Newspapers / The Catawba County News … / March 1, 1879, edition 1 / Page 1
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2sO. 4. She $nvton (ftntcrpvtec, rur.LISHED EVEUY SATURDAY, HY CSEOUGE A. "WAIILICK. TERMS : One year, ------- Six NK'Utii. ------ Tim i moii'liS - - - IM AHIATiLY TX ADVA XCK. $2.00 I'.w j fc-f To persons who make up clubs of ten, an ex tr cul'J be srnt free. ADYERTISIXO RATES : 1 in. 2 in. i 3 in. I i eol. J col. lcol. $10 $14 13 I in Ki 22 IS 2i 2') 4.i 30 50 45 SO 00 I l.rfi 8 (MI V 00 10 00 14 00 15 00 20 0O 3; oo is Y early advertisements ch:ini;ed quarterly if desir ed. Transient advertisements pnyahle in advance. Yearly advertisements semi-arm. illy in advance. Advertisements discontinued before the tune con tracted for has expired, charged transient rates for ! the tune actually published. Advertisements inserted in local column, charsred twenty-live cents per line, unless otherwise Con tracted. An advertisement considered less than a square. Address all letters, "THE ENTEllPBISK." NEWTON, N. C. THE DESOLATE J2EASITBS BAVAltD TAYLOR. The rain is sobbing on the wnU, The house is dark, the hearth is cold, And stretching drear and ashy gray, lleyond the cedars lies the bay. JIv neighbor at the window stands, His youngest baby in his hands, Another seeks his tender kiss. And one sweet woman crowns his bliss. I gaze upon the dreary wild ; I have no wife, I have no child, There is no fire upon the hearth, And none to love me on the earth. A DIFFEKEACE. F. "W. BOVKDII.LOX. Sweeter than voices in the scented bav, Cflf lathing children, gleaning years- tl)pt, Btray, " Or Christmas songs, that hake the snows above, 3s the first cuckoo, when he comes witb love. j-'nddi r than birds on sunless summer eves, Or drip of raindrop on the fallen leaves, Or wail of wintry waves on frozen shore, j spring mai comes, out oniigs us love jio t 1 . y a i 1 more. the uasistei:eo ssstsjs. This pair inhabited a single . pair inhabited a room from the facts it tnu 1,1 have been double-bedded; and it may have been or some (iimonsio-is ; t f 1 " ! l.ut when all is said it was a single room. Here our two spinsters foil out on some point of con trover- sial divinity belike ; but fell out so bit terly that there was never a word ppoken between them, black or white, from that day forward. You would have thought they would separate ; but no; whether from lack of means or the Scottish fear of scandal, they con tinued to keep house together where Ihey were. A chalk line drawn upon the floor separated their two domains ; it bi-sected the doorway and the fire place, so that each could go out and in and do her cooking without viola ting the territory of the other. So, for years, they co-existed in a hateful ftilencc ; their meals, their ablutions, their friendly visitors, exposed to an unfriendly scrutiny; and at night, in lhe dark watches, each could hear the breathing of her enemy. Never did four walls look down upon an ug lier spectacle than these sisters rival ling in unsisterliness. Hero is a can vas for Hawthorne to have turned in- to n. enbinet. nietnre he had a Puri- i i n . n , . i tame vein, which would have fitted him to treat this Puritanic horror ; he could have shown them to us in their sickness and at their hideous twin de- votions. thumbing a pair of great Bi- bles or praying aloud fur each other's now each, with kilted petticoat, at her . 1 own corner of the fire on some tern- j.erituous evening ; now sitting each at her window, looking out upon the mi miner landscape, sloping far below theni towards the firth, and the field paths where they had wandered hand in hand ; or, as age and infirmity grew upon them and prolonged their toilets, and their hands began to tremble and their heads to nod involuntarily, growing only the more steeled in en mity with years; until one fine day, lit a word, a lwok, a visit, or the ap proach of death, their hearts would j melt and the chalk boundary bo over topped forever. Sltccnson 'a New An .ud.1 of Edinhimjli. 1 wvt'V, 2 3 ' 4 " 2 month 3 ' t " 12 " f 1 00 f2 () I I? 00 j ,ff. 00 1 50 I 3 00 I 4 00 j 2 oo 3 :o 1 oo 2 2 4 00 (5 (to 3 00 (i (10 I 10 00 4 00 8 00 12 00 7 00 12 00 Ki OO 10 (Ml l. 00 I 20 00 TEXAS PUBUC LASDS. The State of Texas, when it was annexed, owned a public domain of 250,000,000 acres, which, the Galres- j ton JSeics says, would now be worth j as m:l,lJ' dollars. But the State has j j lost nearly all this land mostly squan dered. One good thing it has done with it, however it has pensioned off its old soldiers and their heirs with these lands; it has honored its old settlers with acres and "has subsidiz ed colonies, schools, colleges, universi- for irrigation, river improvements," and the like. A very large block of the public lands was sold, and the proceeds wasted. A million acres are said to have been stolen. There remains still to the Stale about 31, 000.000 acres, of which perhaps five million acres are worth patenting. The Galveston Neicx says : 'After all that the land sharks, the railway companies, the forgers, and j the Mexican title manufacturers have, j for fort' and fifty years, been picking I and culling from this domain, it is to I be feared that not much is left beside j barren plains and rocky mountain ranges. If it were not for a specula tive demand for Texas land certifi cates outside of the State, these certi ficates, now worth 850 to $52.50 per section, or from 7 2 cents to S cents per acre, would hardly bring, it is be lieved, over 4 to 5 cents per acre. But the Governor proposes to sell the 31,000,000 acres, which, at the above rate, would bring about 81.500,000, in order with the proceeds to pa- the public debt, ami this debt, amounts to at least 85,250.000 at time." This is rather j--r?HXDfroTn. H'j. estate which, if carefully husbanded, might now be .vorlh $250,000,000 enough to build two or three Texas I Pacific roads and obviate:1.!! necessitj I for calling on the government to aid m constructing th e San Ar.tonio and t,- i -Haiti more Sun. Hemaukable Story of an Alibi. A special dispatch from Columbus, Ohio, to the Cincinnati Gazelle says: 'In the jail of this county, under sen- I tenec ot'death for murder, lies a negro j witi, a slI..ni0 history. In Xovein- , .. ;im;in n Holmes was murdered in the most foul and wan- ton manner. This ne-M-o, Sam Hall, was arrested on the charge of being I the murderer, and after a long trial j was convicted and sentenced. The 'circumstantial evidence was strong ; against him, and the sheriff of Mus - ! ro.rop swore to the best of his belief i to the idenlily of the negro. He was sentenced to be hung. He now states that in 18ifcfaps. was sentenced the most complete manner, and the 1 ' innocence of the negro of the crime of murder is clearly proved. The- ne 'ro says that when he was arrested IlTw.l.1.1.0rif'lnllflIlTlirfl'I f1flO' k, i,.. ....... H v. ...... ..w knew himself innocent, that he could not be convicted. He therefore de- clined to acknowledge himself an es - , . . ... n i t a v- i a i- that his eapeu iuii in tinm nu jwuuu I life depended on it 1 Ho will. ! course, bo carried back to jail to serve j out his sentence for horse stealing. j - - - She Asked to Float With Boy- j ton. The Pittsburg leader says that ' bark with Boyton in his swim down 1 . i A eiranv river was one Mrs. S. j Connors. She said she was a woman of nerve; she was not afraid of the water, for she was in the laundry bus- .u !,(, Knir. would 1 1 1.;., r..i,nn I,.,,! ' terror for her. She was not afraid of S11IL Iter, illlU J 1 ''JU' the ice, nor the river nor the whirl- 1 rn . . P0OIS. Olio wax Jl Uiaiueu wuniau Ind ,,.nd to nil kinds of calamities. When told that the only lady who ev nee.omnnnied Bovlon reached shore a corpse, she merely said that the woman lacked grit. Boy ton listened grit. io carefully to the argument and rcsorv ed his decision. .1 . I'., H ft. .nr. .-.... f! t'l I' M.llfO T fl." ffjkll.tl llli. rWTtrllt LU II U I lilt I ill 1" IHliiii I -""' 7 - 7" J .-..- .1 1 1 , ' I 1 . . w, . . , , , . , , T . . v. for horse stealing. He efleeted his i ean atloni it, to pay t he O.m-r- , . e.ueu ... ..... A . ... t F I i r 187 and was con t',KC "ovv- L a man has given short ; 4; years ot age, tall, handsome and , y a decision affirming him to be ot , LonstitiUton. escape e 'iar , b i i , an as con- mi,asim. m UIlsineS!1 ,c (mira to make remarkably like his falher. General j sound mind and capable of managing I j..mcs Beck a ha-rcre-master on a sequent 3 in jail in jSovemlter, lbib, nstitution ton of coal should be I r r rr - r -i e w i .. , , i ' . WL the n,r.lor iva, cmmiUd. it! and nl Sli .'.nn,!' L L U ! .B' K " " ' U '' W jrortUy good, frt... St. Louis r(rad, being accused of pur- Thi torv l,a been ,.,lDliatoa in i ollcn limes ii.-Rdlinon Sun. j "d T.ee bn.yersa.v at LeX1n- ous.ns of Mr. Wells recently took eX. ! ,;; mocy fn)m the m.iK- THE SOUTHERN PLAGUE. Mr. Ben. Webster returned to the i ei t v yesterday from an extended busi- ! ness trip through the Southern States, embracing Alabama, Georgia, Florida, i Texas, Mississippi and Tennessee. He ' reports that the people fear a recur- rence of the yellow fever plague of j last year, and gives it as his opinion that the proper sanitary precautions to prevent it have not been taken in places where the fever raged with the greatest intensity. We understand in j one case, in Water Valley, Miss., the ; bed clothing and bedding used by the yellow-fever patients who died had been given to the negroes, who are now using them without any sort of purification. In Grenada Miss., the graves of the vellow-fever dead are so near the surface that a steel ram rod pushed into the earth will pierce them, so hurriedly were the- buried. To be sure, lime has been scattered over the graves, but that is thought to be a precaution entirely inadequate to the purpose. In many cases the bedding and bed clothing used by the dead, having been hung out for airing, had been carried off by I ho negroes, who are now using them. Thus the seeds of the plague are retained in the midst of the people, and it is liable to break out again with as much viru lence as ever so soon as the warm weather arrives. Lexin'ton Press. Moody on Preaching" and Pkac- ttce. J r. J). li. 3ioo.iy s meeting tor men yesterday was crowded, many having waited an hour or two for the doors to open. Mr. Moody urged up- the present!00 3"" tnvcis the necessity of studying tne li.uie, occausc wnen me j For over nine years Mr. Bradley has meetings were over they would need j not sli.pt jn d, but has taken all his sonicLTiTng to suppi the yiiaec ortnetr rt.p0se standing on his feet. He atten former pleasures. Theie arc many j !e(J to lnc business of the stable, but men who hear the gospel, but the , ;n intervals of active operation he moment the sermon is finished they J would sleep soundly, leaning against a pickup their hats and walk out to ! jor or t.jUTj:,go. Hu rested in an iron ! lhe tll ;lll'e or t,,e tlrinkin saloon- and forget everything. If religion does not make a man honest, it i.-s a ; sham. If a young man owes a bill to his washerwoman, and yet spends ! twenty cents in cigars, he cannot call himself a child of (rod, and, alinough j he joins forty chtuvhes, his prayers will be an abomination before the ! Lord. Others, again, are spoiled by j their friends, who pat them on the j back, tell them what grand fellows j tin y are, and how t he church could . . . j not get along without them, and then, j when they get up to some high pin- ! naele. t he devil pushes them off and j says : " here are your new converts now ? People now adavs are preach- ' ed to death, and what is needed is ; honest Imng Itehmd preaching, it, ; men have failed honestly and paid; 1. . t j 1 A strange story is that of Charles Gilbert, who has served fourteen years of a life sentence for the mur- ' . . ... der of Henry Cadwcll, of .New Unt- r . - rs. t . ; conn., in lbbA:. imueri pays ; that the crime was committed bv his I " ; fat her, Jonathan Gilbert, and a man I '(J "cs rarsons, wun me on- sjecL oi iMuniiering vaoweu ii jii'v, Meet, oi plundering i-auwen oi um, J . . 1 '..A - -1 .1 ' . 1 II .1- 0 fr ' - . I ... 1 -I I .11 . O ft . ilMU Ul 11 UU I VI UUll II l 1 1 UU u l Hint :i of .., ... . . . I 1 1,v Si . i I . .. ,k.w1 l a.- e to be convicted in order to save hi- : parent. The falher has since dud j and Parsons committed suicide. It is j claimed, however, that both the elder Gilbert and Parsons made confessions exonerating young Gilbert. Should j votion to his parent has exceeded - t - 11. anything recently imagined by wri - ; tcrs of romance. I " " 1,,HI'L-1 Njrcadfilmnnnerinwhichaconfi.ssion ..ti A. was exiorieo irom a criminal in .uw j State recalls the refined tortures of the middle ages. The suspected 1 . .. ....1 ,11 ; i rs w:is I ne;ii ct?i ;i icu in i uii. ii 1 ' ; in the next one was placed a man with one of those octagoo-accordeons. By Ue time the wwri jammer n:vi s.pieez j cd 5lt "' Lee," i i wound upon MyGrandfa Lee," and got well dfathei icr'sClock" e taken to the criminal howled to b the gallows and put out of his misery, mm m mm .-- - - ----- .... I i v I - uiv ou i vv Only Three Spike Tails Left. McCreery bus always attracted the at- tent ion of strangers luring his term as Senator from Kentucky. lie is one of J three statesmen who in that branch wear swallow-tail coats, and thereby ! hangs a tail. One of the three swal- ow tails said to your correspondent on this subject the other day : "I wear this kind of a coat beeanse I always did, and there was a time when a man would no more think of taking a seat in the Senate without a coat of this kind than he would think of going in his dressing "own." '-When was that, Senator?'' well, that was over thirty years j ago. When 1 first went into the Sen ate frock coats were just begining to appear there. There were only three or four at that time. A short time previous to that not a frock or sack coat was to be seen in the Senate chamber." These are degenerate days, indeed, when there are only three swallow- , mils in the senate, and two of them to j retire on the 3rd of March. After j that Senator Ilamliu will stand more conspicuous than ever from his coat, which fits him for a dinner, hop or reception, at any moment between ris ing and going to bed. If there had been no more serious change in the Senate than in the matter ofaddinga trifle more cloth to the roundabout of an honorable member the country would not stiller much. PUls'jurj JJis- patch. Death of a Man Who Slept Staxd- IX;.John Iiradley, son of the livery : staui0 keeper on Eleventh street, died sn,,ienly on Thursday of fatty degen- j or:ltjon cf the heart, aged 3G years. hvii m:l,je milcIl ikc :l t.iarf mt whon ilP r.M wlpnn in it. Id slumber would ! Uc disturbed. He was 1 "l well and favor- 1 a,jv k,imvn i,, his own nei diborhood. - Ph iludelj h ia Tim c.f. The revenue received from manu- j factured tobacco in the fiscal year en- j ding June 30, LS78, was 825,320,158.- 08 representing 105.500,73(1 pounds. j 1 he revenue irom snun was i,uoo,- j 7i-t.22, representing 3.321.107 pounds, T he revenue lrom cigars was SI 1.- ill .. . r t r tT f " ; 4.o, i-t4. 00, repieseuung im, uo..- ! 7 13 single eigars? from which are to be deducted 42,001.000 imported cigars. I no revenue 110m cigareues u as i -CbU.Ubl.iU, representing dJi j single cigarettes. Gen. Custis Lee. General George Washington Park Custis Lee, who is (sisters, Misses Mary and Mildred Lee, j in t he house where there father, moth or and sister died. He is an oil bach , i t f.i ..i ; elor, on j very sny oi me geuuei sex. -TT,. -. . I ....,-. I fl r!tI.To.I.i2lt! ; wa" j;i.iuii.iic.i uiolh. .c.- ' West Point, and, like his father, came r . . , j out of the four years course without j I I ' - - " " - inn ?i wiiort ni ivts wirii nm two fi.-iA iwomoti-i tr ntifuni , c, . , t That Settle. Thomas Settle, t , , - -T North Carolina, was a rank beccs sionit and Confederate soldier. Af- ter the war ended, be became a Be publican, with a lively sense of com mg tavors Jrom that pariy. lie r. r r - . r t . . T r. . T - now Judge of the United Slates Dis trict Court of Florida. As such : !'uS. ,,,e mVCI exi',uU,n I,n juries of Ins court all ex Contederates, J . , . i wnaiever ineir moia. unu, uu.i. ;il utMnilimr Thntrst. oath which " " ' ' , , . . T: , :. lh. irs -trnment seeking to abo..sh the ,nM, iiment rf thta oVi-l n irtn Ami VOL J flu Settle could not take tne oatn himse.t ! f'a,Iod in as ajuror This is an ex (I ample of the workings of the Bepubii ..... , . .1, r machinery. 1 notlhcie , rn. yr such an amendment as ,s pro z- l)OSCtl ? Savannah Neics. I The horrible report reaches tis from - Washington that Gail Hamilton car ' r;C!i a razor in her boot-leg. Phila d'ljhia Chronicle Herald. ing w.'.ii.uiiij;i i"""1 ..., TAL.UAOE OX .1 WEES-DAT. Steinway Ilall was hung last even- ing with the many flags and banners which the Atalanta Boat Club has won, and two of the members of the famous four-oared crew were ushers. Mr. Talmage of Brooklyn, had been engaged to provide the entertainment, and had announced his subject as "Muscle and Good Cheer." The house was a poor one unfortunately for the club, but Mr. Talmage was in his best humor. "There is something." he yelled, "in the word 'boat' which stirs my blood, whether it is James Gordon Bennett's 840.000 yacht or a scow in the North Biver. We owe a great deal to boat clubs. There was one in Xoah's time which picked a race out of the freshet." (Much applause and lemimne cr.es 01 w .0-,.. , world needs exercise. I tnmk we; clergymen need to belong to boat c'ubs. We take so little exercise that we get balky livers and enlarged! spleens. When I lived in Philade!-: phia I used to belong to a ball club composed of clergymen, and every Saturday seven or eight of us were accustomed to go into the suburbs for a game. The little ragamuffins of the neighborhood used to hang around j anJ cheer the doctors of divinity on in the most innocent manner. 'Go-it. old beeswax' and 'By-George, that old fellow is spavined' they'd cry as sosne of us ran the bases. But we didn't mind it. You can't tell ma anything i about boats. Come around to the Brooklyn docks some day and I'll row any of you a race. I don't see how anybody can doubt the connection be tween muscle and good cheer. A man can't be smiling and happy unless his backbone is strong. Don't you make the mistake of s;iio.-iHiir iLut usoL mii face is a sign of goodness. The grav est, most long-faced individual I ever met borrowed 825 of meT and through pure delicacy never mentioned the subject again. It is a mistake to sup ! rse that only students need exercise.; ! Our gymnasiums to-day show a dif - fereiit state of affairs. Visit any of them and you will find millionaires turning somersaults, eminent lawyers hanging by their toos and ministers 1 of the Gospel punching sawdust bags as though they were the heads pCpsia climbing out ot sight on a rope j ladder. But you urge that these pas- t times are incompatible with dignity, . .. .. ... . . ! Csr so they are with the dignity ot ; PUCh a man as that old fellow who ! never kissed his wife without first , asking a Messing." I hen Air. lal mage to;d stones tor an hour. .v. 1 World. Good-By to urs Colsins. The case j )f Jonathan Nemanie Wells was de- jossession j nf his property, valued at 8200,000r on - I tie ground that he was of unsound - j mir,d , but the finding of the commis . . . 8,rners, reached promptly on the con ? - T . I - . . I. I ; (.jnsion or me rase, proves im- j action f,f the relatives was unwarrant - j cd, jn summing up for Mr. Wells, , ms counse,, r. a.soa.., L5.a..... nig in nniiTuuinM of; ... . I - I I. a -. . . . , i l- I 1 1 J I, .1,1 ; t- .-i - ri1 n a trwii f -s MmA fn J r ivi m II Ii . : aai c- twin.? v - , T i c J. . . .;.ftftniJvay. Mobile, however, is to cele- - :, . . , . , . ,. . . - ; I let III Llie IllUiilll yJ Uii vhkhi cmp niy fincrat a cnsin"s tannts, is ; And j hAV,.n't any sisters aad I haven't any ' . ... i r..... .r . ' T 1 aunts. he j jtelp IN Acqcikixo Knowllimie. j In acquiring a knowledge of the Eng j .. . , .in.f pr.eri-ill- ir. It-irn- , lh language, aiid espec iai. i.. , tan,- , lhe mcuniui, o words, prohably ! v . 1 1 -.L 1 1.. . no omer worK, nor many omer oom.s i a'tr"Cl ' V ; Umil,r5i! ed Dictionary, IO ! with its 3000 Pictorial Illustrations,; evidence in the Lanier hc libel M"t : . n,t f.,11 .i. tii.iiions. its tare - fuJ fi;scrjni-inalionj; Gf synonymous - wonJs and ;.a manv v.viuabIo tables. u in a whoIc Ul)rary ftf lhe - i Ian,aagc. Let one family have a copy of this work, and use it faithfully, and 1 : another be without it the difference - in the progress of the two families in; resorted to. It the prisoner does not - J gelling knowledge will bo very great, i confess under this treatment he is. dis- A A GLEANINGS. Everybody's girl is nobody's wife. Boston Tmnscrt'if. A "-ood nlaee to get a husband by the ear. Meridian Recorder. What did billet donx? PUUmtj TckjraiJu He letter rip. Citunuuiti Sun. "Wanted To exchange music les sons for washing," is an advertisement in a Chicago paper. Why is a pawnbroker like a drunk ard? Becanse he takes the pledge, but cannot always keep it. A clock at the Paris Exhibition fired off a pistol hourly. The exhibitor explained that it was to kill time. Efforts are being made to restore to ritiludelPhia the industry of porcelain . flouriaheJ tberc frora ?,c.,- 1S1G to 1S37. Articles a 00 hereafter be cl; Articles about lamplighters will classed in this paper un der the head of general ligh terns. Toledo Couaaercud. A "real many milk and watery sort iof young men, with their hair parted j in the middle, have high drawl-ie j voices. Cincinnati San. The most religious bird is theehicka D. D.T and the most wicked is the rub- in. The dearest is the little dues. Loiceli Courier. A vonth once loved a lady fair, - And with her many charms was smitten. He asked, her for a lock of haix, But what slie gave to him. was iatte- Mr. Kearney has befn the publica tion of a paper callea the Lktily Stl bJ. As might bo- expected from its editor and its uaiae.i is a dirty sheet. "Get some pote t toss off a few stansus'on n.e; snrathinr ruild ami tnchin," writes John Iygau to his friend Clapp. Wadanrfio 1W- Mr. Hayes should be the purchaser of .Mrs. Fassett's picture of the EIec l toral commission, ne can uai.s i ... ir. 1. . : in his bouse at Fremont and label it ; to 7." Courier-Journal. j Senator Co Hauler, of Vermont, once : described Senator Edmunds as a man wi,0 COuld see a fly on a barn door as offar as anybody, but who never saw j jt expected that the remains of j p;ivnnl Taylor will arrive in New j y " u n, .kI enj uf this month. The ; ij.imi,urg packet line will j bo,Jv aJ Mn Taylor's tami bring the ly to this count ry free ofchar"e. There is a rumor loafing around in the lolilicnl atmosphere that Hayes has put the Berlin Mission in pickle until he can find out whether Bill Chandler or Memento Brady stole telegrams. Atlanta rcste(! tried, convicted ne.iry .$20,000, and sentenced to the I penitentiary for three years, all in lhe - j sp.iw 0f t'our hours. Justice is wide - j a,Vakc in that quarter. j ,f t . ... jrivc no oarnivl i , l ml'" ' ... . " . r . t ths year i5ae is too iuii oi u.r -- m.J The Mvstie Krew of - s O,..oans win not march forth in ,. .t R.,ni. parade on Mardi-gras tor the same . . . - f ill IklVQ reason, though L-x wdl stiU have ; brate the day in magnificent st Ie. Yawcob Strauss in the Boston Trao- cder : 1 lios 'hout Iot Slicnr.an Mison, Dlicy dalk so tauth at.ou-it r I d..n"J vant tier bositinn, Unl dink id vas Llayel ond ! Ann cr shoke I eafcbose id vss. So da-ke some oler man ; I don'd couM go to Shermany, liut, mayj, Yfcfcool Khan. ! Torture still exists in Taris. Sworn - S evoked the fact that subordinate po j lice omcials feel authorized to torture prisoners so as to obtain confession--. The ii'jotle is most affected tying the wrists with wet cords which arc twisted till the bloo J spirts out ; bcat- ..- 1 . , mg wuh staves and kicKing is aio It the rmsoner does not missed a innocent.
The Catawba County News (Newton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 1, 1879, edition 1
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