Newspapers / North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, … / June 30, 1887, 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
61; II. Salisbuiy, 1ST. C, Thursday, June -30, 1887. 3STo.. 39. MILLER & SMITH, Airs RE3TATJBAOT:. , folsb meala at all bonra, nd alo Bleeping :nt witnoui meais n aesireu. . ible iaaupplied with tbe bent to be baa. ur oyntera, fresh flh, wild gam. c - tly furnish! and kept clean . uur servants are j .1 ... moderate, Special accommodations foi ial traveler, aret-etaea Bar. Tret wit 7 , . . . - ..xi i nnmt wines and lianora ., wit h fl d tobacco and clears. There la ilendid biuiara hwaju wnn pout tame. THE CHES1 EltTGERMAIf 1 Insurance uompany e largest Assets to its Liabil- any Company .represented j State. . ' t forget it when you want e- Insurance. I. McCUBBINS, Jr., Agt. -: Salisbury, N. C. ESTA3LIS3S23 krlNSURHNCE -fOF J. ALLEN "ess b THE OLDEST AS WELL AS LARGEST AGENCIES IN TEE STATE. 1 LIFE, ACCIDENT, LiGHTN IN 6, REGRTE ASSETS presenting the leading American and Foreign Companies, among which the PniE Ins. Co., ("Lit. & Lon. & Globe"), as well as the largest Life Ins. Co., TABLE" of N. Y.,) in the world. All classes of risks placed at once at lowest jte rates. Losses adjusted promptly and satisfactorily. PFICE : "West Cor. Main and Fislier Sta., Up Stair Front Room. - V . SALISBURY, N. O. J t33TDON'T FAIL TO CALL BEFORE INSUIUKG.S MECKLENBURG JOHN WILKES, Manager, CHARLOTTE, N. C. :o:- JlSfGIISrES OF AIX SAW AND GRIST MILLS. A SPECIALTY. WRITE FOR. CRCULARS AND ESTIMATES. J. ; TO GIY ' 11' PURELY, VEGETABLE. ' -. - . - . . . It Mto wifli extraordinary efficacy on the Tivcn' Kidneys. a . : and Bowels. - AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR ' ' Malaria, Bowel Complaints. Iypplm, Siek Headache, Constipation, ' RUloaaneaa, Kidney Affections, , , - Jaundice, Xfental Depression, : Celle. aa-Trcr. TJt:-?, " T T Ho HouseMd Should 1)8 Without It, and, by being kept ready for Immediate use, will save many an hour of suffering and many a dollar la time and doctors' bills. ' THERE IS BUT ONE SHHJOHS LITER REGULARS See thai yee get the oanuine with red "2" ee free ef Wrppr. Prepared eety by J.H.ZEILfN 4. CO., Sole Proprietors, Philadelphia, P. P&ICJB, i.00. 188T. RGENCYt BROWN',1 WIND-STORMS AND TORNADO. OVER - $150,000,000. W0 BOILER S KIND. R. KEEN, -0 S SELLS THE BEST AND CHEAPEST i MACHINERY OF. ALL KINDS BE FOUND IN THE STATE. E HI II ATRIAL BEFORE BXTT HTG ELSCTTnLIlE.' 1 -rr BY 31Y WIKD0W, BT JASPEU:LEE,nERSOT. I am sitting by my window. Where the gentfy-fading light ' Casts its silent, shadows. Like the-prophecies of night. - -And I watcb the flowers blooming. With their myriad forms and hues, And my vagrant thoughts go wand' ring As I sit and dream andmuse, ' ' - . , . I am sitting by my window. Where the shadows round me lie, And I hear their gentle, footsteps As the moments pass me by. "When I ask then if their burdens, Which they bear with patient tread -Are the sins or prayers of mortals But on pinions swiftthey're tied. I am sitting by my windpw As the twilight glides away, And I kiss my lifted fingers To the last departing ray. And I ask the shadows .'round. With their waves In darkness rolled, If there is a King Emmanuel And a city paved "with gold. I am sitting by uiy window " And my thoughts diverge anew, ' As the portals ifft before me And the 'day .glides out from view. And(I ask the stars above me, J In their soft and mellow beams, If there be elysian bowers Beyond this vale of dreams. I am sitting by my window And the dew is on my hair, And I feel the wings of moments .Flitting through the pulseless air. And I ask the boundless future, With its wide expanse of years-, If there be a balm in Gilead To sooth my doubts and fears. I am sitting by my window In the solemn hush of niirht. And the landscape clothed in beauty lias Taeeu from my sight. And I ask my soul within me Uf the Uity of the Blest ; X . ... And the spirit voices answer : "There's a land of peace and rest." THE PRAIRIE FIRE. A fewevenings ago a party of Northwestern cattlemen were group ed together in the rotunda of tho Merchant's Hotel, when one of them tod this incident which has romance enough in it for the foundation for a novel : It was in '75 or '76, I don't re member which, I was in the cattle business in the Indian Territory, below Medicjne Lodge. I had shin ped a drove of cattle to Kansas City, driving them from tho Terri tory to Wichita, Kansas,x and de cided to continae on the main line of the road to Hutchinson, from which place I would take a horse and ride down to th Territory. lhe distance from Hutchinson to Medicine Lodge was about ninety. miles which could be reached by hard day's ride.. ' . By daylight the nest morning a was in the saddle and riding south. The day had been unusually warm and I had been riding rather slowly. with a view of, pushing on, faster when it had j become cooler. A breeze sprang up from the south ana l gave my horse a tap to urge him on : but not minding the whip he started in a diuerent direction m '.i iee i ' irom tne one wnicli we bad been go ing. He appeared to be uneasy out l supposeu; tnis was causeu irom inirsc. j.ne sun naa gone down and the wiud, was increasing bringing with it a' faint odor o burning grass As it grew "dark ; could see a flickering of light at ; distance,, but thought nothing of it It was not long,-however,, before discovered the cause of the horse's uneasiness.- Stretching from-righ to left, apparently in a semi-circle was a streak of nre, ana l at once realized that I was iu a dangerous position. ' l nere was no way to escape ex cept to tu rn back; and 1 was 16th to do that. I stood still some time undecided what to dp. . It, would be foolish to try to break through this sweeping wall of fire. Turn ing the horse's head in tllft ; direc tion from which-we came I let; him have the reins. He needed no nrgr- inp and covered the ground in fine stvle.- I looked back; and was dis mayed to see that even as fast as we were going the fire was gaining on us. Giving the horse a sharp cut with the whip he gave1 a flunge forward, but fell, throwing me over his head. He had stepped into a prairie dog's hole and broken a leg. Seeing that he could go no further, I drew my revolver, and ended his life. " , . -- The fire was now less than a mile from me, coming before a terrible wind, the flamesleaping high in the air. By the light I could see a small hill a - few hundred yards away, and my only hope was to reach thatr: perhaps finding shelter on the opposite side. I put " forth my best efforts," but before covering half the distance I could feel the heat and hear the roar of the flames, while the smoke was suffocating. Shaking a terrible effort I kept to my feet for a few' seconds more, and then consciousness left mc - When I awoke . it wa3 morning and bending over me was a young woman . J Rememberi ng what I had passed through, my first impression was that ! was dead and in well, where we all want to go some time." But I soon found out my mistake, and discovered that I was in a cave dug in the side of a hill. In flying from the fire my last' step had brought me to the door, and," fall- ing, had young wo The tres?, end told ne fe:i: ed her ' forced if! open'. rnin was irf p-eat dist me that feared 1 l.tn ( --t in prairie fire. She told me ner hU-' tory very briefly, saying that she was an orphan, bad been married but a short time, and came from the east with her hnrband to make a home. Her hnsband had left her alone two days before, having gone o tne nearest town, and she bad expected .him to return the evening before., Having eaten what she had prepared, we started in search of the missing mau. . , 'lhe scene waa a desolate one. as far as the eye could reach being a sea of ashes. AVe bad gone a little over a mile when I found, the char red remains of the woman's hus band. I left her watching over him while I hunted up a habita tion, and securing assistance we buried him near where ho died. I hired a man to take me to my ranch where I found my partner had ar rived all right. Shortly after that 1 sold out and came North, but I think I shall not forget that part of toe country soon. Just as the narrator, had ceased speatung a Drigm litue noy came running up to him, saying :. rana, mamma wants to see you." .. ' - liut wnat necame or tne vouno- woman r was asKea in unison by j o the rest of the party as the gentle man arose. -"Well," said he, with a smile, she has just sent our boy after me." -St, Taul Globe. About the Mosquito. Baltimore Sun. The long cylindrical eggs of mos quitoes are laid in little pockets which float on the surface of stand ing water. In four weeks after hatching the insect passes through its transformations and becomes an enemy to man's comfort. The young mosquito, in the larvae state, is aquatic, living like fish in ponds, laKes and. stagnant water. 1 1 is fish-like in shape, with ..the head and adjoining parts much enlarged, and breathes by means of a bunch of hairs radiating from a long tu bercle at the end of the body and connecting with the internal respi ratory tubes. It remains most of the time after coming from the egg at the bottom, feeding upon : decay ing matter, and is thus very bynefi cial as a scavenger. Later it be comes very active, jerking up and. down in the water, aided by a pafr of broad caudal leave3.' When job served constantly about the surface of the water, it is assure sign that it is about to assume the shape of a mosquito. The aquatic animal .is seen to crawl on some substance floating on the water a leaf or bit of twig give a twist or two, split its covering, and in a short , time put out wings abd float away. The males,, which may be distinguished by their bushy horns or feelers in front of their heads, do not bite.. It is.the female who gives all! the trouble singing and biting; No poison gland has yet been found in the mosquito's head, and it is gen erally thought that the inflamma tion and swelling following the bite of mosqnitoes are doe to the irrita tion set up by their slightly barbed jaws, and perhaps the saliva is slightly acrid. Under the micro scope the soft plastic foot of the mosquito is seen to be freckled. It may comfort those yvha suffer from the attack of these insects tt know "that mosquitees have their persourU troubles also, as the microscope shows vermin on them r not uufre- quently. . " . ' v . . Tho Age of Birds. The following table is from an English source, and claims to be measnredly correct as to the ages of birds mentioned : "Blackbird lives 12 years; blackcap, 15 canary. 24; crant;, 24; crow, 100; eagle,' 100; fowl, common, 10; goldfinch, 15; goose, 50; heron, 59; lark, 13; lin net 25; nightingaleriS; parrot, 60; partridge, 15; peacock, 24; pelican, 50; pheasant, 15; pigeon, 20; raven, 100; robin, 12; skylark, 30;' spar row hawk, 40; swan;. 100; thrush, 10; wren, 3." lhe crow, the eagle and the raven each attain to a huii dred years the longest-lived birds named in' the list. Among other animals, there are but " a few that span a century, and tho turtle, the slow, plodding tortoise, is among the few.- Henry M. Kepler, ' of Middletown; Aid., found a turtlel on his farm the other day, and on the shell - of the turtle was cut, "C. S., 1761." j Air. Kepler looked oyer some old , records on, the prem ises, and found that the letters aiid date were cot on the turtle by Casper Shoaf, who owned and oc cupied the farm at that time 126 years ago. ; - - j ' ' m-'..- - ; Give a the Blackberry a Chance. Winston Eepubliean. It is a wonder to us ' that - some enterprising, gentleman has not turned his attention to the; black berry crop and engaged iu the wholesale manufacture of V, wine. Of late years, as a dried commodity of trade, the blackberry ,ha3 inatc fially declined. ' The crop" never fails, grows luxuriantly, upon every untilled field and as h wine pro ducer should .be valuable, being very pleasant to the taste and pos sessing eicc-llent medicinal prop-. NORTU CAUOLLNA SCHOOLS. Intcrestlnj; Facts Concerning the Normal and rublic Schools. .The Raleigh correspondent of the Richmond Dispatch bos furnished that paper with the following: Some inieresting.nformation in re gard to the sebess was obtained at the office of the Superintendent of rublic lustrnction. Jhere 'are eight, white normal schools. To each of these the f?tatemakes an annual appropriation of $500. They oegin in nearly an cases alter July 5th. There are five colored normal ebools. Four of these receive $1,500 annually. Their terms do not. begin until in September, and they are maintained for over half the years. .The other colored nor mal school, which, strictly speak ing, is a university, is kept - open nine months in the year. All the normal schools receive from $35 to $150 yearly from the Peabody fund: ibe public schools are, as a rale, now closed. Alanv of them "will reopen in September. The retu.ns of attendance, etc., are made up to November 30th of each year. y Last year about $850,000 was expended upon these schools, and a sum. ra ther in excess of that will this year be expended. The increase in the attendance at these schools is rapid. It is said that a third of all tne children of school age (six to twenty one) were, in attendance this . year. The new system of taxing railways will increase the school fund. Take the county of Wake, for instance. It will receive about $5,000 addi tional from thi3 source. Ail the receipts from tax go to the counties, and, while four-fifths go to the-gen- eral fund, one-fifth goes to the school fund. . The - railways have never before paid thi3 tax. The fact is that the act passed by the last Legislature on this subject wag a compromise. The railways, ad mitting that before this their prop erty had not been listed and had paid.no tax in this way, agreed to pay and stop litigatiou. for 'many suits had been instituted. So; the public schools share iu the general benehtr. r A North Carolina IiiTcntion. Durham Tobacco Plant. ' The new bag machines invented by Air, Will H. Kerr are in place and ready for work. They attend to business in the most - thorough going manner possible, and each machine turns ont from, ten ; to fif teen thousand bags per. day. "We are not machinists enough to ex plain the working of the bag ma chines so anr one can understand us, but we know that, theyr make bags faster than anything we ever saw or dreamed oL- The place for the draw.-string is hemmed, ' then both sides of the bags are sewed at the same time. The cloth unwinds from an immense spool, the hem is turned and stitched, a little knife jnmp3 out at the right time -and cuts the cloth the proper size ; as soon as this is done, a plate that waits for the center of the cloth catches it and puts it within; reach of the two needles that sew the sides. One after another the little bags roll out, so fast it almost makes your head swim. " v v Air. Kerr is a North Carolinian, a son of the late W. C. Kerr, who was for many years State geologist. lie nas oeen in liion, jn.' i., more tlu a year perfecting the machines and .Superintending their construc tion, a)d now comes to hfs Statto make his "f attune and enjoy his triumph. ''TheTfreorXjlie old land yet." ' ""v- The Raleigh News and Observer states that Air. Kerr, has recently refused $100,000 for his invention. ' HU ' . .- General R.' B. Vance has pub lished a book of poems, .'Heart Throbs From the Aiountains.' It contains much that is elevating and refined Pome of the poems were written while he. was in prison at Fort Delaware and with that warm, So u thern se n t i m en t we so in ueh ad -mire in the poems of Father Ryan. Li ke Father Ryan, too, h is poems are filled with a religious fervor and a trust in -the Almighty as im plicit as . a child's- - The proceeds from the sale of the book are to be devoted to building a church, near Gen'I .Vance's home. : It is issued by the Southern Alethodist Publish ing House, Nashville, - Tenn., and costs 75 ; cents. We venture to quote two- stanzas from "Neysr take-the oath." . - "Soldier, friend and brother, too, . While our .flag of bonnie blae ' , Bttiblem of the brare apd trne - .' " Kisses stm the gale, , Gather np your manhood's miffht, , . What though gloomy be the night, , Tia not Northmen can affright, ; Heroes never qnail 1 ' A grandnury in Gainesville, Ga., it is related, had found, some years ago, a bill oi inaictmenc against person for carrying concealed weap- 0113 -Une OI toe jurur aruje uu said : "We have found a4)ill against that man; now let us search the grand jury for concealed weapons.' It was found tnat ne, tne loreman and five other joror3 had pistols in their pockets, vhen they recov ered from the shock of Uhi3 discov ery the indictment 'was torn up and ITEMS OF .NEWS. A German newspaper devoted to forestry says that lor forest culture in Germany there is a decided pref erence for American hickory A New York firm has bought 0,000 walnut trees in Lee. Scott and Wise conn tits, in Virginia, near the Kentucky line, for; $13 each, paying $25,000 down: No liquor seller will hereafter be received into any Masonic lodge in Dakoja cither by initiation or jiffil iationVthe Grand Lodge at Huron having adopted a resolution to that effects ,-. r ; . , . - News has just been received at Alanson, Iowa that Rev. Dr. Reid, wno lett last winter to become a missionary in Central Africa, ! baa been killed and eaten by a tnbe oi cannibals " - A Termont bov learned to make cider brandy in his mother's tea pot from the information concern ing the Vpbvsiologtcal effects of alcohol contained m one of bis obligatory text books. Gen. Aliles is' reported to express the belief that th6 outbreak among the Southwestern Apaches was duo to bad whiskey, That niay be one of the elements, but there are strong opinions that the bad ? whiskey would have done no harm if. it had not been mixed with bad Indians. ; At Quebec, June 20th, a mob attacked tho Salvation Army while the latter was. parading the streets, throwing stones and missiles at them. Several of the "ladies" wero seriously injured and one, Miss AIcHarge, was probably fatally so. Three arrest wjcre made. The Adjutant-General has re ceived an original roster of the First North Carolina regiment in the Alexican war, also of a company from , this State in the United States army in tha& war. There were in' all eleven companies from North Carolina. , - The Lynchburg Advance sent out a large number of inquiries in re gard to the; crops in V irginia, and the total of the answers summed up shows that wheat i3 very promising and is now being .harvested. Corn is an averageand of tobacco not more than half a crop was planted but what there is is doing well. Albert Taborn, colored, waa hanged last Saturday in Oxford, for the crime of burglary. He de clared he was innocent "of the charge; said his. brother, now confined' in Oxford jail, was guilty of setting I that town on fire a few months ago. iabern 8 father was executed at the same, place many years ago. &Thcre was a tremendous crowd to witness the, execution, but there was no dis order. The unloaded pistol is one of the most dangerous weapons known to civilized . man. Tho boomerang, on account of, the unexpectedness of its approach, can alone compare with the unloaded pistol, and even the boomerang does not fill " the whole bill. ; A little son of Air. Billie Carter, janitor of the market house, and a little negro boy on Sunday evening were playing. with a pistol known to be empty. It is empty now and the boy has a hole in his hand.- Durham Plant. Educational progress in North Carolina is of a marked character, and the school fund increases stead ily each year. In 1886 there were 547,308 children of the school age, and of these 305,598 attended the public schools. Of . the $670,672 ' a were t 94 derived from polls and $258,799 from property, in ibab were was expended for tuition of white youth $366,037, and for colored youth $191-059. The State appropriates $6,000 a year for Teachers' .Insti tute which are held during vaca tions. , S : V-lv'-V A good many years ago several diamonds, small though quite pure, were found in Rutherford county, North Carolina. Some were found later jn one or two' other counties. One of these was placed by its own er in a bottle, and the bottle was set upon a mantel-piece. A servant saw the bottle "with a little piece of rock in it. .- She threw both out of the window. The diamond, Aortb quite a sum, could never be fonnd afrain. Week before last a diamond, canary-colored; was found in AIcDowell county,- At is worth over $1,000. A dozen diamondi have been found at these same mines. ; , r Just-eleven shallow Sounds ' Slumber on our shore Albemarle and Pamlico Topsail, Stump and' Core, - Currituck and Croatan, -- Where the wild geese soar; Wrightsville, Alasonboro, Bogne, Roanoke and no more. Typhoid. Scarlet and Yellow Fe vers, Measles, Diptberia, Small : -r Por, Cholera, etc., Darby Prophylactic Fmid wiD destroy the infection'of all fevers and contagions and infectious diseases. Will ! keep tbc atmosphere of any sick-room pure and wholesome, absorbing and destroying un healthy .efSuvia and r.iataLfion. Vi!l nor!rnu?-2 " 1 - ! --:i-I whatever, not by - ;Vrr3-ic? it." Uo l'i'Ii in every sick BUY. Situatid in the very heart of the business portion of North Car olina, at the junction of ths "Wei- ern orth Carolina and Richmond & Damillo Hail road, 800 feet abotft he level of t bo ica, 250 mi let in- and, 100 mile tatt of Mount Alitchcll (the highest point in tba United State cast oi tht Ifcocfcj Mountains), in the center of the richest mineral and granite belt of the South, in the midst ox a rtco tobacco, wheat, corn and cotton zone, surrounded by magnificent forests, and with a population of 4,000, Salisbury is fast beeominjr a commercial; and manufacturing center. There are at present two banks, eleven churches, Ate tobacco factories, one cigar factory, three tobacco exchanges (warehouse). two tanncric, five, maohine shops, three foundries, three hotels, three e newsnapcrt, railroad machine, car and locomotive shops, two steam sash, door and blind factories, gas works, water-works, about Jutj business houses, graded schools for both white and colored, a grammar school several private schools, two excellent music schools, Living stone College. The Building and Loan Aseociation is in splendid working order. New enterprises S rejected are a new railroad both orth and South, a $50,000 cotton factory, a woolen mill, two tobacco factories and a Brush Electrio Light Plant. The opportunities for investments are real estate, tim ber, manufacturing in general, granito, sawing and mining. The business men are reported to -be the tafest dealers in the State. The climate is delightful and ex ceedingly healthy. p The Virginia Senators, It is probably not generally known . that the two Virginias the old and West Virginia will be represented in the Senate of the Fiftieth .Con gress by an aggregate of tho young est members of that body in respect to years ever recorded in any two adjoining States. John. W. Daniel, who succeeds Alahone, is not ; yet fortyfour years old; his senior col league, Harrison Riddleberger, is a year younger, while Camden's suc cessor from West Virginia, Charlea J. Faulkner, is but forty, and his senior colleague, Kenna, is just thirty-nine. I Senator Kenna is a crcat f Aiorite in Washington and is considerec by his friends to bo quite at mnch of a Washingtonianas a West Vir ginian. Tho Senator is nothing if not original. Capt. Barritt is re- " sponsible for the story that he in troduced a novel feature into the campaigning and; canvassing 'busi ness a few years ago, that has ad ded immensely to his" already well established popularity. Ever since the right of suffrage was a preroga tive of the American people, the violin, or, to .speak more to the point, the fiddle, has been a very important factor in the bands of candidates at cross-roads meetings, huskiugs and barbecues. "Senator SATiTS Kenna is not only a good manipu lator of the bow, but is also one of the cleverest amateur photographers , , in the country, and he enters upon his field of labor twice armed. It is his custom, the captain says, to carry with him while on his politi cal circuit his violin and his photo graphic apparatus. The latter has -proven a wonderful influential -adjunct. v He .will photograph an entire family of his backwoods con stituency in group or detail and nresent the surnrised and delighted aboriginals with the same, which to them is more novel and acceptable ban a whole front row of seats in a siccus. It is estimated that Kenna a-r5422LJ three years, photographed two-thifdfCU the entire population of- the' rural and mountain district of his State, and has held thousands of discon tented voters safe to tne party on election day by the influence of hit camera. - , . Pimples, Boils, And Carbuncles retail from a debilitated, fnipoverLbed, or impure condition of tb blood.- Ajere SanaparOIa prrrente an4 curci these eruption and peiaful tumor, by removing thcir cauie; the only clTect oal way of treating them. ; , I Aycri SareeparfUi ba prevented th ' asual course of JJoIJe. wbka have pained and ditred me very aeaaon for everal year. Geo. Sca'rfi. PlalnvmeIIlch. I waa badly troubled whh PlmpJe en" tho fat ; a bo, with a dlsceloraUoa et tb kin. wUkh showed itself la crty dark patchea. Ko external treatment did mora than temporary good, Aycfs Earaapa ailh effected f J A Perfect Cure, nd I have not been troubled alnce. T, V'. Boddy, fil ver at., Lowell, Slats. ; . I wa: troubled with' Bofla, and ray health w.- much impaired. I be?aa Uhlngi Ayeir. artpariJl, : and, fa dao -titne, tbe tttf ptione all disappeared, and iny health fwa completely restored. John JL Kilrin. Editor Stanley Observer, Albcmarlei'X, C. ' - - ' ' I ivat troubled, for a lonr time, with , t - ' t i nuroor wnwa uppeami on.jtir race in ?'7 Iimplet gud Biotrbct. Aj'er't g iniii.a riiJa cured rue. I consider It tIo bc-t . blixxl pnriner in the world. Charka ii. Smith, AortkCrafUbury,Vt.. V, r' Ayer'si Sarcaparilla Ia aold by aUdrusista asd dealert la rat J ieine. ,Ak for Acer's Saraj)anIIa, and do not Le persnad-jd to tske any otte r. Vr;; art -A by Dr. J.C.A jt? fc CoIwetS, l'i a. - - Price CI J iU ItlUe, C .". ' 'P tbrcrn "ar.TT. . .. . . - i
North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1887, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75