Newspapers / The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, … / June 13, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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A H V A. M. Woodall, Editor. CAROLINA, CAROLINA, HEAVEN'S BLESSING ATTEND HER I" Subscription SI.OO Per Year. VOLUME 10 SMTHFIELD, N. C, SATURDAY., JUNE 13, 1891. NUMBER a JL J v J L ,J I J I ) Jl 4 1 JJL J I J i DIRECTORY. t (H NTT OF KICK lis. Sheriff I. t r.Uiiiittoii. i.tlU-.- In "iirf Superior onrt Iitk tire In Court limine. KririHtrr i( Det'tiw I. V V. . S. Steven, ol Oliver, ortlce in Caurt House. Trvatfiirfr P.. .1. Holt, ni in lite xt'iie ,.f K. J. Holt Co. . (Vrun r II. K. HooJ. iirvnvor T. It. Kullium. Sureriiit-ndi-nt of Health Ur. J.. I.. -er, oftW on Market Street next l"r to Hoard Count v ConnnixHiotiers 1. I . Houeytutt. Clmiriunn. J oh. .1. ,K- kuum, A. I. Johnson ami S. II. IIooil. Couutv Hoard of Kducntion U. . ohiij;. V. K. tierald and H. M. Johnnoti C.UBty Superintendent ot I'nbli.- Intrm tion. Trof. Ira T. Turlington. TOWN ()K'K'E11S. Huyor Ed. 8. Al'ell. CiiuiilimioTnir John lve ami 1. T. Y.nn.Kbloo.t, Kirnt Ward: M. Ivoh and W I., fuller, oeeond Ward: A. . smith .mil Puniel TUuiuaH, Third Ward: Seth ooiinll. J. I.. L via ami J. I. Hndnoii. 1 onrth W aid. Clerk F. C. llyinan. Trnrer lolm K. Hood. Tax Collector J. T. Cobb. I.lk-uian J. E. Diekrim. ciiikciiks. iietUodlrit Church on Second street. Ilev. W. Jl. I'uekett. l'M"tr, Services at 11 o't-lock. u. in. and o clock l. mi. on the hw oud Siindav of each month. Sunday School verr Sunday niornfiijr at 11-30 o'clock, l'r. J. II. Hwkwfth Superintendent. Tinyer uitettnir vrv Wednexdnv evening nt s f.Vioyk All are cordially iuvlteil to attend hee ervicci. MNMlonarv llaptint Church on seeoml atrawt, Rev.'O. C Horton l'lixtor. Services at 1 1 Jo 'clock a. nt. amis o'clock p. in. on thu fourth Suniiar in euch month. Siiu1hv ak-hool everr Nundav nmrnlnK at !-.HO o clock J. il. Beatv". Superintendent. ITnyer meyt in everv Thurwdav eveninn at S o'clock. All are cordially invited to attend these cryuef. Primitive Baptist Church Elder I. A 1. Jones, l'antor. Services every tiret Sunday and Saturday before at 11 o clock in each month. All ira cordially invited to attend t hes service. SCHOOLS. Tb Collegiate Institute Male and female. Profs. J. 1.. Iari and Ira T. Turllniftoii Principals, .1. A. Wellons, Irill Master. LODUES. OH Branch Lodtre. No. 3 I. O. O. F. ovar Smith and Woodward's store, coiner Market and Third ftreet. . M. new. -. C. V. Johuaon. V. O., lr. li. .1. Uwta every Frldav evenivu: Noble, ec y. at h o clock. Ali Odd Fellow htc connaiiy invueu. FelloivehipILodjte. So. 4. A. F. and A M. Hall on Second atreet. Elias Hose. . M. Titos. S. Thaln. Secretarv. Meets the second Saturday Id each month. All Masons are respectfully Invited. COUNTY FA I'M EII'S ALLIANCE. OFFICEliS : A. V. Tavlor. President : W. K. "fe. li. i -l'rtsident: E. 1). Suead. Secrctar : B. A. Vel loa. Treasurer: U H. ttower. chaplain; J. A. Wellons, Lecturer. ll-srular t '!( of t.ie.-t-In. the aocond Friday in January. Ap-!'. July and October. NEWS ITEMS, Ex-Governor Ilenrv Lippitt, of Rhode Island, died last- Fri day morniti";. The little town of Thomasville has voted $20,000 to the Girls Training school should it he located there. The whiskey trust has bought the Schufeldt and the Calumet distilleries of Chicago for the sum of two million dollars. These were the largest distillers out of the trust. The Chilian insurgent steam ship, Itata, has been surrendered to the United States authorities and delivered up all the arms, 5000 rifles, which she took on board off San Diego. James Rittcr, aged eighty-one years, who recently died at Elm Springs, Ark., had his coffin made more than a year ago and kept it in his bed-roon. It was made of black walnut and elegantly finished. He weighed 170 at his death. William W. Williams, of Ral eigh, N. C, son of the late John O. Williams of that place, was run oyer by a material train at Sandy Creek in South Carolina last Thursday and almost in stantly kiiled. His remains were taken to Raleigh and interred Saturday. An expedition, for exploring North Greenland has been got ten vp in Philadelphia and the party started out on their ex pedition Saturday. The party consists of Lt. Peary, of the Navy, and his wife and five as sociates. Near Myersdalc, Pa., thedwcll ing of a prominent farmer was burned and in it two little girls aged 'J and 13 years. Nine other people were in the house but escaped, four of whom were compelled to jump out of the window from the second story. Reports from Kodiak, Alaska, state that the grippe is causing great havoc among the natives. There are no doctors or medical stores on the Islands and they ate dying at a fearful rate. The are suffering great hardship on account of a poor catch of sea otters, on which they depend for a lividg. A YEAR OF STORM. Weathor-Sharp Foster's Discouraging: Prediction and His Reasons Therefor. Beginning May of thh with the iirst of year and ending with IUl last week in Julie. 1S02, will constit ute ilu greatest storm period since 18.-2-i. and it will be at its greatest force during the coming winter. The winter will set in early and with its un usual cold ami ureat snow storms and blizzards will be what is termed a very hard winter. These winter storms will begin in the northern tiers of States with great severity in October, and an early winter, very severe all over the continent , will follow. The force of the storms will increase very gradually, and the May storms will not be so marked as those later on. We will probably have an occasional tornado, but destructive storms will not at tract general attention till after Tune 8. when the ;rreat battle of the elements will begin in earnest, and every month will begin its noted storms. June is not aiwavs a month of great storms, but it will be this year, and should my predictions be verified as to that month the public will give more attention to what I have said as to the eleven months that follow it October and November arjc the months that usually brif the tropical hurricanes that arft-erome times very disastrous on the Gulf of Mexico and occasionally do damage as far north as Ten nessee and Arkansas. Thegrent hurricanes that visited the lower Mississippi and the coast of the Gulf of Mexic o in 1832-3 will be repeated next October and No vember. Wherever von find an old man who followed ilat-boat ing on the Ohio and Mississippi river m lS32-o von will hnd an oracle who can reve.al much his torv about the hurricanes of the lower Mississippi rivet at that time. Portions of Florida were jjrcatlv damaged bv the hurri canes sixty years ago. i cto not desire to create any unnecessary sensation about this very great storm period, but no harm can come by being prepar ed fur the very severe winter and the great storms. Hundreds of thousands of people who read my weather forecasts every week will have great faith hi the pre dictions made in this letter, for they know that 1 am very careful and seldom mislead them. The forecasts arc not based on any superstition or secret, but on what I know to be, real physical causes. The causes uf this period of great disturbances will be the equinox of Saturn in Octolcr and the equinox of Jupiter next January. Jupiter's equinox occured in August and Saturn's in October, 1832, and hence the great storms of that and the year following. The equinoxes of thes planets cause great elec tric disturbances in our solar system just as do the equinoxes of our earth in March and Sep tember, but on a larger scale. Electricity is the force that caus es all storms, and the sun and planets throw an electric force far into space over their equators, as docs the eleetrodynamo, and consequently when any planet passes its equinoctial the elec- trict tensions of the sun and of that planet are disturbed, and simultaneously the electric force ol every planet in the solar sys tem is unbalanced, which effects the electric current of the earth. Dallas News. Southern Farmers and Force Bill. the The Western farmers seem de termined on the formation of a third party. Even in Ohio, where the agriculturists in convention recently decided to stick bv the two old political organizations. it is stated that the farmers will enter actively, and as a body, into the campaign, and in many of the counties and in not a few of the senatorial districts farm er's tickets will be placed in nomi nation. However the third partv move ment mav affect the farmers of the West, those of the South must necessarillv discard all out side alliances and remain loyal to the Democracy. As has al ready frequently been shown in these columns, this is tx necessity arising from the demands of the self-protection and self-preserva tion. So long as social equality between the races remains the chief cornr-stone of the Repub lican party, so long must everv element of the white population of the South stick closely togeth er to guard their civilization. They cannot commit social suicide, as they would most as suredly do if by any act of theirs they jeopardized Democratic suc cess and permitted the Repub lican party to to regain power. There is vet another menace which seriously threatens to dis turb and ruin the South in case of Republican supremacy, and that is the Force bill. That in famy is only scotched not as the South-hating Republican party finds itself in position to warm it into new life. Senator Gor man, of Maryland, whose heroic fight against this revolutionary measure will always be grateful ly remembered, cxpi esses most emphatically the opinion that the bill ik not yet a dead issue, and his views are cordially in dorsed by equally as firm a friend of the South, Senator Faulkner, of West Virginia. This gentle man predicts that Republican success at the next election will not only revive the Force bill, but such success would fasten that measure upon the South. How, with his social and poli tical life thus threatened, can the Southern farmer think for a moment of runninir the risk of again turning the country over to the tender mercies of radical ism by deserting the Democracy and allying himself with the untried and doubtful experiment of a third or "National" party? Outside of any other consider ation. there is no necessity for his taking any such position The Democratic partv has al ways proven itself the tried and true friend of the farmers, as of every other class of our popula tion, and has never permitted an upportunitv to pass to ad- a a - vance their interests. Exocri ence of the past has abundantly shown that not only the farmers .of the South but of the entire country can possibly do no bet ter than trust their fortunes with the party of the people Certainly they can not expect to better themselves by any action which possible a return to the power of the partv which, throughout its existence, has invariably shown itself the friend of monopoly and the advocate of advancing the interests ot the few at the ex pense of thev many. Whatever others may do, then, the Southern farmers mustie- main Democratic. Social in teeritv and political liberty are vitally neeccssary to their ex istence, and thev cannot affort A - to bring ruination on them selves" by directly or indirectly aiding and abetting the party of negro equality and bayonet rule Richmond Times. The Maharajah's Treas ures. We were taken to the old place in the heart of the city, to see the treasure room. Two huge cheeth- as, carefully muzzled, used for hunting bucks, were on the palace steps. The regalia of Ba rodais valued at 3.000.000 We were first shown the jewels worn by the Maharajah on State occasions. inese consist 01 fi gorgeous collar of about 500 diamonds some of them as big as walnuts arranged in five rows, surround ed by a top and bcttqn row o emeralds of the sanies size: the pendant of a famous diamond called the "Star of the Deccan, an aigrette to match is worn in the turban; then followed strings of pearls of perfect roundness, graduated from the size of a pea to that of h. large marble ; won drous rings, necklaces, clusters of sapphires, and rubies as big as grapes. The greatest marvel of all is u carpet about 10 by 0 feet, made entirely of strings or pure and col ored pearls, with great central and corner circles of diamonds. This carpet took three years in making, and cost 300,000. This was one of Khandc Rao' mad freaks, and was intended to be sent to Mecca to please a Mahommedan lady who had fascinated him, but the scandal of such a thing being done by a Hindoo Prinze was too serious'. and it never left Darotla. ; pleading with her and using vio- We were also taken to see twopence and tenderness by turns, she guns, weighing 280 pounds each, j remained firm and would not let of solid gold, with two com- i him have it. As a consequence panions o! si'.ver, the ammunition j he swore a terrible oath that he wagons, bullock harness and ; woidd never speak to her as long ramrods all being silver. Phila- as he lived, and up to the present delphia Press. : time he has kepthis word. From presperity they have sunk to ab- earthquakes Great interest is taken bv thoughtful persons in the recent earthquake in Quebec and the slijrht shocks lelt in our seaboard States during the last few years. Some scientists who have an es pecial stuclv of seismic disturb ances assure us that the.e is an intimate relationship between i volcanoes and earthquakes, and that there is no trreat danger roin the earth tremors yj.j-g ; 1 there is no volcanii. frMin tirktf i To Bnlwtm.tJair. tliw tl.rv tdpv point to the fact, which cannot vvnose neirs are in touti ignor bc nuestioiied. that the maiorit v ance of his existence. Year after & t VI X V Ui t4tmv wall W v. v -v- l ofearthrinakes seMii to occur ,t, . 1 ' J .- volcanic district But there is no volcanic forma tion along the Atlantic seaboard. The most destructive earthquake in many years was th one that created such havoc in Chailcs- ton. Quebec i far away Jrom any volcanic indications, and so are the districts in which slight shocks tire so frequent in the Eastern States. The theory al- far from conclusive. Volcanoes apparently serve a purpose akin to that of the hd or the spout ot a tea-kettle to let steam or gases escape. In the earth's solidifying process within certain gases arc generated. whk:h find vent throujrh voicances. The most plausible theory to account for cathquakes and the only one that apparently ex plains the shocks in the Atlantic States, is the shrinkage of the earth's crust on the inner side in the cooling process and the sud den matter. This would account for the recent tpiake in Quebec and elsewhcic along the St. Lawrence river, where the sur face formation is almost a mas. of solid rock. And if this theory be correct there is a possibility of a shock anywhere at. 'my time. There is no reason, however, why anybod y should be fearful of consequences resulting from earthquake. Some disastrous shocks have certainly occured, but they rarclv amount to any thing more than an interesting sensation and a topic for conver sation. The danger really lies chief! v in the structures that arc shaken by the earth's convul sion. The old idea that vast fis sures were opened in the earth by these quakes had very little foundation. Tn a few instances small seams have appeared in the surface but no great destruction was ever caused by jcople tumbling into them. But how much of an earth quake do you suppose it would take to topple over some of the sky-scraping buildings that have lately become the fashion in our large cities? A few years ago a ycry pronounced earthquake was felt in New York Citv and . x -t- . 1- 1 for some distance along the coast. At the time the writer was sitting on the piazza of a hotel at Long Branch. There was a sudden rumbling and shaking of the building, convev- imr th. irrmr fusion tliiit a heaw bairtraire truck was being drawn oc- C ' vnnillf nlntlir 4 ll fH(IV7!l been in existence then it is aiKir disappeared at once au question wheethcr there might the young man explained to l.ri 11 ctnlilfMi f si 1 1 in ' those around him ; the brick market. A very slight vibration at the ground would be terrific at the fourteenth story of a building. Philadelphia Times. wwrv. w 1 lie wi cue ugauuiui In the Northwestern part of i names given to many of the Un thecitv live a couple who for! ion is no doubt known to the twenty-two years never address-j Eight O'clockers. Alabama, for ed a word to each other. In example, signifies, in the langu- 1809 the husband was a man of means, owning considerable property, but through peculiari ties more than generous he be became a sort of "Coal Oil John ny." Houses and land were giy en away without an intsant's consideration, The wife expos tulated, but in vain. Finally nothing was left except the little cottage which was then and is now their place of abqrle. For tunately this stood in the wife's name, and though he used every 1 effort to secure possession or it. jeet poverty. lie makes what he can out of a news-stand which he keeps. The old couple have two children both daughters. One has been married for some years to a man of weath, while the other lives at home with her parents, and seems to take the responsibility of both on her self. It is a painfull sight to see the old man every evening at o'clock distributing his papers to fie very houses which twenty- f iru'j rt r . f r . a r . 1 1 . i . . i v t,ijr.cii: wt.iv. 1110 x ii,uuu bv the gilt of which he nas made neat little, fortunes or manv 1 '!.. .1 1 year tons on, nauy uccuming fecblor, "forgetting the world and bv the work! forgot.'" Philadel- i phia Record, i I Ho Cot His Dollar. A strapping young man sat in the Erie depot, across the Hud son, the other day waiting for his train. He had t welyescvthe- stones in a bundle on his ri"ht hand, and a cucko clock in a ' box on his left. As he was look ing around the waiting-room he gave a sudden start. Then he started some more. Then he rose up and walked over to a A flashy dressed man about forty ears old, whom any one wotih have spotted as as a fakir, ant asked : "Don't vou travel around with a tooth powder?" "No sir," was the sharp rcpiv "Wasn't you up in ElizabctI last rail?" "No, sir." its vou v.iis. and 1 11 bet on it ! Vou are the same darned fel ler, and I know it !" Oil . HIIHL IIUI. Liim lllttill. demanded the other. "It means that 1 was in Elizz ..e:-- W1...4 -i t.: beth hist Fall and bought a box of your tooth powder, Vou cSian'ed a five-dollar bill, ant darn 1113' hide if you didn't horns waggle me out of a dollar! "Sir!" "No use, old fellow! Iknowet ve the minit I irot eves on ve Same big diamond pin same ret neck-tie same nose, humped up in the middle like a circus camel I want that dollar!" "This is outrageous! I'll cal a policeman!" shouted the fakir ' Call and be durned to ve. but I'll lick ve first! You cither come down with that dollar or PI wrdlop ve till ye can't holler!" "Look here!" replied the othe in much milder tones, you are mistaken. It was my cousen who was in Elizabeth. He dead now." "Then I'll take it out of you !" "He is dead, as I remarked, and rather tlnn have any blot rest ing on his fair escutcheon I will pav vou the dollar." "That's all right! I don't know anything about 'scutch eens, but I've got to have that dollar or pull hair! I've bin look i all over'thc face of the world. And I've laid awake nights think in' how I'd make ve holler like an Injun if I ever got my paws He was given a dollar, and the "I'm almost sorry he give up so ioon. I was just akin' clean in mv toes to lick him all over a if rtv-acre lot!" N. Y. World. Two Queer Word8. .i r t, i :r..i i age of the Indians, "Here we rest;" Minnesota, Sk3'-tintcd waters, etc. 1 doubt, however, if they were asked to explain the origin of Arizona and Oregon, whether they could give the correct an swer without consultation with some of the honorary members of the club the uncles, aunts or big brothers or sisters, and, per haps, mary of the latter would be puzzeled. That part of the territory of the knifed States now known as Arizona was inhabitted by a , tribe ot Indians whom nature had been lavish in the matter of nose, the Indians themselves ac centuating the prominent nasal appendage by piercing the car tilage or gristle between the nostrih and wcaringin it a bone, a stick or a ring. To the Spanish-speaking people of Mexico thev were known as "The llir Noses." In the Spanish language nose "nariz." In that language you can also express a diminu tive or an augmentative bv a ermination to the name-word. 'Narizito" would mean a ' little nose." and "narizon" a "great big nose." The feminine of nari zon would be nstrizona. so that the n having being eliminated by usage and time, we have the name as it stands to-day Ari zona. In the same manner the State of Oregon receives its name from its original tribe of Indians, who! wcic iiuuuu jui men oil: cars. They pierced their ears and cn- i' c. t.: t.r. i arged the lobe with pieces of wool. In he Spanish language ear is oreja, l lie addition ot the augmentative on makes it orejon, or "big ears.' lime and usage have changed the j to g and thus we have Oregon. Ex. Uncle Sam's Fishes. Th is warm spun g wea ther temps most boys and girls out of doors. And doubtless the thoughts of many of them turn to pleasant expeditions along the bank of some shaded stream. But it is to bovs in th country thnt this season is one of peculiar interest There is no picture as bright with life as that of a country lad, whose sun-burned checks are flushed with health, with hare feet in the rocky stream and a battered straw-hat half-shading the laughing eyes. But to com plete it, should add a home-made fishing rod and an old tomato can full of bait and a small, yel low, stub tailed dog in the back ground. Then the potrait of youth's happy springtime i per fect. Fishing is no doubt, one of the most pleasant of amusements when one has good luck. And those that are fond of the sport would scarcely fail to feel an in terest in the work of the United States Fish Commission. This branch of our Government occupies in Washington a square, brick building, very plain in its external appearance. On the first fioorare long rows of tables, upon which large glass boxes or aquariums are placed. These boxes are prettily decorated with sand and little grottoes of stones and fern like plants that grow in water. Within the tanks arc little fish es darting about perch, bright sunlight, flashinggold ones fish es of all shades and hues. On other tables arc tall ghiss bottles idled with eggs in the process of hatching. These jars arc only from a foot and a half to two feet high, yet they arc capable of holding each several million fish eggs. When theeggs are hatched, which becomes in a lew day's time, the young fish arc drawn off into another bot tle by aid of a syphon. Then, being placed in large cans cap able of holding about fifteen gal lons of water, Ihey are shipped into distant parts of thecountry. For this purpose a sjxrcial car belonging .o the commission is used. The object of this service is to breed fish in order to supply some of the waste front those caught, and also to stock rivers with new varities. For instance, in some rivers, salmon have never been een. Now, those little fish es are brought and placed by the commission in these rivers and in a few years the water gives a bountiful supply of them. Thus different varities are car ried to all parts of the country and the rivers of the different States kept from becomming de populated. The eggs hutched in the build ing are drawn from the fishes caught in the Potomacand" after- wards released Thus the fish is still suitable lor food, find the eggs, which would otherwise be destroyed, are used in multiply- ing the fish supply of the world, Philadelphia Times. SubscrilK' for Tin: Hi.KaLP. STATENKWS. The county Commissioners of Buncombe county appropriated $1,000 for an exhibit at the ex position. Wadesboro Intelligence! : Wheat and oats are Ix-ing h.irve stcd this week. Fine crops of both are reported. The new bank, the Farmer and Merchants, at Hal.-igh will open August 1st with a capital stock of $100,000. Raleigh will have a Horse Show commencing July 4 th. There will le several races and premiums for the winners. A good many fine hordes are lxing en tered. Sanford Express: The Magis trates and County Commis sioners last Monday decided to issue $1 ",000 in bond to pav the countv indebtedness. At Greensboro last Wednesday night a car nt theR. isc D. Depot, loaded with oil was discovered to be on fire and was bnrncd en tirely. Loss about $1,000. The Irish potato industry is receiving a good deal of atten tion now in the eastern part of the f.tate. It is said that New Iierne will ship 80,000 barrels tbi season. A severe storm of wind and hail passed along the line of Car olina Central railroad in Kolcson county last Friday. Some of the hail stone were two inches in diameter and the damage to crops and trees was great. . Washington Gazette : Cnpt. J. A. Cox, of Hyde county, sold .a cow recently, and when the buy er went in the woods to take her home he found the cow stand ing perfectly stili, but ione dead. Cap4. Cox himself 0-1 is us the stov. Southport Leader : Commis sioner Goodman repot I s the fol lowing: A rattlesnake was kill ed last week tit Mr.J. L. Tharp's residence, on Town Creek, meas uring five and one-half feet, had twelve rattles, needle Mid thread, button and button hole. Chatham Record ; Mr. James N. Green, o! this county, has a young jenny that sucks a cow, and the cow seems as fond of it a if it was her calf. Mr. John Mclver, of Caje Fear township, has presented to th'- Record's museum an acorn filled with honeycomb that was found in th middle of a lce-gum. Now how did the acorn get there? Ashcvillc Citizen : James Dougherty, the man who was so nearly killed by his brother Rob ert on Sunday morning, is re ported as slightly improved this morning by Dr. E. B. Starnes. His physicians say the prosjxets for his recovery are a little bet ter now. Nothing has been heard by the authorities of the where abouts of Roltert Dougherty. Faycttcville Observer: The first spike on the Short-Cut ex tension of th'' A. C. L. south was driven here Monday afternoon in the presence of quite a mutilicr of our people. About five miles of the road-bed at this end of the line arc ready for the rails, with equally as many miles at Row land end. The entire work is progressing very nicely. The Board of Magistrates and Commissioners of Forsyth coun ty met Monday and made an appropriation of $fo0 for the Forsyth exhibit at the Southern Exposition in Raleigh in Octolcr and NovemlxT. The internal revenue collections for Mav foots up $fl,MH.70. Winston ship- ed 80 1,81- net pounds of man ufactured tobacco during Mav. News reaches here of a ter rible affair which occured a dav or two since nt Lower Fork, in Burke county. Julim York, the tvvlvc year old sou of James Yotk, shot a ud killed i " en-yen r old sister, Easter York, with a shot gun. the whole load entered her fore-head just above the right eye, from which wound a large nmout of her brains came out. The bov has unloosed to i the killing, and avs hp iitt bd it to eare her, and did not know , there was anv cap on the gnn. that that their but from all the evidence can In. gathered it -ecins .thev were in a fight whih i parents were out at work near 1 the house Winston Sentinel,
The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 13, 1891, edition 1
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