Newspapers / Weekly Pioneer (Asheville, N.C.) / Oct. 26, 1871, edition 1 / Page 1
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' . . - . ..- ;, j : ; ! - -. . i '- . : . i - r . - . - . ' i " f. , . . , . ... ", , I- T,'Tt '.W;ffiY - .7'-" v . ' '7: 1r;;'.:::i!.-I'-;' ' !T..n( - . ? OFFICE OF THE ... M 1 . ... u f t -Tiin nt.cr i: is & u M lM ' In Basroicr.t New BuiMics, Public. Square. THF'.TOII nKPAHTMKNT.1 "of ihli?ai:il:i!imcnl t f uiiiirhed with the very ' Txti material fit" execution of all kind of plain " and fanT Job work. A marked feature in this rtrrwrtiur! ' our new LiWrty-press, widen works off ti 1,000 Impcssidons per hour. Thin economy - f frttac enahk-a us to do work at Northern null - lUntrni pr"- - Order for wark. accomjwnted by ' I he cash, wil rm-rl with wnmt attention. , A LXGEjn) OF MEXICO. ' A I-ITtUAUY A.M) rol.lTICAL ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY TEKjr.S OF SUBSCRII-TION. Two Dollaiis a Year; Drk Dollar pok Sue Montiis. Club Subscril)cr: Fiv copies, ono yea $9 75, and a copy of I kef Am r riot n 8uk Jonri a 1'ayuiuul to be invariably in advance. ; PINOEY . E0LLE53, 1 VOL. VI. 1 ' (-'I V ASIJ B.VILLE, :Ift;a, TltUllSD AY, OCTOBE R 2(5 , 1871. ' fnS-. V by jeok;e UPPARIV- TTktt was ft day when an old m.in, w uhili? hair. ut aloiKi iu a Miull rJiamln-r th of . natiHinl- tnatwdon. liU ft:iro but muscular - iiffure rcling on an armed chair, hi hands rla-ril, aud his dwji blue cvea i gtizing , . tfirough alw inUT pk. ( ' . . Tlio hrow ftf iho old man. furnwwl with 4 wrinUes: Jiin hair. riMtiir in traiirht masses, whitr m tin? diiven unow : hw hhikimi clntk. - travemj b inarkctl Iiih-h; and thin lips, 1 hieolv ooinnreH-vi, nil nmionuun a oujj a ami storiuy life. the inarK oi an lryu will, were written un hia face.- ; . j His name, I need not till yon, w as Andre "iActon, and he sat alone inthe'Whi ireff vir.ik-. coon. - in von give it 10 me : tfl T - ail And drilling back the dark hair which fell ' orrr lii face, the bov, ns if fiightenel at his boldness, boweil low before tho Presiileiit. The old man could not restrain that smile. 'It wreathed his firm lip, and shone out from hi clear eye. : fYou enter my-chamber unannonnced, covered from head to foot with mud vou Wllme.that a Licutenautev is vacant,- and ak me to give it to you. Who are vou?n . "Charle Mar ! Tho loy diil -not bow faintly smiled. "iStich as you sec ! cxclainutl the boy, ns hia dark : eyes shone with that dare-devil light, while his form swelled in every muscle, a with ithe conscious iride of his manly atrength ainl'bjeauty. 'Would you "lie bent forward, sweeping aide his curls,-onto more, while a smile began to break over his lip "Would you like to see mo ridev My horse is at the door. You see I came post Iuwh for this eniiiiiission.w - v" J StU-utly the old man followed the boy, and together thev went from the White House. . It was, a clear, cold, winter's day; the wilid townl the President's white hairs and the 1 a.'less t'Ves slootl boldly out againt the blie aky. IJefore tlie MrL:ils of the White IIoum?, with the '" reins thrown loosely n hi neck, attxal a fine horse, his dark hide 'smoking foam. He uttered a thrill neigli, ;is his boy master sprang into the saddle, ami in a llah .- was gone, skimming like a swallow down the ro.nl, his main and tail htrcaming in -the fcr'ze. ' ' TIe old man looketl at them, the horse and his ridT, and knew not which to admire the nit,jJe .tihletic' beauty of the boy, or the temja,'ttuous vigor of the horse. ; Tliritf: they threadv! the avenues in front of the White IIoiim., and at Iat stood pant ing liefore the President, the boy leaning over the neck of his steed, as he coolly e. dairtietl "Well, how do vou like me I'" ' Do you think you could kill an Indian?" I .the President said, taking hint by the hand he leajeil f roni the horse. Aye, and Vat hi ni afterwards !" cnel the Ioy, ringing out his fierce laugh, as he read r his fate in llUt old man's eyes. You. haI bett-r come in and get your commission ami the hero of New Orleans . letftho way into the White House. There came a night when an old man President no longer sat in the silent cham ber of Itis hermitage home, a picture of age trvniUing on the verge of eternity. The light that shone ujkhi the table revealed liis uukeu i form resting against the pillows which cushioned Ins ann-chair, anl the death- like pallor of his venerable face. In that face, j wim lis wiuie uair, ami massive roreiieau. i everithing seemed already dead, except the I "Ainorc,um,i,ivu iurm;; -iu.,iiWi, v.. . . . , ...v. . 0 .w.-. . fvu tus i lAuuisi., me o. a Aiioroev uuiwr tniwiucoww Aujuwunui!raiB oui- t 5 t ' - - ' I What .toUowed beirars all descrtDtion ,nd vtoo.1 before tha lWdcnt, in the form blxsing in the eyes of May and springing to May, mounted on his well known eharger. eral rect,iv0( a dillpaU.li; f rom orth Missis! ce reports baads. to tfaVuumber of threq ha cleafinS way the debrU and putting up tern- Al il6 m4 h fa Jlcll0ll Ul0 VcXugo i a. lAvitif fiineteen. JotIed in a coaje f the camion be shouts l -r r h ' -M ? .General, you told me to silence that : hot- . s -j ... - . Vi . , , . . ; V i , !. ,L r twmrv hnildinVra i Kvrrlahnrino- mm ir,.J. t i v..'-..i j .... r . .. l ,,n.n.i I uir Ar nm-n nu (vpm i? Tin tnA mtiil now I rni i mm inprA inmim iri mhinnr Turin n .n . it. o -hi . ?r i I ..nj t. cs. ri .i'r I wurKin uiu rxiuui uivi.siuu uu uiu ium iiihl.. I . . . ' . I - . . . . i . . t ' I . i 1 . . i k I ( . .. i . -. -L 1 I- : - r- - k . ... - -j,. , : r. .(.... . 1 .... . i :. . I i . ,r n' .i rv. " ... .t. .,..!. I I .t. '4 , - L,J.v.r txm ' n,uv mcHiiont mv pomrailM and I w II tPru T h ni. don.. It ' , ' . t B,i'i'1 swung inai nve ivutiu,i, witn disguises reu nu more, onrnuig, muruenngiinaitreat- tr-j r - .-. e - , u x f ui yu uv .v.v- uwi, wm ai a .SI.hCP ,1, d.A hir 0wcrdiVKtUfV.nl!aUP.whn ffi. ..ia of . Uravo "Ii VV;' " , T., M . Uini i Joni 'ii Now Yor 3., ut nighvirm ,hen,or ofthat ,.K.Tl SlSTl falRn in damp clusters about his white fore- his cannon spoke out to the battery across the j ia;- ! ;;. r v i , . 0 section, .- V ; - , ' h i Herald thus writes to that paper: As I was tJ- f rj'- ' t,.,,,, .m,4 A .U-oldman couhlnot help surveying ravine His fl;h, his smoke have not gene, I ; THE GALLOWS. ' ' , y, G M Van luren has made good- , -I : j,- y burning. Pot OlBce,' I r'was fieeonfin 1 Ulesi Train of fire and . at. rapUl glance the muscular U-auty of his butharkr Did yoar that stonn of coj,per J . : ?, - entire default ,pfU,0d0, byipaytngn . Thc 11 having pub ished a Lined touie'spotbytheshrielTa and curse. Solmgn eveJulgittcM li-nire the broad clieet,the Miiewv anns, the balls, clatter against his cannon ; did yoa see Ezecutiott ofjames Wilson for tbe Ilurdet .iniount to Uieuitod States sub-treasurer. portrait! of Wilson, who was hung last Tri- i . T vivn i n I ran inio.'fhn wAt7f t.rn.rntl mvnelf and. :&tTu r? wo. Um sj&s: sRT-t BSSSS2 short afm.pt war. "Men follow P i Do yon. see tliat face Tlie Xelv York Tribune, of October 14th kers a reward of $5,000 for : tlie arrest of XVl 4 - 4 T 'i block : rati from Madison street, south to I an intensohat I uld keen 2r I liead ot' of , aTl.ll T.i;inantrv raoantl.. tl. jrleamii.!? with battle fire, that scimeUr cut- nv!i-:iJJvld.K..ntl..v. nlina-.Tamna Wil.,.,,! tho ',nr.Wr of .mwl' 5atr n,l 1 .Utlwr t tbat city, says :--What a blessed in- ;t - 'I, T..-r.fl:. : k..:m: u. . ACOUUl ,tCP. m Lv''tni0. 1 tins time, lmt with his right hand ujon his ol his foremost man, while long and uarK be- tempted to escape the ignominy of the scaf- On the night of the 15th, 'hip, lie stood like a -wild Indian, erect iu hind him was stretched tho solid Hue of war- fold. He justified his act in killing Warden Kail way Hotel i and Susquc presence or ine A rcftlueiil.' . riorsami uieir hmtu. i ; r uiaru, ami nnauy put me rope eriiis p. T V wia -What claim,, have vou to a commission ?? Through the windows of the clouds some own neck, and met his fate without flinchimr. l"araPlOD f d8 Airain the hero surveved him. and again he 1 gleams of sunlight fall -they, light on the He was pronounced dead in fourteen minutes re monev was f uuJs of i 'eyes. Tlieir deep grav-blue fhono with tlie I fire of New Orleans, as the old man with his I lng white fingers grasped a letter postmark. I ed "Washington." - ' I Tl.ey ask me to designate the man that shall lead our army, in case tho annexation of Texas bringtm Mar with Mexico" his voice . dtep toned ujid thrilling, even in that hour of decrepitude 'and deciiy,rnng through :tho rujiiiuer iiere IS tiuy one man u uopu : do it, ami ln name is Zacharv lavlor. ; It was alark hour u-Ik.h tdw Liv'-mrl thl I GeneiSl, both pjMintel at bis vuggestioiil or j by the voice of the Man of the Hermitage, ; mit in the battle of luaea de la I'alma. 1 By the blaze of cannon, and beneath the canopy of battle smoke, we will behold their meeting ! I .i "Csptaia May, you must take that bat- teryj' I I Aa the old man uttered these word, he , . poiutcil far across tlie raviuc with his sword; . it was like the glare of a volcano he steady bUxe of tliat battery, pouring from tlie dark- beaa) of tlie chaparral. - iit t Before him, summoned from tho rear of his command, rose tho form of a splendid - soldier, whose hair, waving in long-masses, , swept his broad shoulders, while his beard ' fell over his muscular chest. I , Hair, and beard as dark as midnight, framed a determined face, surmouuted by a , smallcap, glittering with a golden tasseL ' The young warrior bcstrcxle a magnificeut cbargec, broad in chest, small in thy head, delicate in eicli blender limb, and witli nostrils quivering as though they shot forth jets of name. Tliat steed was black as death. . Without a word, the soldier turned to lus men. . .1 and fiashed their H.rhtnin over ti"ht v-f our I tignty-iourjorms, with tnroais and breasts J cannon, the dark charger, wim one ireraenr mem worn upon u. bare, eighty-four battle horses, eightv-four I dous lean, is Uicre. and tlie sword of May is there. It is a damp pi . V ..a a . a -mm .1 aabres, that rose in the clutch of naked arms, I is circling over his head. j i - I of consumption. V face knit in every"feature with battle fire. ;,, , "Men. follow 1" shouted thu voung ofScr, who had been created a soldier Tby the hand of Jackson, as his tall form rose n thp rtirt . .iuij uie battly breeze playti) witunisi long Liatk hair, T There was no rt-.ikin:ii In word, but. vou I w..i.. . V. . . 7 .. I "-.vo aecn thoso horses quiver beneatu the spur, sqd launch away. . Down upon the i , sod with uneturrile beat came the sound of their hoofs, while through the air rose in . glittering circles the battle scimetars. tour yards in front rode May, hielf an4 his horao tho object of a thous.uid eyes, so certain was tho death that loomed before him ; proudly m Hi warrior bvauty he role that iJtSvHl, his Jiair noatin irom pvtieain "is cap iii raren curls upon thy wiiul... . - lle turns his head his mc.ii , w-e- his lace i r,;. . ii,tr fM.l Mho nun liUTH ii ' , nro tr ins eve i mr n:r iiw a.K immense battle engine, composed of eiirhtv-four men and . horl. - woven together 1 ai 14 4 . ttA W . wivr 1 . 1 " by a 4-ords away, and on they dash. Thev near the rapine, old Tavlon follows thVni with hushed breath ; aye, -clutching his sword hilt, ho noes tho golden i tasscl of May I trlfutuiir in tlto citnnon Hash. Tlu v are Ion tho verge of tho ravine. 3Iay i vim m iroiir, ms cnarwr uhijjhij; iho i h Ihmi m.ni among mo cannon . sun up a hnlf clad fiirure. red. .with LlooJ. aud be- l cnninioii wim iwwucr . , i l :.t I i i itel It is Kidclev, w!w to-day ; lias sworu to liriiT its irlilteriur circle in tlie air ? Those men can hold their shouts no longer, ing the air with cries. Hark ! , liend Tlie whole army echo them.: ''They strike th eir spurs ; and worried into madness, their - I horses whirl ami a ay to the deadly ravine. Tlie old man Tay lor said after the battle, that ho never felt his heart beat as it did then. . . - ' " ' r ! t For it was a trlonous sisht to see that young Mav, at thejiead of his squadron, dash- lug across the ravine, four yards m ; advance golden tassel on tho caii ttiey gutter on me on-raised Sword they-'.illumine' the dark horse aud the rider with their warm glow j they reveal' the battery you see it, above the further bank of the .ravine, frowning death from. every muzzle. Nearer and nearer, up and on ! never heed the death before you, though it is certain. Never mind the leap, though it is terrible. But up the bank and over the cannon hur rah ! At this dread moment, i ust as his horse rises for the charge. May turns and sees the sword of the brave Inge on his right : turns again and reads his own mjuI written, in the tire of S:icket's lo his men onco more he turns, Jus n:ur streaming back behind him; he points to the ... . . a 1 cannon, to the steep bank a.nd the certain death ; as though inviting them, one aud all, to his bridal feast, he says : I "vume! 1 i Thev did come. It would have made your Llood dance to see iu As one man thev whirled up the bauk, following May's sword as thev would a banner, and striking -madly Home as iney iieani, mrougn ine roar oi uai- tie they heard it, that word of frenzy: i "Come 1" . As one mass of barred chests, leaping horses and dazzling scimetars, they charged up the bank ; the cannon's fire rushed into I n iMj mu iiiaiiiiu u inik,i;vij, mm n " .. i uaiitv uiuli, siiuiuu me liiisuiivti "nil uicocu- their faces; Inge, even as his shout rang on mg his trial here, which jlio conducted him tlie; air, was laid a mangled thing WneatTi his self, ho exhibited his feei to the jury.l and, steed r'h is throat torn oteii by a cannon shot; Sackctt was buried beneath : his horse ; and seven dragoons fell at the battery's muzzles, their blood aud brains whirling into their comrades eyes.' '. f Still May is yonder, abavc tlie cloud, his horse noting over heaps of dead, as with lus salite circling round his flowing hair, he cuts hjs way through the living wall, and says, to hfs 'comrades, "Come !" i ; ' JVU around him, friend and foe; thfcir vwrils locked together j'onder the. blaze of musketry showering tho iron hail upon his band beneath Ins horse s feet . tho deadly cannon and the ghastly corpse; still that young soldier, riots on, for Taylor has said, "Silence that battery" and we will do ' it. 4 he .Mexicans are arivcn irom meir guns ; the cannon arc silenced, and ''May's heroic baud, scattering amongtho mazes of . the chaparral, are entangled in a wall of bayou-1 ets. '' Once more ' the combat deepens, aud dyes tho -sod with blood. I I Hedged in by that wall of steel, May gath- ers eight of his men, ami hews his way. back to .-the ! captured battery. As his charger rears, his sword circles over his head, aud sinks blow after blow in the foemcn's throats.' 10 U)C ici. a nuuut is u.iu. me iimenwuis, i let! on by tiraham, A'leasonlon, and Winship, Kn-u ailonvwl th batterv there, while the I whole fury of the Mexican army seems con- cent rated to crush May aud his band. j, , As he went through their locked ranks, so lie comes back. Kvery where his men know hint by his hair, waving in hard masses; his golden j tinselled cap ; his sword they know it," too, aid whenever it falls hear the gurg- ling groan of mortal agony. i t. Back to the captured cannon he cuts jhis way, and on the brink of the ravine he be- holds a sight that fires his blood : , - - a solitary Mexican stands there ; reachiug forth his arms in all the frenzy of a brave man's despair"; he entreats his countrymen to turn, to man the battery once, more, and hurl iu fury ou tlie foe. They shrink back, appalled, before that dark horse and its riJer, May! Tlio Mexican, a gallant young rrjan, whoso haudsome features can scarce bo dis- tinguished- on account of the, blood which covers them, while bis rent nniform bears testimony-to his deeds in that day's carnage, clenchoa his hands, a he flings his cursa in the face of his Hying countrymen, ami then, lighted match iu hand, spriuga to the cannon, Amoment and its firo will scatter ten Amerir can soldiers in tho dust. ' ", Even as tlie brave Mexican bends near. the I . , , ... 'iVw.hl " nhoutad his voice, which only' a few moments ago, when rushing to death, said, Come I" :-. j i i The Mexican beheld the form beforo j him apd handed Captain May his sword, ,E f- I .uen la v ega is a prisoner ; no saiu, auu stood with folded arms amid.hu mangled w soldiers. You seo May deliver his prisoner Into f tho I phargo of the bravo Lieut, Stephens, who wheu Ingo fell, dashed bravely ou. ': j Then would you look lor May once moro "izo through the wall of bayonets, beneath jhat gloomy cloud, and beheld him crushing his removal in the - daily papers, and vest into the whirlpool of the light.; his long hair, field avenue was crowded, through its whole Jiis sweeping beard, and sword that never for a moment stays its lightning career, making mm iook like lie embodieit actnon : oauie uay. : Iu the rear of the battle, behold this picture. 1 vu r.... .ii,.i .i ii...i t ".v ...vibwij v...,...-ii 14KO j, w, uiiuci wiu ii ma a.ue, wii. xnmr, in uis orown coai, - A . mi kill, J4M.II 1JI VUU 1 the battle. with interest as keen ahi the stou form.' the stern isasre of his brother. Twiirsrs. ! i j They ; have followed with tlashini eyes T the course of 3Iav. they have seen him char and seen his inen and horses hurled back in their blood, while still he thundered onl ' At tuis ' moment the brave La. Vega is led i into the presence of Taylor, his arms folded 'over his breast, his eyes nxed on the ground. a a a a a As, the noble he'irteu tjeneral expresses his sorrow that the captive s lot lias falleu on one so brave, as in obedience to the com mand of Twiggs, the soldiers, arranged iu was huntrin Hartford county iail at 1:30 - j M. Friday, for the inur irder of Warden Wjlj lard of Connecticut State Prison. lie at-i tempted suicide about three o'clock that . I " a I s a s ' morning Wy endeavoring to puncture his heart witha piebe of wire, which hei had secreted upon- his person. Iu consequence of his weak4 iies$ there was "an effort made to procure a stay of proceedings, but it failed. When the hour for Execution arrived,'; however, he U':illt-il rirmlv uiion tlio KcnfFold. ami made a short speech, in which! he .said he had at ... , . , after the drop fell. A post 'mortem exami- nation discovered the wire in his body with ,irlii..1 lid. nf timntn,l ouwi,!.ft W son u'a. f.nnvic.to.1 in 1 Rfi7 of hrofiboitr . . . 1 .. into tho dry goods store ot IJrown. Thomp- . . .. .. , . ... - . " - o son tt Co.,in this oitv, in- company with one foster, alias Itetsot, and of stealing about seven iuuus;uiu uoiiars w orm oi siikm. xi.ey so blot. .-i lior&o mi Avliit1i Hill niwl ilrt . .t.. I i.i I . i. -ii. . rni to Berlin, where thev hid most of the stolen . .' . -. ... i ...... i ". i uronertv m an outhouse, ami were about tak- ing a train at Merideu for New York when olficers arrested them. Theiiorse which they they stole was very slow, and,' as they missed the right road; they did not reach Meriden m time to hit the early morning train, which would have taken them safely to New York, pruhablv without detection. Wilson always r It ri lulled his arrest to the horse, and when its owner, jifter his arrest, said in an excited inaiiner. ' e ve got you; now, and will pun- ish vou as vou deserve. lie replied. so you -tl fool will, but any man who owns such 'a d of a horse ought himself to go to the State Prison for, ten years." . j v llson made several attempts to escape, and would: probably have succeeded had not his feet both been amputated several years before, leaving only the heels. Tho artificial bait furnished by stiff . siles would not give him any chance of escape if pursued. Dur- pointing to the prosecuting attorney, said : '-Gentlemen of the iuryj while he (the attor Iney) was at home sipping sherry-cobblers I was on the bloody held of Gettysburg, and rebel shot gave mo these' wounds." jTlftJ fact was that ho had frozen his feet while escap- ing froti the Michigan Mate Prison. - The murder: of the warden wns,committcd Sunday. Wilson, being lamewas allowed I the use of ; his cane in his cell. In some un known way he secured" possession of a shbe- knife, which herround ilown so as to make it pointed like a dagger, and this he inserted in tlie, bottom of the cane, aud made it fast with the ferrule. He had a slate iu his cell, aud on this he wrote that he wanted to see I the warden, and hung it 'outside. Wheu the i warden came to uis ceil ne siauuea uim wim I tlie cane without a moment's warning, and ( death resulted a few hours later. : While in prison' he made two attempts . to starve himself to death.! Hie first timo he ivent eight days without' euting, and ceased fasting voluntarily, for the reason, as he said, that be got "a new idea" one that "could hot have been bom of a f ull stomach." The second attempt was interrupted by force ; physicians were called in,: and beef tea was injecieu mrougii u iuuo i passiug noui ma mouth into his stomach, lie was put in a kf rnlf-inc.lri-t '.iml went tlirono-h the otinration jivith a good Ideal of nerve, and without be- ing subdued j for he said, "I shall try it again before I give in." But the second time he got enough. of it, and wrote; to the warden tliat Paris had surrendered, and he was' ready . to die in the natural way. ! J On Sunday, tho day beforo he was brought to the jail in this city to prepare for hjs exe- cution, tho Tribune correspondent had along iuterview with him. lie asserted that' he never sought to justify the killing ; tbat his testimony on the . treatment of prisoners was offered to mitigate, not to justify, so that if the jury were convinced that his claim of sclf-lefense was reasonable, they could find a verdiqjt of manslaughter, instead of murder in the first degree. Iu following up this subject he diverged somewhat from his ori- ginal claim that he killed the warden because of the bad food f umished, though evorything datei from that, and said : ' i ( !S "Willard, the warden, and Beaumont, one of the doctors, came to my cell after I had tried to escape, aud said : Wel are having a cell made as strong as iron, and brick, and stone cau build it, and you shall bo put in there as long as you stay here., flhat ceil was in tho new prison part, and 1 could hear i : i io prisoners are nepb ace. I would dio there irtually I should be iu solitary j confinement. I had fourteen years more to stay here, and rather than suffer a horrible death in that dungeon, I preferred to die on the scaffold, is need be." 4 j . On Monday moraiug, Sherriff Russell, tic- couipameu oy ma ueputu-, auu uuv, ,tt tk th. rrtcn ' oil Vri1t?-iYl ntt&W 1itn shaved and furnished with a suit of black Vila aw J ' lOVJily ayii4 iiwuj which he had woni before his confinement, was takcu iu an open barouche, at his own request,1 that he might for tlio hist time see tho green fields and crrjoy me sunsuine. There had been some notice of the tune of disti pcoj distance ot 1 three miles wim carriages auu e, so great was puouo curio&iiy 10 ge. a .climpse of i the "doomed man. Around ; the ia;i a crowd, of more than one thousand ter- ons had colfw.fl When in th.t 111 1, tl.l . .... . . r- ' r urn iue alien tt mat he shoula want i ust one hour buu upon the saffoId to speak to the spectators I nnf fr l.inifti.If imt W ttm Kmah't nf ow human be K: i T i : - , . j , , (KSEKAL NEWS, .. .;. -.J ,. j ' J 1. Xn th mih of Rpot(ml..r Inst 1 At Chicago, the total number- p dead bodies on' which' innnesta have been held thus I ' far js 92. . It is supposed more will be UlS covered when the debris is removed. -Major'. Hodge has been removed to the Al bany penitentiary. Ho will find a portion tlie North Carolina Knklux delegation al i , . I ruaay mere. tho safe of tho lianna depot, at robbed of 30.700 . . mo lino . luunaj. deposited in the sale by the paymaster. Tho Sunrenie Court of the United S tates l i! I I t v .icliinfrtrkn fin tho I Hrll lirrflir. " " "" " " Chiet J usticoj inase anu, j usuces niioiu, i ,., . - . . f , T rr i Swayne, Miller, Strong and Bradley. Argu. ment on pending cases was begun. I w Senator Pratt isj Chairman,. are in. Alabama. Thev have lust closed an eight days session at Iluutsville, where they examined forty-U ..- f ' s ' - IkrH two witnesses. . . J - . ... : At Annapolis Junction, Jld., on the morn- mg oi uie x t hi, mi. iwuu xuiotj , i. gentleman,' wis cut literally in two by the backing of a tfain just as he was in the act of crossing the track. At Warsaw! Ky., a desperado named Grid- ley, was killed: in : jail by a number of j men who broke through the wall of his cellwith a crowbar early on Monda morning. ? Grid- ley had mortally wounded a man tho day before. It is stated that Rev. Robert, Colly ersou was xo nave, ueen marrieu in vincago ou Tnocilnv wiwl-! l.nt. lvrtniin rhnfcli f uriii f.nrfi j " . and all were) burned Uieay before. On Wednesday the wedding took place, the av-h n a V. . 1 -k V i. i . a-. o m 1 l n n1 1 Sr f-rf writ juuuu, e, MW .jro-.i , Frisaacs, the guard who was wounded I m a . a a a a. J Al uiunng the outbreak ot convicts irom me Nevada State Prison, died on the ,13th inst. Jones, the mosLuesperaie oi me escapeu convicts, is closely pursued in the Sierra Nevada mountains. In Rochester.1 N. Y.. on the: 17th. Miss Jenuie Pixlcy aged twenty-one years, a stu dent of the Broekport Normal School, com mitted "! suicide : by taking strylhine. She ,. . . . . 1 a 1 - . . . t. died m twenty-fivo miuutes after taking the dose. Tho cause was the . disliko ' of her f ricuds to a gentleman she loved. The: money drawer was rifled, Suspicion falls on his Chinese servants, . who have disappeared. ; . , ; - A linnntifnUlihinilrt wont int. i Trov -fiiiwar -at UUUUVI.Uti MiVUViy vvwuv aa J O- store to make ;some purchases.! When shak- ing her head to aiinouuco that the goods did not please her! her auriferous tresses touched instiintlv took i . p - o -j , fire. She nulled the wool . off and stamped out the fire, ! to i tlie amusement of the by- - i r a 1 v ' . h i- I -c ' i. . n:- t,:i...i jreorge fruuci iiaiua puuauuiivjjj broken out in n .not ami in the follow- i -i j- L. L i .i. . . i. .. : f : x ' . r -1 mg iuciu uispatcu ue mrows too piv.,v - his moral support around . the tottering ior- tunes of Brigham Young; "Plead -guUtyj unmarrieU aooording to gentile law. , Chris- Check-1 tian law allows a plurality of wives mate. Tt-.A Cnnnnt.n. if 1. TillTV . Sfl tn rI V . xuu uwvibij vi mo iimj, vi - w. - . j , 1st, ordered five cadets to bo 'dismissed from tho'Vaval'-Apidmnv for i'hazin He is de- nue. xxie uiuer aijo iuai, nuns ! . 'IT.. A n .... hM mhilii mow. youthful vivacity and mischief may be over- J . . - . . : - . . . . looked, persistent blaokguardism is inconsist-1 ent with the character of ah officer arid a gen- tleman, and will not be tolerated. tn Louisville, Kyi, on the night of the 12th, a boy named rioa Maud, aged seven f years, went into a 1 neighbor's yard and found abottleofwhisky,whichhadp secreted hv sotne of the occupants of ' the house. The little fellow di ank a quantity of the whisky and ivas soon terribly prostrated, I ' ... - i I ivespue me skiuoi a j.nysicxax., u e.cimM . . ... I. m a J a a ..i.:i.i a'a in great .agony before daylight ui,e ' next - - . I morning, if.. A: despatch has been received at St. Louis Indian troni j)ir..xunaiu9cierK iu uie vix-ck Agency,' stating that a fight between Cocho- ka, the lawful ,tchief, and his rebellious; sub- jeexs, is imminen u. . uh. factions met at Ockmnlgee, "armed itO the th," and the aent had extreme . diliiculty in-eventing a battle, nr' tee in i: .Aiieoecrepryoi.ine ireasury nas atunorT ot JVUssouri, calls.out tho mUM of Stoddard M,afc. wfY t i vo,'uua";o 1WS "A. "JU ww,w struck tho town it secmetl to swallow up an . . -r I-, i- - - .- !) i ; -i.i .i - y. . .' izeu uio issuo -oi. $i,duu,uuu united atqs and, Dunklin counties, in! t ie southeastern o,tuuiVAJoviaiw- u,uuc,: "M,v,s,"ua literally lrovn everything, 'llio lire notes to take the place of thoso burned at part of Missouri to break tro tho Ssecret ma-1 supposed -Jo bo dead have been discovered on swifter, than a race-horse, ! and witlii ""S"' ..i , f ii rauamgoanus wlicii miesc max section.! An r"r '""tv'" Tn Cnn Vrnnniiiiin P?al nn tho niftrnillcr Ton 1 i,r -a' ' '-Mr a: . .,,.!... 3 : molested by the British me 10m. an, oam, wie aeepur o, ! uumuer oi lourieen, uau gamereu m uo IJa'r 1 waters' M Several 1 traillan restaurant in Clay street, vas found take of a Sabbath dinner with the "old folks" Gloucester have gone to murdered this! morning. ) His head was near- I under the old roof tree. One of the daughters-J the President on the su ,ln some of the safes the; vaults opened at Chicago, the contents have been found whollv or particularly destroyed. In the safe of : iwepublican only four books out of thirty f,.i Ii.p fm. ..j .1 . . lih " l T"7 La ' n , "I fe cash boxes hvas bnrned. The Cnstom A lUlnmnti,,., i, n.Vvi.UJ. cil Ttwn fl f T , r , , , A. n i nas naii upou uie generauons mat succeed I hilTI ! Vlstril.1V ft fran-riaA fitivnr, ' oiicl. v.l I iMiw nvnn .iJ-Ji. u i i t " . m 1UUIl.U .1 IUQII ITl 1 him I J f ' w . IT UV OV1U, - hfi illnstMtil great work of art which adorned it, howled j - ' -ho that?" The newsboy burst into of tears, and said, "1 cannot tell a he. , id it - witu my little natchet." In New York, on the evening of the jl 6th, while the perform anno of "Tlon Juan"! vena progressing at the Academy of Music r...T ,.t u .:ax Ju.n.. -Lino, utgum .wuicvi tu .uuiuD-niiviij unanticipated ot the death i ot Mrs. Jennie Frodsham! , a married daughter, to the consequence o Who nerished a victim the I I Yi.--irrr Hicictni- Mrs. Seguin s.wooned on vVmv"SY I , . . r .1 me receipt 01 me sad news, and was removed to her dwelling amid a general expression of sympathy. On the 17th inst., President Grant issued a proclamation, suspending the privileges of tlie tcrit of habea corpus within the counties of Spartanburg, "i Ork, Marion, Chester, Lau- j rens, Newberry, Fairfield, Lancaster, and Chesterfield, in said State of South Caroli m resPect to ail persons arrested by the-tnar- shal of tie' Unitid -States for thesaid t,.jct 0f South Carblinaor by ties, or bv anv military offieer of the United States, or by any soldier or citizen acting uu- dor the orders ofsaid marshal, deputy, or such militaryouicer within any ono of said counties Glenooe Station, on tho evening of the 12th, a terrible accident happened, m which a conductor was killed and seven laborers were VVOnnded J A construction train on the 1 T L.' :o T : . J t:i. J ijuisviue, ijexiugLou auu uiuwuuauikaiiniau ht ti,e roau above Sparta at 6 o'lock that evening, on their way home, j When opposite I 1 ... lil ' . ' 1 wienie station,, we tram was mrown irom meiracicoyasucKOi woou wnicn nau xaueu across the rails from a wood wagon. I All the l '.1 if WTM V -'Y TkT t cars were tnrown our. Ane couaucior, j. au. Stonghton,: jumped from the car, and strik- mg ms neau on me ran, ms ku.i was nuaur- ed, and death resulted,' almost instantaneous- The Louisvil Ky., Commercial of the 12 th inst., says :! On Sunday last, Mr. John House vault was- onened I bn Satnrdav ' last. I thrmrrtv .infit 4nr won. in nnmlitinn tn I uiinng tho e The greenbks, amomiting to $2,000,000 be telurned for exchange. Tha cashicr'sday Th'iT Tl 1 TXvZt? t . . ti i 1 ? i ,,,.-,! ...v , . . . the southwest of tho town, and ; A duIL roar- weic IUUBU ,,ave ?ee ennreiy j consumed, book and ledger oould be read, but tho cash goululf Uke that of a I heavy wind, canio and the gold, $1,000,000,1 was melted to a book Was destroyed. Tho U. S. District up from that quarter. At 0 o'clock tho wind : : i ' ; ' I k i L: -.... ' - . . . . . .. U . Ulivo nn.rnll TlmnumU'nf limn n'rn nt. I tWelltV lUiniltCS of UIO tllHO it ftlrilck tllO A. Sloan, one of the oldest i citizens in this teuun, oi recapmrm- ana -uiuug "er-uac. ' . . .. i-i. , i to -Nova Scottia. A telegram to Charles countv. bein? orobablv eighty years : of age. . . .. ... .u. . ' a...: I a - o ha(J concladed to hae a reunion of hIg arailj at the old homestead, about two and a "half miles from Hickman, and, hi consequence, liis -o-. -nt1- ;i Jniii ;rt f)lo in-law engaged herself in preparing the; cakes, sweetmeats, etc., and ' not being well ac- quainted with the whereabouts ox the culinary I articles, made the unfortunate mistake of I tW ( psmg a bottle ot. ratsbane instead ot cream of tartar. Fourteen members of the family partook of the cake, and were prostrate from its effects at the same -time. The medical assistance ot Air. J. v . uouney was jirame- diately called iu, and we are giaaio Buuoj.ua. i . . . . a wmm a p . i au are now! happily well. The tact or me " ' ii! ,1 , Jr.t tamuy naving lusa previously parta.eu vi uie j . . - . . j " , . . ,. :n meats, it is mougmv, saveu uie.r ve8. wwujjuij oim ' . . i- , r . 4 occurrence IS a most innocent uub uuiui-uiuawj a : . v... r 4 , - A acciaeni. ouv snouii serve wanuujj wi . ' a tJh' ntmoat ara and """T'li.'' VT... r.' prudence, j amiliessioiUd kCep iniciries entirely separate and apart, in afixed known 1 place, so as to render sucn accidents lrapos- I - : i - i I : ' - i i ., i M I - It Was ! asserted that seventy or eighty nriSonrs had been consumed in the iail of I .yvn.Mi 4..c n-nr mrna tna TQiT.8 IB Tnnnwfl T Wtui4U,w, uH giiw iuv 4, ..ww.... Tlie most painful rumora prevailed yesterday I . : ' .: . .-ii, "i or. on the streets that some forty or fifty pnsoh- J ers had perished in the Jbi ers had perished in the burning of the court- house -iailJ but it has been ascerUiued thaU this report is without the least foundation. . .. , , . There were on Sunday evening oonhned in the jail about niuety prisoners, ail of whom were given fre exit when it-became apparent that tho court-house would burn, the jail doors being thrown open at o ciock yesier. -lay morntdg. Jn oi ine prisoners emuraueu " ! ' 4" - 1 " . 1 Jl ,r,a nri ATnrtnf.itv A--oseanA." and .a "T. JT immeoiawiy iti r. y rio, ry.u ediately left, for various parts of the ... .. . 4 Tn T- i. with the exception of George Dresser, who went a.t once to the west Diae pouct-siauon .a am' . . a. and gave himself up, where he is now in cus- tody. Mr. Dresser, it wiU be remembered, js the mUhO recently while acting as keep- & -m .thfc Bridewell, was the occasion of the ; i . . . . . . , , Jeath- of a prisoner, by throwing him from the corridor iuto the yard, '. At Chicago, the movement for a resuiup the es of trade. One of the iost-bflico safes has been opened, and the contents found badly 1 i ! . i. 1 i. : "Tn- j nioney was and about $80,000 ; worth of pbsU recovered la.. i Attorney lost Mil uis pap bodies have been recovered, and it is believed i auci ucvnic and fronted east oh Dearborn street. Somc two hundred prostitutes of tho "street-walk ing order'l i , ' i i i. .i - r hiH rnnm a horn am 1 u.'hrm tlio !ipp 7- TV I ' " ' icuuiieu uiem a iiuuimii ui mcui ntiu 0WLF ing off the effects of intoxication and debauch. Crazy drunk and petrified with fear, a num ber of them were trying to get through the u 4L nn jj -1 T. aiiey entrance, xue uames iiom uio xoliteral, & - Omce building drove many ,: back, and with horrible jcurses on their lips they staggered hank to tierish in the rmns. JNo one could assist mem from that side, but a signal was aS-tJU .1 n tn.,, ui-ius ivf.uicu. w Sw u.vhuu . WvU.v.u street side, and here a number were assisted . I . . .i '' ' i t r ' ,.L t to me grouna oy nremen .aim ciuzcns. wiuri ers were making tho air heavy with ribald j jests 1 - - and bacchanalian songs. The very j spintol hell seemed to have, lam- posession of the lot. .The saine scenesWero .transpiring around in Clark street, ina block devoted to similar purposes. Seduction is really looked upon as a, crime iiu the Albanf, (N. YJ County Court. Daniel ngJ of Albany, some time since se- Theresa Smith,! of Cohoes. We sup- fose Miss Smith requested him to render her the only satisfaction, through. a marriage cere- I senteuced to three years in the Albany peni riiony; lhat was possible, aud :ho refused.- At tlie amount- of $20,000,000 were destroyed all events he was arrested, tried, and con- by fire in New York, December 10, 1835. I- . t 1 w i. 't . ! ; V ' '-, April 27, 1838, in Charleston, a 1,153 icted, and on Wednesday Hue 1 1 th inst, was cru c'8umtiji ca'tna ,7. teiiary. hen Mr. UVIannnig learned that April 10, 1845, in Pittsburg,! 1,000 build the affair was not a joke as such matters ings wero destroyed by fire. Loss, $6,000,- usually aro-pthat he was, tof speak after popular mauner, "in for it"-j-ho kindly to speak after the con- Jentej to marry the laily : but her parents re- ffSfi,l their consent to tho compromise, and 4 goes un. Perhaps,1 if other courts would h H enuallv iust if this matter of seduction II... ' 1 ... i cjould-be looked upon as something more Uian a pleasantry thero would be fewer broken hearts and blighted loves. I I ' ( A Herald dispatch from Gloucester, Mass., 8tate8 that weU0 was gveat eitenlent lhere a f - gince The wr E. A, Ilorton v frnm thfl hnrhor of OuvsWo. kjova Scotia, by a party of ' men who were . - to iave been sent for the purpose eheyed to have been, sent tor the purpose fom Gloucester, and that the vessel is now due at that port. It is now stated that tho British gunboat sent in search of tho schooner arrived off Cape Arm yesterday with the in- town resuueci iu uie senuinir u an vAiiienctui i . G,OUCfc8te- whfch after takirr J several: United States officers and owners of the schoonerj on board; started last evening on a cruise to prevent the schooner from Uing vessel iu American officials and citizens i of Boston to interview biect. - Tho affair is J . I believed to be one of great gravity THE WESTERN FIRES. About Fifty Villages Destroyed Appalling ' Loss of Life- , . i , t The Gteen Bay Advocate prints many im portant dartliculars of tho great fires iu the vicinity qf that town. Among tho villages either wi oiiy or m partxtesiroyed are enumer- a;uu.u .x-u,., v-, irnuuuiu u 111 iw i - i , i 1 1 1 ii iimiiii v ill a iiiriv u, .T r - jZ,r J Deames, Clenraore, Hubbard's Mill, Bersey . .-vr i r.v n.wi n.,iio,;i ' "tTTii 'i"u.'"'" ,v" ih.m j, w....... . iriage, vv uiiamsonvnie, JueneKaunee, juan- i 44 T?5t, I si.i.i n i. tt: t i ueiie, ivircui vicen, umeu iuu, i esuiew. Jha ; Surfar Bush. Messtere. Dvckesville. ---- ' -r ' J A,,uclc C1W others: Pesht has ! nearly 2,000 inhabitants, Every'bdilding bnt one an unflniahel dwel-1 iing is reporiea ourneu. i i i WUharnsonville five miles from the shore U( T itilnKtn.nnntl Tiait iroo liiin,,1 rxn Knn. 1 uiiuoumigwn -" " , j-4 -' " i day nighjt, the 8th instant. Tlie proprietor, John Williamson, with his wife and two chil- I .IT " , , 1 r . I . same seiiiemeni; perisneu. ocarce a son. is i left to i lell the tale. There were twelvo X :i! J 1.1 !... . t 1 K. I families and fifty-two men in and about uio ?" l',ese .TO living were lounu, anu were reii. o hy the tIg jOzaukee to Big Sturgeon bay for medical treatment. Lvery other individual in ent wead. Mr G.Hliernt of six persons in' one house, and piled the partly-cllarred remains of fifty-five bodies or I , B 1 - . J . . I . . I I M'..AHa. ws I men, wuincn auu jvuuuiuii, incuiuu. human Bodies lay on a spot aoout ten ice squaresome with arms and legs burned off, k'j w;t, in ft A W-rnda ff. ion "I4 vw f,i.v. - every side, were omers, anti a man anu cuui i ' ji- i i i i were found dead in a well. They fouml fifty- five dead bodies, and think the total number . , r ... . '.. . ' i I must bclfrom sixty to seventy. Tho villages of Roisiere and Messicre, both in the town of f Lincol h, were entirely de- ts twentv-one ersons Rtrovpd.l At last aeoounts were miksing. ,. The numbc stroyed fu Uosiere was 18p, . .i . . - . . - , cr or houses ue- (. J. lisdalo makes tho following stale meut jn regard to the calamity at IVshtego : 'l)u ring the day .Sabbath tho 'ftic wu filled with Miioke, -which grew dense toward evening, and it, was . hoticcd tint tlie air. which was quito chilly during Uio dav, grew quite warm, aud hot puffs were quite freqnent venlng. About 6.30 o clock at I- ... : ' . . . . . mora terrible at. 10. Y hen tlio tire d canio out skirts of the town everything was in' (lames. liU. ft spaoe ot nearly an hour. Saw logs in tho river caught firo and burned. L cow camo ..- .-. n...i 1 1 .1 . . I . 1 . f. : . . ....1 i iv jiiu unit iuuiw nil iivviw hii: in uiu Bitu I . . . . . i. 1 o bawled piteously. I heard men, women, ami 1 ClllidreU crV'illv lOT children crying for help, but! was utterly powerless to help any one. What was my experience was the experience of others. Within three hours of tho time tho fire struck tho town the, site of Feahtcgo was dotted over with 8moking ruins. I estimate tho loss of life ta I beat least 300 In the town and Sugar Bash. n-reai, nurauers wero urowneu IU lue nvcr. att, andorscs ero biirned iu -tlie .tails. esntego company s.bara jburnod wiUi y . horses in tho stable. AYhoIa families, heads of families', childrou, mothers. fathers, brothers, and. sisters wero burned, and remnants of families were running hither and thither, wildly calling and looking for their relatives after tho firo." I i . , Great Fire, of Itfodera Times. ' . ' Norfolk. Virginia, was destroyed br Aim and cannon .January 1, 1770. Property to the amount of $1,500,000, was destroyed. ; Soon after New York passed into tbe hands of the British, September 20, 1770. 5 buWng were consurticd bv fire. . , - t. j man ieadin2 ciUxena perished. ! i . Six huudred warehouses, and property to of ground. uu.' v. ', , i -n-1 ' ' x ' Vr' .1 l. 1 4 a .1 hnili,ul lit, 1 1 1 1 1 n r.d .WAV. I . Quebec May 23, 1845, ' aud in less man a month afterward 1,300 Impro; in all two- thirds of the city. I.I .., July 10, 1845, in New York city, 302 store dwellings and $6,000,000; worth of property were consumed. JJ Juno 12, 1846, tho wholo town of New foundland was destroyed J by firo, and 0,000 persons rendered homeless, j 1 beptembcr 0, 1848, in (Albany, COO build ings, besides , steamboats, piers, xc; 2 acres burned over ; loss, $3,000,000. . St. Louis lost 15 blocks and 23 steamboats bv fire. Mav 17. 1840. . ! Jnlv 0,1850, in Philadelphia, 350 buildii ngs "vlv " "l "' " i". irouu!. """'cu 0 drownod, 120. wounded. Ix)s.i $1,500,500. In San Francisco. May 3d to 8th. 1851. 2,500 buildings were burned. . Many lives lost, and $.3,500,000 , worth of ! property do- BlIUJLUi j : I . I . December 21, 1851, 35,000 volumes wero dcstroyea ,oy nro in our Congressional Library. July 12, 1852, 1,200 bouses wero burnod in Montreal. " " -t ' ' ' ;' . " August 25, 1854, Damariscotta, Milne. was' entirely destroyed by lira The satns day more than 100 houses m Troy, NT., an(I a Iare poruou oi. Aiuwauiiee, v is. October 9, 1 857, a great Ore occurretl In I I . - ' i.IAA AAA f . ' . I a vmcago ; 5ouo,uou, in propcriy aeatroyoi.i, t..i.. i tone ti i , ir.. J uijr -i, joud, iuc viij vi t vi itauu, iuw., was nearly destroyed by firoj teu thouasnd, people rcndcretl homeless; loss, $15,000,000. February 17, 1865, the city of Charleston was almost destroyed by fire, aud great quantities or military and naval stores. i THE GUE1T CTB i IS LOJIDO.f. Tliis great fire, whoso! ruins covertHi 45Q I jirri. extended from the Tower to thoTtinlA Church, and from tho northeast gate to Hoi- iorn bridge. It destroyed in v the snace oi ,OUr aays ou cnurcues,! mo i cuy gaiea, me v . I iiTu..i.jka a a -w a-. n a . : a lwfM v"uw WiC ,v"'-vuwr, .mquu- hall .S on CoUege. and many other buUia , -A. . i.. .r :J. ... .ti i' . . . ouuuings, oesities io,ou uowb, laying wasvo 400 streets.; Over 200,000 people, oampel out ! after the fire in - Islington, and !:.-,,.. i': - Highgate. Concernmg this fire Sir Christopher YVreo l. - , ...:4. .i.;J t ..... built a monument with this! thereon : luscripuou) -This pillar was set up in i perpetual remem hrance or trial most dreaoim burning of tola Protestant citv. boirun and carried on Kv . ' -1 1 1! . T-l! I. ireacuery auu inaiicu vi re x onan lacuon. im yC beginning of September, in ye year 6f our Lord, 1660, in order to ye carrying on their " . . .. - ducin fopery and slavery . : ' 1 This iuscription was finally ' erased br or r . i a . r .... ! I er of the Common Council January 20, 1 83 1. ine nurcn or me Campania, oaauago, pecemberlv, 1803, and i.OOO persons perisneu in -tue names. It will be seen from the above record that tho conflagration in Chicago is the largest which has taken place in tho world tinea th great fire in London In 1 666.7' A despatch from Detroit,! Mioh" on the 14th, says : .News rcceive-l today ooaf nxva s,- mmv. a..,. aAi. a. .A BW. -..71.. . I a uun-mm, upviwm wiu wuo-vprca aoM lauon innicieu oy nrea in various ia parts' of Poaul Aax the State. From Tort lluro. to Kaanuea tho lake shore! is aimat r.. . rru. :i.i.:4 i. . . . . ! "' HKWIHU.. xnu inuuoiiu weru ouroeuiHia StkICm for their lives, saving nothing. Tho particulars of tlie Manistee aud Holland City tires, hare .i... - . 4 . L also given, a more disastrous aspect thaii ai first reported. All the energies of tho poo pie of tliis city are now directed to aiding tho sufferers in onr own State. Contributions of moi ney, provisions, and clothing aro limj le, . ' I " i ;. K- .. ma ers. lbus.iar Ua I was mowing very jrcpn. ami. u.ou a icriock u
Weekly Pioneer (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 26, 1871, edition 1
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