Newspapers / The Durham Recorder (Durham, … / Oct. 29, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL.71. DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 29. 1890. NO 44 Highest' of all In Leavening rower, ABSOUUTELY PURE FARTHING & DUKL WHOLESALE-" - Dealer 3 in ; . ;, Notions, Clothing, etc We cany i i slock crtrjitlng jou ciu fin-1 in an; geuerul ttore. "Wo carry large fetocks of W. L. DOUGLASS Shoes, Satter & Lewis & Co.'s Shoes. OLD -HICKORY jind Piedmont Wag oris anrT Road Carts Obcr'a FertilizerThe Na tional and Durham Bull Fer tilizers. ..."" . , . The moit goodi'for the leat money FARTHIH3 & -DUKE. cucriAM, c. 1 i TTfinI W. T. Iaat laa nf ara VAUiiii't oarraalra, a4 a.rrr talr haa ala waa aaa arkca nmmpi aa katlaat. IIP U75 IS Sfe. W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE CENTLCMCN. ria falf mm l-eri Watrraraaf Ural. Taa anrflwa M WMrlnf analiiM of ta ava wala at Ma I an ul at MM Ma.a--a WIV "ri"4 " Fa . . i .... - ftt,.M .khk BiMmftll k tl. ala Hlw. a 44t.M4iMr Walt aa Maalai4 faaj O , al a nrmutaf avtra . m ItM palraiaa'a aaa TrUl! adapt W f. r.ltnal ma. fnT-, all la 0rMa, lutfb lal 1. $3 & $2 SHOES lds. !- av fart.lf Ik am-rtw-J aM lb n Imi . kwm atata law tupaftu aaa, . M ai t. I'-- f"' iwH " ait.tr ra i f.-t..rr m. I.lu ITrUanl irWa ar W. t KUi UI-AS, llwklaa, Him. FARTHING & DUKE Jloin St.', Ssrhsa, H C AiiaHtA. t.a. ti. .'4bii. i.:i m. sMaSaSaaa2lrf for Infants "Cartarla h iBcn aJatrfUeaflJmi thM Iraeammw4HaiiinfirtoanrpnaKrl;4iua aaovatoma." II. A. AM-na, M. P 1U Otfurt Sk, BiwUra, I. T. Ttia naa of favina' In m sntwaal fca iwrtu aa kanwa that tt roma a i4 mmmmrtUi m In wkw H ar l Wli rami I la aa aw aui katy Caaha-M ' tUuaaJf tWB." CAauM . IV 1A ' ' NawVnrlirHf. LaU rMtot moomtnrUle UUvtwl Umrah. Tm Cst. Groc6ri8s,DryGGQUs: fi S 1 1 1 P- ahh.'la lib- HI I'l )V 1 1 n'nvili'i''''itti - -1"- - " ,-1,1 ' 1 -aMaaaMaaaal U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1S89. , twitch, Mange, and Scratches n hamaaor amma s curtd in 30 miou tea by Woolford'a Sanitary Lotion. 1 bis Dever fail. Sold bj ' N. M. JounsosA Co., Druggist Durhaoi, N. C. ATTENTION! We keep ornstantly on bant) B I i cious ftooku. School Books and Sutiunuy. . We maka a tpecialty of BOOKS for PUBLIC SCHOOLS, All of which wa at NET TRICES tor enth. We keep fall lupply in stock A hre auortiLent of '" . rc:22TE:SL23,C2TC22 . ' EIEL23 aai FA12LY.3K2L1H All olJ at lowest prices for cash. Just Out. Triumphant Monga, Kos.land2 t'ombiued, Pi ice 55 ct per cpy, IS.CO " dozen, Vit( IvJition 25 cts, per copy 2 50 rr dozen. Call ai.J Ht before baying. T. J. Gattis & Son, w Blain Sirett, Durhnm. N.C. faaaaaaaiaaaBaawaiaaaaaMaaaaiaaMapa Grand, Square and Upright 1" "'.'gjwAi Piano-Fortps. Fiftr Years before the public. Upon iheii excellence aloue have attained an on purchase J Pro-emleoce which tstablished them as. nneaaalled in TOSH, TOUCH, WOHKMXN bllll ANI ULItAlilLlTV. vAREROOM9 HJFifth Avenue. New York, S8 a-id 24 EJahimore St, DalU.817 m irk-t Space, Washington, D. 0. IRAH'S ASTRAL ABSOLUTELY SAFE! t PERFECTLY ODERLEttI Burns In any Lamp without danger af Exploding er taking (Ire. See that get the genuine For sle by , II UiTIMOKK UNITED Oil CO, RICIIVOXD. VL and Children. raHrla ntfwa VHr, (Vapallna. Unar lmnar, tHarrh'Xa. KivrtaUo, kUia Wnnaa, gnat aweS aa4 praaova IT itCyurkwi mwttoaUasw al. li I-SrSS 1 a an ai 2ariiartaWr predueaa baa4glil hi . Piatiam. H. Da KMrTarkCHf. Co.r, TT Maaa Irawa.i'se tea, T. J. &ATTIS & SON'S WaiD Book Store. . ml sg" 14 1, prTf'--'" 'V rl ill I, y'aw-W t V I Life's Sovob Htaseoa, Only a baby, Ktsfed and caressed, -. ' : . Gently beld to a mother's breast, Only a child, ; Toddling alone, ; Brigbtin? now its happy home Only a boy," , " Trudging to bcbool. ; Governed now by a alerner rule. Only a youth, , Living in dreams, Full of Drotmse life now seems. Only a man, i Battling with life. . Shared in now by a .loviqg .wife. Only a father : Burdened with care, . Silver threads in dark brown hair. Only a gray beard, - a.njuuuk aKun, Only a mound, O'ergrown with grass, Dreams unrealized rest at last. Soiuetlmea. Somttimea I think you will be glad 10 Know That I have kept yon ever in my Dealt, ' And that my; love baa only deeper growu - In all that time that we have lived apart. Some day when yon have slipped away irons care. And idly fall to dreaming of the put- . . And idly think of all jour life has miasea, -YmiU1 remember my true; love at lan. Or it may come to past some dieary night, After a day that hae been hard to bear, Wben yoa are weary, heartsick and : furlorn. And there is none to comfort or to .; care, . .: 1 That yon will close your tired eyes to a ream Of tender kisjos, falling soft and ltKht, . ' Ofreatful touches smoothing back ymr bair,-. Aodaceet word spoken fur your heart' delight, : - Okl then jou will remember and be glad, That J have kept von in mv heart. And thl your heart's true home aid still be there, Although we wander silent and t apart. The atcawui iKirpoie,of a protec tive tariff, according to all its advo cate, is U ;. &i promote "infant nuustriaSiV it must be and or the Congress wb.ch has just adj-mrned tbai,ia psMag the UcKin'ey bill, it h&r been t-ue to Inat Idea. The youngest indosuic we lave among ui m UcTriuta. They -are all of receol-hirtbi Laving been brought in to toe worid under tue supervision ofihat accomplish accoucheur, the cremated DvCte Wall dueefc. They baiung to the family cf i the mood . suckers, and a very lively set o! biib- tes tney' are. . llie suction . power they hat e developed is tremendous. It is Ibis brood of juvenilis that Coa . grass took under its prolictive irg, Mpiclally the 8ogar,TruiU The Uieh.U. der Tuioe Trust, however. was not lelt out, as our farmers will discover abut the time they are gathering their utit harvest.' Uuder lbellikiniy bill everyone of the inunta: is sxiiected to grow co irs moasly large and fat ou the mi!k toil blood t f the Mder people." The iniquity of the SIcKiuley Bi.l has been sj ably and fully exposed by Senator CarlLlc's rpt-ech in the S n ate, July aOih, it.at it would U a oatiooal beue'ae ion should every person of ialel.igt nee in the UuheJ sutes read it. Ii is the otterat ce of a great amfgood man, who loves bis country mure loan power or par ty. Bel ord Uagai &e Chicken .Story. ;, Fraaklio Times. ' llr. George Joyner. a hard working f.rme', who livi s about 4 miles Souibeast of Louisburg, tells at thst during the La spring ho f und a partridge nest on Us farm, ia which there were 13 partridge tgci and one hen egg. As it took longer Ut the former to hatch than the-lalto hedicided to watch results, bnt on riioa u the aest one day .he found tba.13 partridge eggs, (but ihe hen egg had hatche d and toe. partridge bad left the nest with the chicken. IK aaj thai the chicken thrived and is now wild in the woods on his firm: and aays that he has made several attempts. t catch it, but failed. I -.. n.. A Stalwart Call on Mr. Quay. ) : rolUtille iiepullican. To IL a Quay: Withdraw Dvla maury rplace hlm v with Cooper, Hastings-1 any fotht' Kepublieaa ciocpt Andrews and Frank Leach, an4 all will ba i)rjivca-anulthe neatUaiaj iTh-f.ie the plesdioj of many thousands of stalwart lVpuoa licios. LOYALTY TO, PA11TY. SUPPORT THE PARTY THAT TAXES THKTEOPLE LEAST. ; That Party la tho Democratic Party. "'' Ho word has Ven- more aoused in our country than the word loyalty. Loyalty in ulleimce- due to truth and country - tint in to my, to the sovereign. Truth is moral , und in tellectuafruVrreinty, to which all meu ! owo : uufaltering allegiance whatever may. be the cost to them selves, in a monarcny loyalty 13 due to the reigning family, jwhen it does not interfere with the ' funda mental and irrepealable allegiance due primarily and solely to .truth ; because to be loyal to a fake f jstem -a system that is founded ton a lie is treason to truth, which, 5a3 Fichte savs. "neither buvs nor Belli." and from which allegiance can 45 1 be transferred. 1 hold that the truest loyalists in the Brib-h Em pire are the Laud Leaguers ' of Ire- laud, and in limsn the Nihilists: for they fiijht, each ia its of a way, against governments fouuded on the false theory that equu.'i rights arc no'- due to the people, 'but that obedience ia due to the claisss thai rob the masses. : Here in our countrr, where sov' ereigrty resides 'in the .people, the only debatble question' can be to wnicn people allegiance is uue 10 the people of the btase, or of the United States? Claiming that the Federal Government is only an agent of the State, havingonly such powers and functions as were dele gated to it by the States assovereigu entities, the Confederates held that loyalty was due to the State, that the man who refused allegiance to his State was a traitor. While, taking the opposite theory, that the United States as a sovereign entity was the sovereign, the North sup pressed the Southern people as rebels. - Practically the war settled that lssu " forever. What ever may have been the intention of the fathers of the Union and the founders of the Constitution, the controversy between the boys in blue aud the boys in gray decided that the men of thisgeuerutwn,- a-d rot their grandfathers, shall rule the countrv. - But the loyalty due and rendered to country has been perverted by politicians, who have attempted to transfer it to party. As far as they have succeeded they have demoraliz ed the people. No allegiance, no loyalty, is due or can be due to party. Show me a man who boosts that he has always voted the Kepubhcan or the Democratic ticket, and I will show you a man who is proud of his serldom to Eings and Iialls,and tue meanest class of citizens in our coun try -the politicians. 1'arties are only agencies for translating public opinion into laws and policies. They are necessary, because no other machinery exists by which a Democracy can rule the country hut they are so often per verted into engines for the personal aggrandizement of cliques self-! lected lungs of irresponsible cit izensthat, to stand by a party with the devotion due to country is to ensure the enactment of corrupt aw. Party is only a means, and the best party to support is that parly which, for the time being, is pledged to the best policies. 1 live uptown. Sometimes I take the elevated railroad; sometimes the stir- ace cars. Iow, it would be quite as sensible, as otberwim, for me to consider that 1 owikmI lovully to either, as to bo told that I owed nyalty cither to the Democ ratw or tepublicau party. Lars aud parties am only means of oettixo tuiur. don't want to be taxed to give out door rclirf to rich manufacturer. and therefore 1 vote the Democratic ticket. During the war I voted the lliMMiblicaa ticket, bee i I de sired the preservation of the Union; and the Republican p.irly, at that tiuis, I regarded as the best agency for securing that result an, before the war broke, I had supported it to prevent the spreal 0! slavery over the territories of the country. But, to day, the welfare of all the people, North and South, white and thick, demand that there shall be uo privilege: class either fostered or created; and the Republican policy of protection fosters the aims of a privileged class already exislin&and will create other classes whose inter esls are inimical to thecommon wcl- are. t Labor is especially interested in sop port in g the party t h at taxes the people least, that administers government most economically, that neither creates nor sqnuanders a surplus, that does not rob the horny band of 'eler to fill the gloved hand of i'aul. That party, to-day, is the Demo cratic party.. If the' Democrats, when next in power, should become extravagant, and the .Republicans honest advocates and supporters of economy, 1 should then again cbang! taj partf, not Onlv without apology, but as a duty to my class and country. Let us hear no more of this cant about the duty of loyalty to any party; for roe and mine be the party that does the most for all the people nt the least cost, whatever may be its name. - Ueorgt mnaman, in ml- jura Magazine, New York. STATE KEWS. Gathered From Our Exchanges. Oxford Day: Many families want to move to Oxford at once but can not get houses to live in. A number of dwellings are now going up. and mora will follow. Ooldsboro Argus": .. The purchase of cot'on on this uurket thus f tr this yeas segregate seventy thousand dollars over and above the amount paid out for the staple at this time last year. ; - - Charlotte Chronicle: The cotton season has been optn but little over montn. and yet there have been 23,500 bales of CJttoa compressed at (tie Charlotte compress on the cotton piatiorm. Xhis is mort than one ttird of the entire amount compress- e l during the whole of la4 season. Saaford Eirprew The cotton crops in Sanfjrd, Pocket and Deep river townships wera never o good boace of the held will yield a bate to the acre. The cotton recujots ehov three hundred mire bales brought be e than last season. At the end of the season it will show a thousand or fifteen hundred more. Southport L-aler: The hoisting engine, to be U8d ia connection wi h the Coaling & Contracting Co s dock is here, and is a fine one, Ai an in dication of the future pos-ibilitiei of the coal trade at this point the Com pany report inqairies for coal from steamers which will make' this put if they can get coal tor their use. The Company are busily at work on their dock, which is ready for coal. Weldon New: Among other things brought to light by the blasting which is going on at the mill was a sliark's ooth which was found Tues day It is three inches long. The blasting is in solid rock and some feet below the earth's surface' and how the shark's tooth got there would be bard to tell. It seems to sub stantiate the theory maintained by some that once upon a time that por tion oi the State east of Roanoke river was a part of the ocean but be came dry liLd by some great up heave! or nature, Wiuaton Daily. A farmer living in the upper ed jt of Forsyth came to Winston a few weeks ago and in dulged ia a spree. lie then disap peaitd mysteriously, and his family and neighbora made a search and sent out Inquiries for him, but in vair. A few days ago the anxious wife revived a letter from him from adiaua. The intelligence that is brought is that he had made his will ince his arrival in the West, and that it was in favor of the heart-broken wife. The letter closed with the bl owing paragraph t "Please send me enough monoy to get back home on." Asdckt Pa&k, N. J . October 24. --The New Jersey tea coast towns received their full share of the severe northeasterly storm that act in yes krday. All day to-day it has storm ed with no abatememU Tue damage sustained to the shore towns, from Sandy Uook to Barnegat inlet,' by tue severs storm and beavy tide, will loot up thousands of dollars. 'Ihe most severe damage was sus tained at Bloumiuth beach. The tea cut a big gap into the Liutf and made a clean sweep across the drive way about 30 fart wido ihe uslilee tUuenes tust son L oi Sea Itriglit were in a terrible state. h- tea had washed an nude a clean awe?pamjnjtlieQhiog houses, carrying dcsirueiion wiin it. latrontottnebiguaagon house at Sea Bright anl heavy sa dashed up over the breakwater and into the batniont -f the hotel. The bulk aea i at this place were badly dam- aged. All wiong me Shrewsbury river 00 the other side of the drive-way the high tide hal wrought sad a-voo. Everything that was witbin reacn or tho tide was swept away. Boat houses, summer house, stables, could all be seen cither adrift or standing la from light to ten feet of water. At Aoitnandieby the Sea, the ocean swept over the tracks of the New Jersey southern railway and made such lad breaks that at 9 o'clock this morning railroad tratUa bad to be impended. Much 01 the biuirat Asnury rara was waonea away, and ai ucean acli the bjal hou of Mr. Bcb flell wore carried away. A Private. Tip."! tNew-Yk Herald. "Sime sinner in castlo' reflections non this here church." snnounced the Bv. Poindtxter Cranberry, "by putm' chicken Mathers ia de eon tributioa hat, Ef dat ' posson don't cease he's wickedness dar'U be some body dai'l goin' ter be catched some moonlight sight, sbaab as i s stand- U La. I. r ,. u HajH Of Some Importance to the Far mer National Domorrat ' We hope the farmers of thecoun try will read all the Republican rot -1 til. l-'MI ... 1 .1 , uuuuhub newtanu law, una minx it over. Congress reduced the duty on bind' ing twine in order to reduce the price to the consumer; what about that story that the tariff does not increase the cost?. - Congress increased the dutv on wheat and corn and pork and other things, for the. pretended reason that it wanted to increase the price of what the farmer sells. What, then, becomes of the Republican state ment that an increased duty does not mean an increase of price? The farmers are finding out pret ty fast that increased duties on man- 1 a uiacturea goods do increase prices: the auty must be added to the foreign price of the imported article. and the domestic manufacturer. makes his price as near as he can to the price of the foreign duty paid. out the farmers can see equally well that as we do not import farm produce, but raise a great surplus which we send abroad to sell no amount of McKiuley legislation can raUe the prices of what they have to sell. The price of the do mestic clothing the farmer wears is the priceof clothing made in Europe with the cost of tranportation and the American duty added. The price of American wheat is the price fixed in London, in competi tion with wheat raised in India and lussia, with the cost of getting the wheat from Nebraska or Dakota to ondon. So the farmer, he pays the freight both ways, so to speak. and the McKinley bill which can do nothing to increase the prices of what he sell, is doing a let to in crease the prices of wheat be buys. Last vear we imported cattle sub ject to duty worth $550,837 and ex ported UU,UUU,UUU worth of dead meat and $10,616,017 worth of beef on the hoof. What good is the in crease of duty in the McKinley law going to do the farmer? e imported no hogs and export ed 45,128 live ones; of what use is it increase to the duty ? We imported 8,851 pounds of butter and ex ported 15,504.078 pounds; we im ported 8,207,026 pounds of varieties of cheese not made heie, and eaten only by epicures and immigrants, and we exported 84,099,828 pounds: we imported 2,401 bushels of corn and exported 69,502,029 bushels; we imported of corn meal and exported 312,181 barrels; we imported 130,. 549 bushels of wheat and 1,156 barrels of flour, and we exported 46.414, 129 bushels of wheat and 0374,803 barrels of flour. There isn't a farmer in the country who snpposes that increasing our duties on these products is going to in crease the prices. Within the Law. Detroit Free Pi ess. "I want to be posted in de law," said a colored woman who called at the Gratiot avenue station the oth er day. Well ?" replied the sergeant. "I've got a gal." "Yes." And she's got a beau." "Very likely." "I can't abear him, an' I doaa' want him 'round de house. What co'se shall I take?" "Have yeu ever given him a hint? Lands, sahl but !l jess tole bim tocl'ar out or Id bust him to smash! I reckon that's a biu. "Hut he didn t go?" "No, sab. Now, len, I want to know how fur I kin go an' keep widin the law. I've talked to him, frowed water ou him, hit bim wid a club, called him name, made do dog bite him, an' p'inted a pistil at him, but he won t stay away now much furder kin I go an' not break delaw? Could I dun tan' in de yard an mow him acroxs de lg4 wid an old scythe when he cum up in de da'd? Could de pistil go oil acci dentally?" When aitiscd to try peaceful measures she indignantly reponed: "Dat what I did do on the very go oft. 1 took him by the collar a -a. a a a . frowed him ooer ue gate: .1 r ' a I Thankful, and Yet I ant no hog, 1 only seek My three times seven meals per week, Two suits of clothes, a plain black hat. A pair of shoes, but one cravat. r or brorvo stone fronts 1 do not care, And when 1 ride I pay my tare. Like Gould I do not want the earth, I m satisfied with my small hearth. I'm thankful that my wants are few, I say no more -I'm no Depe. I'm thankful, lam content, and yet Sometimes I feel a fsint regret That I am not tike other men, Who hold four acres now and then. Tho Happy Porter's Quarter. Washington Star. The fullmaa cars carried over fs 000,000 paengcr for the past year, which means over tl,2-j0,000 to Full- maa porters. LISTEN! j LISTEN!; CtlEERLtfG nOJjESH'.'x GOV . EltNMEXT. " ; ! . Iiacoln and Cleveland Xdhked With Honest Government. Philadelphia .Tlmea. ' it.. M.,A ftS A Vali o m T.i n coin was mentioned in the . monster a Democratic mass meetings recently . held in the' Academy of Music and ( TTnrt.ie.uU.iirn.1 FTall. it was greeted '-I with round after round of deafening applause. when tn tiamn of Grover Cleve- " land was mentioned uf the' Lincoln, j Republican" mass; meeting s that' crowded the Academy of Music from -parquet to dome on "Monday' even-' innr last, it was irreeted with repeated i rounds of heartiest applause,, Vf Few of the Democrats who cheer- -ed the name of Lincoln would vote for T.inenln nrrainat aneoaallv hon '. est and patriotic Democrat; and few , of the Republicans wb.0 cheered tue . name of Cleveland would vote for Cluverand nirainat an eauallv hottest and patriotic Republican; but these '' 1 ... L .i ueinonstranons were earnest inouuca tn f.tin ef af Asmpn whose names atO '1 inseparably linked with honest gov- j . ernment. No assembly .of Amencan citizens ' on the Continent called to advocate 'i clean politics and honest r govern ruent, could fail to greet such name' ' as Lincoln and Cleveland with hpnrf ionf, e.ti0ra.. fnr thev. more than . nnvnthpi-n dnrinar the last half cen tury, stand out insingieness or naei ity to honest government ; Honest'' citizens will differ from their politi- -cal policy and vote against them but when the single issue of clean poli- " tics and honest administration calls , the people into action, there will be , hpnrfff rhetrs for both not for the'. parties they represent but for the 1 public integrity personalty lypmea -in the records they have, .written. FromBalelgh' . Our Mr. fQ writes us as follows: The Agricultural and-Mechanical Uollege is Having a reasonaoiy goou attendance. The workshops are finished and everything seem to be s in trim. - The tobacco market is only fairly sustained. No very large amount is coming in and the prices are not entirely satisfactory. . ' Cotton is coming ia large quanti ses, and bringing 0J and 10 cents. TtiiainpM 19 brisk, and merchants wear smiling faces, and everybody seems in good spirits. : - " m. P . 1 .:i. a nere is not a paruuie vl cauimi ment over politics. I rarely hear'4 it mentioned and a stranger would , not know that a campaign was in' progress. Q. A CARD. rr" rnillsboro Observer. Having in the past, been acting, mainly with the Renuhlican nartv. but believing to do so longer would be sinning against light and knowl-' edge as well as the best interests of m nannla anil ennntrv. I ' bamhv absolve myself from the Republican party, and in the talons wm act with the Democratic party whose nrinoinlM. I "ifinesUY lw1iAVA. "will best preserve the safety and welt be ing of society, and best promote the ' interests, honor and trosperitv of our whole people. I am impelled to such a course, not to court xavor or popularity with any man or set of men, or any organization or party by whatever name known', ' but be cause to remainlonger a Republican a m . T- 1 a 1 would oe endorsing ueea, liooge, . .K'in1pr k f!n.. and to do aa I fad that I would be false to myself and .. 1 . to those wno are aearer to me man life M. W, Moors. October 17th, 1890. Forlorn, Tx The New York Star- saysr The; most forlorn specimen of ' manhood at Luge in these days is the maa who "caa't get at" the thing 'which he has in mind that is to bring hint fame and fortune. This young man is to be found in every clubhouse in the city, lie comes down in tho morning, dawdles over the newspa pers, drinks a cocktail with a friend. opens his mail, drinks another cock tail with another friend, and then discovers that it is noon and that tunch time has arrived. Ilk lunch - interspersed with more friends. who drop in one or two at a time- lasts for a couple of hours. By this time the afternoon papers are out. He skims over them, talks to some afternoon friends, and then it is time for him to go home for din ner. Somehow his day has slipped away, and the beginning of the great work again is postponed until to-morrow lie nasn t been able to "get at it" ' The strong probabi lity is that he never will succeed in "getting at it." lay's Lueky Hair Trunk. . Sew Yoik World.) ; If stocks ftd much lowr in WaTl street may not Jay Goutd be obligwd to again haul out that hair trunk aal' exhibit bis securities?
The Durham Recorder (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 29, 1890, edition 1
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