Newspapers / The Standard (Concord, N.C.) / Aug. 1, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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Send us $1.00 i and get this The T AND A RD. Only i V ( ) paper 1 year. Only. $1 Per Year. CONCORD, N. C, THURSDAY, AUG. 1, 1901. Single Copy 5 Cts. Sr.K CI.CEPTXC !!A.'--., ( n ' .!!'. Concord - National Bank lias paid $34,000 in dividonds since it oponod doors in July, 1888. Its surplus and undivided fund is $27,000. Tho losses from bad loans in its entire history are $35.00. It baa never sued any one or beon sued. Its officers arc : J M Odell, president; 1) B Coltrane, cashier; L D Coltrane, assistant cashier; JM Hendrix, bookkeeper. Board of Directors W II Lilly, W R Odell, Jno. P Allison, J S Harris, Elam King, J M Odell and D B Coltrane. Emblem Pins . and Buttons. .... Never before has thero been such a demand for Emblem goods. We have tho largest and best selection ever shown in town, including Masonic, Odd Fellows Knights of Pythias, Jr. Order U. A. M., Improved order of Red Men, Labor Union and others. UNIVERSITY . OF NORTH CAROLINA. The Head of the State's Educational System Academic Department, Law, Medicine, Pharmacy. Fighty-five scholarships. Free tuition to teachers and ministers' sous. Loans for the needy. 527 Ntudi-nt. 43 Instructors New Dormitories, Water Works, Central Heating System. $120,000 spent in improvements in 1900 and 1901. Fall term begins September 8, 1901. Address, V. P. Venable, President, Chapel Hill, N. C. M. L. Brown & Bro LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLES. Just in rear of St. Cloud Hotol. Omnibuses meet all passeugoJ trains. Outfits of all kimU fur nished promptly and at reason able prices. Horses and mule always on hand for sale. Breed era of thoroughbred Poland China Hoy. UK GUM G0LLE6E, Founded 1854. The next session will open Sept. 4, 1901. .Enrollment last session 102, boarders 7S. The sivme faculty continue with one additional pro fessor. The same rules and low prices continue as lust session. For catalogue or further infor mation address, RET. . A. LUTZ, Pres., Mt. Pleasant, N. C. dJtw jly 1" 2m Mont Amoena Female : Seminary, nt. Pleasant, N. C. $t(W will pay all the enpenw for a yeiir, inelwiins tuition, inrnmh'droom board, laundry, fuel, lit'lit and phyi ciaii'a attendance. Miiu or Art, 80 for tlie ymr. Mtnio kiicI Art, 50 for thi vpr. crtra turn. Tu next Mtwsion of th ninary viv opnn Wednesday Bept II. i!X)l. I'.ir oaUlogne or ottjr information, ailtiroiw, KRV. II. S. MILLER, Pros., dStw tf Mt. Pleasant, N. O. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Having qualified as tho Ad ministrator of the estate of Thos. L Martin, deceased, all" persons owing said estate aro hereby no tified that they must make prompt payment, or suit will be brought. And all persons hav ing claims against said estate 'must present them to the under signed, duly auihealiealed, on or" before the ll'th day of July, '19"-, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. . 1 C. L. EKWIN, Administrator. July 10, 1901. ,1 y M II Caldwell, Attorney, THE roCIiXAMEJiT THURSDAY. Our ll.iys Excel Id Running but MIs )iui was Atrulni.1 Tlicm. Our firo laddies did not come in for any thing Thursday at Charlotte. They made an euvi ablo run however. The running was said to be the finbst display ed, but mishaps and misfortunes which they will be able to over come in the future, we hope, pulled victory from them. The grab reel race which came off afUjr we went to press Thurs day evening was won by the Spencer team with second prize to the Tarboro team. The Observer says: "This is the first yean that Concord has entered the contests, but her men have run with pluck and determination to win." South Carolina's Great Wheat Crop. Those in a position to know say the wheat 'crop of this year is by far the largest ever made in this State, possibly by 30 per cent. The larger part of the crop was saved, though the con tinous rains iu June damaged it in many instances and in places ruined the crop in the shock. Threshing is now pretty well over. The proper preparation of land and the use of fertilizers have been demonstrated to be the hope of this pare of the coun try. Many yields of 30 bushels per acre are reported and some go over that figure. Anderson Intelligencer. Aufttlu again in Court. The Salisbury correspondent to the Charlotte Observer says a capias was received from the Sneritf of Randolph and it was issued on a true bill for perjury found by the Randolph grand jury Thursday. It is a result of the prosecution for libel insti tuted iu Randolph by Austin against the Mill News of Char lotte. It is upon Austin's testi mony as prosecuting witness that the charge of perjury is based. Stood Up fui North Carolina. Mr. Walter W Council and Preston Irwin, who represented the University in part at the Inter Collegiate Track Athletic Meet recently held in New Or leans, won one-fourth of the events. North Carolina's Track Team won the victory. Messrs. Council and Irwin were students at the Bingham School, near Mebane, before going to college. Jumped from Brooklyn Bridge. A man jumped off Brooklyn bridge shortly after 6 o'clock on the 24th striking the water headforemost. He was riding quietly along in an electric car and suddenly he stepped from the car and began to walk to a suitable place to make the leap. Raising both arms he shouted, "Good bye, everybody," and leaped to his death. For No Expansion Along Thf Line. The bubonic plague, which is worse than cholera or yellow fever seems to have obtained a lingering foothold in San Fran cisco, brought hither from the Occident, and now a vessel makes New York from Calcutta, where the disease always exists, with a well defined case on board. "We hope we will not expand in everything. Morning Post. Mr. W S Whedon, cashier of the First National Bank of Win- lerset, !owa, in a recont letter gives some experience with a carpenter in his employ, that will be of value, to other me chanics. He says; "I had a car penter working for me who was obliged to stop work for several days on account of being trou bled with diarrhoea. I men tioned to him that I had been similarly troubled and that Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy had cured me. He bought a bottle of it from the druggist here and in formed, me that one dose cured him, and heis again athis work.' For sale by M L Marsh, drug gist. . . - Strike at Burlington. There was a strike this morn ing in Lakeside Mills, here. The spinners were dissatisfied with the warp they were using and in a fret they left the mill in a body. The whole mill had to suspend op 'rations. , There will be no compromise, but their places will be supplied by others. They have already been notified to vocate the company's houses. The number of men involved is about 15. Burlington corre spondent to Charlotte Observer, i i A Good Coiigh.Medicine. It speaks well for Chamber lain's Cough Remedy when drug gists use it in their own families in preference to any other. "I have sold Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for the past five years with complete satisfaction to my self and customers," says Drug cist J Goldsmith, Van Etten, N. Y. "1 have always used it iu my own family both for ordinary coughs and colds and for the cough following la grippe, and find it very efficacious." For falo by M L Marsh, druggist. His Clover Hay and Wide TIreg. There's a business air about tho way Mr. H H Blackwelder is bringing in loads of clover hay these days. It is pleasing to ob serve their sizo and the expert ness with which they are loaded. He brings in from 1600 to 170u pounds at a load and thinks he could just as easily haul a ton if the roads had the benefits of wide tired wagons like his that make the roads better instead of worse. The wide tire, too, ena bles him to drive almost any where in his meadows and folds with ease. Will Receive Warm Welcome. "Our people are delighted to know that Rev. C B Miller, of Concord, has accepted the call to the pastorate of the Lutheran church here. He will find a warm welcome, not only from his church, but the entire town and the Pythian lodge, of which he is a zealous member." Albe marle correspondence to the Charlotte Observer. Monument to Hero of 1818. On the 24th inst., there was a monument unveiled at Beaufort NC In honor of Capt.Otway Burns who commanded the privateer vessel, the "Snap Dragon," in tho war of 1812. On the top of the monument is placed a can non tnat was a part of the equip ment of the vessel. The monument was erected by three grandsons, W F, E O and Owen Burns, and the veil was drawn by a grand-daughter, Miss Wilkins, of New York. Judge Walter Clark made the speech of the occasion. Insane Man's Bloody Deed. A Leavenworth, Kansas, dis patch of the 24th gives the story of Michael Kelly, an insane man who deliberately shot and killed Robert Garret and probably mortally wounded Dr. Chas. McGee and wounded four others. He had been in the asylum and had been discharged with the hope that he was cured, or at least was harmless. The Roosevelt Boom Launched. Kansas City, Mo., July 25. Fifty prominent Kansas City Re publicans today organized a 1904 Theodore Roosevelt Club. Its purposes are these : "To secure the nomination of Vico President Roosevelt for President in the Republican national convention in 1904; to have this convention held in Convention Hall, Kansas City, and to have Missouri pre sent a solid Roosevelt delegation in the convention," A public meeting under the auspicas of the club is planned to be held in Kansas City soon, at which United States Senator Burton, of Kansas, and others will be asked tJ. deliver speeches. War Over With Him Sow. A Wheeling, West Va., dis patch some time since told the following little war story: "On a steamboat coming from Sisterville today Richard Paul and James Reed met for the first time since they faced each other in battle, 37 years ago. Reed was a Confederate and Paul was a Federal soldier. Paul had al ways declared Reed tried to kill him in that last battle and that he would not deem the war over till he licked him. He tried it today, but Reed gave him a ter rific drubbing, breaking his nose and blackening both eyes. Paul now says tho war is over and has made friends with his old advor sary." Counterfeiting Dlacorornd. Chief Wilkie, of the Secret Ser vice, has discovered aconterfoit ing game that amounts to some thing. And it did not occur through the ingenuity of some clever scoundrel, but through the carelessness or worse of some employe of a national bank or the government. In 1893 the State bank of New Brunswick, New Jersey, went out of busi ness. The plates from which the national bank notes were printed were supposed to have been de stroyed. But they were not, and counterfeiters have printed from them thousands of bills of small denominations, and these are in use all over the country. The notes are handsome and well printed, and it is ostimated that two million dollars worth of them, face value, aro In circula tion. Most of the counterfeits are two dollar bills, though soma ones and fives have beon printed. Raleigh Times. The Actor That Failed. In the Midsummer Fiction Nunber of McClure's Magazine, Clara Morris, whose "Recollec tions of the Stage and Its Peo ple" has proved such delightful reading, tells the story of an ac tor that failed failed dismally. He was an understudy in a load ing role in "Mazeppa," and when called upon to assume the part, owing to the tragic death of the priucipsil, he did not take ad vantage of his opportunities. As the "fiery untamed steed," "Old Bob" turned "Mazeppa" into a roaring farce. Walter M Glack eus's pictures aro almost as amusing as the text,- Mr. P. M. Brown Dead., Mr. Pleasant M Brown died Friday morning at his home at Cleveland, Rowan county, of ty phoid fever. Mr. ' Brown was about 55 years old and a man of Christian character, . of much church zeal and of spotless character. He was a member of the couh cil of St. Luke's church, where the funeral was conducted today (Saturday). To human appearance this death is peculiarly sad, as the loss of bis first wife and all his property placed a burden on him for years. He had married a second time and had surrounded himself with home and business comforts. He leaves a wife and five chil dren, Including two quite small by his second marriage. Our sympathies are extended to the bereaved, while we share with them heartfelt grief over the loss of a true ifriend and a most exemplary man. A Child is Drowned. Dewey, the 2-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Burnett, of Arlington, Clear Creek town ship, this county, was accident ally drowned yesterday after noon, at 6 o'clock. He had wan dered away from the house, and while playing at the side of a pool, he fell in the water and the dead body was not found and re covered until some time aftor death. Dewey is the second child lost by doath in Mr. Bur nett's family this summer. Charlotte Observer. Glandors In York County. Mecklenburg county has been quarantined against horses and mules, of York Couuty, S. C, which joins it, on account of glanders which is raging there, The order from commissioner Patterson to commissioner Ross reads: "You aro hereby author' ized, in my name, as Commis sioner of Agriculture, to quaran tine any horses or mules which may come or be shipped into Mecklenburg county from the section in Sojth Carolina in which said animals are infected with glanders or have been ex posed to infection from that dis ease. If practicable, any am mals from such section which have come or may come into your county should be returned to their owners at once, so as to avoid loss and inconvenience to them." What a Dreadful, Thing it is to wake up in the night suffer ing from cholera morbus, and yet cases of this kind are very common. The trouble, how ever, will never become serious if you koep a bottle of Pain Killer at hand, for it is a remody that never fails to cure cholera, cramps, diarrhoea or dysentery. Avoid substitutes. There is but one Pain-Killer, Perry Davis'. Price 25c. and 50c. Sheriffs to be Sued. The Raleigh correspondent to the Charlotte Observer says that it is. very probable that several sheriffs in the State will be sued f or their failure to pay last year Texas. Such an enforcement of the law would have a highly ben eficial effect. A Life and Death Fight. Mr. W A Hinea of Manchester la., writing of hie almost miraculous escape from death, says: "Exposure after mealsea induced serious lung trouble, which ended in consumption. I bad frequent hemorrhages and oonghed night and day, ' All my doctors said I mntt oon die. Then I began to use Dr. King's New Disoovory for consumption, wbioh completely cured me, I wonld not be without it even if it ooat 5.00 a bottle. Hundreds havo nsed it on my reoommendation and all suy it never fail to care Throat, Chest and Lnng troubles." Begnlar size SO i. and t. 0 Trial Ix.Ules free at Futter'a Prug Store. Mrs DhtIs Better. Mrs. Jefferson Davis is said to be so much improved that her condition is not regarded now as serious. "If love levels all things it's funny that lovers don't go at it with level boads." Concord Hlgli School. The next session of the Con cord High School will begin on Monday, Semptember 2nd, 1901. There will be some changes in tho corps of teachers, and a num ber of changes and additions will be made in tho building and equipments, greatly increasing the advantages of the school. Instruction is offered in the following subjects: Arithmetic, Algebra, Geome try. English :-Composition, Gram mar, Rhetoric and Literature. Latin, Greek, French, Ger man, Civics, History, Geogra phy, Spelling, Geology, Chemis try, Music and Book-keeping. Competent assistants will be employed and every possible fa cility will be afforded for thor ough training. Since the school house has no boarding department and, there fore, tho pupils are necessarialy not under the direct supervision of tho teachers, except during school hours, the principal will urge upon parents or guardians the observance of systematic study-periods at home. Thor oughness in every recitation will be insisted upon. Miss Mary Mcintosh, of Car thage, N. C, a teacher.of several years experience, who has been secured as teacher of French, will be a valuable addition to the school. Between fifty and one hundred books havo been secured for the fall addition to the library; and the equipment of the Chemistry room will bo greatly improved A permanout scholarship, in one of the best colleges in the South, has been placed in the hands of the principal. It is worth $00 a year and will be giv en as an award of merit to that pupil in the fourth form who shall attain the scholarship Honor. For further information in re gard to the school apply to tho Principal. Jay D Lentz, Concord, N. C, July 27th, 1901 Record Broken. The world's trotting record was broken in Cleveland, O., Friday by Cresceus, the cham pion trotting 6tallion, making a mile in 2-02, thus lowering the record from 2:031, which was es tablished by The Abbott. The track was heavy on ac count of the rains the night be fore, but after two preliminary trials the word was given and the chestnut stallion driven by George Ketcham moved off like a machine and before he had reached the three-quarter post, the ten thousand people in the grand stand were aware that a record was being established. Negro Women Shout at Execution. Little Rock, Ark., July 20. Charles Anderson, colored, was publicly hanged here today, for a criminal assault on a white woman, one year ago. When the black cap was placed over tho man's head scores of negro wotren became frionzied with ex citement and rent the air with their screams as tbey rolled up on the lawn in the State house yard, adjecent to the place of ex ecution. The recent Legislature enacted a law requiring rapists to be publicly executed. It is estimated that it costs the people in the cities of this couutry an average of 3. at) per capita to catch, prosecute and take care or criminals, i'ernaps paying more attontion to the young while boing made crimi nals, establishing reformatories and other ways of keeping them them out of mischief might save at leasj, 50 cents per capita. Morning btar. Neat Little Find. Capt. J W Leonard discovered another large nugget of gold on the Ingram mine. It weighs 100 dwts. This mine is attracting considerable attention Stanly Enterpnese. "The ciutton never nuts off till tomorrow what he can eat today,11 Silk Growing In the United States Whether we shall grow the thirty to forty million dollars worth of raw silk which we are now importing depends more upon tho question of feasibility than that of possibility, says O P Austin in Everybody's Maga line. Silk has been produced in many of the States, even as far north as New England, and as far South as Florida; but for various causes, chiefly la?k of experience and the competition of the cheap labor of the Orient and Italy, it has not been a finan cial success. The application of the intelligence and skill which have brought success in other lines of long-neglected industry may change all this. The num ber of silk manufacturing estab lishments in the United States is increasing every year, thirty uine new plants having been es tablished in 1900 alone; and their product now amounts to over one hundred million dollars annually. It is not improbable that American genius supported by American capital may yet find a way of supplying from our industries the forty million dollars' worth of raw materials which these factories require. Foshburg not Guilty of Killing his Sister. The great trial at Pittsfield, Mass., in which Robt. Foshburg was charged with killing his sis ter nearly a year ago which was understood then to be the act of a burglar came to a sudden end Friday by the judge's instruct ion to the jury to find a verdict of not guilty. Guilt was not proven in the minds of the court nor the jury. A Chance for Every Boy. Every good boy, really desir ous of obtaining an education, will bo given every chance of getting one at Bingham School, near Mebane, North Carolina. The prices are reasonable and in the neighborhood board, fuel, lights and furnished rooms may be had for only $H 25 per school month. For handsome cata logue, address Preston Lewis Gray, Mebane, N. C. Mothers who have alwaya so dreaded the approao.h of hot waather when they have a teething babe, should not forget that TEETH IN A counteracts and over comes tne entjcis oi noi weainer on children, keeps them in healthy eon. dition and makes teethinc eaBy. TEH THIN A costs only 25 oants per box at dragKints, or mail 25 cents to U J Mot Mt, It. D., Ht. Louis, Mo. Notice. All persons having claims or scrip of any kind against the town of Concord are requested to present them for pavment to Dr. W C Houston, clerk and Treasurer of said town. The election "for bonds" having car ried, it is the purpose of the commissioners for the town of Concord to pay off tho claims out of tho first money realized from the sale of the bonds. M B Stickley, Je. 7th. tf. Mayor. On account Pan-American Ex position, Buffalo, N. Y., May to November, 1901, the Southern Railroad will sell season tickets Conccrd to Buffalo and return at rate of $37.10 for round trip. Tickets on sale daily April 30 to Sept. 30 with final limit Nov. 3, 1901, to be good going and re turning same route and to be re stricted to continuous passage in each direction. Also round trip tickets with limit of 15 days from date of sale will be sold at rate of $33. 15 requiring deposit with and validation by joint agent at Buffalo. No stop over allowed. ADMINISTRATORS' NOTICE. Having qualified as the Ad ministers of the estate of Walter P. Parish, deceased, all persons owing said estate are hereby no tified that they must makeprompt paymeut, or suit win be brought. And all persons having claims against said estate must present them to the undersigned, duly authenticated, on or before the 1st day of August, 1902, or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. W. L, Parish, L. S. Bonds, Administrators. July 20, 1901. 6w. By M. H. Caldwell, Attorney, Set the Verdict Aside. The case of Charles H Simp sou against the Louise Mill was decided by the jury for the de fendant. Yesterday, of his owu discretion and without a motiou, Judge Hoke set the verdict aside and ord red a new trial of the case. The plaintiff, a colored man, allegos that he was an op erative in the mill and that while in the dischargo of his duty he was damaged so badly by ma chinery in the mill that he lost an arm. He brought suit for 2,000. Representing him are Shannonhouse & Bronizer and Capt. George F Bason. Jones & Tillett represent the defend ant. Chaalotte Observer. Tent Meeting at Hurrisburg. We are requested to announce that the Rev. Mr. Galloway with his singer will hold a ten days' meeting at Harrisburg in a large tout, beginning the second Sun day in August. The public i -cordially invited. burglars in Durham, Lloyd & Co.'s hardware store was broken into itt Durham earh Thursday morning. They go; 15.00 cash, five pistols and a lo ot razors and pocket knives The store was damaged. Cent and a Half for a Bat. As a precaution against bu bonic plague in Manila a cen: and a half is offered for every rat killed. Dr. Becknith Not Married. Now it seems Hiat Dr. Beck with, of Rocky River Springs, is not married as announced a few weeks ago. Week. End Kates to Mountain Hewirta Effective June 8th, 1801, and continuing to and including Sunday, Aug. 25th, 1001, the Southern Railway Co. will sell round trip tickets to points named below for trains leaving station Saturdays and Sundays, scheduled to arrive at destina tion not later than 2.30 p. m. Sunday. Returning not later than Monday following' date of sale: Asheville 4.10 Round Knob. 3.35 Morganton 2.55 Hickory 2.55 Black Mountain 3.70 Marion 3.05 Connelly SpringB 2.55 JAPANESE Pile : Cure. A new and Complete Treatment, con sisting of BUPPOSITOB1EH, Capsnles of Ointment and two boxes of Ointment. A never-failing sure for Piles of every nature and degree. It makes an opera tion with the knife, whioh is painful, and often results In death, unnecessary. Why endnre this terrible diseasef We pack a written guarantee in each $1 box. No onre, no pay. 60c. and $1 a box, 8 for $5. Sent by mail. Samples OINTMENT, 86o. and 60c. CONSTIPATION oured, piles pre vented, by Japanese Liver Pellets, the great Liver and Stomach Regulator and Blood Puntier. Small, mild and pleas ant to take; especially adapted for chil dren's use. 50 doses 25 oents. . Gibson Drug Store, tJole Agenta, Concord, N. C. PRACTICAL - EDDCflli Agriculture, Engineering-, He cbanlc Arts and Cotton Manufac turing; a comMnatlon of theory and practice, of slujy and manual training. Tultlnn (20 a year. Total expense. Including- clothing and board, $125. Thirty teachers, 3o2 students. Next session begins September 4th. For Catalogue address GEO. T. WIHSTON, President N. C. COLLEGE L Agriculture and Manic Arts. Kaifigh, N. C. ' THE HIGHWAY i TRAVEL from nil points In the m SOUTH to the Pan-American Exposition, BUFFALO, V. IS THK LINE OF THK UUKAT Southern :-: Railway. Its fast schedules, elegant equipments, vestibule ! trains, perfect dining car service, pic turesque route, make it . . .THE BEST WAY. . . . Excursion : Mets : Now : On : Sale- For full information concern s' rates, schedules, routes, call on any Agent, or write 8. H. HARDM'ICK, (Jen'l. Pat. Agt. Washington, D, C, LOCALS Mr. Kay 'I'h'.mij.v. if h;ti' bury, is visiting In.-,- n.-r. Mi . A .1 Voi l e. Mis Ctrrie Query i-.-urn i ir mi Charlotte i itut'i. I. iy eve in from a trip of business at i pleasure combiiU'ii.- Miss Edna Con-ell, who In i bi .in visiting at IJan i .burg, r turned homo Tliurs. lav niytit. .Pou Sale A good mo-i'ng year old mare, colt of ood sto,"k. Apply to A M All.-iinn on Mt. l'leasant toad. Jy Hi w4t. Jas. ' Cook. Miss Willie Duritnt, of Char lotte, is visiting Mins Mary Young at her liouu on Vet Depot street. The colored people of tl.o twvn had a cake walk Thursday ni;,'ht in the Reed store room. ?rof. Jay D Lent?. returu 1 from University of N. C. Tlmr -dr.y night. Mrs. E J Buch.tiiuii and ch dron, of Lexington, ;ro visitu. at Mrs. Joel Reed's. Mr. John Riciiwi n.j :ind faai -1, , of Richmond, Va, , are vi.-. -ui'I at Mr. Gem-go Murr's, t t E st lepot street. They w 1 spend several w-ok.s in tiio cit ' w Ih relatives. Lutheran Itenmoii Auk. 1 The second auuu;il reunion C L itherns in North Carolina -W ! be held next Thursday, Augu r. the 1st, at Lutheran Chap d tie r Cr.ina Grove. It. will bo mi tl ) style ot a baskei. picnic vith r -fr"shmonts pur hasablo on tl j ground. The groat 'entu -a w 1 be address sou various sVojec of interest t Lutherans. We Sell and 1ecornenJ tlie ; CELEBRATED Tyson & Jonss w C buggi ns. k . ' P. M. Horr's & San. i-joc;::joc::.xdoc::: Manufacturers Of P f- n C3 yipio- .. ? a
The Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 1, 1901, edition 1
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