Newspapers / Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.) / Sept. 9, 1882, edition 1 / Page 4
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FARM, GARDES AND HOUSEHOLD. Howlik Clover Id the Fall. Probably cine-tenths of the farmers in the United States sow their clover seed in the spring, withont being able to give any better reason for doing so than that they have always done so, and their fathers before them, Having never done otherwise, they do not seem to be aware that in all that district of | country inclnding the Middle and Southern States clover sown in the fall will, in nine oases out of ten, succeed much better than if sown in the spring, the reason of it being that, as clover is a hardy plant when once established, it is not very easily injured by frost, the start it gets when sown in the fall enabling it to become so well rooted aB to endure the severest cold of winter withont detriment. It is not the frosts of winter so much as the hot Buns of midsummer that it is to be feared. But what, asks one, is the advantage of sow ing in the fall ? Why, just this: A man can then devote the greater portion of his farm to wheat exclusively, with an increased rather than diminished yield, the clover making sufficient growth by the coming fall to be ituned under, and thus not only supply the necessary vegetable matter to the land— and which, with the addition of the mineral matter usually found in all com mercial manures, would insure its in - creased production—but the clover hav ing already gone to seed, would, in all probability, reseed itself. And when a farm is once brought to that degree of fertility when its productiveness can be maintained without the aid of commer cial manure, clover will be found to be the most effective fertilizer the farmer can use, and which, with the addition of the resources of the farm itself—properly husbanded and applied —will maintain the fertility of the land indefinitely without the aid of commer cial manures. Try the experiment, then, brother farmers, of sowing your cloverseed in the fall at the time of sowing your wheat, and if you have any donbts about the risk of sowing all your cloverseed at that time, seleot an acre or two in one of your wheat fields which you intend for clover, and note the difference between it and the other portions of the field the ensu ing fall. It should be borne in mind, however, that the earlier the wheat is sown the better for the fall-sown clover. Os conrse the clover must be sown broadca-1 immediately afttf. sowing or drilling in the wheat. Park-Kalaln. Many farmers make pork-raising a considerable par t of their business with out being able to give a more satisfac tory reason for it than that their neigh bors do so and make money by it. They do not seem to consider that all .farms are not equally adapted to the business that on some farms pork can be raised at one-half the cost it can on others. On bottom lands, where corn can be raised withont much detriment to the soil, pork can be raised at a profit, bnt on hilly lands the damage to the soil is often mnch greater than the profit on the pork. Then, again, to make cheap pork the hogs must be kept in thriving condition from the time they are pig ged—not that they should be kept fat all the time, for that would run away with the profits. m he first six month's of a pin’s life shonld be devoted to the growth of bone and mnscle, for which • purpose they should be fed literally, but not to such an extent as to bo kept continually fat. The hog is naturally a grazing animal, and will make much oheaper pork by being raised partly on grass than on corn aloue. Not only can a pound of pork be made cheaper on clover than on corn, but the great gain is in the fact that a hog, after a summer ing on clover, is in a batter condition to assimilate grain food than when fed exclusively on corn, Pork can be made cheaper, too, from pigs eight to ten months old, thau from hogs that have been wintered and fattened at eighteen to twenty months old—the former being often made to weigh from 200 to 300 pounds (heavy enough for any use)— besides saving the eost of wintering, as well as getting the nse of the money so much the sooner. Another considerable item of expense in raising bogs—and one that is rarely ever noticed—is the extra amonnt of fence required. This is often so great, indeed, that on farms where the Boil is liable to be washed away when turned in corn, enough bogs only shonld be kept to consume whst swill and waste there comes from the kitchen and dairy, and they to be kept in pens with the ex ception of a few for breeders—it being found much better that brooi-sows should have plenty of room for exercise, with access to the soil at all times, A sow shnt np in a pen, with no exercise, will be very apt to disappoint you at farrowing time; and the pigs, too, if deprived of the necessary exercise of following their mother, as soon as they are able, are more or less liable to be affected by lung disease. The man, then, whose land is broken and not particularly adapted to raising corn, shonld have a lot near the barn for his sows and pigs to run in, and thus save himself the trouble and expense of keeping np s pig-tight fence on the rest of his farm. On one of the main streets of Council Bluffs, lowa, two honses stand oe either side of e tombstone eetablish ment. Each honse is occupied by a doctor, and directly opposite an ander taker plies his trade. Next door to the undertaker lives a third physician, whose house adjoins a livery arable on the other side, and until recently a hospital was the next building but one An Unoepkisticated Jap. Excise Commissioner William P. Mil chell and a few friends with their fam ilies are stopping together at Bath, L I. Among the boarders in the house is a Japanese student He is a neat, bright, good-natured young man, and appears anxious to learn the ways of Americans. Mr. Mitchell and friends have been playing tricks on him. Not long sgo they got np a game of baseball. They kept the “Jap,” as they call him, at the bat by refusing or purposely failing to catch him out, and he ran around the bases all the afternoon. Next day the muscles cf his legs were so sore he had to remain in bed. When he reap peared be climbed np a tree to look at young owls in a nest, and discovered rotten apples On Monday morning the Jap, while out rowing, came upon a multitude of I fish of all sizes and varieties floundering | in the water. They ehowed their fins, and appeared to keep within a certain \ spaoe. The Jap thought he had struck ! a fish boranza, and he resolved to keep his “ find " a secret. That afternoon Mr. Mitchell and a number of the boarders were walking along the shore talking about fishing. The Jap said that it was cruel and unfair to catch fish with hook, line and bait "In Japan we catch them with our hands! ” he exclaimed in good English. All his hearers, with the exception of Alderman Strack, were astonished. The alderman said that he Lad read abcut Japanese diving into the water, and chasing and catching fish just as fish-hawks do. “ I will show you,” ejaculated the Jap, " how to catch fish without hooks,” and he got into a boat, and rowed out about two hundred yards. He pitched the anchor over, and pulled off his coat, vest and shirt. He was next seen to lie down in the boat while hp peeped carefully over th9 sides. Every now and then he would plunge his right hand into the water, and would haul up a fish. » “Look at him!” yelled Mr. Mitchell. j “ He is catching fish with his hands, by ! thunder 1 ” The Jap continued yanking up the fish for over half an hour, much to the | amazement of the other bcarden. ! When he rowed in the boat contained j about fifty fish of all kinds. "That’s the way we catch fish in! Japan,” he remarked, as he pulled the boat on shoie. Mr. Mitchell bad nothing to say, and Alderman Strack said that the Jap 1 must have mesmerized the fish ss they swam by. That evening the boarders were on the balcony of the honse listening to versions of the fishing exploit, whan the path gate was violently thrown open, and a big Irishman in a bine shirt swaggered np and wanted to know, “ Who in had been robbing his fish pound ? ” “Do yon suppose,” he yelled, “that I catch fish and put them in pound to fnroish this 'ere shebang with ? H yon New Yorkem want fresh fish go and catch ’em, or else pay for ’em. Who robbed my pound, that’s what I’m after knowin’ ?” The Jap was pointed out, and he paid for his spoils very meekly. “ Yon see,” explained Mitchell, “be didn’t know that the fish were yours— he thought he had found a nest of them.’’ How a Rebel Major Get HU Fardoe. A few days after the war had been declared at an end Major Drewry went to Washington, and, without the usual ceremony of sending in his name, leet he shonld be refused an interview, made his way into the preeenee of Secretary Stanton. “Mr. Secretary,” said he, "I want my pardon as soon as possible. I’ve fought against yon as long as I could, and I’ve been whipped, and now I want to go home and go to work. I’ve got hundreds of acres of land that have been lying fallow for the last four years, and I want to get seed into every inch of it this spring; so Til thm-.k yon to give me my pardon, and let me go.” He talked so fast that Mr. Stanton oonldn’t get in a word ; bnt, being amused and rather pleased by Msjor Drewry’s bluff manner, he asked at last: “ On what grounds do you expect to pardon, sir?” “On the ground, sir, that I ehowed yon how to build a navy. You sent your fleet of- old wooden ships up to Drewry’s Bluffs, and we knocked ’em all to pieces and showed you, sir. that wooden ships were not worth a d . And then yon went to work, and got a navy that was worth something; and it’s on the ground that my men proved 1 your needs to you that I want a pardon.” The Secretary Umghed, and told the honest rebel to call next day, aa he would like to talk further with him. Next day Major Drewry got his pardon, and in return gave Mr. Stanton a great deal of valuable information concerning the Sooth and its prospects. He went beck to his pleasant home on the James, and remained a wise, enterpris ing, prosperous citizen. In the Timet, of Philadelphia, we ob serve : Mr. John McGrath, I*3B Chris tian street, was eared by 8l Jacobs OH of Dcrere rheumatism. God is a rare per master. He may net pay at the end of the week, month or year; bnt I charge yon remember be pays in the end. Gave icotantaaeene relict St Jacobs Ou. Neuralgia. Prof. Tiesb—*. Lorn, Pott-Ditpatck. * OR HUNDRED WIVES. • TWI SntaT ea Trial la Haaearr Mr The arrest of over one hundred women in a little district of Hungary, charged with pemoning their husbands, and the conviction of one-third of the number is startling, but not without a parallel in history. In the seventeenth century an old fcvtane teller in Italy carried on the business of selling poisons to snch an extent that the attention of the antboDtaes was attracted to her place, and it was discovered that the poisons were supplied to young married women who were desirous of getting rid oi their husbands. The courts in those ! days were little better than Judge Lyneh’r tribunals, so that it is impossi ble to any whether their judgments were I well founded, bet a dozen or more women were barged, and scores of others were whipped through the streets. About the same time there was a similar I outbreak of poisoning in France, which i was not controlled until over one hundred prisoners, chiefly women, had been sent to the stake or the gallows. Early in the eighteenth century a woman in Naples carried on a large trade in poasoba. and is supposed to have been concerned in bringing about the death* of over six hundred persons. She was tortured to confession and then strangled. In every instance of whole sale poisoning, suck aa that reported from Hungary, there has been found some seller of poisons responsible alike for supplying the means and the sug gestion of murder. The poisons used were always slow-acting, frequently administered, and so gradually under mined the health of the victims that their deaths excited no suspicion until the aggregate grew so largo as to cause investigation. i Wife Like a Tin Canister. Lard Erskineonce declared at a large party that “ a wife is a tin canister tied to one's tail." upon which Sheridan, who was prerent when the remark was made, handed to Lady Erskine the fol lowing lines : I Lord Erskine at wnrca presuming to rail. Coils a wife a tin canister tied to one'a tail; And fair Lady Anne, white die subject he car ries on Seems hurt at his lordship's degrading com ptnson. ; Bnt wbereiura degrading ? Considered aright, A noHiork pobshed. useful and bright; i And shonld dot its original parity hide, That’s the Unit of the puopv to whom it is I tied! ~ Experiments made in tree pirating at the Shaker settlement in Enfield, Conn., have had satisfactory results seed placed in sandy aoil in 1869 1 having produced a dense growth of trees that are now twelve to sixteen feet high. ■ • W reck Aefen Was on more Letpleeslv stranded than a * reeked consciinlaon, whether its disaster be tie product of name formidable malady, or tlfcai slow, cremators decay that seems to fasten noon some constitutions witnont ap jarens i e t >» cause. An excellent means ofcheekiag this gradual drain of the sources of vitality is ine ben fieent nmic, Hostetter’s S'.Mudi B. liars, which promotes digestion, enriches the blood and giveswnbsmnce as well a- stamina to an enfeebled frame. Constipa te*®, feebleness of the kidnevs and bladder .'ever and ague and rheumatism, an among die bodily which it remedies prompt ly ami ihorvwgtjT. Persistence in its nse is ae£l mailed by in A m»r may like to stand on the pinnacle of Ume. bnt hr does not care to sit down on the lint pert of it. A e.WAKT MAM "* is one who dose hie work quickly and well, shin a what Dr. R. V. Pierce’s “Golden Medi cal Discovery” dots aa a blood-purifier and acreagikaier. D arouse* tbs torpid liver, punfiee the Mood, end is the best remedy for coosamptice, which is scrofulous disease ot toe longs. The übiquitous sign, “Post no Bills,” has never deterred one’s tnilor from firing his ■dooms at you through the mails. iXTWATACAHCB is a aims; end ladies oaa oof afford to do withont Dr. Piaoe’s “Favorite Prescription,” which by preserving and restoring health, preserves end ns lores that beauty which de pends on health. Ton may consider yourself much better than somebody else, hot yon can’t prove it to hie satisfaction, anyhow. BKirTIFIT. WteMEM are made pallid and unattractive by functional irregularities, which Dr. Pierce's “Favorite Preeer.pt: n" will inSsll.biy co a. Th of testimonials. By druggists. ' -Raindrops on the roof.” Os course it drops on the root That’a what the roof is for. Dewtn Dials seed. Aimsteii, Va., Aug. 4,1881. H_ H Turo A Co.: Sirs—l should have been in my grave to-day had it not been for yowr Safe Kidney and Laver Care. Mas. Burgess. eiwsiiV Prrromim rot to tic, the only preparation of beef con iaieing itecaiire euM loree-gei 'rating and life-sustaining proper tsea; invaluable to indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general detailly; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous ; penetration, otamnh or acute disease, par ticularly if resulting from pulmonary com plaints. Caereil. Hazard, A Co., proprietors, Senior*. BoMhrdnqnrtofe. *» owes Will mmr a Treaties noon the Horae and his Diseases, p.r kof 100 pages. Valuable to ovary ownei »■ r .rees. I oeiage otampo taken. Beatpoot ta -t b< Baltimore Newspaper Union,3B to S 3 N H-i’uday Bt. Baltimore. Md. The Fraser Axle Greses Is the heel in the market. It is the most economical and cheapest, ana box lasting aa Isag as two of Saratov, tine greasing will teal two walks. It rseesred first premium at to Centennial and Paris Expositions, also amdaia at vanoas tola Fain. Buy so otbsr. *** Health B-osirer” reetoraa health aadvicw enrea Dripepam, Imiot.noe, Sexo alDataltW. *L Druggists bewdforpaaph let ho K. B. Weigh, Jersey City. S. t. Great improvements have recently been made in Carboline, a deodorized extract of pe troleum, the great natural hair renewer, per fect as an exquisitely perfumed hair dressing and restorer. Sold by all droggists. A L.L.EVS BRAIN FOOD.-Mostreliablelonic A lor the Brain nod Generative Ora a an. It positively cures Nervous Debility and restores lost virile powers. Sold by drureinti. lit 6 lar M. Free by mail on receipt ot price. JOHN H AL LEN, Cbeabt. 313 First Avenue. New York. A bunion ia spoken of aa a nobby thing in low-cut shoes. s»p|j CDHiliioi FOR RHEUMATISM, Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External It remedy A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of ita claims. 1 . Directions in Eleven Language*. 1 *> BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALEB3 IN MEDICINE. A. VOGEUER Sc CO., Baltimore , Md., 1 7. 8. A* “HAINES” PIANOS abb used and indorsed by the OBIATXR ARTISTS IN THE WORLD. PATTI! GERSTER! MARIMONI VALLERIA! KELLOGG! LABLACHE! CKMPANINI! GALLASSI! RAVELLI! BRIGNOLII ABBOTT! MARIE ROZE! OLE BULL! PEASE! CASTLE! WAREEOOMB: •7 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. For Ssle by ell lesdlug Plano Houses.' CATA LOQUBB MAILED FREE OF CHARGE. BeliabK Durable and Economical, tom furnish u bone power with 4 lest fuel and water than ana othei Engine b\iU, uot fitted with an Automatic Cut-off. ■and for Illustrated Catalogue “J,” for Ini urination Jk Roes. B. W. Paywk A Boms, Box 860, Coming, N.Y. PMjM coop NEWS Kcaicaytißa x.axiies> Kjw Get up Clubs tor oar CKLR --fiKJB, BKATED TEAS, and gecur# * baxoiiful PWjL3M£ Hess Soso er Oeld Band Tea Set,’ * («« placet,! uar own importation. On# MHKSMMf Os thooa beautiful Tea Set* given nwn> to the part? Banding * debtor *U.OO. Beware or Iha so-called CHEAP TEA 3 ” that •’ a being advertised—they are dangaroua and detrimental ta t.callti—alow polaon. Deal only with reliable Honiei and with first panda If pnMlLle. No humbug. The Great American Tea Co- Importers. P. tt Sox to* U h St VKtuiY bl.. New Turk. TEASsl^i^ ia tom toad Block *rHtesi,fer|l. I# tbo. Flow Block or HlisA, fsr fa. It SmCkotoo BUUrakorauxoiE f*r M- BolfeirELUMATjwi (Z, K JlTf.O. tor I*ol. I THE eYs . - sr»T Y\ r . ■ scwobV AUGKncfft o jfoVCE r*.i e . NEW RICH BUI Blood, and will comj letely change the blood in the entire eyatern in three months. Any person who will take one pill r*ach night from 1 to 12 weeks mav be restored to Round health, if aurh a thing be ptmaible. ■old everywhere or pent by mvl for 8 letter etampa. I- 8. JOHNJiON Ac CO., Boston, Jluae., formerly Bangor, Sle. CHILLS FEVER LIVBk cyHFI.A toT-ns MALAR.A FOo. EMORY’S STANDARD CORE PILLS. Purely Vegetable. No Quinine. Mercury or Pous ona of any kind. Pleaxant to take, no griping or bad effects. Prescribed bv Physicians and so.«l by Druggists everywhere V and fiO cent* a box. Standard Ccax 00. 197 Pearl Htreet New York. TRUTH tbs Greta *•* Astoty to! CrfStart CUaaoCT FIC- / ' Ti:ah V v-w fu'-rebutoacJ a* «tfe. with cam*. 41»r Aasdjai* Praf. L. Mofba**, lu Mao*'/ PL.Brakta, Mafia. I«R|SHERSsi 12 sr&rtJM tw&fcagtfa .r I .n- LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Is ft Positive Cure Per nil those Painful Complaints and Weakness** so common to oar best female population. A Medicine for Woman. Invented by a Woman. Prepared by a Woman. The Croat rat Kadle*! Dbcavrry 81 are the Dawn of IDsla*?. GTIt revives the drooping spirits, tnvlgorat”* and harmonizes the organic functions, gives elasticity and firmness to the step, restores the natural lustre to tbo eye, and plants on the pale check of woman the fresh roses of life’s spring and early summer time. t3f“Physicians Use It and Prescribe If Freely -©■ It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving far stimulant, and relieves weakness of the stomach. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weigh* and Backache, is always permanently cured by its use. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex (his Compound Is unsurpassed. LYDIA E. PIXKHAITB BLOOD PWRIFIF* will eradicate every veotige of Kumors from th# Blood, and give tone and strength to the system, of ma n woman or child. Insist on having it. Both the Compound and Blood Purifier are prepared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, $L Six bottles for $5. Bent by mail in the form of pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Enclose Set. stamp. Send for pamphlet. No family should be without LYDIA B. PINKHAM’S UVEH PILLS. They cure constipation, biliousness, and torpidity of the llvor. 25 cents per box. jtrSpld by all Druggists.-®* 0) BND36 L j_K l DNE y - W.O R Tj | l HAS BEEN PROVED | The SUREST CURE for i KIDNEY DISEASES. | Does a lame bock or o disordered urine ir.di. | cate that you are a victim? THEN DO NOT , ' HESITATE; use KIDNEY-WORT ot once, , I (druggists recommend it) and it will speedily 1 . overcome the disease and restore healthy action. I It Is a SURE CURE for all . DISEASES Os the LIVER. | It has specific action on this moot important , ' organ, enabling it to throw off torpidity and in- . I action, stimulating the healthy secretion of the , ■ 1 Bile, and by keeping the bowels in free ccndi- I vinyl, effecting its regular discharge. Moloplq If you arc suffering from | IVialdriCle malaria, have tho chilis, | are bilious, dyspeptic, or constipated, Kidney ' Wert will surely relieve and quickly cure. . I In the Spring, to cleanse the System, every ! . one should tako a thorough course of it I | oHIDC For complaints peculiar to ' LoUICDe yourppx, such as pain and | weaknesses, KIDNEY-WORT ia unsurpassed, | as it will act promptly and safely. Either Sex. Incontinence, retention of urine, ' | ' briok dust or ropy deposits, and dull dragging < . pains, all speedily yield to its curative power. | tint Acts at the same time on the KIDNEYS, | 1 LIVER AND BOWELS.For Constipation, , ' ' Piles, or Rheumatism it ia a permanent cure. I SOLD BY DRUCCISTB. Pricegl. (W) I XKIDNEY-WORTr Merely arvt’R ms Liniment Sfor human, fowl and animal flesh, waa first prepared and introduced by Dr. Geo. W. Merchant, in Lockport N. Y., U. 8. A., 1833, since which time it haa steadily grown in public favor, and ia | now acknowledged and admitted by the trade to be the standard liniment of the country. When we make this announce ment we do so without fear of contra diction, notwithstanding we are aware there are many who are more or lest prejudiced against proprietary remediee especially on account of the many hum- L bugs on the market; however, we are •pleased to state that such prejudice does not exist against OA KG LING OIL We no not claim wonders or miracles for our liniment, but we do claim it is without an equal. It is put up in bot _v . Ues of three sizes, and all we aslt ttlat you K' ve ' l a air 2 trial, remembering that the Oil 1 put up with white wrapper (small) is for human and fowl flesh, and that with yellow wrapper (three sizes) for ani mal flech. Try a bottle. As these cuts indicate, the Oil is used success fully for all diseases of the human, fowl and animal fiesk Shake well before using. Cannot bo Disputed. am One of the principal reasons of the wonderful success of Mer w&fuP*” chant’s Gargling Oil is that it i# manufactured strictly on honor. iVM* its proprietors do not, as is the caec with too nnny, after making i Hi ijilix tor their medicine n name, dimin ish its”curative properties by using inferior com pounds, but use thu very best goods to lie bought in Mthemarket,rcgnrdlesiofcos(. Kor half a century Merchant's Garg ling Oil has bten a synonym for honesty, and will continue to oe so, long as time endures. Kor sale by all respectable dealers throughout the United States and other countries. a Our testimonials date from 1833 to the present. Try Merchant’s Gargling Oil Liniment for internal and external use, and tell your neighbor what good it has done. Don't fail to follow directions. Keep tha bottle well corked. riIRPC Burns and Rprains and Bruise*. Scalds. Htringhalt, Windfalls. Chilblains, Yr. *t lMtee, Foot Bot in Sheep, Scratrh”# or Grease, Foundered Foet, Chapped Hands. Roup in P oultry, External Foii*oua, Bore Nipples. Curb, Band Cr»<*k». Poll Evil, Cra-ked Heols, Old Bcrss. Galls of all kinds. Epizoo i \ Lame Back, ■wallings. Tumors. Hemooruoid# or Piles, Flesh Wounds. Hitfaat. Toothache. Rheumatism. Ringbone, Foul Ulcers, Spavins, Sweeney, Garget inOowa, Farcy, <.’orns. Whitlows, Cracked Teals, Weakness of the Joints, Callous, LameneMb Contraction of Mmcles. •torn Distemper, Cramp*. Swelled L*gv, Crowascsb. Quit tor. Fistula, Mause, Thrush. Abscess of ihe Udder. Caked Breasts. Boils. Ac. SI,OOB RBWA ft n for proor of the exlst — ence of a better liniment than > “ Merchant’s Gargling Oil," or a ’ VCTU belter worm medicine than . “Merchant’s Worm Tablets.’ Man ■ TYslf nfactured bv M. O. O. CoLock JOHN HODCE, kec’y. YOUNQ MEg SSTOSS-i 1 ! ’ltu.tu*. OAAna. TJoatto. area. JataarSu. via.
Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 9, 1882, edition 1
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