Newspapers / The Edenton Clarion (Edenton, … / July 23, 1881, edition 1 / Page 1
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t .The : EiMNf f n fcAKiom. : - JOHN H. GARRETT, . -If L '. ,: ' . ' '. - iM.j ' t - ; .' ' - : . N j :" '-EDITOII.. . ' .!. ." .. ; ' . .. i i : - . v , . j , ... , . , ..... , VOL. III. EDENTON, N. C; SATURDAY, JULY 23; 1881. NO. 21. The Sngar Maples, Along the' vale and o'r the hill - I see a blue and smoky haze ; I The afternoons are warm and still, And presage longer, wanner days. , The bine jay on the sumach bough la screaming with discordant note ; The phoebe bird arouses now , ' The longing heart with trembling throat. The hills are peeping through the snow, i . And buried fences greet the view ; On bare, brown knolls squaw berries glow, Or tiny snow flowers flaunt in blue, j The fresh, new earth now scents the "gale, As, rising from her sepulcher, She casts aside Ker enowy Veil And greets het train, who, wait for her. " Kow stands the c rowsy'teain asleep Before' tho bucket-laden sleigh, , 'Vhile sinks the crael steel full deep To draw the. crystal sap away ; The steady drip from wooden lip Makes music in tho soft spring ail And soon the laden buckets tip And waste the nectar rich and rare. Anon the pungent smoke-wreaths rise Around the kettle's" tossing surge ; r Hale youths attend the sacrifice - And high the flames wit faggots urge. Oh J transmutation wondrous sweet 1 r That steals the blood of bare, brown treos And in the crackling flames -and heat r Has power those .golden grains to seize I 1 Oh, vanished youth 1 Oh, balmy days 1 The odors rise of early flowers, I see again through smoky haze The picture of those fleeing hours ; I hear again the wild halloa Of b6y8 long silent in the tomb ; . The fitful camp-fire brings to view Glad faces frpm the outer gloom. They tell of an eternal spring Forever bright with springing flowers, Where morning is an endless ring, i Existence knows not passing hours. It may be that the flames of strife' -! Have stored for us some sweets away ; Or frozen drifts of earthly life May yield for us a brighter day. A BOLD BACKWOODS BOY. farthest tip stream, - that a mink had been caught and taken out by some wild beast and devoured.'. The tail and little featherly clumps of fur i&j scattered about the trap, i If ire vengeance against the yild marauder possessed his heart. Little Cblo was a keen sympathizer in his troubles. She was also his compan ion in this trapping expedition, in which it was her duty to carry the bait some limes a squirrel, of tener a trout caught from the brook. ' c ! J ;. "What d'you spose got himT' asked Clilo, as ' Jad stood lookiug j ruefully at the tail, which he held between his thumb and finger.' '--:--t':-4:'i' ' : "1 don't know, .unless 'twas a glutton or a wildcat. Pa says they j are always nosin round to get the bait out of traps and what's caught in em. Confound him !. Seven dollars gone down his throat !" he exclaimed, wrathfully. "It is too "bad," cried little Chlo. "Can't you catch him ?" ; ' Jad thought a moment. His father had a steel fox trap. He would set that and have the thief. Leaving Chip, he hastened to the house, got the trap and raced back to the brook, j It was set at last to his satisfaction and baited with a squirrel, which he had brought along to bait his mink traps with, j He drove a stake uown through a ring in the trap chain, so as to hold whatever was caught. . , , .- Two. days passed, and not a mink had been near, but the bait was gone out of the steel trap and also from! two of the mink traps. XVitli his usual persever ance Jad rebaited them and waited. - : t The bait was again eaten out of the most of his mink traps, and what was more exasperating another "mink had been caught and eaten. , : Jad's patience now nearly gave way, and he was tempted, to tear his traps up. But on second thought he resolved to try once more. I He -would bait only the fox trap. . Jad did not visit the next morniDg, as usual, for he w;as obliged to i finish ,har vesting the potatoes. But after dinner, his father having gone to assist at put ting up a;log cabin for a newly-arrived feettler, some two miles distant, Jad and Chlo set off for the brook, Tiatchet and fishpole in hand. j As the neared the place where the fox trap was set they heard, the chain clink ing. , : ' 1; "I bet my head we've got him !" Jad cried, .excitedly, dashing, through clump of cedars. And sure enough there he was ! A big, round-headed wildcat ! At Jad's sudden appearance the crea ture bounded and leaped; frantically to free himself j but the stake was a strong one. ' ; ! l After cutting a stout green club three or four feet : in "length, Jaq. stuck the hatchet beneath the strap which he wore for a belt, and going as near; as he dared struck at the creature with all his might. He missed, however, and the cat darted round to the other side of the stake, bring up with a sudden jerk, where it crouched, growling low I and Watching the boy with fiery eyes and ears laid back. : ' "Oh, don't go so near him, Jad !" cau tioned little Chlo, retreating across the brook. "He'll fly at ye 'fore ye know it !" a Jad was eleven years1, old and little Chlo, his sister, was twolyears younger. But this was a great many years ago when their father, Mr. Dun lap, had just" moved into a township in the western part of Maine, which was then a wild, uninhabited region, save where here and there an adventprous settler had planted ms little log hut in the heart of the. wilderness, and laid bare a few acren nf the forest as a nucleus of the future home of himself and thriving family ! almost always a small colony in itself, j Ah, who can tell What homesick mo-1 ments and loggings for the old associa tions Our pioneer fathers and mothers endured, coming, as did many of them, from wealthy iS tatles and pleasant sur , rbundings. There must have been a mighty attraction in the wild , free life , of the backwoodsman and a genuine love . o the simple and homely joys of the rough hearthstone, to have held them in these rude homes, almost isolated, as- they were, from the world. ; But they lived iii' anticipation, looking' eagerly forward to a future of plenty, when the wilderness should become cultivated 1 t ..'if t 11 ' l T 11 r. -i i auu iruiuui inrougn iiieir nrst persis- tent and hardy efforts. ; With an energy characteristicof the first settlers,' Mr. Dnnlap pushed his way on through4oil, hardships and many privations, at first felling a,nd clearing iapatch large enough to put Up a log cabin forjhis family, then by degrees cntting fartner . and farther into the "Let 'em fly '." cried the now excited primitive forest, till now quite a large boy. "He's going to get his head traqk lay open to the sun, a art of cracked 'fore I'm done with 'im ! Take which was under tolerable cultivation, that, ye sneakin' thief !"; he added, ven- the rest laying black and still smoking turing up and biinging down the club from recent burnings. , with a quick blow, just grazing the ani- As before stated, Jad was now eleven, mal as he jumped to the; other side. vile was adark-faced, sinewy lad, toiigh . tu en round and round the stake thev as - a tnont'. mheritinsr much of his . v' VJ I UOni U VUXJ. VUUU1U1UK VJU fJJLXXjL UJLCSIwr. i .l .. i i ' t i ! . . .. . ' I ... . i i iainers pines: ana, enaurance. vvnat- otJv,i viif. v, Qf orifw j - -r. i nuj buxu uuv tuu xsmvj nuivu nuviuj ever he undertook to do ho was nrettv j . , . I I ACU VUV W A IIIH ACIiU, U14 UJULO UU1D X ui - ouiD iuwuij Kiiiuugii. ousiy snarling ana suitting. it was lln these unsettled regiors wild ani- hard telling which was pursuer as they "xnals were numerous,especially the wild- gyrated about the stake;- amid a perfect '"cat, lynx and glutton, or wolverine:, whirlwind of dead leaves. .These creatures often came into thai : But in an unluckv moment Jad's chain, cieanngs, and their frequent depreda- got under the trap chain, and, bringing 'tions became a great pest to the settlers. 1 it up suddenly, he threw the ring over pay for them mink with his skin-jHsee if he don't!' and he climbed on laboriously, giving vent to his indignaticfr iii threats which he meant to put into execution. Beaching the lower limbs, Jad grasped the hatchet firmly, ready for an assault. As he' came within a yard of the cat it kept clawing and making attempts to leap down upon the 'boy's head ail the time growling fiercely. Throwing the hatchet back over his shoulder as far. as he could reach. Jad struck at the big head in tLe crotch, of the tree just above: him. But th e creature dodged the blow. He again struck and rnissed ; bui-iho hixt time he -was .. fortunate enough to hit the cat on the headi fairly knocking it off the limb to the "ground, where for a moment it lay stunned, ; and motionless, , ' C! 1 Jad slipped quickly down the i trunk, thinking the victory now won." Jut the animal, recovering itself, set upon the toy with true feline grit, and the next i ii ' ' ' momeni mey were eugagea m uvcjjt tussle, while little Chlo ran back and forth shouting for help at .the topof her voice., ; " - The woods resounded with; thecon" fused medley. Jad now . found that he must fight for his life, and with another desperate blow he again stunned the creature, and, before he could; xecover, the resolute boy despatched him'.1 ! Dropping the hatchet, Jad threw him self on the ground, panting,; a;lid ex hausted. Poor little Chlo no.?1 came timidly forward, trembling and pasting frightened glances at the anima. as" if she half expected it would even now leap upoii her. r4- , ' O Jad !" cried the little girljjseeing the boy's tattered frock, "you: must be awful hurt! And, oh, see v our arm !" "No, I ain't hurt, neither," ij declared Jad, stoutly, sitting up, nOt much, any way. That's only a little stratch !" regarding his arm ruefully. I j It was a pretty big one, however. Binding some birch wither S(Jifirmly about the creature's hind leg3, jai, with little Chlo's assistance, dragged him to the house. . '. ' 'My patience alive!" cried the i lother, running to the door, as she caugj lit Sight of the children. ,'Jad Dunlapryjulven turesome boy I where did you g$t i that wildcat?" 1 V , i "He got into our trap, an then run off up a tree with it, and Jad ,cltm' up after 'im," little Chlo hastened to explain. "I told him not toj'V she' added, seeing the gathering reproof in her mother's eyes. ; "And you got well scratched ' said Mrs. Dnnlap, .-turning. 'Jad aboat and eyeing his frock and bleeding'arpi;. "I guess 'twill learn you to let'jWildcats alone!",' ,i I . ' ? "He won't eat ahy more of m mink, anyway,", muttered Jad, ' I- WARTS. RELIGIOUS EEADI0. ITEMS OF INTEREST, The Wr la WfclekTfctr are Remwretf With Neta an DUpatch A Prcallar Braaea . of the JSclence of Sursery. ' ; ' -i. i I . . '.... . A very handsome: young lady entered thie rcsthetic office of a professor on "Woodward avenue the other day, and asked the doctor, with an air of great mystery, if he ever cured warts. "Vart8," said the man of moles, 1 should think I had bushels of them. ! "And, do they leave any scar?" ' "Kot a scar" said the doctor ; "why thath the secret of my success ; any bo'dr; can take off a wart and leave a tnt I erladicate the whole' busi ness and leave the skin absolutely with out a mark." "What is your fee, doctor?" con tinued the fair patient, - who was as nervous as if she had ventured into a den of lions.. "Anywhere from SI to $25 according to the size of the wart, the number of visits and the difficulty of operation ; if you will take a seat in the other room I will examino your case." The "other room" was a small office neatly fitted up with a shelf full of small, fine instruments much resembling the tools in a dentist's office. A bargain was, made as the little doc tor went to work with hands as soft and supple fts a woman's, to eradicate that wart.- The young lady pushed masses of bronde hair from her white brow, and lifted her pretty eyes to the doctor's face. j "It is in the corner of that eye." It as plain to all observers that it was ; the defect was bigger than the eye itself. The wart was immense, omni present and overshadowing. Te little doctor picked out a minute instrument and took the dimensions of the wart, then be put on a tiny pair of forceps, and in a second the wart rolled off like a traitor's head. Blood followed, which was soon stanched; but the root was yet to be killed. A small cold steel, wrapped about with cotton wool, was dipped into a white liquid. "What is that V asked the patient who hai only spot en in gasps of "oh's" and "ah's" during the performance. "I . gave a hundred dollars to find out," answered the doctor pleasantly, "couldn't tell for less." "But will it'hurt ?" " . "Very little and he jabbed the base of the wart gently, "smarts a trifle that's all !" The jabbing process went on until .the spot was insensible to feeling, the . doc tor meanwhile improving his time and keeping up the girl's 'spirits by telling stories of all the remarkable warts he had conquered. i I Social etiauetto among the Indians u Railway signals are positive. At cer-1 confined to ona trait. Thy never let a tain points are seen sign posts on which I caller go away hungry, even if it takes appears this word "stop. It is unat- the last dotr. I i as tended by adjective or adverK It is condensed a& a rifle-ball. The approach to a railway crossing or a drawbridge is guarded by the peremptory signal. ! We were riding on a swift train at high speed when with a sudden jerk the ?' Westinghouse" slowed our train to a stand-stilL A look at the "block signal ahead explained. The red signal was silent, yet i "its voice was heard" bore me roar or our many wneeis. it said "stop as plainly as the sign-board with large word in black at !the draw bridge. 1 , j To a human being this littlo word is as positive as to a railway train. I re call a case. Moro than eighty years ago a boy went to Newark to learn a trade. His brave father was an invalid, but earned his own bread. The mother was dead, but not forgotten, j When she died she told this son to fear! God. The Isn't it wonderful how a thousand dollar trotter shrinks away into the hide ef a seventy-five doilir ping when tne : assessor comes along ? An Omaha man has beaten a prairie dog all 'to exnte&h. While this animal will dig 200 feet for water, he dug COO feet under a warehouse for whufcy. The man who really "saw the comet first" hasn't even mentioned' it to his -dearest friends. He lyi l been drinking,'. ', and ho was suspicion of his vision. I Plaster of' Paris cats are no longer' ; considered tony enough for' mantel or naments, but; they must s'cat ! and give place to "crockery doga with yellow eyes. A Nebraska preacher stopped his ser mon to give a baby a chance to cry, and the young one spread himself "With such Aigor that he? burst a blood vessel. Bents at Long Branch are so exorbi- i 1 i -i .1 it.. 1- il 1. 1 I very murmug arveu tuo uiuu uux thftt but fcw Qf the CQt- repeated to him that message. And yet . ' v T,-.t , , . . , , ' tages are occupied, save by. exrrxesi one Sabbath he had spent in reckless , . . . .. . v, , r. . w i 1, dents and journalists on summer vaca- and bad company. That night he did j. . -. not sleep. He thought of the mother's j- ; . words-her dTing words. The words of Mary(Wells of Sandusky, Ohio, acknowledged to having a toot seven teen inches long and eight inches wide. the invalid father were recalled, no was in good company that Sabbath night and the fruit was unto life, j ' As he tossed and thought and wept the boy said: ! i "It is time to stop, and I will stop. And he did stop. A long life of hon orable usefulness followed., i ' And was his the only good mother that has a son on the road to ruin? It is possible thatr some such son m the place of sin, if ha would but listen, would hear her voice .saying to him with such rathos in it. Ston ! Or, as he Was eighteen. That's a fair trotter for a girl years old. If a great many young men's clothes 1 didn't fit them till they pay the tiilor we would see lots of noble young bloods going around town like a loaded clothes lino flapping in the idle breefce of a sum mer day. . Little Robbie went to a show and raw an elephant for the first time in his life. When he came home his mother asked him what he had seen; "An ele- hurried along the "broad road" he has phant, ma," he answered, "that gobbled heard within his own heart, as distinctly hay with his front tail.' as if human lips has spoken his own conscience the word Stop lCongrega tion'alisU - . has At Bethlehem. The Rev. Dr. Theodore Cnyler writes of a visit to Bethlehem irt the New York Evangelist as follows : Wd set our faces far the pools of Solomon, halting a few moments at the tomb of Rachel by the road fide. The small structure was crowded with Jews, some of whom were phylacteries,1, and all were wailing, as they wail beside tho remnant of the Relicfous News and Sole. - A convention of Swedish Baptists been organized in KanFas. ' J The Rev. George H. Hepworth, D.D., of New York city, has been called to the pastorate of the First Congregational church, Meriden,' Conn., at a salary of $5,000. i Pope Leo has appointed Dr. McMullen temple wallsl One old woman was weep- ing and pressing: her withered cheek- He did not get much sympathy! from his .father, either, who chi&eHl him saverely for his want of prudenceVand bade him be more cautious in thef'uture, about attacking such animals. ' 4! ii - It took a long time, to heal tip Jad's lacerated arms and shoulders, ami it was a number of days before he got cver .the soreness and lameness enough tp visit his traps. However, Jad was not troubled again that fall, wlr'le two mor mink were added . to his little pilef furs which he sent on his father's lpajl down to the "settlement" not long aftlr .There was also an abundance of 'smaller game t be had for the trapping, and Jhis fall Jad was anticipating no end of enjoyment in the warm Indian summer days, trapping for "musquash" (musk rat) and minkalongRenny Brook, which ran past the clearing half a mile away in the woods. His father had helped him make his -traps, and on his r.- very first visit he was greatly elated by x finding a sleek and glossy mink in one of them. This piece of good luck had set Jad half wild, for mink skins brought a high price at the "big settlement," twenty-five miles down the country, t where his father alwajs went to- do his :.;; rading. : '. ,. 5 Jad watched his traps eagerly, as a ." miser watches his money bags. , But with all his vigilance, what was his dis. Jaay to find, one morning, in tho trap W0PDS ur UlSliU.U. ... 1 . , , . , ! The necessities tnat exist arejem ? gen eral created by 5 the superfluities that are enjoyed. ' ij I There are few occasions win cere mony may not bo easily dispensed with, kindness never, j ; . j j He that does good for good's sake seeks neither praise nor reward though sure of both at last. . hj ! WBO 1 the top of the stake. With a bound the creature was off, the chain rattling after him catching under roots and stones. . There was not a second to lose, and the boy gave,: hot chase. They ran on for fifty rods xr more : then seeing Jad so close upon him, the cat scratched up the trunl of a hemlock, trap, and all, and from the branches glared at the panting and excited boy. J ; Jad's courage was now up to the high est pitch, and throwing down his club he began to climb the rough trunk. 'Don't go up tfiere, Jad, for pity sake, don't !" implored little Chlo, now com ing up all out of breath. ."Yes, an' let him go off with pas trap on hisfoot, wouldn't jye ? Tust like a girl fraid of her own shadder. P cried J ad, scornfully. 'I tell y er, he's got to arn't ;arn't it is a a a j purpose ; not tne power to acnsle-ye, out the will to labor; There is no time in a manV ! i he is so great as when he It seems that I the .men wanted, here are;, the men 1 i i . ii 1 ti i 5 wantea in tne otner wona. r$ , What men want is not taleS J e when cdieerfnllv o , . 'i t: t . i bows to the necessity of his position, and makes the best of it. 1 1 j ; - He who has been spoiled bjf 'success may readily be sweetened, bilt? he who has been spoiled by non-succe?s has lost wholesomeness forever. H . Life is so complicated a gamg ihat the devices of skill are liable to b& defeated at every turn by air-blown chfnces, in- warts. They are all of fungus growth, fed by vegetable impurities in the blood, for which they have an affinity. Young people are more subject to them than old. The majority of my patients are ladies. Ever see a lady that didn't have warts ? People with light eyes and hair are the been recommended by the official board of East Brady, Pa., to the District Con ference as a suitable person' to be;licen- of Chicago, Bishop of Davenport, a new diocese formed out of tho southern half of! Iowa, and including the cities of Keokuk, Des Moines, Davenport and Council Bluffs. It is announced that Mr. Francis Mur- "Warts grow in classes," he said, as Uhv. the temperance evangelist, has hnmret. nf which meftrtre r.ftO feet in lie uippeu inio me wirne nquia again. "There are nervous warts, indolent warts, obtrusive warts, and obstinate ., i sed to preach. The Free Congregational society at Florence, Mass., voted to call Rev. Mr. Spencer and wife, of Haverhill, Mas'., to become resident speaker'. They will alternate in occuDvinsr the platform three Sundavs of each month, thesocietv " eyes with the view of beautiful Beth- ' 1 X 11 . L t L f lr " i i 1 .1 i . 1 .1 V mosuoject xo xnem ; ccok a wars irom 8lying the other Sundav. i tne tip oi tne nose oi tne preitiest gin n m,mftr,-fli yrn tr th in Detroit ; yours is most killed. A man carved oak frames haye be n plac j in came here the other day with fifty warts t. James EnifeoDal church. Chieaio. in memory of Bishops Chase and White house. Each is inscribed. "In memo riam" with appopriate names and dates. St. James is the pioneer Episcopal church of the city and State. iThere were last year in the Church- of England 127,786 confirmations. Of against the tomb with as much distress as if the fair young wifo who breathed out her life there forty centuries ago had been her own daughter. We found the enormous pools, of Solomon (the length) were, about hal f filled with pure water; We rode beside the aqueduct that leads from them all the way to Bethlehem. Down among the "bleak and barren hills we saw th deep, fer tilo vale . of TJrtas, filled with gardens and fruit trees. It is cultivated lv the European colony planted by Sir. Mes hullam. For a half hour we feaste'd on his head cured them all.' There ! Look in the glass !" The patient did as directed. The wart was gone and a beauty spot of black court plaster was in its place ; her face was a celestial rosy red with delight, and she looked as if she could have hugged the little doctor, who prudently retreated to his salves. "You don't know the mortification that wart has caused me she said, lay ing a generous greenback in his hand. '(I never parted with anything so wil lingly ; a thousand thanks, doctor !" "That's the fourth Tve had to-day," said the doctor, as he stuffed the green- these 51,256 were males (and 76,530 females. The largest number confirmed in any one diocese was in London, being 15,538. j . lehem perched on its lofty hill and sur rounded, by ; olive orchards. So many new edifices have been erected for con vents and other religious 'purposes that Bethlehem has almost a modern look. As we rode through its narrow streets we saw no Ruths, but an ancient Jew in turban, long robe and flowing beard, quite answered to my idea of Boaz. We rode to the convent ad joining, the Church of the Natm'y, where a rather jolly looking moiik furnished us an excellent lunch. He then took us into the ven erable church that covers the subterra nean chamber in which tradition has al ways held that our blessed Lord was born. The chamber is probably a rem nant of an ancient khan once belonging I At a fancy ball the mistress of the house stations a servant at the door to announce the guests by their costumes, to the family of jesse and King David. as "Three mousquetaires !'' m "A devil 1 1 expected to be shocked by a sham tack into a plethoric wallet, "only one and a Hebe !" and so on. At last arrive mockery when I entered the church, was! a mouse." - two -ladies, in plain walking costume, but a feeling of, genuine faith in the "A mouse, doctor? who ; have only came to glance . at the locality came over me as 1 descended gay .and dazzling scene. "What cosr into the rocky chamber arid read, around tumes shall I announce, ladies T says the silver star, the famous inscription in calculable down. as the descent thistle- The only Ohio man whoHdied sud denly last week was a chap wig) -was try ing tc occupy two seats in a passen ger coach while four women wer standing up. Yes, a mouse, a birth mark. The lady came up because she had seen two others from whose features I had taken a mouse. She had one at the corner of of her mouth, and there wasn't a sur geon in the country would touch it. There is her address confidential, of course. You can see her in two weeks, and there!! be neither mouse nor scar. I make a specialty of warts and moles and' birth marks, and I've had -some if ( be-a-u-ti-ful cases. It's astonishing how many faces J have an interest in, but I never seem to see them. The past is p&st, and it is business with me. Detroit Post. x the servant courteously. 'Ob, none Latin, "Here Jesus Christ was born of the mercy, we haven't anything on at all ! Virgin Mary," The three-fold argument is the response. "Two ladies without anything on at all !" bellows the faith ful domestic.1 Sensation. I . ( ( j A 'doctor recently ieprved a friend and Frayna hare made familiar. reit of us. Holy Sepulcher in this city. for the authenticity of this site is drawn from unbroken tradition, from, the fact that Bethlehem has never been over thrown in sieges, and from the other for his too liberal use of absinthe, , . . l a,v "Bahf said the latter, "Fve drank of 4v ' . . , . I . , that he came and spent his long, labo- lt since I was a boy, and Im sixty." , i v IlTT ... . - , . , , J, L nous, life m the cavern close by the ".Very likely, replied the doctor; but , v: r -T t j -u J , .J r , , - . V birth spot of our Lord. I entered with if you had never drank of it, perhaps . . "... . , . , - ' ; . r . deep interest the cave in which this de- you would now be seventy.". . , . ... , - . v . J vout scholar meditated and-prayed and There are! grasshoppers in Gallia .wrought the Vulgate translation of county, Ohioi six inches long. Isn't it Gods word.,' My visit to the Church of A California cirl of ten performs all I nearly time to put an air-brake on that the Nativitv was ten.fold TO OTA fUltiftfn. the feats with a rifle that Carver, Paine State and hold her back in line with' the tory vhan .that to the Church of .th 15 ; 1 ' -M ir Ii T ii!-
The Edenton Clarion (Edenton, N.C.)
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July 23, 1881, edition 1
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