Newspapers / North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, … / Feb. 11, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
'1 V - " . 1 - . .Baa to tb; aa, sro , f 1 V i VOL. I- north" cabouna herald. E V K BY TH C R8 D A Y, UrKKBACM & EA3IES, Ed, aud Prop'xs. nt -RIITIOS KATES: j-sr if paW in adfanoe, not iai! In advance, - - l.W S;ix rn-'iitii. -rilr, will . ailed on or nof w- - u!,-rriitkD we due. In u(h1 it ion h our mhncription lit trrmnn.a large number of every h j.trtH , Xnrth Carolina Thhocivj land for alc will find U Inthti'r adrantayctoadi-ertiee vt Jie Herald,, ax ve have a hsf of partly itMftiry for laud, and to the in f'e. shall tend our paper hPHPver- land advertisements arv inserted, SALISBURY Situated in -the veryJieart of the business portion of North Carolina,, at the junction of the .Western North Carolina and Richmond and Danville liailrouds, 800 feet above "the level of the.sea, "250S miles in "IhimJ, in the centre .of the: richest mineral and granite bejt ln-the South, at the gateway of j the Bine Kidge country,, in the midst of a rirlrtobacco and cotton jzone,.and with a population-'of nearly 4,000, Salisbury is fast becoming a com m'ereial centre. There are at pres ent two bunk, .eleven churches, five tobacco factories; tour tobacco exchanges (warehouses), jme woolen ruiH, two tanneries, font machine Hhops, two foundries, three hotels, three newspapers, the Railroad Ma Lcliine, Car and Locomotive Shops; one steam sash, door and blind fac Wv; about 50 businesirhbuses, and gas "works. New enterprises pro ' ieted are the building of a railroad both North and South, h $50,000 cotton factory, and two tobacco fac tories. The opportunities for in vestment are real estate, . timber, manufacture of tacec, granite and mining. : The business J O vj . t . m!i h:iv the reputation 01 being M he 'safest dealers in the State. -M AYOK E B NEVAfE. TOWN COMUISK)XK,nS D Jl Julian, D A At well, P Jaraen Barrett, Wm F Snider, Kerr Craigc, It J llolmc?. roi.icK : P Mefoncy, bY Gates, K Marringcr:and C W Tdol TOWN TAX COLLECTOll G to Shaver. " COUNTY- OFFICEaS Sheriff. C 0 K rider: Register, II N 1 J M Uorah Woodson; Clerk of "the Court, Representative, L S Overman ConffresHman of 7th Districjt lion J S Henderson, Salisbury, N C. POST OFFICE DIRECTORY. -O- . A. H. B0 YDEJf, P. III. Mail goiis north, closes 6 00 a. m.. and i : 05 p. m. I ; - ! Mail -omg south, closes 10 40 a. m., and 5) 00 p. in. . 3Iail going, westy closes 9 00 p. m. ; I 1 . Mail for Mocksville, Jerusalem, South River and Farminton, c-.i'pted, leave 7 00 a m, arrive Sunday ex- i 6 00 pm. wei, raimersviiie, and all pist offices in . J1U1, Xll'lIW Hill Itn,.1 Stanley county, Sunday excepted, leave within a year the appetite for strong 7 01) a m, arrive 6 00 p m. i , .. , . ". , c Mail for Yadkin College, Tyro Shops, dnnk had laid a heavy hand upon Bridge, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, him, and from bad to worse be went lea.ve 7 (HJ a m, arrive G 00 p ra. ,, .. ; Mail tor Mt Vernon, Woodlfeaf, Verble, : "alon until the end was a pau Tucaday; Thursday and 'Saturday, leave per'.s grave. " . 7 00 a ru, arrive 6 00 p ml I i lf 0 r. ' ' Mail for Harts and WatsoAville. Ylnn- , -Slr- agC and aome . others pro- day and Friday, leave 7 00 a ni arrive 6 00 p.m. ; . i Mail for Jaekson Hill: Brincle. Pool Milledgeville. -Bain, Garfield, Healinsr Sonnes. MiHertown. Rilevs Store. ( hnnil- ler s Grove, leaves 3Iouday ai)d Friday at ) 00 a in. Arrive Tucsdav and Saturdar ou p m. - CHURCH DIRECTORY, - . ' j-:-. -: METHODIST CHURClj. Rev. T W Smith, Pastor, Sunday service at U a. m. ; Sunday $chool at 3 p. ra. Evening services at 7 p. m. Pray er meeting !r ST. JOHN'S LXJTnERAH CHCBCH. Tev. Wra. Stoudenmire, Pastor. Sun nly services at 11 a. m." Sunday School at 3 p. m. Evening Services 'at 7 p. m. Trayer meeting every Wednesday at 7 p. m. . -. . J -. IH9T PRESBYTERIAN CIIURCH. - ; ,lleT j Rumple, D D, Pastor. Sun J vices-morning at il I o'clock. ST. I.UKEKTIBCai.1.' - Rcv.F J. Murdoch serTicosin mornin- m T bunday school at 3 p. m.. v jra-;. bm" 5-30 p. m . Bible Class Wedntol 7 &t . . salisbcrt baptist CHtrncn. ....... iuuie, rastbr. every Sunday except the third Sunday of very month,. Morning services at 11 V m. ; ounuay bchool at 9 a. m. ; evenin services at 7 p; m. Prayer meeting every Thursday at 7J p. m. -1 v J . j- - ... - cncRcn of Tan sacred heart (catholic). - y . . Marx - c. tiross; V. I G Pastor Serv'iceg oii tliird Sunday of every month" WrKioQa at 7 p. m. ' m. evening titer tb Herald, MARRIED. Tf.y theme for to day wK faa U rife, TVAurb the obJ I do Mi A read BotMrTV. baa married a wife, " Horrab I say for tbe redhead. Tbe roasculin half U Roaaell J. tbe better half's 3f 1m BaaaeQ C, Teat t rllt Johney, clear oot the way. For tne aad courting N. U. T J . --,! . I I wowld have been a waiter dear fair, if" Bat that's all past, pleaae bareno fean. For I now ay, and still declare," -4 Tbat'a been my fate for twenty years. I wlh yon all things except downfall And fucb things as trouble man 'a life; . I wlMh you few and far between squalls. Both you and your excellent wife. , May no pair ever happier b . . ' . ' Thau this pair, who bare bees made one. May they ever in unity see I - t ; The way laid out by God's own Son. " To alt Double-ones, and sinple, too Stay incle, or double up right. For some will raise a hulabaloo. And then such things are hard to right. El Dorado's yej,well and harty, x KxceptJ he yjoung married, I wot; x They ra to be a sickly party They're ick pn lovoif not tben wbatf ' - Tt'CK. A DERT OF HONOR. Repairing a Dead Father's Er-ror---The Romance in Russell , Safe's Office. Something like a romance hap pened nbt long ago in the office of Ilussell Sage, the millionaire. Years ago, when Mr. Sage lived in Troy i ' ' 1 V 11 1 T 1 T ana represented mar, aisirici in Congress, before he knew much ofi Wall street and before he was noted for his money, he had in his employ a man with whom he had been a schoolfellow and for -whom he en tertained feelings of warm friend ship. But temptation fell in the clerk's way, and he was not strong enough to resist. The ambition to become rich suddenly overcame him, and, stifling honesty's instincts, he turned thief. His crime; was not detectetl till, goaded by his shame, l he himself made a clean breast of the whole story, and, pleading. for compassion upon his wife and child, gave himsglf wholly up to Mr. Sage. Several thousand dollars had been embezzled and every penny of it was gone frittered away in short sighted speculations. The mercy, he asked in the name of his wife and child was given. Ilussell Sage was never called a hard man n nose days, and the innocent woman in danger of suffering through this sin had been one of his childhood's playmates ; thus, for the sake of the innocent, .the thief was forgiven and his wrong doing never exposed. He promised ! miioli in tin wiv of rpnariitinrt hn , .- J - ' ' , would pay back to the very last ccnf. he said. th mniiev that had been stolen. But his pledges never bore substantial fruil. He did vu Btf UK&1C lor huw regain lost footinc:, but tne-effort broght no satisfactory, result, and vided awhile for the fiurmnrt of t.h . , " , " widow and orphan left behind, but friprnlltr flM;BfflnnnoV;-'nnf 'l f . . & consequence to the broken-hearted woman. A fever, whose fires were kindled by shame and borrow rank ling in her proud soul.did its work quickly. The husband" had not been dead a month 'ere a grave was needed for her also. And a child, the son of a dishonest father a. waif without a relative ip the world was left behind left -with a ; burden other than his own support'to bear, charged with a duty pointed by a dying mpther, the duty ahead of all other thjngs, of repairing the wrong of bis erring father.. The lad, scarce in histeens, gave his word solemnly. " This was many years ago. " Bus sell Sage soon lost sight of the strip ling.' A farmer near Troy gave him a home for a time, but in a rear or two he drifted away.. -What became 01 mm thAraof "i- - fovr noooay couia.ever-H nrmself made the mystery 1 -, - f mp umer aay. - -. oopnme iJIcCaan, Mr.- Sage's M secretary, was holding his S T. nC0 itt ttn ter -office hrl! "T Put and caU askincr l j . . 1 -""wiuiroaaceaf ' -""u BLrarifr, nrJv J r 8nWn int0 Mr. Sages pnvate office.. The put .and; call my Secretary McCann ex plained that Mr. Sage, was busy, but there was an earnestness in the callers manner that induced spe- SALISBXJ M Y, OST; Q; , cial coneideration, and ai lie -was taming away the secretary volun teered to take in his card, if it would be a favor. The risitor wrote a name upon a bit of paper. Evidently 31r. Sage did not recog nize the name a - that of anybody in whom he had the slightest in terest, and M r. McCann was obliged to explain that Mr. Sage . had too much business oii band to permit of interruption. At 3 o'clock the mil lionaire' buttoned op his overcoat and made ready to go to "his Fifth Avenue home; but he had not taken more than a step or two in the out side hallway when he was brought to halt. The visitor who had been denied admittance during business hoars had waited to interrupt the' magnate homeward bound. "I want to see yqu for a little, while," said the stranger. "Yon have forgotten my name, I suppose, but you remember John Blank, of Troy, who was your clerk." "Yes, yes," ejaculated the puz zled speculator. ; ' 'Well," was . the calm remark, "l am Jolyi Blanlc son, andil'ye come to pay you his debt." ,. 5 Russell Sage was late at dinner that night. Hours went by as he sat in his office and listened to the story of this man who had- sought him on an errand so out of rhyme with the regular order of things in inis wona oi ours tp-aay. it was an entertaining tale ! that summed up the career of this young man a career at sea, in western mines and elsewhere, tinged with adventurous experience, ftince ne had been old enough to earn a penny he had hoarded it sacredly, he said, to obey his mother's" dying injunction to pay back what his fatherjiad taken. Once he had almost completed the sum required, when bad luck forced its utter loss, but he; had not failed to pluck.np courage anew, and cent by cent, dollar by dpllar, he began a new accumulation, and now he was come to New York finally to wipe . out the "debt' principal and interest. For some years past he had been a railway engineer on a western road. A few months ago a bit of bravery a mere nothing, so he averred won him the gratitude of passengers on his express train, who, but for the risk ho took upon him self, might all have been killed; their appreciation had been shown by a well-filled purse of money, and later witb a handsome watch with an inscription testifying to his bravery and devotion.! He was now east, bringing the contents of that purse, hisown savings and that watch, to give them all to Mr. Sage, asking only that the' watch ! should be held for y little while till further savings should be accumulated to buy it back. The ( debt was paid now in full. "I have a sweetheart," said the younger man. "but till I had paid you what belonged to you I could never think of marrying."' "Couldn't you ?" said the other musingly. "Boy, you had a good mother; for her sake I want to make you a little present." There was a tremor inlhe voiceof the man whom the worlds had learned to call hard, there was a fervor almost boyish in the handclasp that he gave the rougher hand of his visitor; and then the roll that a little while ', be fore had been laid upon his desk he picked up and jammed down deep into the overcoat pocket of his old clerk's son jammed it so hard that the cheap and well worn materials of that overcort seemed almost ready to give way into tatters. . A Precedent. - The situation in the Ohio Senate where a partisan minority is engag ed in a high handed attempt atrus urpation, recalls a somewhat similar occasion" in Pennsylvania, .'which' produced the "Buckshot War" nearly half a century ago, "When the public indignation broke out and volunteer military companies made . their appearance at llarrjs burg the conspirators to overthrow the legislative majority found it prudent to desist. Tradition re lates that some of. the conspirators, in their alarm, precipitately fled out of the back windows of the .Senate chamber. Let ins : trust that this political outrage in Columbus will not lead to other acts of lawlessness. --PMlad-elphia-Rec&rd. . . The eyes of the world are turn ed on the timber interests of Torth Carolina, - - TITlJESl5 J yE13mT AT? 11.1 r habitual Boniio Vims, ' - ' ' ' - .1 ' 31 a. hDiTOB: 1 haie Soften thought that no greater soci pt exists in any community thla ihs habitual borrower. . : Years ago, prior to the adrfnt of hardware stores, there was sorxje ex cuse for the castomi My recollec tion dates back to the timewhe'n, within an area of fire or ten Iniles square,, there woald probably !bc only one broadax, cross-cut saw, one froe," or, one drawihg-lftiife,? and from sheer necessity, people fwtjre obliged to borrow 6uch things one from another; and, indeed, daring those times, long ago. such toMs 'as I have named, were by -torc&tft (Mt enmstances and common con sen t,- deemed a3 held in common j to used when needed by all the people within a community. During those early times snch implements wjre not only ; very costly, but difficult to procure. Hence, one.person kept a broadax, another a cross-cut saw, another a froe, &c, and these were freely lent by one neighbor to an other throughout the whole com munity. . : . But times have greatly changed. In every town or village now, there is at least one, and frequently sev eral hardware stores, in which every imaginable variety of tool or imp ment can De purcnasea at a very low price, and not a shadow of ex cuse'exists, to justify the borrowing habit now. Years 1 ago, when I commenced business for myself, having seen and felt the annoyance attendant upon this borrowing habit, I determined to furnish "myself with every need ful tool and implement. I bought a full sujfply of farming implement, carpenters tools, blacksmith tools, and evrey thing needful to success fully carry on a farm and keep im plements &c, in repair. I took great pride in my tools and intple- " i T 1 T - : ' m 1 1 ; ! ineius. 1 naa a place tor every tmng and kept everything in its place, so that if I t, anted a certain tool, even on the darkest of nightsI could go and place ry hand upon it. I h2d fully made up my mind that when I needed a tool I would buy it, and that I would mever either borrow or lend. ' . ' j But, like everybody else, I have been compelled to lend or else give offence, and consequently to-day I have many tools Bcittered aroun 1 the neighborhood that I have not the slightest idea where they art , nor in whose possession" they are. j I will give you a case or two pf my own experience: . Some years ago, I owned a fine lot of sheep, an in shearing time, I purchased a first" rate pair 01 sneep snears, anu in; 1 1 J very few days after shearing m sheep, a near neighbor called anil asked for the loan of my shears tp shear his sheep. I told him I hajl just bought them, that they wcr very fine and costly, and I did no care to lend them. He insisted tha he would take good care of them and return them immediatelv. On those terms I let him have them,. Next morning, before daylight, ani before I had risen, he knocked at my door and said he had "brought my shears home;' M opened the door and he handed them to me. After daylight, I pulled the cob off the points, and one of the points hat an inch broken off of it. They were utterly useless for anything. . I had only-used them once. I was, once engaged in breaking up a piece of bottom lands. We were running four plows and teams. A spell of, wet weather set in and we were stopped. We left bur plows all sticking in the furrows. About a week later, the ground got in order and we all went out to plow "again. The plow .' stock which I used was turned up side down, the sboveHy ing beside it, and the heel screw; gone. : I had a neighbor who was; good at borrowing. It struck, mej that .be had my screw. He was plowing in sight, half a mile away, I raised a veil. I asked him if he had ; my screw, he said he had, I told him; to feteh it immediately. Become running with it; said his screw had giveh out, and that mine was nearer than the shop, and he thought I would not care if he bor rowed it. :That ma" is now dead, and I hope has gone to the good place, though I confess that I pen signed him to a Cerent place at that time At another ..time, my cross-cut and hand saw had both got out of fix; I took them to & carpenier and had them jointed, filed and ett and put in first rate order, for which I paid eeTcntj-five cent. I laid them awajr till needed; and before I had ' ever used'' either of them at all.! they had been borrowed by Tom, I . Dick and Harry and batter-whanged f around; aawed in nails, crookwl and! rusted up, at such a jraU, that when I tried to use them I could do noth ing with tKem. To-day I have four first rate au- gers, one smoothing plane, one pair smith's tongs, and a variety of tools that I know no more who has them than the man in the moon; and every neighbor I have is ready to swear that they have not had - The truth . is, they have been gone so long that they have changed ownership, and he who has them would swear to-day that they arc his tools, &c. . " ' And thus iti8; I might go on ad infinitum to tfio end of the chap ter. I have had my claw" hammer borrowed, the person promising to return it next day, and kept it more than a month, during which- time I have needed it badly fifty times, or at least onco every day. A man that canBubmit, to being treated this way without saying bad words must be a better Christian than I am. v.; .-. . There is another class who bor row books, especially . novels, and never return them. I have now, what would make a pretty fair li brary, scattered aroundGod knows where. A young lawyer, about commencing business for himself, asked an old lawyer's ad vice. The old gentleman1 very solemnly said to him : "My son, 1 - 1 --ill A- J i A ' tne main inrng jot you 10 uo is 10 get money. Get it honestly if you can, but get money So it is with these borrowers; they never think of a thing till the very moment they want it' then they run to a neigh bor to borrow it. So they get it they care not from whence or from whom, but as to returning it, that is seidoni thought of. They seem 'to imagine that all the property of the neighborhood belongs in com mon to the whole community, and that all they have to do is to get hold of it and use it. as - much and as Jong asthey please, but as for buying,' they never" think of that. I have known men farmers in fair circumstances, who never own ed a saw nor a claw ham meri though they had been farming for fifteen or twenty years. If they needed to drive a nail,! they would do so with the poll of an axe, or with a rail- splitter's iron wedge, or even a rock. 11 it come handiest. Unc whv mul- tiply cases ?. I have experienced thesethings adnauseum, (to satis fy or disgust), for if any thing bores me more than another it is to look for a tool that I want,;immediately and find that it ha3 been borrowed, and nobody can tell by whom. As I. said above, in this day and time, when tools of every .kind are so abundant and cheap, there is no excuse for borrowing, and ho man who has self respect will do it, or if he does, he will return them. The whole practice should be abolished for the good of society. y A N03f-BOREOWEK. t January 29th, 188G. : - The" larger portion . of. Texas is under snow and catHe are ' dying in large numbers. , i . The American Exhibition in Lon don, which was to have been open ed on the 1st of next May, has been postponed nntil the corresponding date in, 1887. -1 The bill authorizing the President to rei nstate General Fitz John Por ter as an officer of the army is to be favorably reported from the Military Committee. " '. . -. - Considerable, quantities of hemr atite ore from the iron mines near Carters ville, Ga., are shipped to Birmingham; Ala., where for many purposes they are indispensable. It is said that a strong syndicate is be ing formed ta work the Bartow county- mines, once more ; The Emperor. William has just given order that in future prayers are to be offered -for the German K avy at 'all tfre churches in the Em pire. London Truth. , . ' ... -So far as the American Nary is f hat for cuu -j . . :' several years it has been past pray- 1 ing for.. 1 1 it J. ROWRN DRVIS, ' 0 yV SEPERTE VEFDIGT FPOM EyCH JUfOPv No 1 and 2 We find that J. ROWAtf DAYIB' STORE U the ihcaKt b"'tU county. - . . j- K - . . .! S and 4 We find that hn good are among the Ul mamifju tunl. 5 and 6 We m! that every customer is treated wrll at lavi'. 7 and 8 " e find that every one gets their money' worth and atlflNj at Pi U'a 9 and 10 We find that his More 1 the most xpuUr on in the county for n. 11 and 12 jVe agree with the other Jurymen, and add that he carries the" l"t t. L of U00U and Shoes all warranted aolid leather or money refunded. of Upon this Verdict I find J Rowan Davis guilty of wiling In (Joil, -XrtUtt, Boots, Shoes llats. Crockery, Hartlware, Grocerlot andtieneral McrthdiM rltf ?; as Salisbiiry, Concord or Mooreville, ami ttntfnc him to hard UUr at Uli lsulnr to supply the want of the good people of Steele and surrounding Township whTi first class goods at living prices. Frh 4ih 3m Meckleafafg JOHN WILKES Manager, CHRRLOTTE, N. C. ItlG I iSTES AND I30.ILJSBSI OF AXL SAW AND . A SPECIALTY. WRITE FOR CIRCULARS. AND ESTIMATES. 1S79 EatablUhed ,1879. C. HAEEIS, Family Groceries of all Kinds, COXFECTIONEItY, TOYS, I , CIGARS. TOBACCO. TEAS and COFFEE - -SUGAR, SPICES, ' CANNED GOODS. EVERYTHING FRESH. I am recelTlnjf crackers In fresh lot ererr week, consequently hare no old stock. I am making a specialty of thia line and can mpiAy the wholesale trade. My new goods are arrrrinc daily, and are being offered as cheap as any in tbe city. I want to supply all tbe families with firnt class goods at a reasonable cost. All poods delivered to any part of tbe city free of cosU Try me once. ... 1:3m THEtO CK BRIDGE THE WOdCSVILlE O. Salisbury Cotton Mai ' Will build up just as E. C. Miller has built up his immense stock of Groceries Fruits.. ,. ; , ' . CHRISTMAS GOODS and CANDY nousekeepew will find a fresh lot of Baking Powders, Currants, Raisins, and Extracts of all flavors. It is as good as a ne has everything you can think of and as large a stock as any. house in the city, Am - . - ... ... . " WTTiTiTftTiTS BROWIT, STOTES. a,ad Storea of mil JUawia ' If whaty" wtlanot faOoek caa order at abort notice. ' IXOUSK BOOFISG and GCTTEBIXO exectited in a superior manner, uooa wor-. and the best tools in tfee.city. Shop for miles from Salisbury, on 1 Ttrin"le's Ferry 1 toad, does Blacksmith- J iecrS frooVlworkas is done In the cyun i ,Xiow rate-. . - . - f A5UTTy & V I" -i, . (Mi.U U ii . " ( -2 in . . .. .... ! jucewv um4 '- Tr -z rtoca of eTWnriTriioealwa if desircdr Can on r . OJdtoW for work. , , Ijr k7 J A.ES. XO. S. J. R. KEEN, In - fklus tiik rtiTr am rnV-vnT MACHINERY OF ALL hVWS ' to in: found ix Tin: st.vtk. UlYKIUM ATniALllKFOUi: WV tl3.o Judge. Im Works, :o:- KIND. GRIST MILLS. K : I" Vatuable Town Property For Sale. R. R. Crawford offersHhi , -VatitdM ? Store Room 33x80 feet with a good Defil ing Houfte up stairs btliltof briek, ck:HpI on Slain Street justltwi dtors from JIui4 phy Corner, above JJoydcn Hotel. i One new Brick two story. Dwcl'tof House with nice-shade, good kifchen, smoke house, wash house, wood house, lare garden and stable,! carriage and Ui: py bouHc; on Enni Alrtadjoinjnff 3Ir, Jcrrv Brown's resideneel Also, one nice Buildin . Lot on same street 80x410 feet. I m , All this property will be sold cheap nl privately. - . . ' , A.. . For any further Information, call at thit office, or address I i - 11 R. CRAWFOnP, 5tf .Winston. N. C. A LIVERY B JSINESS.- Having Important . business that rc- qun-esroy attention, la another place, it .becomes necessary for mto cloe out my ; 1 j xi.-Z,oiry" 3SlaJ3i3ciO3i3 r - one wishing to engage It business. , f - trtfZtu.iku MtAhiisheavcars ago ifl -: ...a AJb WW , . . . , - ; thtaeart of taV-dtWidoly reJar built stable with jootr IpjjsroTemect I inVhe pJac on a. tthin that pert tins to a fulleanipment for tbin that penwns f " - - , ..-, , Uaily Salwbury fs Tapidf hiCrea n5 w wealth and populations J ni a cu. to secure a permanent and jj5 tahte .tu inesa, which may ot occwr oon Ia W. K SxiDiRr Prop r; ' tin to ne i-" - pf - I 4 4 rr . r :o: j "- I3tf iv-V, Ahy7Wrt; . ' Ifarin ln "c -n jr a Vl i n Ub: renr tbll nil 1 ' ' . 'hn-.Jr. 1-;- J?fS' , t f , t r 1.1.- f.f 1 f!-i- ..1 ,. . i.e. " " ... -1:
North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 11, 1886, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75