Newspapers / The New Bernian (New … / Nov. 26, 1911, edition 1 / Page 6
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;.u.i;..Ur. jHuinuVS UlaLUu.r UUtuliCliAhUti,!.. ruuidAi! 'I r IP MY I"'"' M lulDDUUiilmi D Lii'D ' -m.ii1 .vary L.y tmamfH etnnaay. SAVEO BY A MULE HfWatRrtN.fi- ft. I f 1 V f, V,'.)vi ; - ll" V-'1''' " -' : V '? I' --Tiu -.V - - '-V'- ,1' ' A I " VtKM AND THEIlt CNCMItt. ' r V -'7T-i- - -: "A tiiiil rnoort of th PaKac Btato ' taNH of Btoslngy' Mtt tnUa t tb iomiiK aigmasata Innglna Tat apoa th ahaoiat eonocl folly tvlMkdn( AiatWa air llfv TM oantry, saya aaran expert offer cb yx through, taaact ft aggxagatfcg - 9UM.MW.000; ro- its cost na IM0.0M.00; Mdi than ti00.000.000. .The ar ataggetlng fbrerea. to dead. They oed wot be minutely aoeurat to potnt a moral aa obvWroa as It Is Important. Every thinking person knows Uy ar aaar enough the tratli to make th warning significant. In naturs Am baiancs of living agencies the Mra toned their largest utUlty In km ping tha Insect peats ot mankind tn subjection. Not all birds eat ln aects, but moat da Others destroy rodents, and many eat tha seeds ot weeds. It was a Use scheme ot econ omy nature had. Man In his cruel blindness has upeet tbe balance. He has made plumage fashionable for bats ami glorified bird dinners. Even pot-bunting has been winked at A policy widely recognised as indefensi ble bag been followed for years. America foots tbe bill for ber own in difference. The first punishment is visited upon the farmers, but its ef' fects are felt by every family In tbe and. The rapid transmission of news among Kaffirs and Hottentots Is a mystery which even Mr. Rider Hag gard Is Unable to solve. Mr. Haggard "was at Pretoria in 1879, at the time of the battle of Isandhlwana. Twelve hours after tha disaster an old Hot tentot washerwoman told him that Cetawayo had defeated the British troops, and gave details of tha fight. So Impressed was Mr. Haggard that he reported the Information to his of ficial superior. The British official pointed out that it was impossible for the news to be true, as Isandhlwana was 192 miles from Pretoria, and no telegraphic or railway communication existed between the two places. On the following day official confirmation cf the disaster was brought by mount ed messengers, who were dispatched immediately after the battle and trav eled at top speed all the way. Yet the natives won by twenty hours, and the washerwoman's story was true In every detail. The assertion that cats are necessary ha bakeries is supported by wide ob servation and by the Judgment of high practical and scientific authorities in all parts of the world. Rats are pests, and no better antidote for them than cats has ever been found. Poison will not do especially in a bakery, where the smell of the poisoned rats coming from the holes Into which they had retreated to die would cor rupt the air and the bread. It is raptlous criticism that would object to bakers keeping cats. Dr. Hastings, the Toronto medlcaj health officer, complains that only about 23 per cent, of the 600 cattle killed for consumption weekly in that city are Inspected, and that an aver age of 56 diseased animals a week are sold for food. A Canadian govern ment analyst asserts thattfor the last third of a century the pepper used In Canada has been adulterated 40 per cent We are doing better than Can ada In some things. How Interesting It would be to stu dents of mechanics as well as to stu dents of history to see the first steam boat In which Fulton took passengers on the Hudson in 1807. By preserving In the National Museum at Washing ton the first flying machine purchased fram the Wrights for the war depart ment, the government is providing a treat for students In centuries to coma We are Informed that an easterner whose best girl gave him tha frigid mitt has gone Insane. We have often heard of people who went crasy with Joy.' We ran to understand why soma people are so badly stung by tha avia tion bug when, all tha delights and daogera of the game may be expert- eoced on a roller coaster. The policemen of Lynn, lfaaa, are to be armed with clubs mid of pi par Tbaee will logically go with paper san itary drinking cupa. Boston hlghbrowa are trying to da Urmia whether "bass" should ba proaoaaeao "MaTor "beaa. if thr art patriot! Boatoalaaa the beaa wit) wis la a 'walk.' 4 woman 4 eighty tn a Oonnactkwt twa eaptarad gad bald a barglef aav tH Data earn. Hr la th Brat kaoet t Wow for th ag Uaalt - Adrto to tha aaroptaa operator! -7 ' - It I v1dat that in sevs of tbw fcadaat Aaaat, who all aav yt la tfcra, ana sk -outgrown Kg fore ,'H"u an tb woman faalt" I-, '.' - V.V ; : At aay rata, Ik ma who aald . ba ; Xv wld . awlm acroa th ' AllaaU actlavad.hl ambWon,: H get hi aw la tb efra, ; Sow earaona hav to b aatliflod wttfe K0 divert, haB II It tb Wt tr ragL .... . - ' ' ... .i i i .i in .i I . FRISCO .MAYOR - Rolph plugged his way through and one-half years In completing the earn money to buy books and clothea Rolph s meteoric start in business life began In January, 1900, when he formed a partnership with George U. jilnd, a high school classmate. The near the water front and started in the Hind's father gave the boys their start doing business on their own account, years went on. Jim" Rolph's upward march since himself reads like a romance. He was will be less than forty-three years old term as mayor January 1. Rolph's parents were of limited district, the poorest section of the city. Rolph lives there yet and so does his father, and near the Rolph home live thousands of mechanics, clerks and laborers who have known "Jim" Rolph since he was a stubby little cash boy working for an old-time dry goods firm. PASTOR OF CHURCH 40 YEARS One of tbe unique figured in the re ligious world of today is Rev. Dr. Robert Stuart MacArthur, firmer pas ter of Calvary Baptist church, New York city and newly elected president of the World Alliance of the Baptist Church. Dr. MacArthur was born in Can ada of Scotch parentage. After grad uating from Rochester Theological seminary he began his pastorate in the above church May 15, 1870. Since his pastorate he has Increased the membership from 238 to 2,500. He has laid on God's altar for church work. city missions and home and foreign, missions more than $2,000,000. This) la a remarkable record, especially when It is borne In mind that not a millionaire Is to be found in the mem bership. His election calls to mind that Dr. MacArthur, who seemft far from fitting the role of a seventy-year-old minister, has retired from the first and only pas torate occupied by him during his four decades as a clergyman. His retire ment from the pastorate brings him to a wider activity. It Is interesting to note that Dr. MacArthur was unanimously elected In Philadelphia by dele gates representing every country on the globe to tha presidency of the Bap tist World Alliance. Thlo Is the highest honor possible In the Baptist denom ination, on either side of the ocean or In the world. It is really a world-wide bishopric. One of his first duties will be to behalf of a greater religious liberty for the Baptists and other persecuted faiths In the land of the Romanoffs. The manifesto issued by the czar in 1905 gave a larger degree of religious liberty than ever before enjoyed, yet It Is not sufficiently large. It is Dr. MacArthur's intention to start, for Rus sia about December 1 as one of a deputation of prominent Englishmen and Americana KITCHENER GOES TO EGYPT laUsB W aaata-vae f atu tywaavaawa HWWVa talks." Tha Yankee boattt that ha maket good oa talk, and without it too cast It wall algh Impossible. Bat hart wa have a living contradiction to tha theory. 1 Ktcbenar waa never at a public school, sad cotameacad bit career when ha temporarily eoUtted whlla la hat teens ts a privat tn tha French army of tha Loir. At twenty ha blossomed Inta a "upper," Joining tie anglBeera, and working. It can ba guessed, doggedly at his profession till four ysart latar ba became a member of lb Palestine turvsy. Thus he became part of British history, for later be pataed to th command or tha, Egyptian cavalry la 1811 ... ' . ' ; , ' ' LAURIER IS 1 win remain la : barilanaot an ladr of tha oppotlUon for aoai titan,' 1 tbottld b n dMnrtr of my party tt I ran away now," ald Sir Wilfrid Laa- rlr la Ottawa, Oat . Sir Wilfrid naia that ha had lDtmdd to rstlr and, no aoobt would -do to aftef aoai tlm bat hot Innoedlatelf. . He onoubto' ly wDl gtJ through th bxt saaalon a Undr of th apportion. ' : V.. ': Bl-.WrlMd Utir1t, def anted., and parhapn ft llttl ,dlsntayd. ; possibly wlabea bow mor tbtn atr that b had remained aBkntghUd. . II did not Seslr th honor bstowd upon bkm at th dtamond JubU, 1 would bar arfrrd ratnaln plain Wilfrid Lan Hr," h baa tall 1 bvgun my po litical cartar nndr plain. Aletandar McKeosl. wbd bca0 Ur a a iloo cuttr, and who Uvd and died plain Altadr afcKeasIa." Aa enemy chart? him bc wttb kiting received aa n gift from a or- mpt oorporatlott eaodrrfim, well foi . !h4 dwelling. lie told tb "Dominion prIUmnt whit t fafti wvre.' 81 "AUfrid aiplilnod thlt h b4 bonfiht lb hnti tr,lm:f, piylng 1.1C0 C' dowa and furnUtilng It, cpt for a few fftt from ri)nal.fr1nda to Lsd; Lsar1r, raising the rrmiiy oa bis pmn -.' !.! cots, and giving a moflgif fo U. biJiace, .! ). oa th tou M" t HAS BIG TAS.t ( It U a big Job that Jama Bolph. Jr, tha mw mayor of Baa franc! sco, for merly aa errand boy, hag bafora him. Im taking chargst -of tha city govern . aaast 'forj tha tour-year tarn, daring which It must prepare tor the Paaama ' Paclfle aipoaitlon, ha wtQ ba largely : raaponatble x tat tha . aapanditara at 100,0000)0f lor panne works, - .Ana than, moat difficult and most Im portant of all, perhaps, he raat.'Uaaa p -Ban Francisco. f That la, he 1ast give tha dty aachia moral, cleaalag that It will present ' g daoetrt appaar anoa to tha thousands of visitors troaa all over tha world, .; j . By hia election Rolph beeoaea aa intoraatkmal figure with the eipandi tara of millions of dollara under bit dtractlon, with tha prosperity of a mil lion people largely -dependant upon bis policies, wjth tha ' sacceaa of i tha worid'g fair linked to hit aajalnlatra tioa, and with tha good name of Baa Francisco in his keeping, the. grammar school and spent three high schoo) course, doing odd Jobs to two young men opened a little office shipping and commission business. and within a few months they were which trebled and quadrupled as the he started to carve out a career for born on August 23, 1869, and so he when he enters upon his four-year means and they lived in the Mission Intercede with the czar of Russia in Field Marshal Viscount Kitchener's appointment as agent and consul gen eral at Cairo was received at that city with great satisfaction. As a matter of fact. Lord Kitchener will really, though not . in name, be arbiter of Egyptian policy, and will be respon sible under the British government fpr the administration of Egypt and the Sudan. His full title for tha po sition It minister plenipotentiary and consul general and his salary Is 7,000 a year. As regards bit suitability for tbe po sition. It It certain that there Is no man tn Britain with whom could be more surely trusted the affairs ot Egypt and Sudan. Hla very name proclaims him to be the man that la wanted K, Of K., Kttohener of Khar tum. It It a nickname by which h will always ha remembered. And yet tt la only one of hla many nicknamea. It haa been said. Tha great usually t.lb tMk tfiHAK ' gTItAitartAB naaa NOT TO QUIT 1 1 mm in . i .1 1 i ii i ) I ' i - i 1 y i Andy Gill, Captain CAPTAIN PICKERING Hustling Leader of Minnesota Eleven. CORNELL CREW STARTS WORK Vactlce Started by 1915 Team for Next 8eason's Events Candi dates Number Over 100. The 1915 crew practice has started at Cornell, under the supervision of Coach John J. Hoyle, assisted by Coxswains H. J. Kimball. '11, and C. F. Men, '12. and other former crew men who will spend tbetr spare after noon! at the erew room (or the next few weeka Charles E. Courtney hst not been seen much at the crew room, prefer ring to spend hit time at th boat house supervising tbe work of sev eral varsity candidate who ar working out on th water this fall It It probable that be will nor take cbarg of tha frahmn until Coach Hoy! makea ap several combinations fsto a9d down to th Inlet within a few wk. ,s About twenty additional frhm bsV' entered, bringing th total . number of 1915 candidates bor th 10 mark. , , f . . - ' Woman Craw Will Rao. A varsity IntercoUeglat brat rac between' women rwt from th Uni versity ot California and Stanford In tb latest Innovation tn collcg ath letic actlrttlaa.'aad'lf tb . pratent plana of tb California woffian do not miscarry th Pacific coast collgt pub tic" wni wltnst tb apctac1 of gwo wotnen't .craw gtrurgllrig for victory ovt n nirulatlcm, racing - court .qulppd. wtUr a ragulaUon hn,. , -' oritntn nr Lincoln 4Tam .: Clark Orifflth, manager of th Cin cinnati National Ioagu tam,' la aald ber to b a potalbU purcbar of tb Lincoln fraicbli , tn -tb Wtrn Ooaald C. fespalai managar, of tb franchise, aald b had llzad a prlc. and wblla thr r tevrral pros pacUv purcbastM, no deal bad bn maoludad. ' . ' ;-. . , i -.- ; " ' 11 '-- jj, -y i ' ,'. Picking Winner a Novelty. ' Th "etpert" who flnoJIy did plchr a winner It rubbing It la. On can trrd patblx with blm fur gloating, lla't pickod so man loiart a .winner It a velty, ' ' - Brooklyn s'ljis DoMea Ao'" s t"rldnt EtlwiU of the DrnfikTyn rMT11 tluh srnnt!n-(! trie (Jtrrf day that WHMivn F. 1)ihn bit sir i d a rrr,'r' I t ) n.nnngd the Vrno'i Wn -ft r-rr, 1 ill 41 of th Hoosler Squad. TO TRY FOR OLYMPIC GAMES American Athletes Expected to 8weep Board at Stockholm Small Army to Make Trip. That America will send abroad an athletic team that will sweep the boards at the Olympic games at Stockholm next summer Is tbe pre diction of all followers of sport. Ac cording to the plans of the American Olympic committee the athletes who will carry the stars and stripes in the battles for world honors will be the greatest aggregation of champions eve- gathered together. That a small army will make the trip is evident from tbe enthusiasm displayed In all parts of the country since the call for $50,000 was made by the Olympic committee. In this city several thousand dollars have been subscribed already and in Chi cago, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Port land, Ore., plans are under way to add thousands to help defray the ex penses of the team. It Is the Intention of the American committee to have every section ot the country represented north, south, east and west AMHERST TO GET NEW FIELD Memorial to "Old Doc Hitchcock' Planned at Cost of $10,000 To Have Concrete Pergola. Amherst's memorial to "Old Doc Hitchcock," of the class of 1849. who was a pioneer In physical education among colleges. Is to be a $50,000 athletic field, contributed by under graduates and alumni. No Intercol legiate contests will be held on the field, but there will be forty acres divided Into soccer, baseball, la crosse and football practice grounds, tennis and handball courts, a quarter-mile cinder path' and pits for trap shooting and perhaps a baseball cage. A large tract between the Central Vermont and Boston & Maine rail road tracks has been selected and will be graded In three terraces. Sur mounting the whole Is to be a con crete pergola, from which a view of the entire field can be had. In win ter the second terrace Is to be flood ed, making an srtlflclal skating pond and toboggan slide. New Golf Champion. Harold H. Hilton, now tbe bolder of the amateur golf championships of Oreat Britain and the United 8tat. began playing the game aa soon as be could toddle. . He was six- yean old when be held hit first driver and took twenty shots on one hole Even then be raft tumsu neia by toe gam Walklag.on tbot bol was almost enough tor him. Now h plays thirty tlx a day without being worried or tatlguvd. By tb tlm Hilton waa ten b played a fair game, good enough to boat that of President Tift now. Bator Hilton was sixteen b began winning tournaments. , H knew then that each shot counts, studied tb 11 of th ball and tb club to us. VR how It forty-two year old, and recently In England, wat only on etrok behind Harry;. Vardcn - In tb Contest for tb championship of th world, which also la pn to amateur. .- , y' i ' "' ,f rllllant Quarter rUtum. . ; ' Jtrry Wirnr, .'quarter-back, of tb Missouri valley championship Nebras ka football lvn. nd uotnlmoot cboic for valley qntrtar last fall, baa com back to tb fold tod Corshuskei prospect for tola lto hav goo up. '-..v-; r--v-'--;' --!'if , 4 - . ii i . mi Ii mi i. in. -V";"v i 'oVnUVwahmtn CrtpPle 'V ' Tha atblello prospect of th frb tain ' clasi at Tat practically 'war wrecked by tb action ' of , Director Chlitonden of tb fcinttfio school in prohA! Inning; all tnembert of tb OlU bacaitt of misconduct ,. . ,,' J 1 . MOtaMrtMMMMMWWtf ' , It Ne. , . -i ' "This It a drama of ' Id Nwt its!." - I ' 1 -Ah.' my boy, ho il should aiv frits ct ;, New System of Coaching Give Many Ptayen Chance. OK Machine Give Pine t Squad Capabw Experimental IMfta t Cwr af 0mt Eleven la Mad Mor Plastic. . Football coaching' haa undergone ai radical a change tn th last few years an haa tha game Itself, and nothing exemplinaa'thls o much aa th meth od tn vogue tn the Kiddie went. There la lea change In the east, for tro eleven are so hedged about with their traditions and "coaching systems" that reform is bard to ac complish with the big teams ot th district, and as the smaller schools, aa a general nil, follow the example of the larger tbe change Is less ap parent than In the district known to western followers of tho game aa tbe conference district. Tbe conference district does not mean th conference Itself, but th territory influenced by that body, which may be summed up as the states of Illinois, Indiana. Wisconsin. Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa. Missouri and Nebraska. Schools of the Mis souri valley conference follow the ex ample set by the older and more pow erful "big eight," while most of the minor schools in that territory fol low the larger. In no school is the change in coach ing more apparent than iu an insti tution no longer membered among the conference. The change in Michi gan's coaching has been thorough and the work of Yost there ih the last few yars has been about as different from that used previous to 190r as night is from day. That the change Is for the better is shown by the increase in strength of the Wolverine teams toward the close of the season and the bringing out of stars. Even In the palmiest days of Michigan's "steam roller" Yost never was able to get more than one man on an Ail-American football eleven in any one year. Last season Yost had two men, Benbrook and Wells, neither of whom would have had much better than an outside chance of making the all star team under the old system of coaching. In the years when beef and brawn constituted the greptest qualifications for a player the Michigan eleven often was formed after the first or second game of the season and there was little chance for a man who had not secured a place up to that time, to get Into any of the later games unless one of the "regulars" was benched by injury. Everything was concentrated upon eleven men and the whole work was bringing these men to working aa a unit. Little account was taken of substitutes and. as a consequence, the team obliged to put In fresh men nt any stage of the game labored under a disadvantage rather than an advan tage. From the start of the season the cry was "score, score" and Yost earned the appellation of "Hurry Up" in those days by his ability to keep his men running up and down the field against opponents, often piling up scores of a hundred or more points against his early season opponents. Indeed, the cry for big scores was such that a Michigan team which fail ed to Bcore more than fifty points against its early season opponents was counted a failure. This was not confined to Michigan by any means, for all schools In the conference at that time were score mad, but Yost seemed to possess the faculty of get ting higher scores against his oppo nents than did any of his rival men tors in the big nine. CAPTAIN BUSER Ladr f Wisconsin Football Tiim Trlek Plsy th Thing. Up-to-dat trick on the gridiron, in stetd of tb old-tyl tactics, will wlx gam In th opinion of A. A. Btagg coach of tha University of Chicago. ' .Aft b had analysed the Morw the othr day h mad the pradlcttot that,old-tyl tactics would not b likely to land any team on top. H ttttibnUd th good motm at soro oi tb aatra Uarna to tha presence ot Brtt-claas" tUrs and th caliber ot Uu betUh teams, but declared thtt old fashlond football wtrald b ralegntoc to' tb discard later tn". th teaaoi wbn tb v championship eoaundari gttogethr. i rv ; v ; i Youtjpt Atft. ";': ': .. Tb yoohgest registered atblet a. th L'nltad Btst la Richard nxtr ton of Hugh H. BaiUr, tb n-chara plnn pole vsultut and mllllonalr lUchard wat bora a few day ago not tn A. A. 0. registration card wta 4 tued tor blm bafor b wst twenty four hours old. Hit proposar waj rsptsln Mstthow llalpin of th Ne York A. C . and Ms rurrifl ws sao indd ty I'-crr!ary I'- !.rt C. Kaoier if of t! tni'i t''-:h. 4 " &'mm::. :- . ; H Animal Receive! Load of Shot Which Was Intended for His Master. TARGET IN FEUD FIGHT Neighbors Had Trovbl Over Ditch and Body of Lowly Leng-Eared Beast Serve aa ghield Until Anger of Armed Assailant Cool. Macon, Mo. A Missouri mule has added new laurel to hla kind. Ac cording to the record In a ease la the Macon circuit court a long-eared ani mal that toils on an Eagle township tract for Farmer Ban Harrison, saw his neighbor, Alonao Dixoo, point a deadly gun, "to-wit, a shotgun loaded with gunpowder and ball," at his mas ter. It was so sudden that Harrison bad no time to dodge, but tbe mule stepped In the breach Just as Dixon pulled the trigger and received the load Intended for Harrison. The mule did not die. He kept his 3ody between his master and his as sailant until Dixon's anger cooled, and he was glad his Bhot had not readied the target be aimed at. The trouble was over the drainage Hitr-h between the men's farms. Dixon thought Harrison was encroaching ifb his land and went out to see about It. He got mad about It and fired at Harrison, but hit the mule. To sLoot at a man with a deadly weapon is a felony, whether your but let lands or not. Information was filed in due form, and process served. Mule Saves Master's Life. and Dixon came down to Macon to let the circuit judge fix hla punish ment. Harrison had sent word that ho wouldn't prosecute the man who had shot at him. and that if it were neces sary to pronounce a penitentiary sen tence he hoped the court would parole him. Harrison said Dixon had a large family to provide for and that it would never do to take him away from them Judge Shelton sentenced Dixon to the penitentiary for two year, and then paroled him. "I scmlt I waa a bit hasty," said Dixon, "and I'm mighty glad the old mule was In the way Harrison is a good man, and we had been friends un til that ditch matter came up." HAVZ ADAM AND EVE PARADE 8oclety Procession as Aftermath o1 Smart Dance Shocks Pennsyl vania Town. Latrobe. Pa. Society of this plan is shocked over a parade, th" af'cr math of a smart dance, which in curred along the main thoroughfare of Latrobe early the other morning Some of the costumeB worn by mem bers of the fair sex In the parade ere too shocking to mention. Some ap peared as "Eves" and their male rmr panlons as "Adams " And there wo-e enough "Salomes" to fill a Bmall sized theater. Shortly before dawn the resldentp of Latrobe were started by yells that sounded something like Indian wa whoops. As soon as tbe paraders were sure everybody was looking they gave a series of dances In tbe middle of the street Soma one telephoned- the police. A policeman, who Incidentally Is a Sun day school teacher, wss sent with or dert to arreet tbe crowd. He went, pt taw, but he failed to conquer, be cause be could not stand tbe sight Ha ran back to the police station emitting crle of "O. horrors I" Next day ba waa "put on th books' for falling to xrt tb matqucradera Tbe parade given by tbe smart se-t ol Newport waa a Sunday school me tlm compared to this parad. according to those wbo viewed It from bad room window. RUNS WITH HIS ARM CUT OFF Nival Coaswala Injured by nwtlah Ingln Hurrl t Hi' Ship and May Recover, Lo Angalet, CaL Charle Henry Townseod, 4 1 1, coxswain of th tor pd oar detroyr Wblppla. gat ad xhlblUon of rnnutrkabl grit it San Pedro, th other nlgbf. rts, ,t r la attempting to board iwltcb.tn gln Townn fell nadr tb whl and i il right arm wag vrd tt tb , tbouldaf. ,', lasisntly retaining hl tUth ahUor. ran at full tpd dlttanc of a bundrsd yrdt dowl tk ' dork a antll b reached th gnntplaek of th Whlppl. v Boarding bit ihlp, b was given first aid tratmnt and thn runhed lo tb Marin botplUl la VJt dty. . . ; ' - - , : ' Fr ft torn ay that To r hd hs fair chunre for rcovry. .- If ni;'-i I. m Kit-.'ord, Conft. - ' V ' v - t '
The New Bernian (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 26, 1911, edition 1
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