Newspapers / Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, … / May 12, 1892, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE WEEKLY AEGUB. 'This A.KGUS o'er the people's rights . Doth an eternal vigil keep; No soothing strain of Maia's son Can lull its hundred eyes to sleep' VOT,. VIII. GOLDSBORO, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 12,1892. NO. 01 LOCAL. BRIEFS. We hear much about "the Demcc cracy refusing the people's demanda." As the Democracy is the people how can it refuse their demands? The Court House is now receiv ing its new metal roof, and it adds "greatly to the fine appearance of the building since it has been brought up to its new designs. That is a patriotic and substan tial manifesto sent up from Grimes land Alliance, in Pitt county. How about its suppression by the Pro gressive Farmer f Is that " toting " fair with the " hayseeds," as it calls the brethren of the Alliance ? The news of the death of Capt. Juo. A. Richardson, formerly and for many years a Conductor on the A. & N. C. R. R-, which occurred at his home in Newbem, Monday after noon, will be received with sincere regret in this city, where he had many friends. The death of Mr, Chas. II. How ell, aged 84 years, the venerable father of our good friends and coun tymen Messrs. Jno. C. and II. T. Howell, occured Wednesday night, at his home in Fork township, rather suddenly, though not unexpected by reason of his advanced age. Thebe are 248 students at the University. This is an increase of 50 over last year. President Win ston, who was in the city yesterday, says that he will have 300 next fall, then 400, then 500. When he gets 500 he will tak- t rest. People all over the State, he :says, are most cordial and enthusiasic in support ing the University; and, as to the students, why they love it and help in all ways to build it up. There have been only two cases of disci pline during the year. The sad intelligence reached this city Friday morning of the death of Mr. Council Bizzell, the venerable father of our esteemed townsmen Mr. K. E. and Dr. Bizzell, of tLe firm of Bizzell Bros. & Co., which occurred Thursday night at his home at Bizzell's mill. He was a most estimable gentleman and hon ored citizen and his loss will be sin cerely mourned in the community and by all who knew him. The Argus extends its condolence to the sorrowing family. A bold thief forced the front door of Mr, W. II. Huggins' hardware store, on Walnut street, Thursday night, using a wooden wedge and an axe. The only thing missed from the store was a glass rotary show stand, in which was displayed a inumber of pistols. This was found .on the sidewalk near the store yester day morning rifled of its contents. Evidently the thief was of a bellig erent turn of mind.' Thus far n clue has been obtained to the perpe trator of the deed. It is with sincere regret, which will be shared in by many in this city, that The Argus chronicles this morning the death of Mrs. Ceo. D. Bennett, which occurred in Rich mond Tuesday night, after a long and lingering illess. Her husband was a constant attendant by her bed side during all her illness, for the past several months. Her remains, accompanied by her husband, sinter and brother,were taken Wednesday to her childhood home in Cnarlestown, W. Va., for interment in the family burying plot. The negro Peter Cobb, who was sent up from this county in January last to serve aterm of 15 years in the penitentiary for aggravated lar ceny, made his escape some days ago, and on Friday evening Sheriff Grant shadowed him in this city, and gath ering a posse of determined men he went to the house wherein Peter was supposed to be loitering, shortly af ter midnight, and was not long in apprehending Peter, whom they found secreted under the house. The posse covered him with their shoot ing apparatuses, and policemen Iler- ring and Head put their nippers on him and brought him out where he could be stood up and searched. Im agine the consternation of the crowd when Peter was found to be literally clothed with pistols. He had seven pistols on his person all of them new, 32 calibre, and loaded. They were the pistols taken from Mr. W. H. Hoggins hardware store Thurs day night, and there can be little, if any donbt, that Peter is the man who broke open the store and stole them, lie is now safe in jail and will be duly attended to according to law. lie is a desperate character. MEMORIAL DAY. Its Observance in Goldsboro -with Mil itary Honors, t Ioral Decorations, Gathering of Confederate Vetera 118, and an Appropriate Address, True to memory of her cherishing of the the Confederate Dead Goldsboro did honor to them yester day with becoming ostentation. As the hour for the ceremonies at the cemetery approached the weather grew so threatening that it was de cided to hold the services in the Messenger Opera House, and soon that spacious buildiDg was thronged to its utmost capacity. The Confederate Veterans, who turned out in goodly number, were given seats upon the stage. "The ladies of the Memorial Association were seated in the right dress circle, and the Goldsboro Rifles occupied a section of the parquet. After a fervent and eloquent pray er by the Chaplain of the Rifles, Rev. C. L. Hoffmann, the orator of the occasion, Mr. Jos. E. Robinson, was introduced by the Chief Mar shal, Mr. Henry Lee, in words of commendation ' that were sincerely appreciated. Mr. Robinson spoke as follows : Veterans of the Gray: Ladies of the Memorial Association of Goldsboro : Comrades of the Goldsboro Rifles : Ladies and Gentl men : It was after much hesitation, chiefly on ac count of the consciousness of a certai 1 unfit ness for the taak.that I acceptc d the invitation to deliver this Memorial address. 1 he highest qualification for speech on such an occasion as this, is one that, unfortunately, I do not possess an appropriate expeiience, the ex perience of one who has been tried in the firey furnacn cf war, and who knows what war means, and hence who has a more just and in tense appreciation than I can have of the meaning- and purpose of this day. And so it has always seemed to me that the principal actors in this, as well as other Memorial ex ercises, shou'd, when possible, be those who were active participan?s in the stirring? events to which they all relate. That the public in terest in them would be enbansed thereby, it is fair to assume. Who so well qualified to speak of the gallant soldiers, whose graves we come to-day to decorate, as one ho, as it were, stood shoulder to shoulder with them in the great conflict in which they fighting fell, and was, perhaps, an eye-witness of their patience and fortitude, their suffering for they did suffer and their heroic death ? And who knows so well to appreciate the tender significance of these ceremonies as the old soldiers among us ? The thought, therefore, at once suggests itself to you as it did to me. that soldier-orators may not be everj where available, even now, and still less will tney be so in the future. The time is not far distant when the old soldier will cease to participate in any of the exercises of this day. One by one they are passing away " over the river to rest beneath the trees ". Ere long the "Army of the Gray" will be marshalled on the other side. God grant that when the last reveille shall sound upon the plains of immortality His great orderly may report the ranks all lull not a soldier missing. It was with some such thought as this in mind, comrades of the Goldsboro Rifles, that I accepted the invita tion with which you honored me, to address you at this time. Unable, then, to draw upon the eources of a personal experience in war, I can only pre sent to your consideration such thoughts as observation and reflection have furnished me, and I shall, at least, address you seriously. It is not a time for hollow or unmeaning speech. Too many wounds made by cruel war, still bleed and pain, pemaps insilenceand in secret; toe many mothers s ill live to mourn over darling boys sleeping in soldier graves, it may be far away where a mother's tears of grief and affection can never fall above them for the South has had to gather her own dead to gether and care for them as best she could ; too many stricken hearts are sadly beating away life's weary years in widowed solitude, heavily burdened wi h the cares that belong only to the husband and father, but which he will carry no more; and there are too many surviving soldiers, veterans of many a hard campaign, still among us, with minds solemn with the memories and reflections that crowd upon them on such a day as this, for indul gence in sectional harangue, or in the affecta tions of mere oratory. But would. Veterans of the Gray would that I could speak to you with the soul of an old soldier to-day, who might recall with a kindling of the old war fire in his own heart, and a quick response in yours, the time when, each morning as un complainingly renewing the wearisome march, or silently taking his place in the line 01 Darxie, ne iaia nis uie, a iresn sacrifice, oe- side your own on the altar of his country. What reminiscences of those eventful yeai-s must throng your minds to-day, some sad and touching, some hard and painful, some bright and exultant, but all invested with that abid lng, thrilling interest that always comes with the rcco lection of a great experience I W hat a contrast between then and now! A trreat calm has followed the raging storm Scarcely a ripple now disturbs the surface of the national life. The arbitament ot arms has settled the issues that were then involved; and whatever side the fault lay, the nation is now one and at peace. But it is not of this that I would speak. The lesson of the day and hour is one of patriotism, and the old and young alike should heed it, So long as these memorial exercises shall be observed In the spirit in which they were con ceived, so long will they exert a potent influ ence in promoting among the people a love of country, and they are admirably calculated to do this, appealing as they do to reason and emotion alike. Yes, many hea ts have been stirred to-day. many noble,patriotic impulses engeni" ared nd quickened. Not only have the tenderest feel ings of the people been touched by memories of the heroic dead, but a new interest has been awakened in the cause for which they fell in a broad sense, the cause of country. The importance of cherishing among our people a love of country cannot be over-esti mated . By the very laws of development, cultivation is essential to healthful, vigorous growth. In a free country, absolutely and, to all appearance, permanently at peace, whose liberties are unmenaced within or without, there is little to keep actively alive in the old or to cultivate in the young, the heroic quali ties, or the sentiment of patriotism. Rome, struggling for life and empire, cultivated he roism In her children by ever present national peril or unceaing national strife. Rome, the mistress of the world, "whose eagles flished in the rising and in the settin ? sun '. enriched with the wealth of all climes, and enervated by luxurious ease and peace, ceased to be heroic and tottered to decay. No v it docs not follow that heroic or patriotic elements ot cnaracter win not exist unless they are specially cultivated.for these elements will be found to a greater or less degree in every truly noble nature. Without any of the sharp teaching of events which for centuries of time made every Swiss a patriot snd hero, how quickly, when the call to arms sounded thro'out Southland, did the latent sentiment of patriot ism in the hearts of tens of thousands of her sons burst forth into a flame as fervid as ever glowei in the heart of Swiss or Roman ! But none the less important ii it that love of country should be cherished among our peo ple, not alone in anticipation of foreign war or civil strife, which may never come, but for security against the more insidious, and hence. more dangerous evils that are ever present with us, and that our liberties and tree insti tutions may be the more carefully preserved in all their original purity. W hile no argu ment is required to prove a proposition so self-evidenr, the point is too vital to be allowed to pass with a mere affirmation. We are apt to cherish the notion, practically if not theo retically, that our republican form of govern ment is so superior to all others, and so well established, as to be beyond the reach of the perils that beset others, and therefore not to require the safeguards so carefully provided1 for their peace and security ; in fine, that our republican system, out of its innate excel lence and vitality, must stand forever. It is this spirit of Oter-conildence rather than in difference that makes our people so neglectful of their political duties, and that constitutes one of the dangers that threaten us. If the history of republican governments in the past, and that of our country so far, teaches anything at all, it is that there is no form of government exposed to more imminent perils than the republican, in which all elements of corruption, disintegration and decay have the freest and fullest play, and hence there is no form of government under which vigilance on the part of the people as well as by those who actively administer it is more imperatively demanded. The stability of a despotism de pends in no small degree upon the ignorance and, what usually accompanies ignoramte, the servilit,- of its people. On the other hand the perpetuity of repub-- lie-in government depends, I might say almost wholly, upon the iatelligence of its people. and the conscious, active, watchful presence in their hearts of the spirit cf liberty. No government is; ever, anywhere, self-sustain ing ; and no law under any form of rule, has the power of self-enforcement. But especi ally in free America is the stability of the government and the vigor of the law depend- j en; upon an educated, watchful, patriotic public sentiment. TnU is a practical age, and men of the world are inclined to sneer at sentiment, but let us not in our vaunt id security forget and surely we cannot forgst to-day, that only a few years ago our very existance as one broad and mighty nation that we are, stood trembling in the balance. I be lieve there can extet neither in this nor any other country, a state of society so uniformly elevated and a. government so. thoroughly fortified at all points, as to be beyond the reach of danger, or when it will ever be safe to neglect to cherish in the hearts of the people the spirit of liberty. Contrast the future of a youth from the common walks of life just entering manhood in an absolute monarchy and in free America. It is a matter of no personal or national con sequence whether or not the former under stands the science of government, or even knows the history of his own country. Mat ters of state do not concern him, and in the conduct of public affairs he can therefore have no sense of responsibility. He is con scious that he is simply one of so many mil lions whose chief political duties are to obey the mandates, pay the bills and fight the bat tles of his imperial majesty. The politica' creed to which he has been educated teaches him to yield a slavish compliance with the re quirements of a single despotic will, I can easily Imagine how the untutored savage can love the wild woods, that are all his own, and through vhich he roams at will ; and the wandering barbarian, the burning desert sands, where,under the free canopy of Heaven, in unmolested solitude he pitches his tent and makes his home. But I cannot conceive how one can deeply love his country, whose as pirations for freedom, if hf ever has any, are buried under a sense of utter hopelessness, and who can give expression to those senti ments only at the cost of bringing upon him self and all who are dear to him the crushing weight of des,potie porer. Of that broad sentiment of patriotism, that lofty sense of nationality that springs from pride in the past, hope in the future, and the enjoyment of inestimable rights and privileges in the present, for she preservation of which the possessor feels himself, in a measure, re sponsible, he can know nothing. How different the present nd the future of a youth just arrived at th period of manhood in free America. The future, with all its possibilities of achievement and of public honor and emolument, lies wide open before him. Whatever lis capacity, the field for its exercise is broad and free. Whatever his ambition, the priza glistens at the other end of the course, and he has but to outstrip his competitors to secure it. He has a clear con- scio :in:ii4 his life is safe, his liberty as secure and his opinions as sacred as those of the highest in the landV He may and should issume the duties of citizenship with a sense of increased responsibility. It is as if at the moment of his assumption of these duties he were ushered unto Freedom's imposing Tem ple, and ti'i presiding genius, the Goddess of Liberty, pointing to its sacred Constitutional guarantees of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, should say to him, " all these priceless treasures 1 commit to your keeping ; preserve them in all their purity and integrity for yourself and your posterity ". The figure is fanciful, but the truth which it typifies is substantial. Now, while we must not expect our young men to assume their civio rights with ostentatious displays of dignity and sentiment, we should desire that they should assume these rights with an evident ' consci ousness, both of the greatness of the privi-" lege and the gravity of the duty devolving upon them. The youih of to-day will be the active citi zen of anothor generation. Their proper education, therefore. Is a matter of the deep; est importance, their education into the spirit as well us knowledge of the origin and hi story of republican institutions, and, more Important still, into that nobility of character, which, if :t is not patriotism itself, is the only soil in which patriotism can take deep root and find vigorous growth. True nobility of character is the best of all qualifications for Ame rican citizenship. Themes open up before here upon which 1 cannot dwell. But how responsible is that work which belongs peculiarly to the teacher and the mother, and especially the latter the work of moulding the characters of the young, of building up the manhood on which the safety and prosperity of the State must always immediately rest. In view, therefore, of the mother's close and responsible relation to the formative period in the life of the young, do I express myself too strongly when I say, that an intelligent, patriotic womanhood is the great and ultimate conservator of American freedom. Of the womanhood of the Scuth is an active, inspiring, patriotic power in the late civil war, did time allow, much might be said. When the men of ancient Sparta were mustering for battle, their wives or mothers were accustomed to present them their shields, with the parting injunction: " Either vith your shields or on them ", sig nifying that in the way they bore themselves as soldiers of their . country, a heroic death wa? better than dishonor. There may not go down the sounding aisles of history, the fare well words of Southern wives and mothers to those most dear to them hastening to j oin the valiant army of the Gray, but that their sense of honor and spirit of self-sacrifice equaled that of ancient Sparta the history of the achievements of the soldiers of the " Lost Cause " affords abundant proof, and that they would have preferred that those whom they gavi. to the cause of Southland should fill the honored graves over which an admiring and grateful people bow to-day In holiest rever ence, rather than prove recreant to the sacred trusts committed to them, we are proud to believe. Thousands of wives sacrificed all the transcendant swoeta of domestic life, assum ing burdens too heavy for them to bear, and thousands of mothers saw the hopes which they had fondly cherished for life's declining years lade away when they gave husbands and eons to their struggling country. The memory of a wife or mother's heroic bene diction may have made Leonidas, fearlessly facing the lrersian hosts in the pass of Ther mopylae, immortal. Can we doubt that many a hero of the Lost Cause felt his soul fired and his arm nerved to do valiant deeds, in the con sciousness that proud though anxious eyes were watching him from afar fiom home ? Read the legend on the old war banner of the old Goldsboro Rifles" victory or death" and find the answer there I l few thoughts on the influence and uses of public memorials and I will close. Claim to the possession of heroic elements of char acter as a race inheritance is so natural to ev ery people, that history, relic, festival and monument are employed as safe repositories or permanent memorials of the notable events of the past. In constantly remindl lg the people of the heroes of the past, or the mark ed crises of the national life, they become as so many inseparable ties, that silently but surely unite all hearts in a common memory, a com mon pride and a common hope. These memor ials often become the embodiment, or the em- blemof a national principle.and in th a presence or contem plation of the emblem,whether in the form of a national ensign, an enduring monu ment, or a recurring memorial day, all uncon sciously the people grow steadfast in their adherence to the principle, until both are held inreligioos veneration. This lieautiful me morial monument, around which, we are now assembled, was erected not merely to perpet uate the memory of the "Confederate Dead," but that our sympathies may be kept warm in the cause of country. And so long as that si lent sentinel shall stand guard oyer the im mortal heroes who Bleep beneath this grassy mound, will its educating influence for good be felt through all the rolling years. , The ancient Romans were accustomed to place the images of their distinguished ances tors in the vestibules of their dwellings to re mind them and their descendants, as they passed out to their daily avocations, to emu ulate their illustrious example. So we erect monuments in public places and observe me morial days, not alone as fitting tributes to the eminent characters or public services of the dead, but as perpetual lessons to the hy ing. Through these the dead address the liv ingthe past speaks to the present and the fu ture, and theirs is the voice of wisdom, for it is the vnice of history and experience. Bight hundred sleep here! Their earthly sun has set, but until its lising on the Resur rection morn shall the beneficent influence of their valar be felt through all the land. The glory of their heroism shall but augment with the lapse of years, and generations yet unborn in this Southland of ours shall rise up and call them blessed. After the address the Rifles, .ac companied by the Chief Marshal and his assistant, Capt. D. J. Broad hurst, the Chaplain and Orator, many Veterans, the Eclipse Steam Fire Engine Company in uniform, and numerous citizens, proceeded to the cemetery, where the floral deco rations around the Confederate Square and Monument, thanks to the noble women of the Memorial Association, were beautiful and pro fuse and where a round of three sa- , lutes were fired by the company. NO DODGING THIS PLAffi That Twelfth Plank of the St. Louis "Demands" is There: Face it Fairly and Bravely as You Did Yankee Bul lets.Men of the South, and Say What You Will Do With It. IT IS NOT " MERELY A RESOLUTION " The next important political event in North Carolina with no politics in it", is Mr. President Butler's great Star Chamber Conference, called to meet in Raleigh on the 17th insr., to consider the St. Louis man ifesto " for the purpose of adoption ". This conference promises to be even more secretly interesting than that great silent conclave of Mr. Polk's that has just adjourned in Birmingham. We opine it will be come particularly interesting when , the conference conies to discuss a plank in the St.Louis platform that, although prominent, Mr. Butler "forgot" to put in his call. We refer to the Twelfth section, which says: " Twelfth We demand that the Government issue lean! tender notes and pay the Union soldier the differ ence between the price of the depreci- ated money in wliich he was paid and gold". This would mean the expenditure of two thousand million of dollars to be raised by taxation of the whole people for the ben?fit of a single j class in one section of the country. The South would have to pay about one-third of this enormous sum. I The Third Party promoters In thd South cannot leave out this section. They may assert that it was "only a resolution and not a part of the platform ". That will not do. . It stands out as plain as language can make it, an essential part of the platform itself. It is just as much in the platform as the government ownership of railroads, telegraph, etc., is, and we want those of our friends the honest yeomamy of the Alliance who attend that conclave on the 17th to be heroic enough to grapple it and kick it out of the Alliance " demands . It is found in the hand books of the Third Party, and in certain sec tions where it is meant to catch votes the Third Party orators ho wl over it as energetically as they dodge it id the South. Is Mr, Butler prepared, to saddle this debt on the South ? If so, although he is a young man his youth will not be &cceptedas an ex cuse for such an act, and were he to live a thousand years he could not outlive the odium of his even cham pioning the effort to saddle so nefa rious a measure upon the people of the South. If Mr. Butler thinks that the people of North Carolina are going to be lulled to rest, or that the Dem ocratic press of the State are going to be cowed to silence, while he calls his secret conclaves and star chamber conferences with the view to sad dling upon the people of this State and the South, by secret wire-pulling and high-handed chicanery, such odious measures as the 12th plank of the St. Louis demands, he is sadly mistaken and wofully blind. " You may fool some of the people all the time, and all the people some of the time; but you cannot fool al! the people all the time." Mark it, Mr. Butler, while the time goes by. The reckoning is in the future and it will be between you and the people. The wife of Thomas Buchanan Reed is buried in Spring Grove Cem etery, Cincinnati, and he, we believe, "sleeps the dreamless sleep" in a foreign clime, while his peerless po em, "Drifting," lives on and keeps his memory green: A revivifying of nature's latent forces occurs every spring. At this time, better than at any other, the blood may be cleansed from the humors which infest it. The best and most popular remedy to use for this purpose is Ayer's compound Ex tract of Sarsaparilla. DEMOCRATIC COXVEMTIOV, Delegates Elected to the State Cons ventiou: The Mew County Execu tive Committee. The Democratic County Conven tion that assembled in this city Sat-, uiday was one of the largest and most harmonious we have ever known. Tht: convention was called to order by Mr. I. F. Dortch, chairman of the Democratic Executive Commit tee, and Mr. J. P. O'Borry was re quested to act as temporary secre tary. A call of the townships show ed them all to be fully represented, and thereupon permanent organiza tion was effected by the unanimous election by acclamation of Mr, W. F. Kornegay as permanent chairman. On coming to the chair Mr. Kor negiy stated the purpose of the Con vention briefly, and his appeal for harmony and counseling together in behalf of Democratic success was strong and eloquent and met with general and hearty applause, showing that the misses of this county are still true in their allegiance to the party that has ever fought the bat tles of the people. On motion, Mr. J. P. O'Berry was elected permanent Secretary and Mr. Jos. E. Robinson, assistant Secretary. It was decided by the Convention that every township should select the number of delegates to which it was entitled and refer them to the Convention for election, to represent the county in the State Convention. In accordance with this plan, which toet with unanimous endorse ment, the following gentlemen were reported by their respective town ships, and elected accordingly ; Goldsboro lownship Messrs. C. B. Aycock, Jno. W. Bryan, I. F. Dortch, W. R. Allen. Fork N. H. Gurley. Granthams" J. A. Stevens and W. B. Hood. BrogdenG. F. R. Kornegay and W. H. Jinnett. Indian. Springs J. W. Edwards. Xew IIopeK. T. Uzzell and M. W. Moye. Saulston B. A. Parks. uVaJiunfa B. F. Aycock and Z. I'. Davis. Great Swamp Green Copeland. FikevilleJ. W. Thompson and J. E. Person. Stony Creek II. D. Ham. On motion Messrs. W. F. Korne gay and J. P. O'Berry were made honorary delegates. There being no further business to engage its attention the conven tion adjourned. Subsequent to adjournment, ac cording to the time honored Demos cratic custom, the several township executive committees metln the hall and elected a county executive com mittee as follows: I. F. Dortch, Chairman, W. F. Kornegay M. T. Johnson, J, W. Bryan, W. II. Ham, F. A. Daniels-and D. A. Cogdell. The re-election of Mr. I. F. Dortch ' as Chairman of the County Execu tive Committee is a distinction that was pre-eminently deserved by him, and a graceful recognition of his service to the party by the township committees. His election is an earn est of Democratic success in Wayne county, complete and brilliant, in the campaign of 1802. "There are no birds in last year's nest" but this year's are doing busi ness os of yore. What is lovelier than the landscape when it wears the first sweet smile of Spring ? The May sun sheds an amber light On new leaved woods and lawns be tween. Bryant. Isu't a young lady who fits on la dies' gloves at a glove counter a reg ular counterfeiter ? The birds all pipe their welcome blithe and clear, While May comes through the doorway of the year. Whittier. People should not worry when their books get rough usage. Books are "bound" to get soiled sooner or later. If thou art worn and hard beset Witfi sorrow that thou wouldst forget, If thou wouldst learn a lesson that will " keep Thy heart from fainting and tby soul from sleep, Go to the woods and hills ! No tears Dim the sweet look that Nature wears. Longfellow. As the name indicates Hall's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer ia a renewer of the hair, including its growth,' health, youth ful color, and beauty. It will please you, Leadin medical authorities indorse Ay er's Sarsaparilla as the best blood meai-,cine,
Goldsboro Weekly Argus (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 12, 1892, edition 1
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