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THE RE PORTE R l MOSES I. STRWART, Editor. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,1879. John Lancaster was hanged at Little t Rook, Ark., on the 12th. I Governor Blaokburn was inaugurated , with duo oeremony at Frankfort, Ky , ( on Tuesday the 2d inst. Four hundred an eighty women hare 1 thus far registered in Boston to vote for 1 school officers at the next election. Lady sensue takers are to be employed in the coming sensus taking expedition. Lady senses takers are always in order. The St. Louis Times Journal has a i double leaded editorial, nominating ex Gov. Hendricks, of Indiana, for Ptesi. dent. A four year old ohild was sealdtd to death in Tasewell couuty, Va, on the 6ih, by falling into a kettle of boiling water. ■■■ ■ ■ » Post-Master-Geueral, D. M. Key, has 1 accepted an invitation to make an'ad dress during the centennial celebration 1 at Jonosboro, Tenn , next month. 1 The Antietam iron woiks, nine miles ] above Harper's Ferry, after a suspen. , sion of five years, have boon put into s operation, employing between seventy- , five and a hundred men. , It is stated that Gen. Grant has ac cepted the Presidency of the Niagara Ship Canal Company, and does not intend to re enter publio life. Should this be true, the Geo. has mado a wise determination. Secretaries Sherman and MoCrary are the only members of the Cabinet at Washington. Mr. Hayes and all the others arooff for recreation, or stumping —so mueb for the latest phase of tho civil service order.— Ex. The Cincinnati Exposition was form ally opened last Wednesday in the pres •aoe of an immense oonoottrse of people. President Hayes made a brief addrees, congratulating his bearers on the evi dences of increased national prosperity, and predioting a bright future for the republic. * Ctrl Sohurz says he had rather vote for a Democrat liks Bayard than a Re publican like Grant Radi, barken unto the voiee pf your god! Will the great Republican sachem, Rutherford, com mand this blasphemous warrior to be sacrificed for his obstinacy ? New JUDOE—Governor Jarvis has appointed John A Gilmer, of Greensboro, to be Judge in the place of the late John Kerr. Under the provisions of the new constitution an cieotion will be held for the balance of the term next year Judge Gilmer will only hold until 1880, unless re-elected. There is a mountain in Georgia a part of whioh to be sinking. There is a sharp fraoturo along the line where the sinking begins. It is supposed it has been uoderminded by a river which flows near it, though the uncertainty as to the oause bas produced considerable excitement ia the neighborhood. PINSIONS.—The Goyernor issued his warrant yesterday to Daniel Long, who lost both eyes at Drury's Bluff, and to Henry Vines, who lost both legs from frost-bite at Elmirj, N. Y., for their pen sions under the recent act. Both men are from Columbus. This makes the fifteenth pentiou of this kind, and all of the pensioners to whom this bounty has been given lost their eyes excupt four. The oommiitee of citizens appointed to investigate the eirccmstanoes under whioh Columbia was burnt in 1865, have made a very long and elaborate report. While they do not fiad it as a faot that Sherman ordered the burning of the eity, yet there is evidenoo rendering it highly probable. He knew it was going on. Ho was present, his soldiers were •t work, and they had reason to suppose that it would be sgreeable to him. Want of space prevents our giving a synopsis of the report. Mr. M K Grant, of Boyertown, put • jar containing sixty turtle eggs on a Shelf last June. A few days ago he noticed a little turtle's head sticking out of one of these eggs. He immediately placed them in warm sand, and tho re sett is thirty little turtles alive and kicking. The Mammoth Cavu of Kentucky wa« fold on Saturday last to a company of Eastern capitalists, the price paid being . §2 000,000. It is said that tho oompuny will complete the railroad fr m Glasgow junction to the cave, and make other im* proremenui for tbs attraction cf visitors. DEATH OF JUiVGE KERR. Wo are indebtod to the Wilmington Star for the following tribute to the death of the obaste and upright Judge John Kerr. A man who spun his thread to the end without a prominent blur in his enviable reputation : Wo were not unprepared for the sad announcement that the brilliant, gener ous, impulsive, noble, able and eloqneut John Kerr was dead. We had for days thought that the grand old man was nearing tho river, and would soon be be yond it in tho enjoyment of those frui tions whiah await the redeemed and glo rified in the bright, boautiful world pre pared by the Father of all spirits. Judge Kerr had been in deolining health for more than six months. He had in vain sought restoration at the supposed foun tains of health, Buffalo and the Whito Sulphur. He has gone to his rest. "After life's fitful fever he sleeps well." lie died on Friday, the sth of Septem ber, at bis residence at Reidsville, in the county of Rockingham. John Kerr was born in Virginia in 1811. lie was, therefore, about sixty eight years of age. His father, John Kerr, was a native, we think, of North Carolina. Key. Dr. Jeter, of tlie Rich mond (Virginia) Rcliyious Ilcrald, wbo pronounces him the greatest pulpit orator he has ever heard on two continents, and who knew hitn intimately, refers to him as a North Caroliuian Like hit elo quent futher, Judge Kerr was a born orator, and like him he was a devoted Baptist. We have often heard him on the hustings and at the bar. When at his best he was a most magnetic and captivating speaker. At times he was wonderfully brilliant and impussioned. We have heard him when his voioe rang out like a bugle souoding a pecan of vic tory He surpassed any man we have known in profound and philosophical reflections concerning the duty of life and the obligations of citizenship. At the bar he was quite noticeable for the admirable parentheses in whioh he would give expression to some subtile or acute philosophical or moral reflection that would give a pleasing variety to a severe legal argument. Judge Kerr was an excellent lawyer. We once heard the late Judge Gilliam say that he was a capital lawyer, although men sometimes underrated his legal at tainments because of the dash aed splen. dor of his oratory. This is not an un common mistake. Brilliant men have always been underestimated by the great mass of men. Burke and Sheridan, Fox and Orattan, Wirt and Pinckney, and many other world-wide famous men, have sometimes suffered from this erroneous judgment. Some people who plod them selves cannot believe that a man of mag nificent powers and who soars can be really profound. They are pack-horses bearing their burdens with due resigna tion, and creep along at a solemn and deoorous pace. To them this is the only safe and proper gait. The Arabian courser, swift as the wind, as he dashes across the desert is to them an object of dislike. They cannot see anything ad mirable in such unwonted fleetness They are pack-horses and can only ad mire the pack-horse movement. There is uo greater error possible in estimating men's intellectual powers than to suppose that exoeeding brilliancy of mind is in compatible with true greatness and pro fundity of parte. The world's greatest men have been its most splendidly en dowed. Who approach Homer and Dante, Shakespeare snd Milton, among the poets ; or Demosthenes and Cicero, Burke aud Sheridan, among the orators 1 Only they wbo are endowed with raro aud brilliant genius, but are still lower than the most magnificently gifted of the sons of men. At the bar Judge Kerr often made spceohes of singular force and ingenuity. The last speech we ever heard bim deli ver was at the bar in reply to Gov. Gra ham. It was remarkably ingenious and striking. His legal brethren thought they had never heard a moro buooessful effort from hiia. Wo once heard bim in a ease which excited a great deal of per -1 sonal feeling in the county in which it was tried. Judge Kerr surpassed him ' i-elf. We do not remember to have ever heard so eloquent a speech in a court of justioe. We recall one incident. The large court room was literally packed , There wero some thirty lawyers in the , bir, seated near the speaker. Among tbem were Htrnry W. Miller, Romulus M Saunders, Edwin G. Reade, William A. Graham, Robert B. Gilliam, Abrsm W. Venable, Perrin H. Busbee, and many others of reputation. Mr. Kerr had been speaking for some time in a most iuipu3»i. Ned manner His intellect never appeared keenor, his descriptive I poweis were never belter displayed, his I invective was never more corrosive or incisive. Across the bar ran a large j stove-pi] e supported by upright irons j In tho midst of one of the mout splendid , outbursts ui' impassioned eloquence, a young man was so carried away by 'be I great oratory that be leant with all of his weight against one of supports, , when dowu fell the entire pipe directly across the bar and between the speaker and tho jury. A great dust and smoko arose, whon Mr. Kerr, stepping at onoo across tho separated pieoes right up to ! the jury, at the top of his deep, ringing voice he exclaimed—'"Let justioe be done j though the heavens fall. Fiat justitia, j &o. The effect was electrical. He made j instead of losing by the unexpected in- I terruption and excitement, and went on as if nothing had ooourred to break tbo oontinuity of thought or the flow of bis splendid eloquence. Judge Kerr was tbo Whig ?indidato for Governor against David S. Keid, and was defeated. His campaign wag a great triumph, and excited vast enthusiasm. It was the first time in North Carolina that a candidate for Governor was met | and escorted by oavalcadea of gentlemen ; and ladies. He also ran against A. W. Venablo for Congress, but was beaten He was afterwards elected when the Congressional District was changed. ; After serving one term he was defeated by Edwin G. Kaede. He was twioe on the bench, we believe. He delivtrcd the oration at Charlotto, in 1875, OB tho. occasion of tho Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence. It is an ele vated and impressive effort, written with much precision of style—glowing rhet orical and elegant. There is loftiness of tone throyt'hout that was a characteristic of his mind and Character. John Kotr is dead. A great heart has ceased to boat. A noble, magnani m >ns soul has pissed from this world There never lived a truer man He hated meanness and he loved his friends. During the last years of his life he was full of Christian zeal, and often delivered religious addresses that wore marked by the deepest unction and pathos and beauty and eloquence. 110 leaves a dopendent wife and children. Tho Father of the widow and the orphan will watch oyer them. "Never to mansions where the mighty r«*st, Since the foundations came a nobler guest." C. F. $ Y. V. RAILROAD. [Correspondence Greensboro North State.] Messrs Editors : The subject of building tho Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley Railroad is be ginning to agitate the people of Stokes oounty to a considerable extent, and the people in this section aro sanguine and hopeful that the road will ultimately be located through our oounty. And why. I would ask, are the pcoplo thus san guine and hopeful 7 It is not because the people in Stokes oounty aro full handed in a moneyed poibt of view— not beoause they have orators and fluent talking men to move, by their eloquence aud (air persuasion, men pi authority,- But it is because wo have atA asking faith in the honesty aud intelligence of the Board of Dirootors, who have this important matter in charge, and wo say omphatioally and without tho foar of successful contradiction, that if the Board of Directors will do what we think is their imperative duty to us be foro looating the road from Greensboro to Mt. Airy, that there is not the shad ow of a doubt, if coupled with this ) that the citizens of Stokes will do their duty, but what the road will pass through the county of Stokes, and on what is kuown as the Walnut Cove route. Now, we trust the Board of Directors will not consider what we say in this article, in reference to their duty, as dictatorial in any offensive sense, but that it is a sug gestion for their benefit, aud in the interest of tho whole Stato. We find that other routes than the Walnut Covo route, havo friends and advocates, and we know that this is but natural We d >ii't object to the friend* of all the pro" posed routes pressia-r their claims in a fair and legitimate manner before the Hoard of Directors, but we insist, after they shall have beard many speeches upon this subject and read many reso lutions passed in rail-road meetings, and read varii us newspaper articles and pri vate letters bearing upon this subject, that before they locate tha road upoo. any of the proposed routes they go ovor, the several routes and see for tbemr elves.. When they do this, then the responsi-' bility will rest with them and upon thorn with their eyes fully opened, and with a knowledge and understanding on their part that will onable them to give reas one satisfactory to themselves and tho whole Stale, why they looated as they did. If the Directors will do this and fail to lo.ate the road in Stokes oo the line suggested, then we will meekly sub mit and turn our attention to Virginia, and ask her to develop oar resources, as a last ieort, and turn our treasures into tier lap and aid nnd assist in building np Danville, Richmond, Norfolk, and other seaport tovros, within her borders. Will we be thus humiliated and forced to the dire neces-iity of doing this ? That • read will be built from Greensboro to Mt. Airy is a fixed fact, and the only uneottled question is as to the route. There are ut present but three routes in auitatuiu, to wit : By Winston, from ! Kernersville, and from Greensboro, via ! WulnutCove The frionds of the two 1 first mutes on n tempi ato leasing the priv | ilege of lsyiug down a third rsil oo the Salem branch road, and running on that I or, in other words, using the Salem 1 branch road from Greensboro to Kor nersville or Wington, as the case may be, at whatever coat and under whatever restrictions may be plaood on the game by the powora which oontrol that cor poration. Is it advisable thus to connoct the two roads 1 Can the two corpora tions co operate upon terms of equality, or, if they can, will they do ii ? Ought North Carolina to place her road at the mercy or under the oontrol or in a posi tion to be in anywiso depondent upon that corporation now or hereafter '( We thiok not. Now, what inducement is offered by the friends of the Winston route to go byway of that place to Mt. Airy? Well, they say there ia already a road from Greensboro to that place, aud that it is better to get the privilege to run on that road than to build a new one, and that they have subscribed £20,000 to be expended on the road West of Winston, or in the direction of Mt. Airy; and they speak of the im mense amount of tobacco manufactured in their town, and which would be shipped over this road ; but it is a fact well known, too much so to be com mented upon, that there is now a road being built from Moorosville, coming directly to the town of Winston, and the friends of that road confidently expect it to be completed inside of two years, and when that event happem scarcely one pound of manufactured tobacco will be shipped over the road from Winston to Greensboro, but will pass directly over the Mooreaville and Winston road going South. Now, na to Kernersville, she lays no claim to being a manufacturing town, aud the only or about the only argument she had to offer is that it is a little nearer to go from Greensboro to Mt. Airy and branch off from the Salem brunch at her place. Thus tbo matter 6tandswith regard to these two routes Now, as to the Stokes or Walnut Cove route, how does the matter stand ? We insist that all paying roads are profitable in propor tion to their length. Now, what is the interest of the State and the btock-holders in this road ? It is unquestionably to boar off as fur as possible from the Salem branoh, go from Greensboro byway of Sumroerfield, bear in as far towards Rockingham as possible, then pass up tho valley of the Dan and Town Fork, the most practicable route to Mt. Airy. What arc the advantages on this line ? You first run, in leaving Greensboro, over a fine agricultural country—one well adapted to the growth of corn, wheat and tobacco, well watered and well tim bered, until you reach the Dan and Town Fork valley—a valley unsurpassed in the fertility of its soil by no soction to be found in Western North Carolina —a valloy underlaid with a bed of inexhaun table semi bituminous coal some 25 or 30 miles in extent, and from 4 to 7 miles in width. Not only this, the road would pass over a country abounding in lime of a superior quality and eiiSfby ineXhffus fauiu beds of the richest iron ore to be found in the Statf—oro which is said by competent judges to be susceptible of makiug the finest quality of Bcssimer steel—firt-proof clay, being eutirtly free fnm lime aud magnesia, and highly re fractory in the fire With all this min eral wealth there abound streams of the finest water power in tho world for man ufacturing purposes, aud near by this proposed route there are no less than one dozen mineral springs, of high medicinal properties, some of whiuh have already acquired considerable notoriety in and out of the State. Now, if it is the ob ject of the Stato to develop the rich and valuable resources of the State by means of this road, then thore can be no two opinions as to where it will be located. If it is the polioy of the Stite to hus band her own resources, build up her own inland and seaport towns, then this is the mute. Hut if it is siuiply the polioy of the State to fritter away its money and labor, simply to havo a rail road from one point to another, without any regard as to whether it will pay in the futuro or not, why, then follow the ridges and keep as far off from freight as possible. Or, if the State designs to give her own people the goby and leave these fertile fields to be penetrated by Virginia and let her bear oif our wealth, let it be so, and eee, when it is too late what a fatal step she has taken. Now, I have said this much, and it remains tor me to say what the county of Stokes ought to do. The road is to be looated by the Directors and will bo located by them, doubtless, upon tha* route which in their opinion is the best, due regard being had to the cost and future pros pects of freights and the material ad vantages resulting therefrom to the State Let the Direotors, as first indicated, sur fey or run theso several rentes, and looking to the future of tho road, say or indicate to tho peoj le of Stokes and that portion of Guilford through which it will pass, on the Walnut Cove route, we will locate on your route if you will raise a oortain amount of stock. That will then place tho matter beforo the people in a certain light, and the pwple will go to work and raiso the required amount beyond a doubt. But if left, and the people understand that notwith standing their superior advantages for the future of the road, whioh will enure to the whole State, that they are to get it only upon the condition that they aro the highest bidder, then, indeed, are we crippled and paralyzed—not only the people of Stokes, but the whole State at largo. TOWN FO»K. Thompson, who killed "Monkey" John, in Giles, has been tried by a magistrate aud sent oo to tbo grand jury. lie plead accidental shooting, and proposes to fol low it up belore tho higher court. It is thought that he will escape punishment. He is now in the county jail— Wythe- I vide D!*putch. FLASHES. California went Republican. Charlotte is to have a new spoke and han dle factory. Daniel f. Davis, Republican, has been elocted Governor of Maine. The Republicans of Massachusetts Tear But ler will succeed in running this year. A son of Senator Vorhees, of Indiana, is soon to begin stumping Ohio for Ewing. Last reports from Morgan city, La., says that five cases of yellow fever exist in that place. The Newbern Demotrat says that more gins and engines have been purchased in tliat sec tion this year than ever before. There are now in the U. S. Treasury $.lO - 678,764 in standard silver dollars, jtad this amount is continually increasing. General Grant sailed in the steamer City or Tokio, wliicn left Yokohama on the id, and will reach San Francisco about tho 21st. The Raleigh AYH>» reports 125 students at Wake Forest College and more expected. The Wingate building is progressing satisfactorily. The police of New York made one thousand four hundred and thirty arrests last week. There were 131 marriages, 482 births aud tive Hundred and thirty deaths. Watermelons have been so plentiful in Lynchburg, V., according to the Danville Ifetvs, that on a day recently the hucksters closed out their stock by giving away the melons still on haud. Bob Ingersoll proposes to give ITood's sur viving children SIOO per year, during the remainder of his lite. This is liberal in Mr. Ingersoll, provided the children are kept from under his influence. According to the fashion editor of the Keokuk Constitution, the fi.st thing some women will do when they get to heaven will be to look and see if their wings are cut bias, while the wings of other angels art gored. Alarm is felt among the residents on Jer sey City Heigh's on account of the spread of a disease which exhibits all the characteris tics aud symptoms of the most malignant type of spotted fever. Last week two deaths occurred from it, and physicians wore called upon on the tenth to attend three new cases. GENERAL NEWS. Diphtheria seems to bo assuming a very malignant form- There are several serious cases in and about the town Greensboro l'atriot. Col. GJO K Griggs, lately clerk of the Grange warehouse, had bis arm bro ken last Sunday morning. The AW# says bis horse fell with him and caused the accident.— Danville Reyistct. Luoibcrton liohesonian : "An eld white hen with yellow legs, which laid her master many eggs," bas recently laid two mure, but the two aro together at tbo little ends, makiug two eggs in one. EBOAPKD.—Fivo convicts escapod from tho stockade last Friday morning. They were on the sick list, and, taking advan tage of the liberty allowed them to walk about tho yard, removed a plank from tho back part of the fence and made their escape They were from the east ern part of State and weut in that directiuu. Raleigh Farmer and Mechanic : Within a radius of three miles from Li psoo tub's in Little River township, Orange county, there are no less than seven babies named after Zeb. Vance, and if the prioe of China mngs doesn't rise at Charlotte after the Governor reads this notice we shall vote next year for another sort of fellow. A Henry oounty farmer predicts a killing frost on tho 17th of Oatober. He goes by the fogs in August. If there is fog, for instance, on the 10th of August tl ere will be a frost on the 10th of October. This year the fog oatne on the 17tb. He has kept, he says an ac curate account and never knew his sign to fail. Threo or four old gentlemen vouch for tho game thing Wythevil/e Dispatch. WHITE'S CELEBRATED FACTORY! ( Heavy Setting Wngont a Specially ) Jas. A. White, WINSTON, N C., Manufacturer of all kinds of light Carriages and Buggies. Repairing done on short no tice, in the neatest style, and all work war ranted as represented, with prices always to suit the times. Give mo a trial and be con vinced. A 28 —lm. JOB WORK executed at this office. PIEDMONT WAREHOUSE, WINSTON, TV. C. For the Sale of Leaf Tobacco ! PIEDMONT WAREHOUSE sold more peroels of Leaf Tobaooo last Tobaooo yuar Tlian any Warehouse in Town ! THE SALES AT PIEDMONT last Tobacco year amounted to over (1,500,000) One Million Five Hundred Thousand Pounds. PIEDMONT is the only Warehouse in Town that has side lights and sky lights, and is the best lighted Sales-room in Town. The building contains 14,200 squaro feet of fl>>or room, making It oot only the largest Warehouse in Winston, but in the State We now have in our Town Fifteen Tobuoco Piiototios, with a prospcot of more in the future. Our Leaf Dealers have orders from Kichwoud, Petcrsbnrg and lialtimoro, also from Canada, and willing to pay liberal prices for all good To baooo offered. " BRING US YOUR TOBACCO in large parcels and in good order, and we guarantee you highest market prioe. NORFLEET & VAUGHN, W. A. S. PIBRCX, of Siokcs Co., J. Q- A. BAKUAM, JAMES S. SCALES, Book-keeper. Auctioneer. Floor Marwyer. January 23, 1879. A Fatal Aocidint. —Mr. Cioero Heckle, who lived near Petra Mills, in v thih county, was aooidentally killed tut Thursday, the 4th inst. He was en gaged in Bawing timber at his mill, and failing to remove the plank that was on the carriage in time, it flew np and struck him in the breast. The blow was fatal, as he never spoko aftewardi, and all efforts to restore him to life proved fruitless. Tho deceased was about 55 years of age, and leaves a wife and nine children, who have much sym pathy in their sad bereavement.— Lenoir Tvjiic. The State Agricultural Sooiety has contracted to haye a tout put up on tho Pair Grounds, 485 by 80 feet, in whioh will be a ring for walking matches, eto. The act extending the jurisdiction of Magistrates is already causing much complaint and trouble. The Solicitors of tfco Courts say that in eonsequenoe of it many violations of tho law go unpun ished. All of which wc are indebted to the Oxford Free Lance. We learn from the Wilmington Re view that Ignasieus Graiff, a titled Hun garian, who was banished about the time of tho Kossuth Rebellion, died la£t> Sun day in Wilmington. Ho came to Wil mington directly after the war, was unfortunate in business and lived tho life of a recluse, lie made few acquain tances. Hoostin Waddoll, of Ashe oounty, was recently struck with a club and killed by C. L 11 Smith, who hud accused him of stoaling a piece of leather. Smith was arrested.— Lenoir To]>ic A 4\ H WfftKJ Tf - V " ; ' w -"" to MAKE HARVEV A CO., Atlanta. G». A New LEAF TURNED. With many thanks to our numerous patrons for the liberal support giveu ua during the past years since wc have been in business we again inform the public that we are now replenishing our already large stock of summer and fall goods, and having determined to give the store more attention in the future, hope to meat a full share of th« patron age of this aud atijoiuing eouuties. We are determined to build a trade that will do honor to Stokes, if low pciouti and fair dealing i* any thiug loukiug in i that dirootiou—we meau what we saj 1 and arc determined to sell goods as low as they can be bought aud delivered here from any market i We find on the new leaf turned marne i Bait that has been selling here at 82 50 per suck, we will uow m>ll at SI .50 per t sack Fine salt 4bu sacks, at 82 25 puri sack. Ttio best quality of 0. K 8.~ Baoou at 87 00 per 100 lbs A fair coffee at 12 cts per lb. Other things very low. These prices are lor CAS LI ONLY. In addition to a good assortment of domestics and foreign goods, we have uearly one thousand pounds of Red and Ilomc Tunned Leather, i consisting of Red and Home Tanned . Sole, Upper aud Harness Leather, Kip, p Calf, Hog, Sheep and Goat Sting, and j. having employed a FIRSTCLASS HOOT & SHOE MAKER, from a Southern City, can furnish, npon short notice boots and shoes, that will compare favorably with any oity work. 1 We will pay libera) prioes for all e kinds of country produce. Very Respectfully, PKPPEK & SONS. / J. M. NICHOLSON, WITH J. P. YANCEY & CO., I (Successors to Yancey, Franklin k Co., IM PORTERS OF NOTIONS, No. 1209 Main Street, Richmond, Va. >" March 21, 1879. tf. » PRESCRIPTION FREE!" For the speedy Cure of fcfcuiitlUkl WtakneH*. Losi Manhood and all dinonl*»rs brought on by India* - cretion or excess. Any PruKglHt, baa the Ingre dients. Adklr****, Dr. W. JAO I'EN dk ISO w«*i NUth fcUmC. i'ittcWaU, O-
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
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Sept. 18, 1879, edition 1
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