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! ' ' 'I' .' 1 ; ? '5i ; - ' r-r-t. E. L. 0. WARD, Edito and Pjroprietor.il , 4 ThejOjrii , -'. - TEBHSi $2.?D Per Tear, in Adraacc. YOL. IY. - j ; . j" ! j ' ,1 " ; SlMFiaBpE0 K. C, THIIRSDAY, NOVEMBER 7. 1878. - V V v'-' :;NO.' 2. : ' : ' : I ! 1 . . f T " - : . ... w " -. - I . '- t I : T-" ' : T" , 77- . ' . : r -r, : : -sz 1 i rr- -r-! : SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE.) One Year.... $3 00 Six Months.... j. 1 10 Single Copies, Flye Cents eacn. Any Derson Bendlncr a club of fire snb- Ecrtbers, accompanied by tne casn, will receive one copy free for one year.' ADVERTISING RATESi EFACK. 1 W.I2 W. l m. tin. I 8m. em. 1 Incb... 2 Incb.es 8 Inches liiciies X COL... 14 CoL. 1 Col.... $100 $1 50 3 00 4 00 000 800 14 00 20 00 $50 400 00 TOO 15 00 20 00 J0 0C $ 4 00J$ 6 0y, $ too ioa ITOd so oo 85 0C) 45 00 70 oq $12 00 a oo 8 00 4 00 500 10 00 15 00 18 00 SO 00 50 00 8 00 10 00 80 00 30 00 40 00 170 00 125 00 Transient advertisements payable In advance. Yearly advertlsementa payable quarterly ilia ad vance. ! I Professional Cards, six lines oir less. $10 per annum ball yearly In advance (lncluaing P or the publication of Court notices 17 Is charged, if paid In advance otherwise, $a i Advertisers may, by counting teln words to a line, and adding the number of display lllnes they wish, estimate for themselves the length and costof an advertisement, andrremlt acpoi d lngly. Remittances may be made by check. draft, or registered letter. Communications containing ltjems of local news are respectfully solicited. 1 1 The Editor will not be held responsible for views entertained and expressed by corrjpispon dents. I 1 1 Manuscripts Intended for publication miufet be written on one side of the DaDer only ah3L act companled by the name of the writer as a guar antee of good iaitn. i We cannot undertake to return rejected jman- nacrlDt. I M , Important to Advertljsers. XV- The ALBEMARLE ENQUIRER IK the ofliclal organ of liertlord ana j Northaiipton counties, and has a larger circulation in iBei tie, Northampton, Hertford and Gates counties! than any paper puoiisned. it also circulates in thirty-seven other counties, and as aR AD- VJUtTiMNO MEDIUM Is secondito no paper in Eastern Carolina. j; XA cross mnrk on yonr paper SZ Indicates that y.ur subecription hatsSUV. Hxmred. or Is due. We demand nrompits pay ments, as we need what la due use to enatae usd to carry on our business morej successfully. Promises are worthless unless fulfilled, ai isub scrlptlon Is a small amount to a sxkbscrlbrt, but out together, they are considerable .to ixs. So please remit. JOB PRINTING of all kinds done In the best styles, ures to suit the times. and at ng- STATIONERY, CARDS, ENVELOPES, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, i Additess all furnished at the shortest notice. orders to the ENQUIRER, I Murfreesboro, N. C. Professional iCarda. XT C. BO WEN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAWf, ', Jackson, N. C. Practices In Northampton and adjoining coun ties. Prompt attention to collection In all parts pi tne state. E. C. WARD, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Murfreesboro, Practices in Hertford and adjoliing counties, and in tne bupreme and .Federal courts. prompt attention to collections. J J. YEATES, ATTORNBY-AT-LAW, Murfreesboro, N. C. Practices in the Superior, Supreme and Fed ci ttx (juurui. A. BARNES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Mo-freesboro, jN. C. Practices in Hertford and adjoining counties and in the supreme and Federal courts, j rp B, JERNIUAN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, . , Harrellsvllle, N. C. Collections made In any Dart of the State. 1 JOIN V. MOORE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, - , Pitch Lajidlng.N.C, Pract'ces In the Superior, Supreme, and Ped eral Courts. Prompt attention to Collections. Bi B. TVIABOKNE, ATTOIINEY-AT-LA Wlnton, N. C. Practices In Hertford and adjoining counties. Collections made In any Una. North Caro- D R. C. F. CAJIPBEL,!, 0 B H H 3D h B part or ; i lHAiiai'LAiiijy. -jue.-- , : ' kituik meaer nana, "i nave Deen i II. I t : il m wmn9 m mini t ' 1 M.M -m t I f S , . .w ":1 " i I ;;.!! XRaKSPUHTEB. In ft garden watched with care Grew rosebud sweet and fair; Blooming brightly, hour by hour, lrew this rare and precious flower : : The delight ol svery eye, f The joy of every passer by. . Ld ! our treasure U not here ! s Fragrant not the atmosphere; t Pearly tint and beauty bright Gladden not our longing sighL , f Aching void! where, oh. where ..... ,4 Is our rosebud sweet and fair? . . Planted in the fields above, i Warmed with goodness, lit.jritJbi love; Blooming still, more sweet, more fair; Watched with loving angel's care: See it now I By faith we can 1 "My Father is the husbandman." Romance of a Postage -Stamp. I had breathed more freely after it tas over, t It was a temptation resisted but I felt better after having done it. As I was assorting the letters prepara tory to putting them in the mail bag for New York, one letter turned up and sent a jealous shock through me that set my heart throbbing and my brain swimming with a sudden dizzi ness. 1 might have expected to see it, bujt none the less did it affect me when I did see it "Joseph Norris, India Dock, New York" that was the ad dress, and'I knew it wa3 his. I had a dear little ! note next to my heart then, a few graceful words thanking me for a tiook I had sent her a little note that I had read over countless times, and 'kissed as often, wondering would it displease her to know how fondly cherished it. I thrust the hateful let ter out of my sight, and leaning my head on the table, lived over again the hopes, the fears, the wretchedness of the last twenty-four hours. The day before, while distributing the mail matter, I came across a letter addressed to myself, and on opening it I learned that through the generosity of a distant relative whose name I bore, I had been left in California au inheri tance of $20,000. What a change a few strokes of a pen had made transform- ins: Karl Bersrmann, a postmaster of a secluded Connecticut village, into Ivarl iiergmann, tne possessor oi a competence, well invested, yielding a certain income ! And how before my good fortune I had thought of Annie M6rrill as one separated away from me byj my poor circumstances, my salary barely supporting my mother and my self, and how could I ask any woman to j share my poverty? Now that the burden of poverty was most unexpect edly lifted from me, I felt at liberty to tell her the hopes that i never dared to entertain till now! What would her answer be ? iThat I would learn that very night. In the same mail with my letter was one addressed to her, postmarked iNew York. ier corres pondence all passed through my hands, but I had never seen that writing be fore. That' was no weak, wavering, female style. It was large, clear, de cisive, the writing of a' self-possessed man. Who could the writer be ? An nie's uncle. Dr. Merrill, had male cor respondents in New York. But this letter was the! first that had come to her since she came orphaned from the great city a vear before, and had been re ceived into her uncle's heart and home. But other thoughts put the question of the letter out of my mind. I sent by a messenger a few huriied lines to my mother to prepare her for our good fortunejand tnen counted the hours that would pass before I could offer the inheritance to Annie, encumbered with its possessor, i When I reached home I fonnd her there before me. My mother, who had taken her into her favor from the first, her! sweetness and orphaned situation proving a passport to her heart, had sent for Annie to communi cate the good news to her. She was strangely quiet, I thought, and there was a troubled look in her eyes I had never seen there before. In fact, after a while, a subdued feeling stole over us all! v Annie's disquiet seemed to impart itself to us. ! I was thinking how I could venture' to tell her all my hopes, and my mother, guessing what my thoughts were, left us together most of the; evening, but my heart failed me. It was only when I was walking home with Annie to Dr. Merrill's that I found courage to speak. She led me on by saying that I must not think from my silence that she did not rejoice in ihe happy change in my prospects; bu no one'could be more sincere in their congratulations than herself. I answered that my good fortune would be valueless to me unless I could share it with the girl 1 loved. . 'iThe girl you love?" she repeated, questionably.! I felt her hand tremble on my arm. "The girl ;I love," I answered, in tones that she might have interpreted, but failed to do so. ' She ought, to be a happy woman," she continued. " May f I ask if I know her?" I ! -If you) know her?" I cried. "If you know her ? O, who could it be but - I: I r I'-r" " : , - . " - I She drew, her hand quickly from my arm and stoooVquite still before me. ' Mel. O, did you sayioe?" And then j sawtUe moonlight falling on her faceVawu4not'the face of a cirl sWniXwiti Jiappy confusion wben she hears the jftory of his loye from thbisheefe.;it was pale and 8hocked,;aridllieriBhe hid it. from me in her hands and burst into tears. -; ' t . needed no other answer. I knew my suit was hopeless. . : 4 ; " Don't cry, dear,' I said, " I never thought to wound you." " Mhught"you knew," she went on, sobbingly. "I ' thought my uncle might have' told you. I am going to marry Mr. Norris. I got a letter from him to-day. O, can you forgive me?" She stretched out her little hand im ploringly. I took them in mine and kissed them they were sacred to me ; they belonged to another, and I kissed them while my heart was breaking. "Forgive you, my darling?" I said. "1 would forgive you if you killed me, I think. Don't grieve, Annie; I will try to bear it." We parted at her uncle's without an other word, and I went home to the motherly heart that I knew would suf fer with me, but whose tender sympa thy would uphold me in this bitter hour of trial. The next day I sent my resignation to Washington, for my mother and I agreed to leave the village where we had spent so many quiet years. It was in the afternoon of the same day that the letter of which I had spoken, that I now knew was for my rival, attracted my attention. 1 took it up reluctantly I felt that I would as readily have touched a poisonous snake and was just about to put the postmark on it when 1 saw that the stamp upon it, In stead of being a postal one, was a reve nue stamp, and that that letter, instead of speeding off on wings of love to New York, must be consigned to the Dead Letter Office, in Washington. With a thrill of savage delight I flung it into the box appropriated to the reception of such castaways, and went on with my evening's work. With that I went on mechanically, but my thoughts were not agreeably employed. That then was the answer to the missive she had received. But it should be long before he would get it get it too late, perhaps, for an explanation ; for mis understandings between lovers had often arisen from slighter causes than the non-arrival of an expectant letter. I pictured him waiting and longing for the letter that would not come; and she, poor girl, how her tender heart would be tortured at his imagined neglect when no answer would be forthcoming! She, I knew, would suffer in silence, and 1 fondly hoped he would do the same. So I locked the mail bag and waited for the messenger to take it to the station. The express would pass in an hour and a half. And then a struggle began in my heart. The mis-stamped letter seemed to look re proachfully at me from the box where I had thrown it, and seemed to whisper to me that one little act of mine could send it unimpeded on its mission. No one, I believe, unless he was in my situation, actuated by the same de spairing, selfishly hopeful feelings that were overmastering me, could under stand what a base impulse I conquered when at last, after an hour's tempta tion I took that letter from its resting place, substituted a postage stamp for the revenue one, opened the mail bag and let it go. Then after it was done some hot tears gushed to my eyes. It was my last hope, and I could not help iudulging in some weakness over its grave. The next mail from New York ar rived three days later. I had the poor satisfaction of seeing the result of my good action in a letter in the hand writing of my rival, addressed to Annie, make it unwished-for appearance, as I knew it would, and shortly after Dr. Merrill took it away with him as he called for his mail. Loungers came in and out of the office, and went away, finding me little disposed for conversa tion. Nothing yet was known in the village of my acquisition, so I was spared the pain of listening to congrat ulations which I was in no mood to hear. When I went home that eve ning I was surprised to find my mother absent,' and still more surprised when, on opening a note she had left for me I learned that she was with Annie at Dr. Merrill's, and that I was to follow her there. Hopeless as I felt, the prospect of seeing Annie again prom ised me only ta painful pleasure, but still the thought of being near her had a sweet and sad fascination that I could not resist. When I reached the Doc tor's I found himself and my mother seated in his ' office, so intent on the moves of a knight's gambit, that a mere nod on my entrance showed their con sciousness of my arrival. Annie was not 'there ; lT found her in the parior standing on the hearth-rug, the glow of the "firelight shining upon her golden hair, and a glow of eager, happy ex pectation (that was new to her sweet face. 1 . giving ; me her hand. "I have been Impatient for your coming -and I will tell yon why. There Is a question I want yon to answer. It perplexes me," and, somehow I think I can look to you for its solution. You remember a let ter! received in the early part of the week?" : '. She hesitated and cast down her eyes. " f. have, too good a. reason ever to forget It,? VI answered, bitterly. I saw her face flush. She went on; "I answered, that, letter the next dayt t was of vital importance tome that it should go then, as there would be no other mail for several days. I was troubled when; I. wro it and stamped it at my uncle's desk while the messenger was waiting to take it to the office. I found, too late, that I had mis-stamped it. I have been utterly wretched for the pa3t few days on ac count of that mistake. I knew too well what the fate of that letter would be. Judge then how relieved I felt when; my uncle brought me this "taking from the mantle-piece the letter that had come that morning. "If it es caped your keen observation, how did my letter xass the eyes of the New York officials undetected? This is my question." Her eyeB searched my face. I took her hands within my own. "Annie," said I. "I believe I could make no one understand what it cost my jealousy to rectify that mistake, but I did it. I knew it must be in an swer to that letter which you spoke of a few nights ago. It ought to prove to yon how unselfishly I love you, my darling, when I re-stamped it and sent it on its way to him, I never thought you would find it out. I did it to spare you a moment's uneasiness. If the man you love cares for you as much as I do, he will make your life a happy one." " How can I repay your generosity ?" she said, in a voice tremulous with feeling. "You could not have acted better if you had had a peep at the con tents of that letter. But your reward may be obtained when you read this.'' She handed me the letter and glided out of the room. I took it over to the shaded lamp and read the following : "Dea Annie: When beside your father's dying bed we entered into an engagement of marriage, I felt as he did, that the interest of the firm of which he and I were partners would be best sustained by our union. I wrote to you notifying you of my readiness to" fulfil my part of the agreement, and requesting you to be ready to return with me as my wife. You say to me that I must not come. There is but one explanation to this re fusal, and that is that you have some ohe who pleases you better than your humble servant. It is but natural, child; I cannot blame you. The young should mate with the young, and I am too much your senior to expect to awake ia your youthful heart feelings that have long been lifeless in my own. I ielease you irom a promise that I am now aware was made by you under the pressure of the sad circumstances. But tills fact can never affect the "fatherly regard I have ever entertained for the only child of my dear old friend." I read no further. Here was my re ward. And how nearly I had lost it by the desire of gratifying an ungener ous impulse ! Annie has since assured me that had Joseph Norris arrived on the day designated, so great was her awe of her father's old partner, that she never would have had the courage to contend against her destiny, In deed, the circumstance of having made the error she did, in mis-stamping the letter seemed to her troubled mind sig nificant of a deep meaning, and that even beyond the grave her father sought to control her actions. Annie did not return to the parlor. 1 found her seated in the Doctor's office, apparently interested in the game which just at the moment of my en trance he brought to a victorious con clusion, "Check- "Mate !" I cried, finishing the word for him,, and catching Annie in my arms, heedless of the astonishment of the elderly pair, I demanded my re ward. Well, Joseph Norris, gray-haired, commonplace and undemonstrative, came to, ..Green well to other nuptials than his own.! He gave way my dear one with, the best of grace, and after the marriage congratulated me on my admission into the firm. My ignorance of his meaning was so apparent that with a grim smile he enlightened ? me. With my bride I acquired an interest in an East India firm in New York and Calcutta. If Annie had chosen to ap peal as an, orphan, dependent on the bounty of her uncle, she had the after. satisfaction of knowing that the love she h ;d won ws offered to herself alone, and not the golden store that at tracts so many suitors., i v "My dearest," I sometimes say to her, " who would think that In a great measure -we owe our happinesi to a lit- tle? postage-stamp?" - , If a whale 70 feet long were struck by a harpoon In the tail, a second would elape before the disturbance wculd Simple Water Tests The , complete analysis of potable water requires much mechanical skill, but the i more common Impurities may be detected by. , comparatively simple tests. Certain deleterious, salts may thus be recognized.; -.Among these are the nitrates, whose presence is chiefly significant; as 'showing .that organic matter has been acted upon and may be present. The danger ia not in the alts themselves but In their source which should, If possible,' be ascer tained. : To examine water for nitratesj: put a small quantity, of It in a test tube ; add an equal quantity of sulphuric acid, using care so that the fluids shall not mix ; to this add carefully a few drops of a saturated solution of sul phate of iron. The stratum where, the two fluids meet will, if nitric acid.be. present show a purple, afterwards a brown color. If the nitric acid be in minute quantities, a reddish color will result. The, presence of ammonia, if in excess, can be determined by treating the water with a small' quantity of po tassic hydrate. Ammnonia, if present, will be liberated, and may be recog-1 nized by its odor, or by the white fumes of choride of ammonium when a glass rod wet with muriatic acid is passed over the mouth of the test tube. If chlorine is present in any form in water used for drinking, it is evident that sewage contamination in lsome form exists. The presence and amount of chlorine may be ascertained by the following simple method: Take 9 grains of nitrate of silver, chemically pure, and dissolve in 200 units (say cubic centimetres) of distilled water. One unit of the solution will represent 1.100th of a grain of chlorine. Take a small measured quantity of the water to be examined and put it in a glass vessel more than large enough to hold ij. Add to the water a small quantity of the solution ;' if chlorine be present a white precipitate will result. Repeat the addition, after short intervals, until no precipitate results. The units of the solution used will determine the hundredths of a grain of the chlorine present. If more than a grain of chlo rine in a gallon be present, reject the water, unless it can be clearly deter mined that the excess does not come from sewage. The water should be slighly acidulated with nitric acid be fore the test is applied. Several years ago the Journal of Chemistry described and commended Heidi's sugar test- for the presence of dangerous organio matter, but it is worth repeating in this connection, being at once simple and trustworthy. Place a quantity of wa ter in a clean, glass-stoppered bottle; add a few grains of pure suger and ex pose it to the light in a window of a warm room. If the water becomes turbid even;after exposure for a week, reject it; if it remains clear it is safe. Birds and Farmers. 1 Some time ago, while at work near a wheatfield, my attention was called to the fact that some of the wheat had been picked from the heads, in certain parts of the field. As my neighbor seemed to think that the mischief had been done by yellow-birds, 1 procured a gun and killed one of the supposed offenders. Although interrupted while taking his breakfast, we found in his stomach only three grains of wheat, and by actual count three hundred and fifty weevils. Some years ago, a person brought me ai turtle dove to preserve. "Why did you kill them?" I asked. "Because it along with others, was found eating some fresh sown peas," was the answer, r opened its crop to see If such, was the case, but instead of peas I found in it over one thousand seeds of weeds, prin cipally dock. I took them to a' large retailer of seeds here, but could And none In his shop to, which they corresr ponded. One day last season, as the barley in my fields was ripening, the blackbirds began to gather about it, and my father began to anathematize them as thieves and robbers, feeding upon what they did not sow. "Why they come," said" he "in clouds from Nan sh on, and all about us. Notwithstanding, I told him that I was satisfied that they did more good than harm, and that they were welcome to their share. The har vest began, and as the' mowers reached the middle of the field they found, the stalks of the grain very much stripped and cut up by the army worm. When the barley was down th ey commen ced to march out of the field In a compact stream through the Jbarway Into the next one, and here we saw clearly what the blackbirds were after. They pounced upon them and devoured them by thou sands, very materially lessening their numbers. The worms were so numer ous that they could not destroy them all, but they materially lessened them and their . powers of mischief. All honor, then,to the blackbirds, which are usual ly counted mischievous, and are destroy ed by farmers like vermin A friend of mine,; an animal preserver, lived at Southwell, when a gardener used to bring him in dally a number of thrushes. At last he eald to him, "why do you esr? "Why " said the gardener, "ther are eating all my strawberries." ! don't believe It baid my friend, "I will come in and teeLj" Bo In he went accor dingly, and font 4 the gardener, gun in hand, ready to s loot a thrush that had dropped in I among the strawberries. "There, said tie gardener, "you see don't you, what! he is doing;" and sulk ing the action t the word, raised his gun to shoot. "Stop"' said my friend, "let us see if it s as you say;" when presently! the bird rose up with tome- thing In its mouth and flew over tho wall into j thd adjoining grounds. "iow," said my friend, "let us go ami see what he hajsi cnfc " Thev went, and) found the bird breaking a snail's shell, "There,") said rnjy friend, "you see tha it is the snails tl at eat your strawber ries,; and jnot the birds ;" as a more care ful examinatioii .snbscqueutly proved Need I say ne killed no more thrushes on that account. The fact was, the summer being dry, the snails harbor ed there, the thrpshes found them, and were taking them as food to their youug ones. A Gam of Cricket. None but Eriglish-8peaklng peopl8 tolerate cricket, pnd not even all these, . for our own countrymen steadily refuse to let it supplant base-ball as the na tional game. But it is played- in Can ada, In India, injthe far off islands of tho Pacific, and ; at -'the Cape of Good Hope . where British officers skirmish with Caf fres or plant wickets as occasion offers It is also flayed in the Island of Cyprus,, and not long ago some officers in her Majesty's Navyjlentertained some Rus sian Army officers at a game near Con stantinople. If? we may believe Mr Jingle, it i8 aisoj played in the West In dies,; he himself! having 'indulged in it "momthanja thpusand times." " 'It miist be rather a warm pursuit in such a climate,' observed Mr. Pick wicks !- 11; ;' ' ' War n I, red! hot, scorching, glow- -ing. Played k match once single ; wicket- friend, tte Colonel Sir Thomas Blazo -wholshoiild get the greater num ber of jruiis-j-wojp the toss first innings 7 o'clock A. 3i. six natives to loolc out--wen t in kept in-Vheat intense natives & 1 fainted taken away fresh half dozen ordered fainted also. Blazo bowlIng--oouidn,t bowl me out fainted too clear Ml away the Colonel-wouldn't glvO " in-pfaithf il ; attendant Quambo Samba 1 ast ma i left sun so hot bat in blisters bal scorched brown 570 runs ra ;her ; exhausted Quambo mus tered last remaining strength bowled me out. Had a path and went out to dinner.' j I " 'And what I became of what's-his- name', Sit?' inquired an old gentleman " 'Blazo?' I " 'No, he other gentleman.' '"Qaambo Samba?' " -YesJ Sir ' " fPooi Q'lanjbo never recovered li i bow on his ed oh on my account bowled oft" of n dldd, Sir.' " Burnihg Diamonds In the year 1694, it was discovered,, experiment, at Florence, that by actua a diamond would burn. Cosmo III, had one fixed iri the focus 'of a burning. glass, and afteij some exposure to the rays of the sun, it cracked, corruscatetf and Anally disappeared like a ghost,, leaving no trace i behind. Experiments of this kind were costly. , They were long in yielding any: scientific results It was only a sovereign prince who could afford to see his jewels vanish, II ko the gifts pf a fat ry godmother. Another potentate, the Emperor Francis I., tried a number of valuable diamonds in-tha heai of -ja emel ting 'furnace, and my have! felt some gratification in flpding they had disappeared. This was in 175(i, and about twenty years later a. magnificent diamond was burned in? France. jA jeweler , named Le Blanc, the, possibility of burning: denied diamonds, and suspected some unfair play on tine part of Macquer, the chemist? who conducted the operation. He ha& often, he asserted; exposed diamonds to great heat, with the sole result of in creasing their : brilliancy. Mr. Streeter " has done the same, with success.. Butr Le Blanc only knew half of what Mr. Streeter knew, and when the chemJn demanded that he should enclose some diamonds In coal In a crucible, he rashly assented, and in three hours they had. all disappeared. ' Then another Jeweler,. Millard by name, who seems to have had a surpiciph of. the truth, put three diamonds Into an' eartheh-bowl pipe,, packed in powdered .charcoal, and ex posed thm, without Injury, to intense. Ijeat. Javoisier, who was present,, proved, jin ; 1770, that by shutting out tbe air the diamond was preserved in a. furnace, oxygen, but that the admission of with which . the -carbon com bines, allowed the diamond to burn like-. a piece of coal. I , ' Hero!m is! the tit vine relation whlcl in all times unites a great man to other men. it! was a max m of Euripides, .either to kce; silence or to . sp?ak . scmstbjrfr you?" "X aia glad to bee you,:j biie said, i reach the brain. keep bringing me in eo manytbnish- better than silence. .
The Albemarle Enquirer (Murfreesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 7, 1878, edition 1
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