Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / May 13, 1879, edition 1 / Page 2
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ANIIKIJOKo, MAY 1.1, mS. J T- CROCKEB, Editor, i The Home and he Annj. of Hayc alllri ,,,C3 0llt llrc ' n: P-" to withhold suppHes. ,t if th6wirnS?,CmS vcryPlin that tic 4uhW? f "'""'"onal We of i ri "I Po,e TrCiy,V ',avo b"omcPr pose in inserting rh h . the Constitution? Provision ir "What was it? "H was to place Hhis vciy m the bands I . "-I'wi'ic, ana soon to lav down agon so a to ainat or the people s money incompatible with liberty. This is no idle; unmean ing provision.' ; Our forefathers, as We have before mentioned, adopted from the British Constitution the grand, principle that iue exclusive right to originate all bills for raising revenue belonged to the House of representatives, whose mem bers were direct from the people. )n July 3, 1675. this great principle was solemnly declared in these forever memorable words : . ' 'I i f ? I a,d and 8uPPlies and aids wm M?J8t m liament are the le gift of the Commons ;and all bills for thd granting of such aids and sup. plies ought to begin with the Commons ; and that .it is the undoubted and sob right of the Commons to direct and limit and point in such bills the end ST' rconditionV considerations! "U""1WU1 a qualifications of such J no. house. iteaainir. was iir.ton,4 for cr.nvcying, a paupcr w MOKLEPS" LETTFh nmu L "toiUK t'ORRE.Sl'OXDi w iork, May 8, lg; ch yc: into I hoard, shall not without hi con icj 1.1 imiwa tho iiavs run unt uwi" - i . . . , ; thorou-Ulv earn- be again sppomica ovcrccr u.. LllHV WMWWW OP X fm - XUKK S GREATEST PROBl - Turning off Printing Hou estsystematic efforts to prepare the for the struggle just ahead, w not be so. here is in.rsew iors aswj, fJmcd thirteen years ago, called the tional Temperance Society and rub- lfcation House, which, starting ,.,.. - at whom wrni . "i " .. l a dollar or capital ami su,.. - I was mcchaX:u:,7"l"1 mostwhollybyvoluntao-contnbuUon. U-r, .. - MU-ffiUi cuowell, was allowed sl nn m negative response tn ,ia " i - icy swarming with beggars yooj- Jas. R. Frazier, was exempted from 011 and working ni.i; . Kenj. Hooker, was allowed 2 50 special allowance as a pauper. ; ' xrancis King, was allowed $2.50 lnU a fiide street the o her day as A aria! .1 -11 I ? . i J' Vrr1 ,owancc as Pauper. 'aril conscious of a little urchin .i Lrowder. was allowed $15.40 br niy side be-in fnr m4 tcr the expiration of two years the date of his resignation. when a public road shall be a dividing linp hctween townships the board Jof for bold in g inquest over the 1. K. Kirkman Sally McDow as special allowance ts power cxclu- of a body fresh as a Dannor Sheriff R. M. Stafford, of Guilford r ""uwtu -3 years money d ue tms -na.Dlt in rorrr lr l.xt Sti 1 he trotted on until I turnedfa hallway and began to climb u -i. Housetl from my abstfacUon ate ini hgnre left my side, I rememfcd ue saul """fy-r-uaun t fen smcc yesterday. Of course, he li ; "iey au do but surely he didn knt money for rum-perbaps he was .m ishmg in a big city, and I had re; ?cd' him a mouthful of break ! Itiaed little form, coveretl with raT wcc'Q grant, which ought not to be chan-ed or altered by the Ilouse of Lords." To show how the Republicans in the past regarded the right to engraft bills of general legisation upon bills of sup- iny , me &u?i gives this information : "Between July 5,1862, and March 4. i87i, the Republicans, who had com P ete control of the Senate and the "uuSe pi iiepresentatives, engrafted eighty loririTr- u ,BIieriu iegisiation on aPr ycr ?" ?,HS' or ly thirty every J yLr rvr;en oottoooativ y COngM0 v- tliC power to disoon- him. S. W. Trogdon, was exempted from loll tax and public roads. 31. S. Robins and J. K. Walter (were appointed a commits tn MfL with ex-Sh'fl", 6. R. Cox. ' H. C. Lamb, was aflo worl 47 k Dept. Sh-ff fee, off -Fall TeAvW and Spring Term, 1879. witness fee off Spdng Term. 1878 O. R. Cox. was allnwfwl 9 CKr sli11 standinir in the vpsHhni xrr . . " ig term;i879. 1 responding to my whistle, hinuo up the stairs. He had neither father nor mother ; sometimes, wln he had money enough, he bought newspapers and sold them; his home was an ash box or lumber pile, and he warmed himself by. squatting pn the grating over our quondam friend the Chained Slave under the Spruce street sidewalk. The dirt appeared a month old on his hands and wrists : and t -VM 111 lJJI friend's office, he got down somewhere near the skin the little chapped hands began to smart, and I hadn't the heart to push the cleaning process any fur iner. A lew coppers brought a mo ment's gleam into his stolid face, and down stairs he darted. "They are a bad lot of boys on this street. They feed on the Am vVV V14W 11 JLA1 these offices after merchants lunch. When they get any money, instead of going7 to a boarding-house, they go to the Bowery Theatre, and next day act it all off again on the street. There's a swarm of them, and all are bad boys, but keen as razors." mxr friend. Passing down stairs, there sat the little fellow, perched on a wagon where I could not fail to see him, div- thid has published six hundred varieties ol hnnk nhamDhlets and tracts upon every phase of the liqnor question. spent $70,000 in Bterotypmg ana ior literary labor, printed over ttiree nuna red million pages of temperance litcra tare and scattered it throughout every State and Territory and in nearly eve- rv country on the globe. It publishes two first-class monthly papers, one, the lo lav out and establish and discon tinuc public roads, subject to tho same rules axjd regulations now iu force : ProruM, Aotvtrr. thaVin lay ing out and establishing roads and line between townships the boar? ton cartways, am. .or-iu - commissioner. 'of the county ihall scssing damage iopropS"J determine as to ho- saiJ road ibll of the same, no greater number of be divided, with notice as to the rV Jurors than five snail be ing of said road. ) bo required, any prom.on anj Sec. 4. All able-bolied male Pr; other law to the contrary notw.th- uton ftfics of eiszhicen standing. - " 11 years and forty-five years snail dc re nmlpr the nrovisious ol this 1 . I II act to work on the public roadj , X cept the members of the board df su pervisors of public roads, nou ljss than three days in each and every fees of Spring "amwin, was allowed $1,25 for cleaning out Jail well and taking bucket out public well. A. G. Murdock, was allowed $4,00 for conveying Reubin Butler to Jail. R. W. Frazier, was allowed $37,84 for recording bills, State cost, money orders, &c. W. J. Frazier, was allowed 3.00 for conveying Orrin Brooks to Jail. w. S. Crowson, was allowed 60c. for serving one road order. D. J. Staley, was allowed $3,00 for serving 5 road orders. J. D. Brower was allowed $2,80 for same. W. J. Frazier 7,80 for same service. II C. AVilliams, 60c. for same. W. F.' Brown, $3,00 for convevintr xrxMtuu xuingipn to Jail. . B. S. Scott, $4,80 for serving road orders. C. S. Dicks,' was allowed $61,40 for services as Jailor to Mav 1 1 S w . i ' I iMfon Presneirwas al lowed $4,40 for serving road orders. Jonathan Lassiter, was allowed $5,80 for services as Commissioner and mileage. I. W. Bumess $6.10 for same. J. E. Walker $4,10 for same. R. W. Frazier fr i.i- Apartment has lately named for thework. and shalj ete thee hiclin hool the hour, and the placo'for the!m?et. shall orant. This -Society is ing of the hands, and what implement the f ted ed to the children. But a new VDCT UdVnfr should be ignorant. This-Sariety is now publishing some ninety TEjfPEKAiNCE LlBKAUY HOOKS T;R SLX DAY SCHOOLS froifi the pens of the most giftrl writ ers of the day. A list of thee can be tb Sec. 10. The boara or supervisors shall annually make report to the first term of the superior court of their county alter the first Monday in Au gust of the condition of the roads of their township, and if the meetings orovided for in this act have been . . I 1 L .1 find the ludzo Sec. 5. The overseer of tbe roiuii'cm .-T 'JL shall for at .east three, days tn he hold ng sue, .ten . . . 1 r 11. . . : . rvtnrr hiib.ii i&ii:, "' n ir room call opon the clei urt for such reports, and then and there be deliver .u- r f lhe rrand iurV : audll year. Yovih't Tptronc to iUustra- year summon tue 7" ind before they shall retire being.asi.namein,caU,deTO, j Tthei! c.U lue cuui v ivi ow r the hand shall person P board of Bupervisors shall fail to has l so unimoned shall apbeir at ylime and place named, and with Ijiinplemeot directed, and hall had by writingtheNationnTperance on lhc road um,cr tbe direfticf Society, 58 Reade St, Newark. WhaTf lbe over5eer until chargcil Uv u T thin of Board. J. J. Hamlin jeas allowed ( nS ravenously into a huge roll .of ibts Bwjxrrtruatlpn of ,-m riiibt to declare that armv business on both civil and criminal , P dot be used as a police forcc.V- dockets, the Commissioners have re- vyOgrcss has a right to say to the quested the Governor to appoint a X 1 LUUli 11 yUU UlUlUUUite LU USe I w':"' vv uvtuau the army in dcuance 01 such laws as on .na luonnay m uuiy, next, we may enact for its government, we Board adjourned to meet on the 1st will' disband it by withholding all pro- Monday in June. ' visions for its continuance, and we will Thc Commissioners, with a majori be acting constitutionally in so doing, ty of the Assessors, agreed upon the for the Constitution of the United following uniform scale of valuation : States gives Congress the. exclusive Wheat, per bushel, $1,00 75 cents. 35 " 75 " $1,00 75 cents. 50 . -.$1,00 9 cents. 2 " 10 " 1 ma, - a 7 . ment and regulation of the land and naval forces." The Sun says of the authority thus granted : 'Under that authority, Congress di rected that tho army should not be em ployed as a police force at elections, and repealed so much of the law. as permitted the presence of troops at the polls. This amendment vis strictly proper in a bill providing for the army, lvfnRn if. i n. dirpfinn hnw t.hfi nrmv shall, rvshall not, be employed, or, in thc language of the Constitution, a 'rule for the goverrmeut and regular tkn of the land forces.' To assert that this is general legislation is to al lege an uutruth." It is a mistake to 3uppose that the army is aperpetuai mstuuuon neces sarily, irrespective of what Congress may do or say. It would cease con stitutionally if the House should vote rUlrcr to vtter W to OWTJSBtirot Wttn 1 hold from it the needed supplies. The whole power lies with Congress, and the President has nothing under heav en to do with its continuance, although he may' exercise his veto power to 1 thwart the wishes of a majority of the House. For the first time in the his tory oi our Government a President has used the veto power to prevent the repeal of bad laws and to give the Ex ecutivc the right to use troops at elec tions for members .of Congress. -Wilmington Star. Proceedings of Uie Board of Commis . siouers had at their meetingr on the 5th day of Maj, 1879. . All the Board present. K. G. Coble, was exempted from working the public roads on account of inability. Jonathan Lewallen, was exemptetl from the payment of Poll tax and working public roads. Nannie Beckerdite, was' allowed $2,50 for special allowance as a paur per. ' . j' " . E. A. Moffltt, was allowetl $25,86 for insolvent taxes, accotintctl for by him. Corn, per bushel, uais, pr ousu. Rye, per bush. Flax seed, pr bu. Peas, per bush. Barley, per bush. IMillet, pr bush. Cotton, pr lb. in seed, Tobacco, leaf, per lb. Bacon, per lb. i 7 Lard, per pound, 8 Pork, per pound, 4 Wool, in dirt, pr. lb. 15 washed, per lb. 25 Flour, per bbl. $5,00 Molasses, per gal. 45 " ' Stalion, $100,00 to $250 each. Best Horse, $100 to $75 u 2nd, $75, to $50 3rd, $50, and down, Mules same as horses. Milch Cow, $15 to $12 2nd, " $7 to $12 3rd, " : $7 and down. Sows and Pigs, $8 to $12. Slioats, $3 and down. Fat hogs $3 per 100 lb. gross. Sheep, per head, $1,00 1 Lamb, 50 cents. Goats, " $1,00 Kids, " 50 Bees, per stand. $1,00 Heart pine Lumber, 1,00 Sap, " ,60 cents. White oak & ashe, $1,00 Other oaks, 60 cents. Refused lumber, 30 Walnut, $2,00 Other lumber, 30 cents. Brandy, $1,50 Whisky, $1,25 Wine, $1.50 Jacks, $100 and down. Jennies, $2,00. Chufas, per bushel, $1,50 Yoak Oien, $40,00 and down. Yearling. $2,00 to $6,00 Wool Rolls, 40 cents per pound, j Spoak timber, 1,00 per uund. RopiV. Transits not w-iiiiriJL.flivi r ocean lines ; not Kasfr River budges, nor North River tunnels, but our pwu street boys: boys that are training every day for the penitentiary and gal lows; boys growing up uncared for by any living soul, faring worse physical ly than the horses and dogs of Man hattan Island, and morrally in a dark ness and turpiditude beside which the Gaboon seems white and pure. This group of boys, huddled over the warm grating, will be the highwaymen, burg lars, tramps and murderers of fifteen years hence as surely as effect follows cause. What else can they be? Why should not humane legislation sweep all these poor boys from the slums in to a State factory or farmj where, m der judicious restraint they may learn to make an honest living, and be taught their superiority to a skye terrier tr a stage horse? Viewed fronran econom ic standpoint, it will cost less moiey to savs these boys than to; hang them. Yet nothing is surer than that all tbsse thousands of street boys grow up htrd, unreasoning criminals, preying npon society till they finally fall into f he hands of the law. Private charities 1 1 cannot provide for them. They are vicious, idle, rebrobate why shouldn't they be? It will need the compulsion better method could possly be ado' 1 ' , t ed for arming the childr of oucna against the fierce but ipfdious Mnpta tion sure to assail frm a years hence? The lastii impressions of childhood make an,eqnalled founda tion on which to JWd a sober, manly life, and it see15 a Vlt7 lhat these Temperance IPrar' boons ior &un day School sll'l not be morc widely known and Jscd to this end. Let it be borne '4 mind that this is not a money nyins scheme. The society is purely" benevolent and humane in stitutpni aud except the few hard worked inmates of the publication hbue, it is all outgo and no income foevery person connected with it. Forty years ago Joshua Nye and 0 thcrs in Maine began work among the children in -Sunday and day schools, and when that generation of pledged and instructed boys grew up, the State of Maine took the foremost position of him : Provided, that no hand shd required to work for a less time seven hours nor for a longer time! than ten hours in any one daj An per bon summoned aj aforesaid who shall by twelve o'clopk of the day preced ing the one appointed for work on the road pay to the overseer the si&n pf one dollar shall be relieved from Ivorlk ing on the road for one day. j The money thus collected by the ovcrsepr shall be by him applied on ing and repairing of the road ty1lfiK siege any other duty imposed hj tb,V act, tu:y , bhall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof shall be fined or imprisoned, or both, in the discretion of the court, and the indictment may be cither against the board of super visors, or against the individuals composing it as justices of the peace. Sec. 11. The several superior court clerks and the register of deeds in tho state shall within twenty days alter the passage of this act post a copy thereof in some conspicuous place in their respective oflices, and to carry out this provision the secretary of state, immediately upon the ratifica tion of this act, shall cause to be pub lished in convenient form for thia ' i purpose a sufficient number of copies the work of luig act ttn j jjC suan mau one copy ad : !iVt to each and every superior court clc -. -onn oi.ofi f.U land roister of ''eedft in the sttc : . . r. TVmm- that the nrovisions tnw nisu one auie-wu.t-u uauu i. iiu- ,, . - .tii,. nr . , it . , . 1 . 9 act suan qui. piv v" w ... shall be held to have complied V?lth Ca and Mecklenburg. the provisions of this act. Sec 12. All laws and clauses of . ... - : w m. x m rt w ra firm imiiiii m ri i c: i-. il Anv rorarn Iirvlilo tn rtrk laws 1U tuumti. n'w I Ov. , 1 1 1 rondlpil. . 1 j i . i- 11 r : 1 . . ' .1 f 1.1113 ate utifc" 1 - on me roau wuu uau 1111 lu aiiuim - , i, ; fl4n . . 1.1,1 OUt. 10. auto avk v and work as hereinbefore proyiqeci fro n(1 nf..r iL ratification. when summoned so to do, unless he shall have paid the one dollar as af(re said, shall be guilty of a raisdefner.u - - -1.-11 .J r.l-.-i Ratified this the 14th day of March, A. D. 1879. of law to draw them froiu 5pv (4" dom of their vile and miserable Itfe. -1 ! May make this appeal to you, gentlemen of the Press! For God's sake, fo3 hu manity's sake, use the mighty pcWer of your honorable calling to procure such legislation in behalf of these poor children, and their pitiful counterpit8 with which every large city is tcambg and festering to-day, as will, at leaU, lift them out of a condiiion of Ifc where manliness, purity, and piety hay less than a ghost of a chance ! j 'A HINT TO TARENTS AND SUNDAY i SCHOOL TEACnERS. Put the question to a thousand 2 thers : vWhat vice do you most feai in your boy's future life?" and nine To Provide for Keeping In Repair the Public Roads of the State. Tte General Assembly of North Car olina do enact .' Section 1. That the justices of the m peace in each and every lownsnip shall have the supervision and control of the public roads in their respective townships. They shall, with respect to this work, constitute and be styled the "board of supervisors of public roads" of such township. They are hereby incorporated, and the above shall be their corporate name. Sec. 2. The said board of supervis ors shall meet at some, place in their respective townships to be agreed upon by themselves, or in the absence of such agreement to be named by their chairman, on the first Monday of February, May, August and No vember, for the purpose of consulting on the subject of the condition of the roads in their township. They shall some time during the week preceding each meeting go over and personally examine all the roads in their town ship. They shall annually at their meeting in February elect some one of their number chairman : Provided that the first election, for chairman shall be held on the first Monday in me 11 1 1 1 onemousana cignt nunurcu anu seventy-nine, and the chairman then elected shall hold the position until the first Monday of February, one thousand eight hundred and eighty. Sec. 3. The said board of supervis ors shall annually at the meeting in May divide the roads of their town ships into sections and appoint over seers for said sections at said meet ings. They shall at the same time allot the hands to said overseers, and shall also designate the boundaries or points to which each resident shall be liable to work on said section, and shall within five days a fter such meet ing certifiy to each overseer written notice of his appointment, with a list of the bands assigned to his section : MM --.. exceeding fiv days, or both, iti discretion of the court. Sec. 7. Every overseer shall atjeaeh and every meeting of the bod supervisors of bis township mal?e port to them of the present coni s fir ol cjre-iuon of his road, of the number of pdav 1 i worked on his section since last tnict ing, of the number of hands wlrl at tended and worked each day, of the number and names of hands who ail ed to attend and work ; whether or not they were legally summonc!, ihd whether or not they paid the one dol lar as provided. That the saidorer secr shall before some person author ized to administer an oath mako writ ten affidavit that the report ii true and correct. That upon this rriiort sworn to as aforesaid, if it shaj 11 pear that any of the hands, after ap- be ing legally summoned, have failed to attend and work on said roadl and that they did not pay the one dbllar, then it shall be the duty of th said justice of the peace, or any rfnefof - - - a 1 them, to issue a warrant for theirrpst of any such band or hands, andfslfsll put him jor them upon trial for lhc offence. j I Sec 8 The said overseers shall kt the meeting of the supervisors in Fpbru arv make a report of all money 6ol- lected by them from parties extucd from work on the road for the preqed ing year, with a statement as ti bjow the same was expended. 1 nai 11 any : overseer shall fail to dlscharA any one of the duties imposed by tbisct he shall be guilty ot a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be fined een dollars, and in default of payment of fine and cost be imprisoned nptjex- ceeding five days. In cae of failure of any overseer to make any eport to the board of supervisors of public roads of bis township, as provide In this act, then and in that case jt shall be the duty of tb chairman ai sucn board immediately upon such .failure tn m1cA a nm statement of the fact before some jastice of the peace of an adjoining township, who shall imme diately issue his warrant forth! arrest nf tho mid nvrrer. and DroCceJ to try him for the offence. I Sec. 9 Tbe board of iupcfrvijo shall have the right to lay dutaind discontinue cartway, iubjec U all tbe rules and regulations now in force, and the board of commissioners of th countv only shall have the tiht 1 - j - hundred will answer, 'Intemperance, Rnt whfit at tho nine hnridred doinff about it? However men ' feeL about lroriJeJ, that the board of supervis legal prohibition, all men acknowledge urs may at any time alter thesections j a lw inctiw, tw1 rtAroitc inatrrwMinc? or allotment, but shall cive notice X UK, WM'JO v.v. v. -.---. 1 m 1 1 telegraph wires is going on in Germany, and that country will soon be intersect ted with a complete network of this in visible and accessible means of com munication, which no thunder storm can destroy and not roving enemy can readily cut. young and old upon this important subject. Yet we are mostly drifting along from day to day blindly hoping and half eipccting that somehow our boys will be saved whatever becomes of the rest. And so amid the wreck Oi urCilues ami luc craau ui iuum thereof to the overseer. 1 The overseer bay resign after the expiration of I t .t. : l 1 1.:- jweive monius, proviueu i uau fiall be in good repair and the board c)T supervisors shall so find ; and any drereeer so resigning, and whose re signation has. been accepted by the Trinity College Xorma June 20, and closing July 19, 1878.. -Supt. Rev. 13. Craven, Pres. of the College. PnoFKssons. Gannaway, Johnson Carr, and Pcgram. TirAcimts. N. C. Knglieli. A. J. Tomlinson, Dr. W. A. Welborn, A. I. Hrooks, T. Taylor, and C. P. Frazc r. Kindekoahten Teacheks. .Mrs. Louise Pollock, and Miss Susie Pol lock, of Washington, D. C. Special Teacheus.- Misses Retta English, Theresa Giles, Pcrsi Giles Mary Giles, Laura Clement, Matlie Eaton, Mattie Haskett, Lou - Lee, Nannie Icc, Rarsine Osborn, Parthe nia Ilenly, Anna Robbins, liettic Cutbel, Mollie Perry, Corinna Col trane, L. E. Rfirker, Ellen Hammond, Nora Rurcb, Laura Petty Mcssr. I). F. Welborn, J. Mendenhall, S. J. Reeach, L. M. II. Reynolds, II. C. Nance, Mr. Led ford, J. W. Coltranc and others. v . Subjects Taught. Eng. Gram mar. Orthography, Othoepy, Geog phay. Arithmetic, Algebra. Latin. Phi losophy, Chemiatry, Vocal Music, Pcnnmtnbbip, Object Teaching ; Lec tures on the Teacher, Teaching, School Government, School Houses, School Furniture, &c. ; The true Kindergarten rnctlod was fully explained, illustrated and taught. Whole No. of Normal Students, 220 No. of professional Teachers 1G5 Counties represented, 31 Whole number of visitors -Greatest number ol Students and visitors present on same day, 45') Average attendance of Student and visitors, . 300 rs Petition for I)ower. lCniilolli Coiinly-In Su- a.aint Ilnah Mofiltt & wife Sa rah M. Moflitt, Ahly Swalm and wif Rib -i Swaim, Riley I. .Snil-r Albert nWer. Albert W. V Uee and wile .Sarah t.. Re, Jame Snider, El len Snider, Solomon L. Snider, .Irpnxo Snider. Ahley Snider, Rowie Snider. In thiieaHf itarpearinctotheiatbfctlon of tbe court that Hush MofUtt and wife Sarah M. Moflitt. Riley D. Snkler, Solo mon L. Snider, the defendant above named nide byond the limit of thi State. It i therefore o rue re I that publi cation lie made for Vix Micttwite week In the Kakdoij'IC Reueatoh. a week ly newspaper put)llhel in the town of Aiheboro, notifying the ail defendant to appear within that time and answer or demur to the complaint whkh luw been tiled In the offlce of the Clerk of the Su perior Court, otlierwie tbe Petition will be heard ex parte a to them and Judg ment rendered pro confeMicaInf t thenu J. A Blair, atto. for riift. Witness A. M. Diffee, clerk of our Su- - . . - . t (i.kArn 1 rri 1 ienor toun, ai mm c - - 3rd, H7D. AI.n M. DIFFEK, 7;t Clerk Snierior Court.
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 13, 1879, edition 1
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