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Stye t)arl0tttb0crotr. ' if hi; iji static ZUBSOJilPTION RAM8 i i ' MixdU 4 00 mrte Hontto .9 00 OM Month. r W WXMKLX MDTTIOX I Wteldv, county) atom (2 00 tfthtcixintv.&Ktpad,.................. 810 Six Mxth ....... 1 00 WeraLBettuctUxuscr Cktim. THE OBSERVER JOB DIPABTMENT Bb&nirx want, and wtt) te latest jrirfe oTjpfc and, every manner 'of Job Prtto cs iQ0 IshatshortnoUoe,.!.; i . .7 tJW.l BLANKS, BILL-HEADS. l LSTTEB-HEADS, CARDS, "'- v" 1 TAGS, BECBIPTSi POSTKR3, ' PBXRAiQIXSVHAiroBYXXGb' PAMPHucTs, mcmiARs. -checks, a 'WW VOL. XXIII. CHARLOTTE, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1880. NO. 3,461. THE HEW BEVEXITB BILL sswwsswsslsMMiiSMMlsSi . .-l- x .. . i.. , . . , ,. ; ,ii-i.:.i.-iy.:i . tprr B1TISTB DULSACI; VALKNUNNNB WKI.TISG; 1 ANGUXDOC, point calncom. BRETONS E, BLACK. FRENCH AND BUGLE FICHUEi; LANGUlDOC ANja i'ALJStC H ? -. i ' JABOTS; CHECKTSD 8 ASH, BROCADED . . . . : ' ' : ! f . AND FANCY NKCK RIBBOSS; . BED, GREEN A GOLD CJSECKID TABLE DAMASK, (something rich), LACK LISLE GLOVES, EMBROIDERED TIDIES, BUNTINGS IN PLAIN 4 LACE EFFECTS, LUNCH CLOTHS, &c Ac, 4a, at ALEXANDER & HARRIS'S. roar. 14. 00ts and gnats. SPRING STOCKi 1880. OUB SPRING STOCK OKJ BOOTS, SHOES, IWTS AND TRUNKS Is now Complete. We are determined to sustain our lormer reputation for selling THE BEST BRANDS Of goods, which every: sensible person knows Is the cheapest In the end. Please call and see ufl before buying.. fW W will deal fairly and hon estly with you. PEGBAM 4 CO. March 11. lf80. , ' Democrat and Home eepy. i l. mmm Boot.Sb.oe. HAT AND TRUNK ESTABLISHMENT, TRYON STREET. Next Door to Dr. J. H. McAden s. If shoes you wish to buy, Call at Aslel's store and try ' His boots and shoes how well they fit; Also, hats and trunks, so cheap for cah His prices are exceedingly low; Cash sales, small profits his mottOf Remember, when you wu to trade. That money saved It money made By purchasing at Aster's store You save full ten per cent or more. Prove the fact; you'll find In time More trutH than poetry hi my rhyme; 80 go and try him without fall, h,n' a7Hi"ng connected mrwlt wttb. the above nuse, I am sure that my old friends and custom. m can be better suited and tor lass money than W any othar h nil an In f ha nitw . mar H 7 77 "w 3 m i vxrWTTT 1 T. HO. D. GRAHAM, N the state and United States Courts. Collec- tons. Home and-Foreign, follclted. Ab r; " of TlUes, Surreys, AC, fttrnlshed for com katlon. A LaoT 'rom the Norti, bmt to pen a Chll- V dten Drees-Making BtabrUitwaent,its the Patronage of the Charlotte Ladles. All kinds of chiwrens' clothes made. i Fine Dresses ft Special. tJ. Hoom up-stalrs, next door to LeRoy Davidson. mar28 -dhT" Mki. MURTISHAW. COMPLETED STOCK COMPLETE. OUR SPRING STOCK Is now Complete in every Particular. WE INVITE INSPECTION AND CRITICISM, Feeling assured that no House In the City Offers a Finer, More Tasteful, OR CHEAPER LINE OF GOODS. THE Handsomest Assortment of Hosiery In the Market, ace Lisle Gloves with ten Buttons, a most beautiful line of Dress Buttons, new and stylish; Lace Fichus, white a black. Zephyr Shawls, Forchon, Bretonne, Yalenclenne, Languedoe, and real Laces. Come early and get one of om Handsome Para sols. They are going oft rapidly. Don't forget that you will always find everything New an'd Styl ish at T. L. SEIGLE & CO'S. mar28 pWscjclIatte0tis. Macon, Ga., Mares 81, 1879. From having been Intimate for a number of years with the proprietors of Swift's Srpfelilltic Specific, I nave Known much of its manufacture and Its use. There are men in the community well known citizens who were victims tn early life to Syphlllls, the most terrible corse that ever afflicted the human family, and who have taken the S. S, medicine, and are now, to all appear anees,and In their own belief, as free from the taint disease as the first man, fresh from the hands of his Maker. Delicacy of course forbids their public recommendations of this medicine, but I am al lowed refer to tbe skeptic privately to those who will endorse everything that can be sld In Us lavor. BelDg professionally moch opposed to en dorsing or recommending nostrums or secret rem edies, it is with hesitation that i attach my name to this article; but I know whereof I speak when I say that our science has not yet made public a combination equal to this for the purpose indica ted. Tbe greatest boon the government could be stow on hundreds of thousands or its citizens would be to purchase this receipt of its proprietors, and make it public for the benefit of the present and all coming generations. T. L. MASSENBURG, Ph. G. :o: Prepared only by the SWIFT SPECIFIC COM PANY, Atlanta, Ga. Sold by T. C. Smith and L. R. Wrlston & Co. Call on your druggist fpr a copy of "young Men's Friends." mar26 d&wlm. A VEGETABLE MEDICINE FOR THE BLDOaUVER&KIDNEYS. CURATINE, For B1m4 PlieuM. guratIne, . . For Liw Com pi tint. CURATINE, To KMUy PiMM. CURATltlE, For Sbaonuttiaa. CURATINE, For ftsrofal Kmw- CURATIME, rr ErrriptlM, Pimflet, BIo4cbi, etc. Nov. 15 d-w A. vnedlclaal cam ponnd of known value combining in one prep ration the cumtlve powers for the evils which produce all dis eases or the JSItxxt, the IAer, the JKMnev. HarmleM In action and thorough. In tts effect. It Is unexcelled for tbe core of all Jllcod ZHa nm raoh as 0tpA ttlm, Tummi: Bail, Tetter, Bait MHmutn, Mheumatimm, Mer-Mrrter-fMMNtaff, also OmumUfttlmn, gemtion. Hour Stom ach, JBeti of ZIrin, ete. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT. THE BEffO CHEKCiX CO. --c, Md. rpHE WASHINGTON GAZETTE, PublUbed at the National Capital every Sunday Giving a full resume of the preceding week, news of all national topkw and general intelligence, be sides being the only , REPRESENTATIVE SOUTHERN PAPER There supporting tbe National Democratic Party. Edited by OEOHGE C. WEDDERBURN. of Virgin la, formerly publisher of the Richmond (Va.) Enquirer. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : Single copies, one year, postage paid. 9 2 00 Five copies, to one address, postage paid. 7 5 Ten copies, to one address, postage paid, 12 50 Twenty copies, to one address, postage pd, 20 00 (With a copy free to the person securing the clubs.) For further information address GAZETTE PUBLISHING COMPANY, Box 322, Washington. D. C, or the Editor Dec. 23. (irayV Specific Medicine, TRADE MARKThe Sret Kng-TRADK MARK IkCUICU J , All unfailing cure for Seminal Weakness, Sper matorrhea, Im- nntnncv. and all diseases . that I (1 11UW. ga a BAnnence of self- BEFORE TAalKfi.Memo'ry.Unlver-AFTER TAIIMQ. iiti Lassitude, Pain In the Back, lHmness of Vis slon, Premature Old Age, and many other Diseases that lend to InsanlV Consumption, and a Pre mature Grave. , . W-Full particulars are In our pamphlet, wWra we desire to send free, by m.ail to every ene. The 2io!llc Medleinals SP M all druggists at $1 per puckage. (ir six packages for $5. pr will be sent tree hr mill on receipt of tbe money by addressing W W THE GRAY MEDICINE CO,, JIo, 10 Mechanics' Blonk- Detroit, Mich. Sold In Charlotte, wholesale and retail, by Dr. T. v. Smith and all druggists everywhere. marCdAwly. UNDERTAKING, A full oner or uviii wnsumu u uouu ?heap' cj: ;" 7 J vTTLHILM, I Oct f ' Rogers' Furniture Store fTTPfeNATU RES OWN I lull lFIII5DY 'ill H I1 II II H. I ! ll I lilt II Tl II 'III 1 II II 1 ' I II It-I II OHMKKVATIOKK. "Put no fulsome compllmen s on my tombstone," said a wag. ' Don't give me any epltaff) . This world without woman lovely woman Is like a blank sheet of papr r not even ruled. The leadlug Method.st church In Toronto dis missed its choir because it bad been singing "Pin afore." Only "dismissed" them! Why didn't they kiU'em 't Burlington Rawkeye. An Ohio wman dreamed that she saw her hus band kissing a certain neighbor's wife and she awoke and struck him across the face and broke his nose. The Vanderbllt interest has been able to do about as it pleased In rew York, but It has not yet acquired a mortgage on Chicago. Chicago Tri bune. Perhaps Mr. Vanderbllt has an aversion to taking second mortgages. Hartford OourarU. A New Hampshire woman has a husband who Is addicted to joining secret societies.. One of her exasperated outbursts is thus reported by the Man chester if irror: "Jine! He'd Jlne anything. There can't nothing come along that's dark and sly and hidden, but he'll line it. If anybody should get up a society to burn his house down he'd jlne it just as soon as he could get In, and If he had to pay to get in he'd go all the suddener." A Waif from tbe Tay Bridgre Wreck Loudon Telegraph. A strange but not altogether impro bable story comes from Norway, where it saw the light in the columns of the Morgenblad, a well-known local news paper. On the 12th of last month, as some fishermen were hauling their nets in one of the fiords on the western coast, apparently not far from Bergen, they sighted an "extraordinary object" some distance further out. Fancying at first that it was a new monster, they retired to a safe distance. Finally, how ever, curiosity got the better of them ; they cautiously approached the bobbing mystery, but only to discover that it was a railway carriage, in a sadly smashed and dismantled condition, with the following letters printed on it: "Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway." From the fact that there was a port manteau inside containing clot his marked "P. B" it is supposed to have been one of the relics of the Tay bridge disaster, separated from the other car nages by the wrench to which the whole train was subjected, and then floated out to sea with the ebbing tide. That the waif may have drifted in a northeasterly direction toward tlie near est point of the Norwegian coast is s little surprising as the circumstance that in midwinter no vessel happened to see it en route. If one wagon was so completely severed from the others, we may now understand how it is that the wreck of the train has yielded such comparatively few memorials. Tl.e North Se;, and not the Frith of Tay, has been the cemetery of the victims. Ben JPerley Iire. CjI. Ed. Llles In Wadesboro Herald. ."Who is he V" many strangers ask-iis a man well known here passes about the Capitol. He is a newspaper man; has something to do with the Kecoi-d or Directory is always busy is five feet seven by four feet six in measurement never says anything to anybody was once a noted politician, and is yet a man of weight in more than one re spect. He is Major Ben Perley Poore, of Massachusetts. I remember that in 1856 he made a wager with some Dem ocrat to this effect: Should Tillmore be elected President (as, by the way he ought to have been) the Democrat aforesaid was to roll a barrel of apples on a wheel-barrow from Boston to Va terbury, Mass., a distance of about 50 milen ; and if Buchanan should be cho sen, he. Maj. Poore, was to perform the task. "Buck and Breck" carried things with a "whoop." Tillmore and Danel son received only, I believe, the elect oral votes of three States. Perley Poore set himself manfully to the task and, refusing all aid or assistance, hon orably accomplished it, The noble Whig women of the "old Bay State" strewed his way with flowers, and his wheelbarrow march was like unto a triumphal procession. You young folks don't remember it, but we old ones do. And that gifted and brilliant man, John W. Cameron, then a corresponding edit or of the old Aryus, in noticing the oc curence gave vent to his poetic genius. I only remember tbe concluding lines of what he wrote, probably some read er can furnish the whole. Thus it en ded "And If I live to vote again I'll go for great TtHmorei grit next to nlm, of living men I'd vote for Perely Poore," But the rotund old P P. don't look like a man who could roll a barrel of apples far now! Isn't this enough for the present? Jfew Orleans Women. New Orleans Picayune. The New Orleans woman proper is a Gallic-American, or rather an Ameri can Gaul. She may never have been out of the country, or even out of the State ; but for all that, she is an alien to the republic in the sense that she has little knowledge of it and less care for it and its affairs. If Creole, or of Cre ole descent or affinity, she reads French newspapers, has French habits and opinions, and is essentially French in mind and manner. She talks English, though she thinks in French ; she is an inhabitant of the United States, but a citizen of Louisiana, especially of its metropolis ; most of her grand outings being to adjacent parishes. Once in a while she may go -to St Louis, or Mo bile, or Charleston, or New York, but if she dogs it is a memorable event, and she regards jt as a Qhicagoan, Bostoni an or New Yorker would regard the circumnavigation of the globe, a jour ney to the interior of Afghanistan, or tho honrr. nf Africa. Should the New Orleans woman be young, especially, should she be unmarried, she may De very graceful, though rarely slender in figure, for plumpness and Toundness come very early with her. She is usu ally a brunette. Her mapners are, 3s a rule, superior tQ her person. t is mar velous what she can achieve with a bit of lace, half a yard of ribbon, or a few flowers. The New Orleans woman is not: very substantially educated, but sueh education as she has, she can put to the best advantage. She is very fond of pleasure, of gayety of every sort, and she sees more of these as a wife than as a girl, for she is very strictly and con ventionally reared by her parents, and augments her era of freedom with her matrimonial experiences. Newnrt BMes. A Newport (R. I.) correspondent writes: "Will it occur to nobody to have a baby show in Newport this sum mer? Such babies as are to be here I Babies with European fathers and American mothers. Lady Randolph? Churchill nee Miss Jerome, of New York, brings over a bit of humanity; and Mrs. Minnie Stevens Paget a child of hers who bpasts tba future-King of rrnrl-f lit hpr anil dritlVa out.ofi christening cup presented' fy tne irnnpeti ul u ifi r .vj ..tun rA 4Vq "hoant.if nl ' Miss Yz.na.rra. comes to Newport thisi sammer-itir twin babies, the Lady Alice and Lady: niu-l Ifnntomio And lh Ttfnnfit.t n-11 t-..Y ta onnttiar Ann them IS -ft.' new'Astor baby, "with the handsomest mamma u .ww.jaji.um vVt 1 5 the beauty she possessed as Miss Paul. Which la JLikely te be Adopted by Cengreau Some of It Provisions. Washington, March 29. The sub committee of the ways and means com mittee decided to report favorably on Mr. Carlisle's bill to amend the internal revenue law. A number of petitions have come from St. Louis and other large cities favoring its adoption. The bill limits distillers bond to 6100,000 and majces tneir penai sum the amount of, instead of double the tax. It also provides that the distiller may give a Dona 11 a lessee instead 01 owner con sent that the building be used for dis tilline purposes. It is also provided that fermenting tubs shall be emptied at or before tne ena or the fermenting period, that no tub in a sweet-mash dis tillery shall be filled of tener than once in seventy-two hours, no tub in a sour mash distillery oftener than once in ninetv-six hours, and no tub in a new distillery oftener than once in one hun dred and forty-four hours. The" distil ler is given three years from the date or entry in tne warenouse in which to pay the taxes on the spirits. There are a numoer or other changes in the exist ing law, most of them relating to the details of the relations between distil lers and the internal revenue bureau. The bill, according to the estimates of the internal revenue bureau. DroDoses to reduce the revenue upon the basis of last year about $2,250,000, in the follow ing manner : First By relieving distillers of the interest upon the tax upon distilled spirits remaining in bond over a year, Which now yield a tax of about $150,000. Second By relieving distillers and wholesale dealers in distilled spirits from the payment of certain stamps on barrels, which yielded last year about $350,000. Third By making certain allowances for shrinkage on the evaporation of spirits in bonded warehouse!, that would reduce the revenue about $1,750, 000. It cannot properly be said that this bill will reduce the total amount of revenue, inasmuch as the books of the internal revenue bureau show that the revenue from the tax on distilled spir its is steadily increasing, and even though the Carlisle bill should become a law, there is every indication that the aggregate amount of revenue will con tinue to increase. For the first seven months of the current fiscal year, the tax on distilled spirits had yielded $8,362,397.07 more than it did in the cor respeniing period of last year. Good for Wilmington I r True. Wilmington Review. We hear that a rumor is in circula tion on the streets in Columbia, S. C, that the W. & W. R. 11. and W., C. & A. R. R. Companies are about to purchase the Greenville and Columbia R. R., which, commencing at Columbia, runs through one of the finest cotton pro ducing countries, for a distance of 143 miles, that there is in South Carolina. Greenville, which is the terminal point at the other end of the road, is 143 miles distant from Columbia and immediate ly on the Air-Line Railroad, between Charlotte and Atlanta. This line will give Wilmington easy communication with Atlanta, and place us in inter course with a fine productive country, which we doubt not, under the able management of Mr. A. Pope, the gen eral freight agent of the two roads above mentioned, will develope a nice business for our little city by the sea. In- the event of the consummation of this trade, as suggested by the rumor referred to above, we may expect to see our foreign cotton trade, by direct ship ment, largely increased. Wilmington is certainly capable of handling a large amount or cotton for foreign shipment. We have three of the finest cotton. Dresses anywhere at work on the South Atlantic Coast, and besides these we have other facilities for a large ship ping trade. Our bar and river im provements have given us an addition al advantage over what we enjoyed in former years ; with nearly or quite 18 feet of water on the bar, we can com- Eete quite successfully with our neigh ors on the South as well as to the North of us, After all we don't know, if we can succeed in making this con nection, but that we can very well afford to stop weeping over the Best iniquity, albeit that does-not lessen the monstrosity of the act of sacrificing a million and a half of dollars of the peo ple's property to a shrewd syndicate of Yankee speculators. t f - 1 A Ureat Project Hickory Carolinian. 1 Lately a project of great importance to Hickory and surrounding country comes up from an unexpected quarter. Pittsburg, the great iron king of the United States, is brushing away the great cloud of smoke for a moment to et a peep southward, and 1alks of uilding a narrow gauge road through West Virginia, and on through Ashe and' Wautaga to connect with our Chester & Xenoir road, arid thus not only open up a way to the great ore beds of Virginia and North Carolina, but se cure a direct connection with the South Atlantic seaports. ' Tbey recently held an enthusiastic meeting, which was at tended by Prof. Kerr, our State geolo gist, who gave them information con cerning the mineral deposits of this country. It is their purpose to run the road through to Charleston, and should it be undertaken by those rich corpora tions, it will be pushed vigorously to completion, and once completed it will be one of the great lines of transporta tion of the country. The fact of its small cost compared with broad gauge roads and the great saving in rolling stock, together with the fact well de monstrated tflarrow gauges pan ear. ry a greater per cent, of f reiglit, all com. bine to mafce this one of the greatest enterprises, no wii4'oott Experts out the dio Electric Light. Baltimore Sun. 1 An examination into the efficiency and practicability of the Edison, elec tric fight has been instituted under the uspice8of the American Journal of Science. Mr. Edison put his entire es tablishment at the disposal of the com mittee of experts who; had undertaken the examination. Their report is pub lished in the Journal but is too tech nical to be understood by the generali ty of readers The conclusions arrived at are, in the language Of the commit tee, that, "provided the Lamp can le made either cheap enough or durable enough, there is no reasonable doubt of the success of the light, but this point will evidently require much further experiment before the light can be pro nounced practicable." The committee is. nevertheless, of opinion that Mr. LEdison will ,ultiiatelv,vei?;orAe theu dirhcpity. as wiiss tne mos amno i lative statemenTyet made in regard to What Mr. Edison, has .accomplished in the production at, a divisible. electric light, iAhovM thiit,1 trhlle1 there' ?bas Been, good PfOgress-iiv overcoming dif :ficultiestliexiueitibn3)fetelati,e cheap ness ar,pajafncyligJ4p)9 aojyr ARE DAILY ARRIVING, And During Next Week we will Display the Most Attractive COLLECTION OF INVITING STYLES EYE IK, EXHIBITED IUST THIS idiABKET- O U S. EflC 3a. 3ES. IB. Ea A T T A Is still in New York awaiting the productions of the advaneed season, and as fast as issued will favor us with the result of his efforts. We Propose to Surpass the Expectations of all Admirers of NOVEL & MODERN STYLES. April2. pirnim Look for BETWEEN X.. ipeim WTE ARE LARGE Entire New Stock of Goods for Spring and Summer, And we are ready to exhibit, without a shadow of doubt, the most complete and finest collection of DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, HATS, ETC., ETC., THT SIJS E-IEie, IB IE 13 2- BBOTJGHT TO TZHITS 3TATB. SEE OUB DRESS GOODS, SEE OUB WHITE GOODS, SEE OUR SUMMER SILKS, FRINGES & TRIMMINGS, SEE OUR BROCADED SILKS, SEE 0011 MILLINERY, MILLINERY, MILLINERY. In this Department we excel our own efforts of former seasons. 100 Pieces of Nttoineham Curtain Laces and Cottage Drapery, New Carpets. New Oil Lloths, New Rugs. New Mats, New Mttttlng-a bewiWertug, BtoCk of everytWnT Out raottBnFi and Hat I)epartmentsl5e replete with all the Novelties for the Season, and contain the very finest Goods manufactured. Gent's Furnishing Goods of every description. Our Grand Spring and Summer Opening:, Eegins on Monday, the 22d.f in a condition to compete in price with any first class establishment in the United States.: , Anticipating an early call, we are, Very respectfully ( . ; . WITTKOWSKY & BARUCH. 1851. TO Twenty-Nine IES TLb 31 jS. TO PURCHASE THIS SPRING THE LARGEST AND MOST Dry Goods, Notions, Ever offered to their customers. learn onr prices. iar.3. - . . --m tt TtO UNEQUALED i'eLEGACE s STYLE 1 REASONABLE PRICES. HT The Public Afull assortment of Ladie Mens' bought for anywhere else, a apiencua asunmou mario ,l;,STLiB!A!p . . ' n known to need further comment. Call for tks book wltbrtestlmoildls froai aO socaoatii Also I Aseat? f )r 3T 8 LTN ,": t irUtDCnSSnati(marreMtatloar Doroj43,,of,Ni YattijrjLSAJSP AalfWr pit or.!iyDf caBed it .Irorinteatt-tadlns grocers. ..-:. up. .-.-'-M-iij" 1 . .(..., vvSui -uv h Very respectfully. QUAiS! our Grand Opening My THIS & APRIL FIRST- Respectfully, IB ttn DirnttfiefiDnD AGAIN BEFORE THE PUBLIC jSEE OUB SATINS, 1 SEE OUB FRENCH NOVELTIES, ! SEE OUR FANCY GOODS, SEE OUB HOUSE FUR NISHING DEPARTMENT, THE TRADE. Tears Experience has Enabled S c& CS O Nearly all bought before the recent advance Respectfully, ' SPRING NOVELTIES WE HAE.NOW - - . '. :V O TT T A 1ST is Cordially Invited. No Trouble to .W sses', and Children's Boots and Shoes can be found tof H?te?sucn as Btift, Furk Wopl, and Straw. Hats 15 OF THE LARt ANIX BT ASSORTED FANCY ..GRQCJERiE' r ; . ... ..; E.D.LATTA & BRO. Sjpiriiiogo TITI Fine Clothiers and Tailors. WITH AN SEE OUR LACES, SEE OUR HOSIERY & GLOVES, SEE OUR HANDKERCHIEFS, SEE OUR EMBROIDERIES, SEE OUR PARASOLS, 1880, the Old House of v, COMPLETE STOCK OF in prices.; DoR "1: 1 ' -Tin ' - 1 ; OT D -C'H I'UTf BE IT- ; : tenow inem. -f. , ,., 'I ! ")"?'! ; ! ',: ' ' . r x y x . K-A H H M A IN oc VKJi' - at , dhr store.J at Jp. " for Men, Boys, Yputaa and qhlklren, :Ge caU, , 1 mtmm m a m mmm m m wmmmmm 1 o?M m&Si, 1 ill;'! W ilfcf .f.jn .- d 1. im-a-iwekttfi '.- -.! ..... . . I Cn:"'
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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April 2, 1880, edition 1
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