,ouo. 13 acres with eood buildings, good orchards, clues to school and church, well waterea by spring ana creeK. Price 82,500. ?n anroa Ann rarl mnlnt1 soil n.11 POod rich land with 1 room house, big imnli i.arn r.lnon in schools and churc hes, in 2 miles of Farragut school the best high graae scnooi mere is in uie South, in three miles of Concord. Price 84,500. Tins is a uargam. 1A pTn tn linlf mil, nf Kimrton Pike, In 12 miles of Knoxvillc, land all lays level, 18 acres of l imber with good tl room house, line yard, good barn, orchard joins land that could not be bought ior 100 per acre. Price $4,500. 11 nrrar. In 1 1-1 lnilo of Concord with tiOacres of creek bottom as rich as river bottom, line improvements one of the finest locations for the money there is in the country. Price $7,100. ORvrml 1.! miles from Concord. mi Tsnnnnsna river. 35 acres of fine bottom land and all the rest is good land, plenty or turner anu goou un provements. Price $5,000. si orrai 1 1.mllof fnncord. eood 4 room house, good orchard, 1 1-2 acr es in line strawberries anu piuniy ui timber. Price $1,600. Ann' nf o farm .that ' a man WUUIU " (.,., wuj v w - - lot in Concord or Knoxvills that a man would want. Call ana see me, or write me. I am nrCnared to keen all customers free of oharire. and free conveyance. Old phono 37. - UKUKUK IJUiMJlliNUa. Concord, Tenn NOTICE OF SALE Bv vlrtuo of an order and decree made and entered in a Special Pro- rvndlncrs in the matter of the estate of Veva Roberts by her guardian Flo rence Roberts, Kx-Partc, 1 will sen to the hiirhest bidder for cash at the Court house door in the town of Msrs- hall at 12 o'clock M. on t he 5th day of August 1912, the following described real estate, situated in No. 15 Town- snio. Madison County, N. C, lieglnn- ine' on a dogwood balow the road lending irom u;iunei s view iu urc forks of Ivy.. Ben Debruhle and Marlon Uebruhle corner and runs up Willi said Ben Debruhle lino Sonth 12. 30 West 16 poles to a rock near t he point of a ridge thence with said'rklge North 88 West 20 poles to the Will tract, thence with the line of the said Mill tract South 10 Eustb poles to a stake, thence South 32. 45 East 8.1-4 pole to a bunch of small popular neara small branch, thence leaving said mill tract up and with said branch South 4. 30 .West 5 poles, thence South 25. 45 East 11 poles-to a small dog wood, thence South 33. 30 East 17 1-2 oolestoa stake at the mouth of a small hollow and near the mouth of the spring branch, tlvnco up and with said hollow Jsorth oO Iva'A, 32 poles to a styke, thence North 81. 15 East 30 poles to a siaKC near a u cusi hush, thence North 41. 30 East 14 poles to a stake near another smull hollow,, thence North 30.15 last 7 1-3 nolfis to a black ulne. Marlon l)e- bruhle's corner, thence with said De bruhle line North 63 West 33 poles to a stake; tlienco North 78 West 10 roles to 31 a rock set up, then South 80 West Doles to tha beglnnin"-, containing 17 1-2 acres. Said sale is boinir made fori re-investment. This the 29th day of June l!U2. FLORENCE ROBERTS. - . Guardian. EYE; EAR, NOSE and THROAT SPECIALIST. If you need glasses- fit. If you have Catarrh If your throat need treating. Call on DR. I. E, BURNETT, MARS HfLL; N.C' and have your work done. He ha a complete set of instruments to perform all kinds of operations, and anew up-to-d.ite ofHoe equipinoiii to treat all kinds of diseases. - . He has taken two special courses! He jruarantees satisfaction. MARS HILL The Leading -Co-Educational Institution In Western North Carolina. ,' . A school that draws 87S) students from 58 North Carolina Counties, and from six other States and two Foreign Coun tries, some coming half around the world to reach it must have merit worth considering by Madison county people." It drew 132 students fronv Madison county, and 243 students from the rest of the world. Is this a fair proportion? Its students succeol at higher institutions and ' in life, out of all proportion to our number. North Carolina Education says: "There arc few schools ' in the world that do better work than Mars Hill, and make -so little noise about it." The Fall Term opens August 15, 1912. Send for our new catalogue. t L. MOORE, President, IH HTTJVr,lU JLM REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF CITIZENS bank: Marshall, N. C. AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS 14TH, 1912. 1IKSOURCES : Loans and Discounts 75,810.27 Stocks and Bonds 7,800.00 Overdrafts 1,201.011 U.'ildinjr and Fixtures 0,040.45 Cash and due from Hanks. ..22,563.10 Total in.4o4.ui J. II. WHITE, President C. J. EBBS. Designated U. THE NORTH CAROLINA State Normal and Industrial College Maintained by the State for the Wo men ol North Carolina. Five regular bourses ieadinff to decrees. Special Courses for teachers. Free tuition to those who agree to become teacliurb in the State. Fall Session begin hup tember 18, 11112. For catalogue and other information, address JULIUS I. FOUST, Pres. Greensbtro,N. C, McCABE LUMBER CO NEWPORT. TENM. t Buyers f , HARDWOOD LUMBER . SPECIALTIES WALNUT - CHESTNUT We buy all kinds of Hardwood Lumber, all grades and thickness es, take it up at railroad and pay spot cash. Write us. Box 208, Isnd IiKllfoMioafl&iised'mo proAttdlrtrem for two years. I ttiri many tiiiuito for i:.f l.-i m.! .ltnfc lnu, I tmnA I it in tL beat pill or modiolus I ever triad Southern Railway Company SCHEDULE OP PASSENGER TRAINS N. 11. Following schodule figures published only as informati n i nd are not guaranteed. Hast BOund (Central Time) , 'o. 8, daily.. e i-X . m No.. 3U, daily :r. due 5:00 a. m No. 12, daily.... ........ d ie 1:12 p. m No. IX!, daily. . . ..... .... .due 838 p. m Ueit BCund No. ", dally,... .......... due 7:30 p. m. No. 35, daily.. .... ......due 2:15 a. m No. 101, daily....... .....due 6:55 a. m No. 11, daily ...... due 3:55 p. ti SUBJ15CT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE W. A. AV15ST, J. H. WOOD, Agent Dist. Pass. Agent Marshall, N. C. .c: Asheville, N, C ROOT & KERB TIME IS HERE We want larpe quantities of the following: Puc!oon root. Mayapple root, Aiiuelii'a root, Rlack Haw bark of root, Sassafras bark of root, bright rough off, White Sarsaparll la root, lV)ke root8lied dryP Willow bloom or taprs. Wild Cherry-bark thin young rreen skin, Wild Clier rvbark thick rougli off. Elder blowers or bloom bright color, Star Hoot, Star Grass, tc, all prime dry- Write for complete price ilst add get early start. P. V. Lowe & Son Leading Root and Kerb Dealer ASHEVILLE. K. C. 85 CENTS PER UJITLE AT U DRUGGISTS. COLLEGE MARS BILL, N. C. LIABILITIES: Capital paid in....; .25,4.V).0O ; Proflts 2,012.61' Notes Re-dlscounted U.OOO.Gtt Due to Ban ks 548. W Deiositd with uh OO.SW.T? Total .ft17,404.lil Cashier W. T. DAVIS. As't-Cslikr. S. Depository NORTH CAROLINA MADISON COVNTY Under and by virtue of authorly con ferred by a certain deed in trust exe cuted by Temiie Henderson wife of W. T. Henderson to t h e undersigned Trustee, bearing date 15th day of Juna " 1009, and recorded in the office of tha ' Rejfi-tr of Dcods of Marl son County', In Ui od Hook No. 12, ime 27tl,-dofuulr, having been made in the payment of the indtedness thereby secured, I will on Monday the 20th day of July, 1012, at 12 o'clock M. at t h e Court , , House door of said county sell to the ' highest bidder for cash to satisfy 'OaUl indcbt edtiesn, allthe right, title and in terest which the said Tennfe Henderson wife of W. T. Henderson hu in tlm following described real estate, to-wit: ! Lying and lieing in. Madison County,,. North Carolina on the waters of . Big, Pine Creek and adjoining the lands of Marion Lunsford, formerly owned by Nathan Davis and . Elsie and Reubin Caldwoll and others, Beginning on tho Marion Lunsford line, once Nathan Davis' line on tho Mirth side of tho ' mountain on a chesnut oak and , run . North 85 West 47 poles to a sugar trett; then the sumo course 50 poles to a stak then West fit) poles to the top of the Koi-k mountain to a ruck and pointers; then South 22 pules to a choainut ; thou South 32 West 2K poles to a bunch of jhestnut sprouts; then Kast .181 polo to a stuko in the field; t lion North 3S - poles to the beginning. Containing 4i ' acres, more or less. This 'lieing thw ract of land deeded, by. T. i. llmitor -and wife Annie lt;tor to Alfred Hec tor, dated April 18. 1WK). Tills J une 2Uth, ''1012. " ' JAMKS SMART. '' Trustee. '. . i Helping a Uoari Generally bium helping an entire family. Her back aches so sba caa hardly drag round. Her nerves are on edge and aha is nearly wild. Headache and Sleepless ness unfit her for tbs care of her family. Rheumatic Pains and Lumbago rack het body. . But, let her talcs Foley Kidney Pills end all these ailments will disappear. She will soon recover herstrengtli and healthy activity fox Foley Kidney Pills are healing, curative, strengthening and tonic, a medicine for all Kidney, Bladder ani Urinary Diseases the, always earee. I. K. BURNETT ' ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICIJ Having qualified as ' administrator of. H.-. D. Frlsbeo, deceased late M ladison County, North- Carolina thli is ui notify all persons having claim tgatnst the e.itnle of said deceased to ixmiUL mem u mt 'unueriuntHi v lis home on tl watrs of Sprirtg' ' Creek, in No. 13 township,' on or befool the 3rd day of June lHl.ortli:s. noNiv,' vill be pleaded in bar of their;,ecpvery ll peittons indeliwd to said estate VitF ' 'iteawa make irunwdliite paymeirC ' : TiiU 3rd day of innm V.'-:' 1 THO A. Kit IS REE ; Administrator of H. V."Frh)bee:' . ii ... - l . . I . J . - .1 .... , NOTICE . Any ftnd all pcrsor.s aro lie;'n y forhiJiicn to lure or ftt J i o y son Barn Plemmoiii or iay 1 i -for his work. EOfj rLi'."" ' ' , f ? ovcit-s; cros for t!i
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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July 5, 1912, edition 1
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