Newspapers / The Durham Recorder (Durham, … / Feb. 11, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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A BROWN-STONE MANSION To Be Erected by Mr. George W, Watts. ' .. IT WILL COST NEAR $100,000 Mr. C. H. Norton, of This City, Has Awarded the Contract. WORK WILL BE COMMENCED AT ONCE The Building Is Expected to Be Uu " ilerway When Mr. Watts lie turns from Europe. a brown-srone mansion anu n wui - . i. cy&l suiuciv.rc.5 - ahd ioo,ooo. . II W1U UC wewwu vi iug one w Ml I -LA U- . f ni his present residence on Morehead avenue ana worK wm Degm on M at once. I.Tr, Watts decided some time ago to have a brown-stone mansion erected and so when he decided to go on a trip abroad he began to n.ake arrangements 10 nave me work to begin at once and the con tract was awarded to Mr. C. J I. Norton, Durham's well known con tractor. Contractor Norton said yester day that the building would be 125 feet each way, would be of brown 1 stone and of the latest design. He I said he would begin to make ar rangements at once to move tiit- present residence of Mr. Watts to I the vacant lot in front of where it now stands and as soon as that is done he vill begin the new anu modern mansion and expects to have it well under, way of con struction bv the time Mr. Watts and his family returns next July. Mr. Norton further said that tht building would cost Mr. Watts somewhere near one hundred thousands'' dollars and would be one among the finest residences in in the state. , . Architects have been working on the plans of the mansion since tht first part of January aad will soon be ready to turn the design over to Mr. Norton. About the time Mr. .Watts firs. c . cidod to build the new rtsiaencc, it became reported that it woula be erected in Baltimore and that he would make his home in that city after his return from the olu word. Much regret was express at the time by hie numerous friends I in this city and elsewhere in tht state that he had decided to leave Durham and North Carolina, and this announcement that he is not only gc.'ng to remain in North Caiolin out that he is to make his hoire here for life, will be read with much interest. . 1lT.ham mfilt Amnion v-oniracior iiuuuu ' jkuiw; some twenty or twentyrhve stone jnasons in erecting the building J At 1. ...Ill Iwk xi.f.Vw.i 4 a anu me wui wn juaw bo rapidly as possible. The Recorder is glad that Mr. Wa.ts is not to leave Durham and also that he is to have this fine res idence erected, for that will be another one added to the many fine residences that grace the dif ferent sections of the city and will be an honor to Durham. In awarding the contest to Mr. Norton it proves that Diirham is well prepared 10 uo au ner wwa and that there is no use m aenu,, 8 off to get men to do the best work. It would be well lor other uur- hamites to follow the example of Mr. Watts and keep the work at home. Houses for the Poor. The city of Glasgow, which is orobablv the best managed muni cipality in the world, some years aco bought at great cost a large liodv of land in the tenement dis trict and erected substantial and comfortable houses for the poor, which are rented at a price graded accordinz to the income of the ' workingman. It also erected large warehouses where women w ere al 1. I .....U 1sftiSnr tnr a fn, rpnt. a ,lav. These and other nlana succeeded bevond expecta-1 tion. and the city is now deriving . .-. . . some revenue from its outlay. Baltimore American. hotJirrnojrstoTnraOut. There was a regular meeting of the Durham Light Infantry last nizht and the company decided to ...! ,,r; at St. Phillio's -w "- - -o o. - at....... " T rliiirrh Sunday momimr. next, at 11 o'clock in a body. Rev. Mr. ruden, the rector, who is now on .iridal tour, will return by Sunday and preach a special sermon to tlw "boys in blue." The company will fto out in full dress uniform an i : n t f si1 arms. Tl.re will' be a ful! turn out CoL A'. .V Bobaitt passed t uougii yestry from Oxford to .iiaitu j. uhtre fie reprtsnts tli j .t. TV in tht parchass of to bacco. i IUTNAWA AND ACCIDENT. Dave Lyon Thrown Against a Tele- 1 . phone I'olc and Hurt. . There was a runaway and-acci dent hfitwppn Vipi-p arA Kacr T)nr. ham yesterday afternoon that came aear resulting fatally. Dave L,yon, colored, who drives for A. D. Markham, was bringing a load of wood to Durham , and when just below the residence of Talbot Smith the wagon dropped into a ditch and the wood struck the horses which caused them to run away, The driver was thrown out be tween the horses and about the same time the wagon struck a tele phone pole and Lyon was thrown acninct tho rVrtta with rnnc!ortU 1 .. . v...-- mrr He was renWrf linear h . te tQrce 0j the blQW he recejve(J I and some men wno were oassinr I mnvpri hi in tn a crni-o nearhir an ... Mr o Dr. A. M. Moore, colored, was summoned to attend him. At first it was thought that he was hurt internally but last night he was resting very well and it is now thought that he will recover. There were two wounds on his head each of which were about an inch long and cut to the bone. a r. . a . Alter he regained consciousness he was moved home. ' , RESOLUTIONS OP RKSPF-CT. fhe Masons Pay a Tribute to the Memory of Dr. Brown. At a regular meeting of Durham j.odge No. 352 A. r. and A. M., last night the following resolutions tvtre passed in regard to the death of tre late Dr. J. C Brown." who as a member of the Masons: 'Whereas, It has pleased Al mighty God in His infinite wisdom to remove from our midst our ,, be loved brother T. C. Brown, who as an acceptable member of Dur ham Lodge No. 35 2 A. F. and A. M., and who as such always deported u: it 1 L. j . muiseu uuiiurauiy ana in ine most sincere mariner toward his breth ren, therefore be it resolved: v "v irst, 1 hat, in this dispensation lof Divine Providence we bow in humble submission to Him who loeth all things well. Second, 1 hat, in the death , of 15m J Jir-Bro .mtu is Lcig w, tauicJ an irreparable loss. . "Third, That, out of respect to to our diseased brother our hall be draped in mourning for thirty days according to our custom. "Fourth, That, this Lodg tender to the bereaved family its smcerest Sympathy and coiiuola- tions, commending them to the Great Friend of the widow tnd orphan. "Fifth, That, a copy of these resolutions be spread upon the minutes, and copies, with request to publish the same, be sent to the n.nt.i " iviv i'i'- Chas. E. Turner, C C. Taylor, John B. Morris, Committee. The Pride of Durham." In its issue Monday the Press- Visitor, Raleigh's bright and newsy afternoon daily, has the following to say about Durham's beautiful Hotel Carrolina, which the Press- Visitor refers to as "the pride of Durham nd who kriowg what ft clags hotel . remarke(i t0 the pres3.visitor a day or tw0 ag0 that . . d d in Durham just for the pieasurc of Btnnnin(r th' rarmlina Hotel. He decJit one of the begt equipped and furnished, and one of the best managed hotels ts be found in the South. It is indeed a fact that the I Carrolina is a credit to Durham and the whole state. Few hotels in the country are more attractive. The finish is superb, especially on the interior, and the furniture is of ihe most modern and elegant. Ol Manager Cobb it must be said that what he does not know about conducting a fi stclass and up-to- date hotel 43 not known in hotel business, and it is always a pleas- ure to stop at his sumptuous hos te'ry Farmer Taken Hick. About 4 o'clock yesterday after noon lohn Terry, a farmer, son ot Ueorge ierry wno lives out in tne I Red Mountain section, was taken with something nice tne cramp m ' . M 1 Cwiic and lor some time sunereu Considerably. Dr. A. Cheatham 1 was summoned arid did all he could . .. 1.- to relieve ms pain. uer ne ue came easier he was moved to the boarding house of Mrs. Royster and was resting very. well last night. J. J. Caudle, who recently re signed his position at the Golden Belt Hosiery Company, left on the early train this morning for Char lotte where he has accepted a posi tion with the Mecklenburg Iron Works. Mr. Cau-lle is an experi enced mechanic and Charlotte has Secured a good workman. ice factory srAitruu. The Ground Broken for the New . Building Yesterday Morning. The ground was broken for the. new "Uurham Ice factory yes ,terday morning and $hc work -will ue-puaueu as rapicuy as possible u""4 " ls w"ipeu. . - ' he ne.w factory will be on the : vawuu. mi immediately in the rear of the Southern frieghf depot 'ft?. wurK ne? . , e.n: gaged in digging out the founda tion. . T . . ' ' . In conversation with a reporter yesterday afternoon the manager, Mr. Lee H. - Simmons, " said that the building would be erected and machinery put in as soon as pos sible and that, unless bad weather sets in so thaCwork on the build ing could not go on, the company would be ready to begin the man ufacture of ice by the latter part of next month or first of April. t Then Durham will not only - be prepared to furnish her own -ice but can help supply the trade of the outside world also. ". We wish the company mrch success. It starts off . under very flattering prospects and will, no doubt, do a large business. MISS PEO ALBRIGHT TO WED. The Event Will Take Place on the Seventeenth of this Month. . Miss Peo Albright, formerly -of this city but now of Greensboro, is to be married on the seventeenth of this month.'. The groom-elect is W. H. Mathews. . a " prominent ng business . man of Greens boro. The Greensboro Record said that the cards are out and then -adds 'We congratulate the contracting parties. fhe bride to be " is a daughter of the late Wm. A. Al bright, of Durham, and has resided in Greensboro only a. few years. but long enough to win a host of warm friends by her kindness f heart and sunny, genial disposi tion. The croom is well known. having lived here for many years. He is one of our most substantial young men, a member of the firm of Matthews, Chisnolm & Stroud, clothiers and furnishers. He is to be congratulated on his good luck in wiaaiac jot jua-wiie a laay pos sessed of so many pmoJATCTiarm and noble traits of character." M ss Albright is a daughter of Mrs. Margaret B. Albright and the late Col. W. A. Albright. She numbers her friends in this city by the score all of who.will hasten to wish her and her chosen husbnnd a long and happy life. A Large Number Arrested. Last night was regular weekly drill of the Durham Light Infantry and when the time of meeting ar rived there were only a few of the "boys" present This did not" suit Capt. J. C. Michie very much so he sent out several squads in different sections of the city with instructions to ar rest and bring to the armory any member they should find. . The squads went out and in a short time, were picking up one man here and one there some were found on the streets, some at home and others at homes of their best girls but it made no differ ence, for thev had to come In a short time there was a good sized company at the armory, and the drill then went on as usual. ' trader Direction of Robert Downing Eugenie Blair will appear at the Opera House tonight in "East Lynne" and the theatre-going pub lie in Durham should give her a large house that is, if they want to witness a first class play. This beautiful and talented actress will be assisted by an "accomplished and specially chosen company, which is "tender the direction of Robert Downing (Eugenie Blair's husband), who has a national rep utation. It will be one of the best plays of the season. Reserved seats 75 cents. . ' Swiss Rett Ringcis. The Armstrong family of Swiss bell ringers will appear at the Dur ham Opera House Friday bight. This company has appeared here on two former occasions, several years ago, and it is one of the old est families of -bill ringers now traveling. The Armstrong family have ueen musicians for four gen erations. and have appeared all the country. Thev cive program of classical and popular . if.. ... ! . I I ... music, ana in meir une nave lew equals. : Dahlness Picking t;p. D isincss is getting some better in t le-register of deeds office and they have issued three marriage liceme in the past three days. Thoss issued are as follows: u W. Lynn and Mrs. Mary Fuller ion; Arthur Broy and Miss Lucy Parkel, white, and Moses Black well and Janie Bailey, colored. SMSsasa-iisasiBaaaii aMMBHMaM Revenue officer, J. H. Shelbu.n left yesterday evening for Halifax. AFRAID OFTHEMCHELORTAX G. W. Lynn, Will be Married This Afternoon. BRIDE OYER FORTY YEARS OLD The 6.00m Did M Wa it i Run Any Chances - rfPawW th Tav . r HAVE MANY FRIENDS .SI T?1IS COUNTY Ceremony Will be r 'jrmca at the Hoineoftho Brl Zls Miles v Ea8tofDur)it. " ' . i. x be a I marriage fi ve Durham this after There will miles eaSt of noon at 2 o'clock and the contract ing parties will be Mr. G. W. Lynn and Mrs. : Mary JFiillerton. . The groom is 50 years f age and the bride-to-be is put dawn as having passed her 40th birfhday. - -;" A gentleman infoT!ed The Re coi d cr reporter jestti day that his match might not have been made but for that the grooia-to-be wanted to escape the -vengence of the bill recently introduced In the legisla ture to tax bachelors 1 10 for the first year after the. bill goes into effect and double the amount of tax each year thereafter. Mr. Lynn, so our informant stated, was afraid te bill would pass, s"0 he "took, time in the fore iock , ana maae nmisen sate in time. Both 4 the briJe and groom have many friends in this" county wno win be ..glad to. hear of the match und wish them -much happi ness in the declining Vears of their life. -' . , i People In Geaeral. . - ".v , - ; " Procurator Pobiedonostzeff is de sirious of having Toiatoi tried by the Holy Synod of lytssia for her esy. ; ;. .' . r. George Wcmbwel' 4 who used to be a ' famous Englr jji showman, now makes a precarpus living by playing a cornet befcNe the public houses of London. All the Chief Iusti" s of Kansas except the last one.L vri Alartla fn,ini.Ti ,r, ..'crtiis were up, and. Justice Martin was the only one holding the office who swore in his successor. , John Burns, the English If bor leader, has made a will which he thinks no court can break. "He leaves his best love to his wife, a sound constitution to his son, his books to the parish, and his debts to his country." , Emperor Fraic's Joseph of Aus tria is having his portrait painted by the .Viennese artist, Eduard Horowitz. He sits for the artist in the Historical Art Museum, where the directors' office has been fitted up for the purpose. . ,Paul Lawrence Dunbar, the young negro poet, , who was an elevator boy, is to go to London this spring and give readings there from his works. It is proposed to introduce him first as a drawing room ; reader. Dunbar is : very black, and is about twenty-seven years of age. He first began to write in. 1 093. The Oklahoma House elected Mrs. Weeks clerk, tfhe was duly sworn in before a notary and went to work. Then the house recon sidered the vote and revoked the appointment. With a proper con tempt of-such a variable and muta ble lot of legislators, "Mrs. W eeks is at her work and retuses to quit, defying the house." After "Old Reynard. A hunting party will leave here this morning and, if their inten tions prove to be realties, they will make some old fox "hard to catch." In the party will be J. W. Hutchins and A. J. Weatherspoon, two hunters of considerable exper ience, and they will use ex-Sherifl J. V. Rigsbee's pack of hounds. Air. itigsbce cannot go on ac count of sickness in his family, but he said yesterday that there would bo no use to ask the party if they caught anything, but it. would be sufficient to simply ask how many th2y got and where they were caught at. He said his dogs were hard to beat. "A Smart Man." Prof. Eliot, of Harvard, doi.bt less is a smart man and an cxi- r- fcnctU educator, but he will have a hard job to make the laborers of the country believe that he is right when he says: "The workingman should be taught that higher pro tected industries mean lower wages." A better teacher than the learned professor namely, practi cal experience, has taught the workingmcn the very opposite. iana it win n? unless. 10 J it will b unless . to teach t.ieui u bel vc wuiiething that is not trucburlington Hawk-Eye. THE PARTY OFF, Miss Lallab Ruth Carr Accompanied Them. V - The party of .Durhamites, who are to tra el abroad for several months, left the city yesterday morning at 11 o'clock on the Dur ham and Northern train. ,' The party was composed of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Wdtts. their ac- ' complish'ed daughter Miss Annie 1 Louise Watts, Dr. L. B. Turnbull, pastor of the Presbvterian church. ! I and Miss Lallah Kuth Carr,' the beautiful daughter of Coi. and Mrs. -Julian S. Carr. In yesterday morn ir-'s issue we failed to men tion th; Miss Carr was going with the party, but she went along and ...itak v,..j""'?ntire trip, but more especially to visit the"" Holy Land. Dr. Turnbull said yesterday that it had been announced that he would remain abroad five months, but he said that it was an error. The rest of the party will be gone rive months, but Dr. Turnbull will visit the "Holy Land" and other places of scriptural interest and then return home reaching here the first of Tune. about four months. . - A large number were at the train yesterday morning to bid them "good-bye" and wish them a bon voyage, happy trip and a safe re turn home. - - r; . They were accompanied as far New York, from which place they will sail next Saturday, by Col, J. S.Carr. 1 he Recorder joins meir friends .in wishing them a happy trip. OXIS MILE A WEEK. An Incident In the Early Days of the . Western North Carolina Road. When the Western North Caro lina railroad was pushed through the Blue Ridge mountains twenty years ago, Tine construction was carried on at both ends from Old Fort, N. C, westward; upon the eastern side, and f between the Swannoa'gap and Ashcville upon the western side. ; As the work progressed, . an engine upon , the western side became a necessity. and the line upon the eastern side suspend the work meant a ioiig delay." An engine must go out, j and the problem arose how to get it then over the mountain. One of the lightest engines on the line was sent in as far as Henry s. From there to the rails on the i other side of the gap it was three and a half miles, and all the way up hill, 500 feet to the mile. The track to the top was but roughly graded. There were bridges and kculverts to build. It was decided to utilize the turnpike road. By means of short sections of .track, the sections bejng taken up after the engine had p used them, and carried forward to be replaced " for further progress, it was regarded as possible to effect the ascent. As it was manifestly impossible for any friction-wheeled engine to carry itself up such a sharp grade, it would have to be dragged up by other means. A long line of oxen was tried, but the plan failed through the inability to obtain ' a uniform pull from the team. There was plenty of power, but it could not be made to harmonize. Finally the large crew of convicts, by whom the roads was being built, was set to work. Ropes were run forward upon which some 200 men in striped clothes were set to pulling. Others worked at the wheels with pinch bars, while oth ers stood ready vh blocks of wood to se ve a wedges behind thee wheels, to hold every inch of ground that was gained. Almost inch by inch, "with a "long pull, and a strong pull, and a pull .alto gether," this forty tons of dead en gine was dragged up the mountain at the rate of a mile a week. Trains have been snowed in, broken down and delayed so that the process was slow. But it is doubtful if a complete engine was ever kept in motion day after day for three weeks at a slower rate of move ment than one-sixth ot a mile per day. Yorkville, b. C. Lngutrcr. Iluck Is a Plum Honey. Buck Kitchin has iitsucd another lanifesto, in which he declares that "Butkr is leading the populist party to hell. This because Bai ler tried to get his crowd to vott; for a silver man for United State Seaatr. Thi! lasi manifesto Buck Usui-d was one denouncing the middle-of-the-road p pu lists for not taking down To.n Walton? and voting for Bryan and bewa! straight, in the interest of free sil ver. Buck is a plu:n honey. Asheville Citizen. On account ot tne .iorth Caro lina State Convention Y. M. C. A. Winston-Salem, N. CfFeb. 18-22 1897, the Southern railway wjy sell ' round trip tickets, inclusivetji'aal ' limit : -Feb. 24.- , AT DEATH'S DOOR. Mr. O. M. Harden In 1 l'rncnrions Condition and Not Expected Lire. Mr. George M. Katden, Sr., is critically ill and fears are en tertained by his many friends for his recovery. He is paralyzed on the right side and has been un conscious since yesterday morning or Monday night. He has been sick for sometime but was not considered to be in a critical condition until he was 1 stricken with paralysis. He is at tended by Dr. Arch Cheatham. A reporter of the Record r called athe residence of Mr. ; Harden last njght at ii o'clock and he was no better than rered yesterday -Jeing-9tHl .ipjc6.nsci6us. and in . a very precarious condition. ' Mr. liar den's sister. Mrs. R. A. Noel, of Roxboro, is attending his ueusiae, ana u. ju. 1 iarden, Jr;, who has been in panville for some time, arrived here vesterdav. The many friends of Mr. Harden only hope for the best Flowers Made of Bread. The latest method of making ar tificial flowers is from fresh bakers bread. I he materials required are wire, bread, .coloring matter and knowledge of the process, now familiar to only a few persons. The factory, the only one at present, is in the west end of London, and employs about one hundred ex pert-hands. According to a well known importer of artificial flowers, the novel method is likely to su persede all others so far as flowers to be worn on the corsoge are con cerned. Not only these bread flowers look exactly -like the real article when freshly made, but as the bread grows stale the flowers assume a slightly withered appear ance, which is almost identical with that of a natural flower be ginning to fade. Of course, this faded appearance never becomes verfr marked, being just sufficient to overcome the unnaturally bright and( fresh appearance which is so objectionable in the ordinary arti ficial flower alter being in -: the heated atmosphere of a ballroom for several hours. The fading power of "bread" flowers practically in sures them against detection, even ov the eyt-s of an expert $15 to 8 per dozen, and " chrysan themums from $12 to $5. Violets, lyacinths, and other small flowers a come several collars cneaper. New York Tribune. . Monroe Johnson Hanged. Charlotte, N. C, Feb. 8 Mon roe Johnson, the colored burglar, was hanged in the jail at 11:19 this morning. - The execution was private, only 100 being admitted. Large crowds gathered outside the jail. John son protested his innocence to the ast. Father Francis stood with . a wo a on the scatioiov Eleven minutes after the trap was sprung life was extinct He was turned over to his wife for burial. The crime for which he was convicted was the burglary of a house of an old man living in the country. ' He entered Miss Shields' room and was found there by her father.' He shot at the father and daughter, badly wounding Mr. bhields. 1 he case was carried to the supreme court, who affirmed the decision of the ower court. The governor re used to pardon or commute the sentence. Mr. Walter Henry, counsel for Johnson, used all ef ions to no avail. The many friends of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. A. Gattis will regret to earn that they are both confined to their room with illness. They have been sick for some time and were reported yesterday as being no better. Miss Blanche Blake, Miss Dig ev and Miss Simmons, of Raleigh. who have brn here on a visit to ihe family of Mr. Sam Kramer for wetk returned to Kaietgh on yesterday evening s train On account ot tne uresi Jential inauguration ceremonies, ington, D. C, March 4th, '97,. the Southern Railway will sell round trip tickets from Durham to Wash 1111: ton at S8.8 each, lickits or. sale March 1st, 2nd and 3rd; lina limit returning March . Mrs. 1. T.' Kerr left last evening for Washington, D. C, where she will remain for sometime. Col. h C Wilkerson, who has been confined to his room for scv- erahdays with illness, was out on the street yesterday J. H; Vetter, advanced agent lor the "Farmer Hopkins" comedv company which is to .appear here on the seventeenth instant, was in the city yesterday. B. H. Cozart, who is an appli cant for Internal Revenue collector for the Eastern, N. C. District .went down to Raleigh yesterday 'evening. , , " .i A I Anal ( 11 : i ! i ' . V O i v;m t Ct;'e $ i lia Headache I 1 lO Minutes. ! aa4mt-an4t-s) - h A Aoalftfne ? Will Cure 1 lie Headache I Minutes. tK2BtMt- l-as4MM ! Analgine : -ia- Headache Minutes. I i utt mm it For Sale by Druggists. CONSIDER PLAIN FACTS Prices clone may Je deceiv ing. Apparent cheapnsss does Dot make a real . . . saving of money. Best value for its price, is real and only cheapne.. High Quality at fair prices is the real and only economy. rhe Domestic has always been the Best Machine in v.v- ery sense of that term. Bjst for the agent to sell, as it gives him the most profit for the least trouble. liest tor purchasers because it gives he most satisfaction in us Vgents wanted. "Domestii; 10- f urn atM Will X Cure The 3 4.i".--.7rr fe3' tl .-a 'l 1 . V V kV . ' ;1 . fX3 r .nd Imperial Taper rati mi ;, nd for catalogue. Add ns domestic Sewing Macbine Cc, RICHMOND, VA. Webster's International Didlionary The On a Great Blmtidard Authority, 1 writes lion. t. J rwwrr, . 4 OMle. V. b. Huprem Coart. 1 MTSrMi a Pcwtal for SpcclaMa PiiVi6. LiUnabrldged." ftnndnr(1 1 ifil1'.B.iwtPrln4 l.inir-. 11.. 1 n. hf , In n Hirl, ll III inl.i f)ti)nrn ( nnn, ' KV.-t ff li"Jirl Ml Hit I Wnnnf Coiuiiicnded 1 frf Cutis PnjnniinwV .n.a .if R-ti'.t.. .nil . eilori'tnni'm iilliMt j IUmu( uimuimt. THE BEST FOR EVERYBODY CCAUtC It Is to fliMl th word wanted. It IS easy t) acrU'a (lis prMiundattoa. It Is say t tracs ths trowta of s ward. It Is caty t teura wht a word mesas. Tfts New Orlotwtt flcnyttM aft it .Ktul. now motinm.nl It iwllnl hwtiwtrT, Inilllaiit i lnlitrliip. ittxl ttwIiitiiliMl (kill, mwl ni.nl iniiiit c.1111,1-1. aixl utrlul trttkvrt uliUdaHlln UiK wtiuliT. The BaMhXew&ObererMyt swmwii'-ii"itrir.iiiit iwu.Tn'ttitmiiHti"witti m li.u r r-llifm . f WrtW Inu-riraiKMinli hul'-l rlltKfaH tt 1 ti"t tialiml. dlcUmarr MkiuIiI lif t uro-BmTU. Th0 A Unfit Unuthern Ctihivmtor , Bmym I WrlwUr't to Uw Mandntd .Ik-Uutwa la , tt r'ni'l'T IV It. Urtt pw.mil'.'. mm i O. C. MtnitlA M CO., PnMlghtrt, dprttiittcld. Jfsss., V.8.A. "Do (Krt tin T rtmn rrpilnt of iHtdlliona A Enioif s Broiua-Ceisrg - Xml'tHi Br.lli r.iBtln, rimw..n', ir-n-rnl Nitlir mlmt It llhni. n-.tfi'M, Otmt. KMd-t I Hannlm, ArM lr i. . Anrmt. Antl.loW tnr Alronnli tntW.io.OTM. lrKM,lUlfca4fJoMl .4 2 ) MSBkS
The Durham Recorder (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 11, 1897, edition 1
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