The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, January 03, 1907, Image 6
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11 the "weather" side
J&& connection. It may be ;
MW terin what part of the
jBSSy hallwav?it can soon be n
I - / PERFE
I on h<
S3 (Equipped with Si
a Unlike ordinary oil heaters the
j. En always. First and foremost i
ffif torn the wick too high or too
jS smoke or smell because equippsc
K ;W Can be easily carried from roc
flV to operate as a lamp. Orname:
'.M Made in two finishes?nickel and
beautifully embossed. Holds 4 qu
m hours. There's real satisfaction in j
M Every heater warranted. If not at
nearest agency for descriptive circ
I ? The Ra&f? Lamp 1'
? - Improved burner. Made of brass throng
II Every lamp warranted. Suitable for
M parlo'r or bedroom. If not at vour dealer's
|| STANDARD OF
Wyoming was admitted to the Unfe
: ion July 11, 1890.
Itch cured in SO minutes bv Woolford's
v* Sanitary Lotion: never fails. Sold by Drug*?ists.
Mail orders promptly filed bv Dr.
E.DetchonMed.Co..Ci-awfordsville,Ind. ?1.
Bp- . ' Of all .men sailors suffer most from rheuBfr
matism.
| Hogless Lard ?
m TSJnn* am;wli#>ro noon en PS
jjl good, so pure, so eco- j|
p 13 nomicaJ, so satisfactory. S3
I j| U. S. Government Inspected, fs
i full of pimples &
'V xpoils life for many a one. Get rid at , j?
tbem by aidiug digestion with 8,
I Parsons' Pills I
* They assist digestion, help the liver to do W
B its work, and core constipation. g
|l - Put up in glass vials. H
' iV! Price 25 cents. For sale by all dealers. B
:> g t S. JOtWSOH & CO, Bcstoi, Mat*. K
Light SAWMILLS
I IATH AND SHIN6LE MACHINES
SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND
GASOLINS ENGINES.
* ? AMDinn AUGUSTA,
1 ry L,VlTIL?rnvjlr, ga.
I ' HICKS'
I | CAPUDINC
? rvlV 1 WMEOIATELT CURES
1ML HEADACHES :
IffltVW .fekBrctJl. up COLDS
BaB^A^EgM in o to n hours
|5B8glp88^BTriel 6oa^1 l0fc
*Love writes the epitaphs of the absent
ones on the hearts of the living,
And not on tombstones.
>N ?
h'
Piles Cured in C to 14 Days.
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
?aeeof Itchjng. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
JPiles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c.
A Useless Art.
s" ""Well," said the manager, turning
to the fair applicant for a place in j
liis company, "have you any dia- J
monds that you can lose on a rail- j
road train or be robbed of on a ferry- j
fcoat?"
"No, I'm sorry to say that I do
raot own any jewelry."
"Is there anybody that we can have
- ? _ ,.nn armin/i
&rrestea ior luuumug jvu. ?
^irom-town to town and making love
"to you?"
"I don't know of any such per>
?on."
; "Would you have any objection to
"being thrown out of an automobile
and rolling down a steep embankment?"
"Dear me, that would be dangerous,
wouldn't it?"
"Well, what are your recommendations,
anyway?"
"I can act."
"Oh! You must think we are
still living in the dark ages."?Chicago
Record-Herald.
DYSPEPTIC.
"He used to complain because he
never got what he wanted to eat."
"Yes, but he's very rich now."
"Yes, and now he complains because
he never wants what he gets
to eat."?Philadelphia Ledger.
Says the Minneapolis Journal: ?
Fortunately neither Countess CastelJane
nor the Duchess of Marlborough
has any temptation to go on the
stage.
" .
amnmBBBBnnBnmEROBmnBnB
m Staves jl
ItoDo
every house there is ^?9^
at the heat from the IBU
ves or fumace fails to
It may be a room on
, or one having no heat
a ccrtd. hallway. No mathouse?whether
room or
lade snug and cozy with a ?K
^rsnw?\t^T ?
11 lUlU ?
eater 1
nokeless Device) 1
i Perfection gives satisfaction M
t is absolutely safe?you cannot
low. Gives intense heat without
i with smokeless device. B
>m to room. As easy B
ntal as well as useful. | li I
japan. Brass oil fount w , ' iL fl
tarts of oil and burns 9 ?
1 Perfection Oil Heater, f
your dealer's write our /
lakes the home bright. f-., ,"]?7*aL
; the safest and best lamp / B
>r all-round household B
se. Gives a clear, steady B
ght. Fitted with latest H
;hout and nickel pl3ted. r-'? "y
library, dining room, ??
write to nearest agency. rT K
L COMPANY H
A man who can make the world believe
lie is a .genius is really a genius.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrnpfor Children
teething, softens thegnms, redocesinflammation,
allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle
Almost 15,000 women work about
the mines in the'German empire.
NO RELIEF FOR 15 YEARS.
All Sorts of Remedies Failed to Curt
Eczema?Sufferer Tried Cuticura
and is Entirely Cured.
"I have had eczema for over fifteen
years, and have tried all sorts of remedies
to relieve me, but without avail. I stated
; my case to one of my friends and he
recoitlmended the Cuticura Remedies. I
bought them with the thought that they
would be unsuccessful, as with the others.
But after using them for a few weeks I
noticed to my surprise that the irritation,
and peeling of the skin gradually decreased,
and finally, after using five cakes
of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura
Ointment it disappeared entirely. I
feel now like a-new man, and I would
gladly recommend these remedies to all
who are afflicted with skin diseases. David
Blum, Bo:c A, Bedford Station, X. Y.,
Nov. 6, 1905."
General Shafter on Fat Men.
Weighing scarcely less, if not more,
than four hundred pounds, Shafter
had a profound aversion for fat men,
either as enlisted men or officers.
"They're no account for soldiering,'*
he would bluster in his tremendous
basso. "They pant, they wheeze, they
snort, they choke, tney grunt, they
groan; they waddle, they slouch
through the world. Not a particle of
good on earth, fat soldiers?would
not have one of 'em around if I could
help it."
vEr?but?er?you would not exactly?er?call
yourself slight, would you,
colonel?" a venturesome major once
asked Shafter after one of these outbursts.
"Slight? No!" Shafter thundered
in reply. "H?11 no! I've been a fat,
blobby old nuisance ever since the
day I tipped the beam at over two
hundred pounds, and right then I
ought to've been courtmartialled and
cashiered for outrageous and malicious
adiposity, sir?for scandalous
corpulence to the prejudice of mili*
tary discipline."?Washington Star.
f
A FORM OF SPEECH.
Suitor (nervously)?"Sir, I aslf your
daughter's hand "
Father (quizzically) ? "Well, you
voxra it tv> vou suppose I'm
vau u aui v ' ? ?r
going to have a one-handed girl hanging
around me for the balance of my
days?"?-The Bohemian.
POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD..
Guarantee On Their Products.
We warrant and guarantee that all
packages of Postum Cereal, Grapi^
Nuts and Elijah's Manna hereafter
sold by any jobber or retailer, comply
with the provisions of the National
Pure Pood Law, and are not
and shall not be adulterated or misbranded
within the meaning of ssfid
Act of Congress approved June 30,
1906, and entitled, "An act for preventing
the manufacture, sale or
transportation of adulterated or misbranded
or poisonous or deleterious
foods, drugs, medicines, liquors, and
for regulating traffic therein for
other purposes."
.postum uereal. ^o., irtu.
C. W. Post, Chairman,
Battle Creek, Mich.
Dec. 12, 1906.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 15th da^of December, 1906.
Benjamin* F. Reid,
Notary Public.
My commission expires July 1, J.907.
Our goods are pure, they always
have been and always will be, they
are not mis-branded. We, have always
since the beginning of our business,
printed a truthful statement on
the package of the ingredients contained
therein and we stand back of
every package.
T,* . .
AWFUL SLAUGHTER
Wrought in Frightful Wreck
Near Washington,
THIRTY-EIGHT ARE DEAD
While Sixty Are on List of Injured,
Trains Crashed in Dense Fog.
Heartrending Scenes
Enacted.
An appalling disaster occurred Sun
j day night at 7 o'clock on the Baltimore
and Ohio railroad at Terra
Cotta, about three miles l'rom Washington,
in which thirty-eight persons
wore killed and over sixty injured,
some of them so seriously that
they will die.
The accident was caused by the collision
of train No. 6?G, due in Washington
at G: 25 p. m., from Frederick,
Md., known as the Frederick special,
witii a dead-head passenger equipment
special of eight cars. Over 200
passengers were aboard the ill-fated
train.
The railway oflicials are unable to
assign any cause for the collision.
As soon as tlie news of the wreck
i'CilVlieu UiC a:i auwu..i.iwj i; v unable,
with as many physicians as
could be assembled, were sent to the
scene.
Of the injured seven were taken
to Freeciman's hospital, fifteen to the
United States Soldiers' Home hospital
aDd twenty were brought into the city
on a special train to be carried to
the various hospitals.
Fran:: p. Bodlitz, a newspaper man
of Frederick, Md., who was slightly
injured, in describing lis experience,
said:
"I was in the car next to the smoker,
talking with a gentleman and his
wife from Detroit, Mich. We were all
standing up, the car being crowded.
Suddenly we heard an'awful noise and
then a crash. Women began screaming
and the next thing 1 knew I found
myself rolling down an embankment,
where some one picked mo up and
I found I was not badly hurt. It is
impossible to describe the scene.
Women and children were running
about crying for their parents, and
mothers and fathers were rushing
around trying to find their children.
The dead and injured wore strewn
along the track for a distance of a
tnile."
The dead bodies were found iving
beside the track for a considerable
distance. The wreck occurred at G: 39
p. m. A dense fog was prevailing and
made objects perceptible but a few
feet ahead. It was impossible at first
to determine the exact extent of the
catastrophe.
The ill-fated train runs only on Sunday
for the benefit of Wasliingtonians
who either have country places
on the line or go to visit relatives.
It leaves Frederick at 4 o'clock in
the afternoon and is scheduled to
reach Washington at 6:25 o'clock.
C. W. Galloway, superintendent of
transportation of the Baltimore and
Ohio, stated that it was impossible yet
to determine the cause of die wreck.
He said:
"We have on this division the most
modern block system. Just what occurred
we are unable at this hour to
say. Because cf the confusion incident
to the collision, of caring lor the
dead and injured, we have been unable
to consider the proper causes. We
have not yet interrogated the opera
tors and until we do so we cannot
be certain what the situation was."
It is stated that the danger signal
at Takoma Park, a short distance
frcm the scene of the accident, was
set when the train of empties passed.
The train was going at the rate of
sixty miles an hour, and Engineer
Hildebrand stated that on account of
the heavy fog he could not see the
signal. His train ran into the Frederick
train just as it was pulling out
of Terra Cotta, where it had stopped
to take on four or five passengers.
BOOZE CAUSED RACE RIOT.
Mississippi Governor Favors Prohibition
for the Negroes.
Governor Vardaraan of Mississippi
states that the newspaper reports concerning
the disturbance in Kemper
county were greatly exaggerated. He
nnt think that the death list will
number over four or five.
He further states that the trouble
was caused by liquor and favors the
same prohibition laws which are applied
to the Indians In the west for
the negro.
JEFFRIES TO MEET SQUIRES
In Fistic Bcut for $30,GOO and World's
Championship.
Articles were signed at San Fran
cisco by William Delaney representing
James J. Jeffries and B. F. Taylor,
representing the Rhyolite Athletic
Club, for a light for the heavyweight
championship of the world and a $30,000
purse at Rhyolite, Nev., next
April, between Jeffries and William
Squires of Australia.
VARDAMAN ON SCENE.Mississippi
Governor Accompanies the
Troops to Scooba and Will Investigate
Gory Race Clash.
A special from Jackson, Miss., says:
Governor Vardantan and several menI
bcrs of his staff left for Scooba Wednesday
evening at six o'clock cn a
special train. He carried with him
about twenty-five ^members of the
Capital Light Guards, under command
cf Captain Albert Fairley. Adjutant
General Fridge preceeded him
about three hours, going on the regular
train to Meridian, where he had i
another special train waiting to car- 1
ry the governor and militia direct to !
Scooba.
Latest advices from .Scooba and
Wahalak state that quiet prevails at
both of these towns, as well as
throughout the surrounding territory
and that the troops and civil authorities
are in complete control of the
situation.
According to the most reliable reports
the disturbance of the last few
days in Kemper county were not as
serious as at first reported. The trouble
is attributed to the actions of a
reckless mob, which, in searching for
the negro who attacking Condutcor
Cooper aboard a Mobile and Ohio train
last Sunday, and who shot and killed
Constable O'Brien of Wahalak killed
three negroes and wounded several
ethers.
Feeling against the negroes was intensified
by the Mobile and Ohio railroad
at Crawford station Monday
night, and in the belief that the mob
was beyond his control, Deputy Sher- i
iff Alexander, at Scooba, asked that \
troops be sent there at 'once, so that
the innocent negroes might be protected.
Two companies of state troops
are now encamped at Scooba.
It is believed that during the trouble
ten negroes and two whites were
killed.
Wednesday night the streets of
Gr?r/Vh? wprp pmwded with nearroes
who had gathered from miles around.
They were highly excited, but there
was nothing threatening in their demeanor.
According to their statements
most of them had gathered
through fear that violence would be
done than if tbey remained In the
surrounding districts, and fear alone
bad driven them into the towns.
With companies of militia patrolliDg
the streets there seemed to be little
apprehension among either whites or
Macks of any further trouble. Most
of the white people in Scooba are giving
the troops their heartiest co-operation
in efforts to restore tranquility.
Among these whites the opinion
is freely expressed that the entire
trouble was uncalled for, and should
have been averted.
MAFIA AGAIN ACTIVE.
Six Italians Found Mysteriously Murdered
in New Orleans?Crime
Laid to Secret Society.
Six Italians were found murdered
in a tenement house in Dumaine
street in New Orleans early Wednesday
morning. Some of them had been
burned to death, and there is* no
doubt that the men were -victims of
the Mafia, which lia3 been working secretly
in New Orleans for many years,
and has broken out at intervals, when
revolting crimes have been* committed.
Not since the lynching of Italians
by the wholesale, several years age,
has the New Orleans fpreign populace
been in such a high state of excitement.
Following the discovery of the murders,"
the excitement grew to such
bounds that the entire police department
was hurried to the tenement
house. The police could not cope with
the situation and a call was sent for
every able-bodied fireman in the department
to hurry to the scene.
The murders are believed to have
been committed during the ?arly part
of Tuesday night and had undoubtedly
been planned ahead. That no screams
heard from the murdered men
leads to the theory that many men
were engaged in the slaughter and
that the victims were set upoii at a
given signal and struck down before
any of them could make an outcry.
The bodies of the dead men were
literally hacked to pieces and those
that were burned had evidently been
set on fire after being put to death.
The murderers are said not to have
left a clew to their identity, if they
are known the Italians are the only
ones who can enlighten the police,
and up to this time they have refused
to , talk.
The police are of the opinion that
the murders were committed by one
of the many secret societies and that
the six men who were slain were
marked for death by their own countrymen.
RAIL HORROR IN SCOTLAND.
Storm Causes Disaster in Which Sixteen
People Lose Life.
In a railroad collision in Scotland,
caused by tbc heavy storms of the
last few days, sixteen persons have
been killed and over thirty injured.
The accident occurred near Arbroath,
on the North British railroad, between
Edinbr.rg and Aberdeen and some distance
north of Dundee.
\ mM
>
. A
T ">* ,* - j-...
LAND MINUS POVERTY.
DREAM OF THE ECONOMISTS FULFILLED
IN THE WEST.
The Vast Grain Field Where Thers
Arc No Poorhouses, No Fresh Air
Fund, No Charity Work, Because
None is Needed?Universal Rule
That of Prosperity. ?
The dream of the economist is a
land without poverty. T:ie ambition
of the statesman is a people without
want, able to obtain those necessaries
the use of which will permit them to
maintain a state of physical efficiency.
The dwellers on the great plains of
America. approach near to that ideal.
r rom me Missouri mver to mo
Rocky Mountains, from Canada to the
new State of Oklahoma is one vast
grain field. It is the home of agriculturists
and of people whose prosperity
depends directly on the products of
the farm. Tc be sure, there are mines
and oil^nd manufacturing; but the
staple resource of the region is the
farm.
When the crops fail the general income
languishes, and this is the test
of a community's basis. In all that
territory are only three large cities,
Omaha, Kansas City and the Minneapolis
St. Paul settlement. St Louis,
though on the west side of the
river, does not belong in the Prairie
State catalogue.* Denver is primarily
a mining centre..
Each of these cities is remarkably
prosperous; each of them has more
work for laborers than there are laborers
for hire; each is building and
extending its limits as never before.
The problem of the poor, the struggle
of the tenement house and the efforts
cf organized charity are little known.
Poverty is unperceived because the
opportunity for wage earning is, and
has been, present in these rapidly developing
communities, advancing as
nf
LLIGJ' ua?c ii urn t tua^^g cv? ~.150,000
to 300,000, in practically uninterrupted
progression. The construction
of municipal improvements, the
erection of stores, public buildings and
dwellings, the multitude of other improvements,
added to the manufacturing
industries, gave all not physically
incapacitated a chance.
"Have you a fresh air fund or plan
for open air outings?" we asked of
some church workers in one of the
West's bustling cities.
"Why should we?" was the reply,
"when a walk of a few blocks takes
any one to the fields and running
streams? This is only a big country
town, after all."
A big country town?perhaps that
best expresses the present day condition
of the Western cities, those that
form the centres of population for the
inland empire. They retain some of
the freshness and the heart interest
of smaller municipalities and of the
open lands.
More true is it of Ihe middle class
cities that are scattered, two or three
in a State, over the level leagues,
gaining sustenance from local agricultural
surroundings. They are indeed
big country towns.
On their boulevards one sees in
summer evenings happy* families
stowed away in comfortable surreys;
* * * - ? 1 ' -? 1 orrmo
coatiess nusDanas luuugiug uu ian^
they themselves have mowed; neighbors
visiting on the porches along the
best residence street as well as in
the farthest suburb.
Past the finest houses in the town
roll the automobiles and along the
same streets roll perambulators pushed
by workers in the creamery or in
the carriage factory. It is a democratic
procession that makes up the
moving picture and you wonder where
are the poor of this community of
40,000 people.
"You mean the colored population?"
suggests your host. "Needn't worry
about them. They are getting along
all right. We would be glad to pay
the women four or five dollars a week
as servants, but they will not work
for us. They say they do not have
to do that. They can work by the day
half the time and make more money.
So we hire them by the day part of
the time and do our own work the
remainder of the week. Poverty?
into their homes. Some of them have
pianos; organs are common?they
don't suffer."
"But you give to charity?"
"Of course. Occasionally a family
is found that needs help. The father
or mother is ill, death or accident has
lessened the income. When that hap
pens and it is known supplies are
forthcoming in abundance and the
needy ones are well cared for. We do
not have any suffering poor with us
in any other sense."
So it is in other small cities, Des
Moines, Dubuque, Lincoln, Wichita,
Topeka, Sioux Falls, Fargo, Pueblo,
Guthrie,. Muskogee. Up and down the
plains region, travel from one busy
capital to another, from one business
centre to another, it is all the Same
story.
Are all rich? No, not even a considerable
portion rich, as the worldgoes.
The list of millionaries places
less than a dozen in all this empire
of as many States, and it is probable
that the wealth of some of these has
Xl
been overesumaicu.
But in these towns there is no fringe
of that desolation or of poverty stricken
dependence which mark equally
large cities of the Eastern States.
Every resident enioys a familiar acquaintance
with green grass, flowers,
pure air and sunshine; every one in
good health has sufficient to eat ani
wear without dependence on alms.
Then come the villages and small
towns?most of them dignifying themselves
in due Western boastfulness
with the title city. They may have
only 150 inhabitants or the census
??
taker may find 5,000 to 10,000. Bi
neither event does he find reminders
ct' pinched resources nor lack of necessaries.
Take a typical community of 5,000
people out in central Kansas. It is
the centre of an average farming community.
In it are twenty-four church
organizations and seventeen lodges.
It has been through a boom and recovered,
and has the usual social dif- \
Acuities attending a settlement where
everybody is familiar with his neighbors'
business. This is the extent of
its charity work.
Each Thanksgiving Day at a union'
service in one of the churches is taken
a collection for the city mission, fund.
This amounted last year to $34.60, the
year preceding to $37. A committee,
consisting of two members from each
of half a dozen leading churches,
works with the city officials, that none '
of the needy may be missed.
The principal expenditure is in buy- ;'j
ing Christmas baskets and sending ; M
them to the families of widows or to
the aged as reminders of the day. . /gm
'Occasionally some immigrant is
stranded here as he goes with hflfr '
family across country in his white
covered wagon," explained the chair- %
man of the committee. "We helped
two such cases last year. Some families
with little children where the
parents are ill have been assisted, but ;
we have not spent all our money this
year, nor did we last year." ^
"But do not the town and county
spend something for charity?"
"Yes, and there is a poor farm, but
it has only seventeen inmates, all of
them there because infirm, sick or"
aged. It is really a hospital. It haS
steam heat and bathrooms, and is *
more a home than a public refuge.
The city marshal sometimes takes food
or coal to families in town,, but it is
when sudden misfortune has visited'
the home and not because of poverty
in th: usual sense of the word."
This was characteristic of other
towns in which inquiries were made.
Many of them had even a better record,
not having so many railroads
and so escaping the trampdom that
guides its movements by the direction
of lines of ties.
The tramp problem, closely allied as
it is to poverty, exists in the plains V ^
region as elsewhere. While distances.
are expansive and opportunity for
curing work so numerous as to be
impertinent the procession of able
bodied men loafs along the highways
and halts in the parks and groves.
Questioned, most of the members of
the Guild of the Wandering Foot will |*|j
say they are bound for the "Coast,"
or are "going East to the wife's folks."
Many towns have ordinances making
the giving of alms to strangers anoffence,
specifying that beggars shall be
sent to the city authorities.
In summer when the farmers are
begging for help in the harvest it Is
aggravating to see able bodied men ;;i|
living their irresponsible life and
fusing ?2 a day and board for work
in the wheat fields. Kansas asks for ??
25,000 workers in harvest every sum- ?
mer, Nebraska uses 15,000 and the '/|
Dakotas as many more.
THE KAISER'S VOICE.
His Words Preserved on First Perma- ^
nent Roll in Phonetic Archives. ;
One of the novelties of the last few years
is the establishment of phonetic -v;
archives, in which the voices of noteworthy
persons are to be preserved.1
The first record actually taken for ;
such a permanent archive in America
was that of a European/Through the _
American Ambassador Charlemagne Vp
Tower, I applied for a "record of the :
voice of the German emperor, for pres- |
ervation in duable material in' Harvard
University, the National Museum
at Washington, and the Library, of? ;
Congress at Washington. The record,,'
is to be kept as a historical document
for posterity. The Phonetic Archives ;
at the institutions mentioned are to
include records from such persons as- ^
will presumably have permanent his- ?torical
interest for America. The im- Mi
portance of the undertaking can be
estimated by considering the present
value of voice records by Demosthenes* ;
Shakespeare, or Emperor William the- ..
Great."
The Emperor consented, and the apparatus
was set up in the palace. I '
asked lor four records, one for each 'i&g
of the institutions mentioned and one
for my own scientific investigation;
The Emperor, however, made only '; '
two records, designating one .for Hairvard
University and the other for
u mimnom tvio twn rornhn vaiv
UIUC1 pui XUV bnv * VVW.
made by a phonograph (with specially '
selected recorders) on wax cylinders. ^
Such cylinders are of no permanent value,
because they are often injurtd ^
by mold, and sooner or later they
always crack, owing to changes in
temperature. :
From each original "master record" ^
a metal matrix was made by coating : ^
it with graphite and then galvanopl*- j||j
ting it. The wax master record was
tSen removed (being destroyed in the -'J?
process), leaving a vmold from which ^
"positives"?that is copies of the origiHo
Mat in a bard Rhpl?fl/?
comiposition and in celluloid. Some ^
casts were also made in wax, and new ?
metal matrices were made from these. ~
In this manner the following material , y
was obtained: (1) A metal matrixand' ^
positive of Record No. 1, deposited in ^
the National Museum at Washington;- %
(2) a similar set of Record No. 1, de- ^
posited in the Congressional Library r;f
at Washington; (3) a similar set of
Record No. 2, deposited in Harvard- ; ^
University; (4) a complete set for "J?
both records (a metal matrix and a *,
positive of each), which I presented . /V
to the Emperor; and (5) a reserve set :
of both. These are the only records
of the German Emperor's voice which ^
exist at the present time.?The Cen- rv
tury. ^ ^