Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / March 23, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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( 7 C - v A. II. MITCHELL, Editor and Husincss Manager. Located in the Finest Fish, Truck and Panning Section in North Carolina, ESTABLISHED Issr,. PRICE I $1 When Paid in Advance: ! $1.50 ii Noi Paid in Advance. ED.'jNTOIT, N. C.? FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1894, NO. 451. . I '-V M J Fisherman and AEMER. I i a s 1 4 W. !!. BOND, Attorney at Law EDENTON, N. C OVTICK OR KINO PTRKET, TWO DOOM wnsr OF MAIN. Ffactloe la to Superior ConrtB of Chewaa aa4 Mlotatof eownl. t, acd in the l-nreme Court M KVeJgta. lfColltloiii promptly made. DR. C. P.BOGERT, Surgeon & Mechanical EDKNTOJ?, IV. C. raTlENTS VISITHU WHEN EEQCESTK WOODARD HOUSE, EDENTON, N. C. Jf. L. ROGERSON, Prp. Tbi aid aad established hotel 11111 after f re elans accommodations to the traveling public TERMS REASONABLE. Bample roe in for traveling calaimen, and e romances famished wben derlred. w Free tlaok at all trains and teamera. Flrat dais Bar attaeaed. The Beat Impertee fmi Domestic Jjqners aiwar ea aaad. pens NEATLY AND PROMPTLY -BY TUnxr Fisherman and Farmer Publishing Gompany. EVERY M HES OWN D00T01 l!y J. Hamilton '.vits A . M..M.I. This is a incst V;i!:,:u'lc bonk fir the Ht.iisfh' -i't. tra' hiiiK :s it lot's the- ciisilv-diM iiiirmshcil Symptoms of Ctrterent liis.-iisi's, the Causes tiiil J!i'a:i of l're vpntiuK sucli l'l-. :iv-. and the simplest Kcnieilics w i.icii wlllal leviate or cure. 5: raves, lTofi!i'ly Illustrate.!. The Hook Is written 111 lam tvery-day r.nbsh, rirnl is frets from tht' tcclinical terms which rentier most Pm-tor lnnks so valueless to tli" Kcneiillly tf reaiiers. Till ISooU i in lenlcl l o ! I crvici' in l In- Knmily, mi. I is so v. .riled hs to he rcatl ily u ml erst m .1 by all nvi.viiiiH.. ii'r i 1 1. - h if--ir i'ostiitti1 Stamps Taken. .Jj 'III Not only does this Honk eon- 3eC I 1 alii so much Information IJelii- I A tlve to Dlseasf. hut very projter- -fSff Iv pives a Complete Analysis of evervthlnir itertainin to Court- .saE. hip. Marriage and the I'rodue- -J-tloii and Hearing of Healthy 8 -T- FainlllP8,t4rether with Valuable Recipe and i'reseriptions, Hx j.lanattonnof Botanical i'rnctice, Correct usenf rdlnary Herbs,,vo Complete Inukx. HOOK IM 1$. IKIi'SK, 131 l.eomml "i.. N. V. C ity ASn FFFEI-T. IF TOU WANT THE.M TO T H E I It TV A Y e-ren If you merely keep them r.s a diversitn. la or der to hatidlr Kowis jut I ii ionsly, you must know fometli'.nu ahout t '!fi.i. To meet ' his want we are ielllni; a :,t"k n.vni; ti e eper:enee i O jif )C. of prnli,-:il poultry raiser tor Will J & vCi twenty five jears. It w:.s written by aman wbo put all his mind, and time, au.l money to making a sue rs; of ('ht''kt n raisimr net as a pastime, tut as a I'tisiness-ami If vouwill pvotit l,v his twenty-flvo years' work, you e-n eavo many Chicks annuslly, " I7aisiny Cliickcns." and maifl your Fowls earn uoilars for you. Tbe point Is, that you must be able to dete'-t trouble in the Poultry Yaid as soon as It -appears, and know bow to remedy it. This hook will teach you. it tells how to detect ami cure iisea.se; to feed for egfts and also for lattenini.-; w hich fowls to save for lireedinn: purfioses; ami everything, indeed, yotl ahou'd know on this subject to make it j-roti table. Sent postpaid for tweuty five cents in c. o.Hc. Book Publishing House, 135 Lkonakd ST.. N. y. City. ere Waat to Uara an atmai m Bene T Bvwto Pick Crat a geodOaeT Know lmperie ttoaf aad so Onard against Fraud T Detect Disease aal Effect a Core whea sameta lltTalbln T Toll ISW he Teeth t What to call the Different Parta of aha fcnlmaJ? v. - to Shoe a Boree Properly? AH tUt sad ether Valuable InformatloD can be obtained hi reading onr 100-PAGK ILLUSTRATED H DESK BOOK, wlok wa will torwai. pes i-a d. on receiptee oaly 24 oaata la etamaa. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 14 Ueanard 8t- 3York Olf YOU I eras 1 ' If Is! 2 MP l REV. DR. TALMAGE. TIIK imOOKLYX DIVIXK'S SON DAY SERJIOJf. Subject: rnappreria(ctl Services.' Text : " Thrtmyh ft irinilo'P, in a hi&l(f trax.T Ifl down b the irnll." II Corinthians xi.. 33. Damascus is a city of white aQ'l glistPmn.f' nrchitootur.'i sometimes called "tho eye of the Enst," sortielimes called "'a pearl surround ed iy emeralds," at one time distinguished for swords of the best material, called Da mascus blades, and upholstery of richest fabrif. called damasks. A horseman of the nime of Taul, riding toward this city, hail been thrown from the saddle. The horse had dropped under a flash from the sky, which at tho same time was bo bright it blinded the rider for many days, and I think so permanently injured his eyesight hat this defect of vision becametho thorn in the flesh he afterward speaks of. He started for Damascus to butcher Chris tians, but after that hard fall from his horso he was a channel man and preae.hetl Christ in Damascus till tho city was shaken to its foundation. The mayor rives authority for his arrest, nriil tho popular ery is: "Kill him! Kill him ! ' The city is surrounded by a hitch wall, and the tratesare watched by the police lest the Cilician preacher escape. JIany of tho houses are built on the wall, ami their balconies projected clear over and hovered above the gardens outside. It was customary to lower baskets out of these balconies and pull up fruits and flower from the jrar.len. To this day visitors at the monastery of Motmt Sinai are lifted and let down in bas kets. Defectives prowled around from hotis to house looking for Paul, but his friends hvl him, now in one place, now in another, lie is no coward, as fifty incidents of his lib? demonstrate. Jiut lie feels his work is not done yet, and so he evades assassination. "Is that preacher hero?" the foaming nio! shout at one house door. "Is that fanatic hereV" tho police sho it at another house door. Sometimes on the street incognito he passes through a crowd of clenched lists, and sometimes he secretes himself on tho house tops. At last the infuriate 1 people get on sure track of him. They have positive evidence that he is in the house of one of the Christians, the bal cony of whose home reaches over the wall. "Here he is ! Here he is!" The vocifera tion and blasphemy and howling of the pur suers are at the iront door. They break in. 'Fetch out that gospelizer and let us hang his head on the city gate. Where is he?"' The emergency was terrible. Providentially there was a good stout basket in the house. Paul's friends fasten a rope to the basket. Paul steps into it. The basket is lifted to the edge of the balcony on the wall, and then while Paul holds on to the rope with both hands his friends lower away, carefully and cautiously, slowly, but surely, farther down and farther down, until the basket strikes tho earth and tho apostle steps out. and afoot and alone starts on that famous missionary tour, the story of which has as tonished earth and heaven. Appropriate en try in Paul's diary of travels, "Through a window, in a basket, was I letdown by tho waP." Observe first on what a slender tenure great results hang. The ropepjaker who twisted, that cord fastened to that lowering basket never knew how much would depend on the strength of it. How if it had been' broken, and the apostle's life had been dashed out? What wouid have become of the Chris-' Man Church? All that magnificent mission ary work in Pamphylia, Capadoeia, Galatia, Macedonia, would never have been accom plished. All his writings that make up s? indispensable and enchanting a part of tin; N'ew Testament would never have been written. The story of resurrection would never have been so gloriously told as he told it. That example of heroic and triumphant endurance at Philippl, in the Mediterranean euroclydon, tinder flagellation and at bis be heading would not have kindled the courage of 10.000 martyrdoms. But the rope holding that basket, how much depended on it! So again and again great results have hung on what seemed slender circumstances. Did ever ship of many thousind ton crossing the sea have such important pas senger as had once a bo.it of leaves, from talTrail to stern only three or four feet, tho vessel made waterproof by a coat of bitumen and floating on the Nile with the infant law giver of tho Jews on board? What if some crocodile should crunch it? Wnat if some of the cattle wadiug In for a drink should sink it'r Vessels of war sometimes carry forty guns looking through tho portholes, ready to open battle. Bat that tiny cr.tit on the Nile seems to be arme I with all the gnus of thunder that bombarded Sinai at the law giving. On how fragile craft sailed how much of historical importance. The parsonage at Epworth, Englaud. is on fire in tho night, and the father rusho I through the hallway for the rescue of his children. Seven children are oiu a:i l s ife on the ground, but one remains in the con suming building. That one wakes, and find ing his bed on lire and the bui'dmg erumb liiv. comes to the window, and two peasants make a ladder of their bodies, one peas int standing on tho shoulder of the other, and down the human ladder the boy descends John Wesley. If you would know how mu ;!i depended Cu that ladder of peasauts, ask tlu millions of Methodists ou both sides of the sea. Ask their mission stations all round the world. Ask the huudreds of thousands already ascended to join their fouuder. wilo would have perished but for the living stair of peasants shoulders. An English ship stopped at Piteairu island, and right in the midst of surrounding canni balism and squalor the passengers discov ered a Christian colony of churches and schools and beautiful homes and highest style of religion anil civilization. For fifty years no missionary and no Christian influ ence had landed there Why this oasis f light amid a desert of heathendom? Sisi y years before a ship had met disaster, and one of the sailors, unable to save anything else, went to his trunk and took out a Bible which his mother had placed there and swam ashore, the Bible held in his teeth. The book was read on all sides until the rough and vicious population were evangel ized, and a church was started, and an en lightened commonwealth established. and the world s history has no more brilliant page than that which tells of the transformation of a nation by one book. It did not seem of much importance whether the sailor con tinued to hold the book in his teeth or let it fall in the breakers, but upon what small cir cumstance depended what mighty results ! Practical inference there are no insignifi cances in our lives. The minutest thing is part of a magnitude. Infinity is made up of infinitesimals ; great things an aggregation of small things. Bethlehem manger pulling on a star in the eastern sky. One book in a drenched sailor's mouth the evangelization of a multitude. One boat of papyrus on the Nile freighted with events for all ages. The bite of Christendom in .a basket let down from a window on the wall. What you do. do well. If you make a rope, make it strong and true, for you know not how much may depend ou your workmanship. If you fashio.i a boat, let it be waterproof, for you know not who may sail in it. If you put a Bible in thetruuk of your boy as he goes Trom hoaie, let it be heard in your prayers, for it may have a mission as far reaching as the book which the sailor car ried in his teeth to the Pitcairn beach. The plaii.est man's life is an island between two eternities eternity past rippling against his shoulders, eternity to come touching his brow. The casual, the accidental, that which merely happened so, are parts of a great plan, and the ropethat lets the fugitive apos tle from the Damascus wall is the cable that holds to its mooring the ship of the church in the northeast storm of the centuries. Again, notice unrecognized and unrecord ed services. Who spun that rope? Who tied it to the basket? Who steadied the il lustrious preacher as he stepped fnto U? Who relaxed not a muscle of the arm or dis missed an anxious look from his face until the basket touched the ground and dis charged its magnificent cargo? Not one of their names has come to us, but-there was no work done that day in Damascus or in all the earth compared with the importance of their work. What if they had in their agita tion tied a knot that could slip? What if the sound of the mob at the door had led them to say. "Paul must take care of himself, and we will take care or ourselves.' "So, no! Thej held the rope, and in doing so did more for the Christian Church than any thousand of us will ever accomplish. But God knows and has made eternal record ol their Undertaking. And they know. Itow nXUltant they mnst havo felt when they read his letters to the Romans, to the Corinthians, to the Galatians, to tho Ephe sians, to the Philippians, to the Colossians, to the Thessalonians. to Timothy, to Titus, to Philemon, to the Hebrews, and when they heard how he walked out of prison with the earthqnake unlocking the door for him and took command of the Alexandrian corn ship when the sailora were nearly scared to death and preached r. sermon that nearly shool; Felix oft his judgment seat t I hearthe men and women who helped him down through the window and over the wall talking in private over the matter, and saying, "How glad I am that wo "effected that rescue ! In coming times others may get the glory of Paul's work, but no one shall rob us of the satisfaction of knowing that we held the rope." There are said to be about 69,000 ministers of religion in this country. About 50,000, I warrant, came from early homes, which had to struggle for the necessaries of life. Tho sons of rich bankers and merchants gener ally become bankers and merchants. The most of those who become ministers are the sons of those who had terrific struggle to get their everyday bread. The collegiate and theological education of that son took every luxury from the parental table for eight years. The other children were more scant ily appareled. The son at college every lit tle while got a bundle from home. In it were the socks that mother had knit, sitting ui late at night, her sight not as good as on-!o it was, and there also were somo de licacies from the sister's hand for tho vora cious appetite of a hungry student. The years go by and the son has been or dained and is preaching the glorious gospel, and a great revival comes, and souls by scores and hundreds accept the gosoei frcm the lips of that young preacher, and father and mother, quite old now, are visiting the son at the village parsonage, and attheclose of a Sabbath of mighty blessing father and mother retire to their room, the son lighting the way and asking them if he can do any thing to make them more comfortable, say ing if they want anything in the night just to knock on the wall. And then all alone father and mother talk over the gracious influences of the day an l say : "Well, it was worth all we went through to educate tha? boy ! It was a hard pull, but we held on till the work was done. The world may not know it ; but, mother, we held the rope, didn't we?" And the voice, tremu lous with joyful emotion, responds - "Yes, falher : we held the rope. I feel my work is done. Now, Lord, lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation." "Pshaw !" says the father. "I never felt so much like living in my life as now. I want to see what that fellow is going on to do, he has begun so well." Oh, men and womeu here assembled, you nrag sometimes how you have fought your way in the world, but I think there have been helpful influences that you have never fully acknowledged. Has there aot been some influence in your early or present home that the world cannot see? Does there not reach to you from among the New England hills, or from western prairies, or from south ern plantation, or from English or Scottish or Irish homes, a cord of infUierce that has kept you right when you would have gono astray, and which, after you had made a crooked track, recalled you? The rope may have been its long as thirty years, or 500 miles long or 3000 miles long, bnt hands that went out of mortal sight long ago still hold the rope. You want a very swift horse, and you need to rowel him with sharpest spurs, and to let the reins lie loose upon the neck.and to give a shout to a racer if you are going to ride out of reach of your mother's prayers. Why, a ship crossing the Atlantic in seven days can't sail away from them ! A sailor finds them on the lookout as he takes his place, and finds them on the mast as he climbs the rat lines to disentangle a rope in the tempest, and finds them swinging ou tho hammock when he turns in. Why not be frank and ac knowledge it? The most of us would long ago have been dashed to pieces had not gracious and loving hands steadily and lov ingly and mightily held tho rope. But there must come a time when we shall find out who these Damascenes were who lowered Paul in the basket and greet thorn and all those who have rendered to God and the world unrecognizad and unrecorded services. That is going to be one of the glad excitements of heaven the hunting up aud picking out of those who did great good on earth and got no credit for it. Here the church has been going on nineteen cen turies, and this is probably tho first sermon ever recognizing th services of the people in that Damascus balcony. Charles G. Finuey said to a dying Christian, "Give my love to St. Paul when you meet him." When you and I meet him. as we will, I shall ask him to introduce me to those people who got him out of the Damascene peril. Once for thirty-six hours we expected every moment to go to the bottom of tho ocean. The waves struck through tho sky lights, and rushed down into the hold of the ship, and hissed against the boilers. It was an awful time, but by the blessing of Gad and the faithfulness of the men in charge we came out of the cyclone, and we arrived at home. Each one, before leaving tho ship, thanked Captain Andrews. I do not thin!; there was a man or woman that went otT that ship without thanking Captain Andrews and when years after I heard of his death I was impelled to write a letter of condolence to his family in Liverpool. Everybody recognized the goodness, the courage, the kindness of Captain Andrews, but it occur3 to me now that wo never thanked the engineer. He stoo 1 .away down in the darkness amid the hissing furnaces doing his whole duty. Nobody thanked thy engineer, but God recognized his heroism, and his continuance, and his fidelity, and there will be just as high reward for the en gineer who worked out of sight as the cap tain who stood on the bridge of the ship in the midst of the howling tempest. A Christian woman was seen going along the edge of a wood every eventide, aud tho neighbors in the country did not understand how a mother with so many cares and anxie ties should waste so much time as to bo idly sauntering out evening by evening. It was found out afterward that she went there to pray for her household, aud while there one evening she wrote that beautiful hyma, famous in all ages for cheering Christian hearts : I love to steal awhile away From every cumbering cara And spend tne hours of setting day In humble, grateful prayer. Shall there be no reward for such nnpre t ending yet everlasting service? We go Into long sermon to prove that we will be able to recognize people in heaven, when there is one reason we fail to present, and that is better than all God will intro duce us. We shall have them all point e J out. You would not be guilty of the impo liteness of having friends in your parlor not introduced, and celestial politeness will de mand that we be made acquainted with all the heavenly household. What rehearsal of old times and recital of stirring reminis cences. If others fad to give introduction, God will take us through, and before our first twenty four hours in heaven if it were calculated by earthly timepieces have passed we shall' meet and talk with more heavenly celebrities' than in our entire mortal state we met with, earthly celebrities. Many who made great noise of usefulness will sit on the last seat by, the front door of the neavenlv temple, while' right up within arm's reach of the heaven Ij1 throne willTje. many whe. though they coul. not preach themselves or do great exploits for God. nevertheless held the rope. Come, let us go right up and accost thosq on this circle of heavenly thrones. Surely, they must have killed in battle a million men. Surely they must have been buried with all the cathedrals sounding a dirge, and all the towers of all the cities tolling the national crief. Who art thou, mighty one of heaven? "I lived by choice the unmarried daughter in a humbie home that I might take care of my parnts in their old aiare. and I endured without complaints all their querulousness and ministered to all their wants for twenty years." Let us pass on round the circle of thrones. Who art tbou, mighty one of heaven? "I was for thirty years a Christian invalid and suffered all the while, occasionally writing a note of sympathy for those worse off than I. and was general confidant of all those who had trouble, and once in awhile I was strong enough to make a garment for that poor family in the back lane." "Pass on to another throne. Who art thou, mighty one of heaven? 'I was the mother who raised a whole family of children for Go 1, and they are out in the world Christian merchants. Christian mechanics. Christian wives, and I have had a full reward of all my toil." Let us pass on in the circle of thrones. "I had a Sabbath-school class, and they were always on my heart, and they all entered the king dom of God, and I am waiting for their ar rival." But who art thou, the mighty one of heaven on this other throne? "In time of bitter persecution I owned a house in Damascus a house on the wall. A man who preached Christ was hounded from street to street, and I hid him from the as sassins, and when I found them breaking in my house and I could no longer keep him pa'ely I advised him to flee for his ".ife. and a basket was let down over the wall with the maltreated man in it. and I was one who helped hold the rope." And I said. "Is that all?"- And he answered, "That is all. ' And while I was lost in amazement I heard ft strong voice that sounded as though it might once hive been hoarso from many ex posures and triumph as though it might have belonged to one of the martyrs, and it said, "Not many mighty, not many noble are called, but God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty, and base things of the world and things which are despised hath God chosen yea, and things which are not to bring to naught things which are, that no flesh should glory in His presence. JLnJ I looked to see from whence the voice camt, and, lo ! it was the very one who had said, "Throuerh a window in a basket w;vs I let j down by the wall." Henceforth think of nothing as insignifi cant. A little thing may decide your all. A Cunarder put out from England for New York. It was well equipped, but in putting up a stove in the pilot box a nail was driven too near the compass. You know how th Vil would affect the compass. The ship's otiicer, deceived by that distracted compass, put the ship 200 miles off her right course, and suddenly tho man on the lookout cried, "Land, ho I" and the ship was halted within a few yards of her demolition on Nantucket shoals. A sixpenny nail came near wreck ing a Cunarder. Small ropes hold mighty destinies. A minister seated in Boston at hl table, lacking a word, puts his hand behind his head and tilts back his chair to think, and the ceiling falls and crushes the table and would have crushed biro. A minister in Jamaica at night by the light of an insect, called the candleCy, is kept from stepping over a preci pice a hundred feet. F. W. Robertson, the celebrated English clergyman, Baid that he entered the ministry from a train of circum stances started by the barking of a dog. Had the wind blown one way on a certain day the Spanish Inquisition would have been established in England, but it blew the other way, and that dropped the accursed institu tion with 75,000 tons of shipping to the bot tom of the sea or flung tho splintered logs on the rocks. Nothing unimportant in your life or mine. Three ciphers placed on the right side of the figure 1 make a thousand, and six ciphers on the right side of the figure 1 a million, and our nothingness placed on the right sido may be augmentation illimitable. All the ages of time and eternity affected by the basket let down from a Damascus balcony ' AMENDED TARIFF BILL. THE SENATE'S CHANGES IN THE WILSON MEASURE. The lleport to the Full Committee Tile "Whisky Tax Increased to .$1.10 a (ialloii and the Bonded Period Extended Sugar, Iron, id Coal on the Rutiable List. SENATOR VOOEHEES. The Wilson Tariff bill, which passed the Houso ol Representatives February 1, has been laid before the full membership of tho Senate Committee on Finance in tho amend ed form upon which the Dsmoeratic majority of that committee finally agreed, after one whole month's consideration, and numerous changes of front upon all the more important objects of taxation. Simultaneously with tho presentation ot the bill to the bill committee by Chairman Voorhees, it vsas given out for publication through the press. The fhief features upon which public in terest centered were the provisions in re gard to the tariff on sugar, iron ore, lead, wool and its manufactures, cotton manufac tures and tho internal revenue taxes on whisky and tobacco. The sugar provision is as follows- All sugars, tank lottoms, syrups of cauo juice ot of beet juice, nialada, concentrated malada, concrete ami concentrated molasses testing by the polariscope not above eighty degrees shall pay a duty of one cent per pound, and for every additional degree or fraction of a degree above eighty and not above ninety degrees shown by the polariscope test, shall pay one one-hundredth of one per cent, pet pound ad'litional, and above ninety and not above ninety-six degrees, for every additional degree or fraction of a degree shown by the polariscope test, shall 5ay a duty of two one-hundredths of a cent per pound additional, and above ninety-six degrees by polariscope test, shall pay a duty of one and four-tenths cents perpouni; molasses testing not above lifty-six degrees by the polariscope shall pay a duty of two cents per gallon, molasses testing above fifty-six degrees shall pay a duty of four cents per gallon. Iron ore, including manganiferous iron ore. also the dross or residuum from burnt pyrites, forty cents per ton. Coal is taken from the free list and ma lo dutiable also at forty cents a ton, and coko at fifteen cents. Lead ore, which in the Wilson bill was fif teen per cent, ad valorem, lead ore and lea 1 dross, three-fourths of ona cent per pound ; provided, that silver ore and all other ores containing lead shall pay a duty of three fourths of one cent per pound on the lead contained therein, according to sample an 1 assay at the port of entry. Raw wool is left on the free list exuetly as in the Wilson bill, the provision to go into effect August 2, M91. The whisky tax is raised to a dollar an 1 ten cents. The bonded period on whisky is extenie 1 five years, that is from three to eight years. Cigars, $5 a thousand ; cigarettes in paper, $1 a thousand: cigarettes in tobacco, lifty cents a thousand. Barley and. barley pearled, patent or hulled, is raised from twenty-five to thirty per eent. ad valorem, and barley malt from thirty f:ve to forty per cent. The reduction in tho duties for manufac tures of wool are to take effect December 2, 1894. Among the additions to the free list are diamonds and other precious stones, rough or uncut, including miners' diamonds. In the silk schedules corded silk is changed from twenty-five eents a pound to twenty per cent, ad valorem ; thrown and spun silk froja twenty to twenty-live per cent, ad valorem. Lumber remains on the free list. The income tax of two per cent, remains in the bill, but the tax on noa-residents is etricken out. nh 7m BY FM MS ORDERS JOHN BULL RESTORES THE MOSQUITO FLAG, Nicaragua's Assumption of the Coast Reservation Resented by the Eng lish Government and an Armed Force Landed The Mosquito and N'iacraguan Flag Left Flying. Captain Angus Brown, of the steamer El liott, which arrived a few days ago at Savan nah, Ga., from Blueflelds, brought some do tails of the state of affairs on tho Mosquito Reservation. Captain Brown says the Nicaraguans en tered Blueflelds on February 25th or 26th. He did not know their exact numerical strength, but says there was an armed force of 400 or 500 of them at Blueflelds when he arrived. They brought no cannon with them. They simply entered under arms, and without any resistance on the part of the natives. They hoisted tho Nicaraguan flag over the Custom House and over the other public buildings. The flags remained uo during the time the Elliott was in port. There was no fighting. The Mosquitos were terrified by the pres ence of so large an armed force, as they were practically without protection in the city. Captain Brown says tho reports that reached this country with regard to tho name of the British war ships there are in error. It is not the Cleopatra, he says, but the Tomas. Tho Mosquitos, he says, fearing they might be attacked by tho Nicaraguans, appealed to the Tomas for protection. On Thursday, March 1, the Tomas, Cap tain Brown says, without, any authority from tho British Government, as there had not been timo to get any such authority, sent three boat loads of armed men ashore. Ho tlitl not know the exact number or men, but between eighty and 100 were landed. They were armed with carbines and cut lasses. Tho men went ashore in the steam launch Oi the man-of-war, and carried with tbem two Gatling guns and three field pieces. The British forces did not land at Blue flelds, but at Blueflelds Bluff, about four or five miles northwest of the city. There was some understanding between the Mosquito chief and the officer in charge of the Tomas, the chief asking that the men be landed for the safety and protection of his people. The British soldiers went into Blueflelds from the Bluff several times while Captain Brown was there. They could not go by land, but had to use the steam launch, on which they carried one of the Gatling guns. There was no fight at all between March 1, the day the men landed, and March 4, the day the Elliott sailed. Captain Brown says there was little excite ment among the people. The Mosquitos were somewhat lrightened when the Nic araguans first entered, but after the landing of the British troops, he says, all excitement subsided, and the people seemed willing to let things go on as they were until the trou ble between the Indians and the Nicaraguans is settled. The Nicaraguans, of course, objected to the landing of the British troops and charged the officers in charge of the British with an open violation of the Olayton-Bulwer treaty. Little attention was paid to this by the British. The Nicaraguans wanted them to stick to the terms of the treaty. The Tomas sailed from Blueflelds for Colon to cable to England for advices. Meantime the troops were left in camp at Blueflelds Bluff. The Tomas returned to Blueflelds in two days. Captain Brown did not learn the result of the correspondence with the English De partment of Foreign Affairs, as he was five or six miles away from Blueflelds, and did not land there again before leaving. When he left, he says, the soldiers were still in camp at the Bluff. Captain Brown found little excitement in Blueflelds. Business was going on as usual and the foreign population, most of whom are Americans, expect no bloodshed or other trouble. The Americans control the bulk of the trade and American influences are the most prominent foreign factors on the reservation. All were looking for an Ameri can man-of-war. Tho general opinion saemed to bo that the settlement of the question of Nicaraguan con trol would in the end be settled by tha position assumed by the United States Gov ernment. All were agreed that Nicaragua merely took possession of Blueflelds to se cure the revenues there, which have become largo in recent years and have been coveted for some time. One incident occurred which was regarded as indicative that the British regard the Ni caraguans as usurpers. When the Custom House and other public buildings were taken possession of by the invaders, the Musquito flag was hauled down and that of Nicaragua put up. The commander of the British war ship insisted that the Mosquito flag be re stored, and it was run up under the Nicara guan flag. This was not satisfactory, and in the end the two flags were placed on oppo site poles at the same height. FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. The Senate. 54th Dat. Mr. White, recently appointed Associate Justice of tho Supreme Court of the United States, announced his resig nation as Senator. A House bill giving a pension of S12 a month to Hannah Lyons, ninety-one years old, the daughter of a sol dier in the Revolutionary War, was passed. Mr. Sherman made an argument against the Bland seigniorage bill. 55th Day. An agreement was reached to vote on the Bland seigniorage bill. 5Cth Day. Mr. Blanchard took his seat aa successor of Mr. WThite, of Louisiana. The motion to investigate reports of stock jobbing in connection with the Tariff bill was tabled. The Bland bill was debated by Messrs. Allison, Vilas and Walcott. 57th Day. Tho Bland seigniorage bill was discussed during the entire session. 58th Day. Mr. Allison's motiou to recon sider the third reading of the Bland bill was defeated by a vote of 28 yeas to 45 nays ; also Mr. Manderson's motion to recommit for amendment. The House. 70th Day. The bill to abolish the Customs Bure.iu of the Treasury Department was passed. Bills were also passed to protect the fisheries of the Potomac River for a pe riod of ten years and to amend the law gov erning the Smithsonian Institution. The District of Columbia Appropriation bill was disenssed two hours and then went over. 71 si-Day. Almost the entire session was devoted to the District of Columbia Appro priation bill. The general debate was closed, and the bill was discussed under the five minute rule for amendment. Mr. De Ar mond's amendment, to repeal all laws re quiring the Federal Government to pay half theexpenditures of the District was rejected. An evening session was held for the consid eration of private pension bills. 72d Day. The District of Columbia Ap propriation bill was passed by 111 to 11. It carries a total appropriation of 85.206.773, half payable by the general Government. A committee amendment, appropriating 43. 000 for the improvement of streets extended beyond the city limits, was agreed to, and fin amendment requiring illuminating gas fur nished consumers to be twenty candle power was adopted. The House then took up the Sundry Civil Appropriation bill, making it the unfinished business. 73n Day. Only District of Columbia mat ters were considered. Mr. Walker made charges against the trolley trust and said "the traifof the monster, tho General Elec tric, can be traced in this House." 74th Day. The House in committee ap propriated $90,000 for the improvement of the New York Postofflce. A resolution ask ing Secretary Herbert for information re garding the armor-plate scandal was adopted. 75th Day. The day was devoted to uis cussion of the Sundry Civil bill. James Hickman was cutting down a tree near Glasgow, Ala., when it fell on bis two daughters, who were passing near by, un seen by him. One daughter was killed in stantly and the other died in the morning. Hickman has since gone crazy from tha rief and is a ring Tnaome. At Midwinter Exposition at San Fn cisco. Cal., half a million people have piss J through the turnstiles the first month. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Eastern and Middle State. At a mass meeting in Troy, N. Y., a com mittee of one hundred was named to see that themuiderer of Robert Ross, the election watcher, was brought to justice. Thk tight between the rival Senates of tha New Jersey Legislature ha.- been carried be fore the Supreme Court at Trenton. Thk State Senate Committee held their first regular session and began the investiga tion of charges against the police of New York City of partisan activity at tho polls. Thk residence of William Snyder, at Dela van, N. Y., took lire. Snyder, who was obi and sickly, went to the front door to give an alarm, and then returned to rescue his agel wife. Both perished. The Forsyth Street Methodist Episcopal Church, New Y'ork City, celebrated the 101th anniversary of its founding. The oldest United Presbyterian congregation in America dedicated a new church at Oxford. Penn. Thomas Dtm-eavy and Edgar Van Gaas bcek, through a heroic attempt to save the lives of fellow workmen, lost their lives at Hickory Bush, N. Y. They were suffocated in a cement kiln. Samcei. Ham, of Barrington. N. H., the most prosperous farmer of that vicinity, committed suicide by thrusting a kuifo into his heart. He was sixty years old. The millionth loaf in The World Free Bread Distribution was given away in New York City. Striking spinners and dyers' helpers in Tatersou, N. J., attacked those who re mained at work, and maay were injured. South and West. Daniel, Couohlix was acquitted in Chi cago of the chargo of complicity in the as sassination of Dr. Patrick H. Cronin. Ex-Presiient Harrison paid an eloquent tribute to the late Senator Stanford at Palo Alto, Cal., the occasior. being the celebration of Memorial Day at ti e Stanford University. Judge George W. Stone, Chief Justice ot the Alabama State Supreme Court, died a few days since in Montgomery. Half way between Little Rock, Ark., an 1 Marche, some colored men found the dead body of a young mulatto woman, probably about thirty years old, suspended to the limb of a tree. On her body was a placard bear ing tho inscription : "It anybody cuts this body down they will share the same fate." It is supposed the woman was lynched. There is wholesale destitution in south yest Texas and appeals are made for aid. Jacob Studt at St. Louis killed his em ployer, Charles Wuensch, who had dis charged him, and then fatally wounded him self. Both are carpenters. Ex-Pkesident Harrison delivered the second of his course of six lectures on Con stitutional Law before the students of Leland Stanford, Jr., University, in Menlo Park, Cal. Marion T. Skafps shot and killed his wife at East Alton, III., and then fired three Ind icts into his own brain, killing himself in stantly. The couple lived unhappily together. Washington. The Senate confirmed the nomination of H. A. Hayden to be Marshal for the Eastern District of New Y'ork. The trial of the Pollard-Breckinridge suit was begun in Washington. Major Throckmorton, of tho Army, has been retired to permit him to accept the office of Assistant Superintendent of Street Clean ing in New York. Louis Green Stevenson, son ot the Vico President, was nominated Assistant Pay master of the Navy. Walter L. Wilson, son of Chairman Wilson, was nominated to a similar office. The President made the following nomina tions : Wallace MacFarlane, United States Attorney for the Southern District ot New York ; Edward Grosse. Collector of Internal Revenue for the Third District of New York , Francis M. Gardenhere, Surveyor of Cus toms for the Port of Chattanooga, Teun. General A. W. Greely, Chief Signal Of ficer of the Army, has been designated to act as Librarian of the War Department, a place heretofore filled by a civilian clerk. The Government receipts for the first third of the month of March showed a decided im provement, the aggregate being 9,250,000, indicating 2,000,000 for the month. Newton C. Blanuhard was sworn in aa the successor of Justice White as Senator from Louisiana. The President has nominated John H. Mulligan, of Kentucky, as Consul at Samoa. Associated Justice White took his seat on the bench of the United States Supreme Court. Commissioner Lochren was infra-med of the arrest of Jesse C. Hansen, a pension at torney of Hudson County. New Jersey, for alleged pension frauds. The Commissioner restored between Sdl'i1 and 4000 suspended pensions. Foreign. Eight persons were i-eriously wounded by the explosion of a bomb in front of the Chamber of Deputies in Rome, Italy ; several arrests have been made. The Rosebery British Cabinet, at its first council, approved the draft of the Queen's speech ; the speech may promi?". disestablish ment of the Church in Wales ; tho Parnelliten have issued a manifesto expressing distrust of the new Cabinet. Admiral Benham, of the United Stabos Navy, is tho only foreign commander on duty at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the naval representatives of other nations having fW from the pestilence. Da Gama's men have insulted the British and German flags of late with impunity. A British force of thirty-four officers and men were massacred by tribesmen in Assam, after fighting two days end nights. Da Gama is said to be convinced that tho Brazilian insurgent cause is lost and to be seeking a chance to surrender to the foreign commanders. British shipmasters in distress at Rio cable to England that succor refused sy the British Navy is given by the American iquadron. The Kearsarge's hull is in no immediate danger of going to pieces, according to a Meamer captain who saw the wrecked cor vette on Roncador Reef, a few days ago. Lord Rosebery, the new British Premier, outlined his policy at a meeting of Liberal leaders ; the Queen's speech was read before the Lords and Commons ; Lord Salisbury and Mr. Balfour eulogized Mr. Gladstone at the session of their respective Houses. Premier Sagasta has succeeded in form ing a new Spanish Ministry. Mr. Justice Stephen, the English judge who became insane while trying the charge against Mrs. Maybrick of poisoning her hus band, is dead. OFF FOR THE POLE. Walter Wellman Startcd on the First Stage ot His Journey. The steamship Britannic, which failed from New York a few days ago for Liverpool, carried Walter Wellman and the American members of his party on the first stage of a journey which thev fondly hope will termin nate at the North Pole. The most original feature of the Wellm-m party is the equipment of aluminum boats and sledges. With these Mr. Wellman ex pects to skim the polar regions and get further norththan any explorer has yet done. The travelers go from Liverpool to Nor way. There they will be joined by ten young Norwegian scientists. They expect to sail about May 1 from Tromsot for the islau i of Spitzbergen. Headquarters will be estab lished at Dane's Island, about 700 miles south of the pole. The dash north will b made soon after with the boats and sledges. Mr. Wellman expects to make about twenty five miles a day. getting back to Spitzbergen in September. The American members of the party are Walter Wellman, Professor Owen B. French, astronomical observer ; Dr. Thomas B. Mo hur, medical officer, and Charles C. Dodge, artist and photographer. Ma. McLaurix, the new Senator from Mis sissippi, is a tali, erect, well-proportioned man, whose fine face is indicative of high intellectual caliber and much individuality. THETR IDI SURRENDER OF THE INSUR GENT VESSELS AT RIO. Da Ciama Seeks Safety on a French Cruiser Insurgent Soldiers Will He Pardoned and Captured Of ficers Court Martlaled 3lello De serts His Followers. ADMIRAL CUSTODIO JOSE DE MELI.O. A despatch from Rio do Janeiro. Brazil, says : Floriano Peixoto is triumphant. The insurgent vessels have surrendered without having answered with a single shot the can nonade from the Government's hilltop bat teries. The report that Admiral De Ganui had fled was confirmed. He has sought aafety on the French cruiser Magon. Tho American offlcbrs of the Government warships came ashore during the afternoon. They report that the crews of the vessels arc well, and delighted that they won without a fight. Excepting the officers nolody aboard Peixoto's men-of-war seems to have been eager for battle. In coming up the harbor the Government fleet saluted the United States flag and Rear Admiral Benham. The United States fleet will disperse 60on. The men aboard the American war ships are in excellent health. The end of insurgent power in the harbor has been welcomed with joy in the city. Ex change has improvctl twenty-five per cent. Business is as usual. Not a symptom of dis order has appeared in the city. The people are preparing to celebrate the collapse of the insurrection. The Aquidaban and Republiea. which con stitute about all that is left of the insurgent cause, are reported to bo in south Brazilian waters. Both are said to be disabled. Ad miral Mello, it is reported, has just been seen in the streets of Montevideo. He has de serted his followers, as Admiral da Gama de serted his officers and men on the burbot fleet. The insurgent sailors will be par doned ; the officers will be court n.-rtialed. The surrender of the rebels after tho at tack by the forts and shore batteries was complete and unconditional. Da Gama has taken refuge on a French war ship. Many of the other officers es caped on other vessels in the harbot. The revolution is now eoialntV. Is tin; uthci States. The sudden surrender of Da Gama and his fleet to the Brazilian Government without a naval fight, which seemed imminent a few days before, is the source of great grntlllca tion to the officials of the Navy Department, who now expect the dissolution of our large fleet In Rio. Tho expense to our Navy De partment during the revolution 1ms been larger than is generally imagined. The cablegrams alone have cost thousands of dollars, while coal, supplies, and stores have been enormously high. Every officer on the fleet is believed to have spent a large part of his salary for mess bills alone on ac count of the exorbitant prices charged for everything at Rio sinco the out break, of the revolution. The de partment has felt the greatest con cern for the health of the officers and crews, and but for the exercise of unusual care it is believed yellow fever would have appeared on all tho ships. Some naval officers regret that the war was terminated without a naval fight, where the dynamite gun would have undoubtedly played an important part, and where our officers would have had a chance to Witness their first modern sea battle. THE LABOR WORLD. IlAnu times don't prevent strikes. Chicago has 6000 union carpenters. St. Louis has thirty shoe factories. Taris has 600 female street cleaners. New Yokk City has 11,001 factories. Sante Fe Railroad has Chinese clerks. Unionism is thriving at Toronta, Canada. Fall River, Mass., has 1000 union card ers. Mexico laborers get twenty-seven cents a day. Hubbard, Ohio, has a co-operative iron plant. New York unions want State labor bureaus. At Pittsburg carpenters are working foi if 1.50 a day. Kentucky Knights of Labor held a State convention. Australian shearers have had 1000 strikes in two years. Washington. D. C, is to be the K. of L. headquarters. Baltimore unions held an anti-child labor mass meeting. Female Knights of Labor run a Cleveland (Ohio) laundry. St. John (New Brunswick) steamboat la borers get 3 a day. Armour, the Chicago packer, pays 17,000, 000 a year in wages. The Independent Labor party of Great Britain has 400 branches. Massachusetts button workers average eigthy-threo cents a day. Fall River Spinner' Union !its dis. tribute! i'yMi anion.? un:np!oy. 1 members British coal miners take two t'ays ;iT weekly in order to give work to surplus laoor. Only nine of the uirmployel of Indian apolis would accept the city's offer to break stone. Labor organiz-itions are opposing the making of the Labor Bureau a Cabinet de partment. If the views of Ju Ige Jenkins, of Milwit tee. Wis., are siis.ainel, an en i will ft! jut U strikes for higiv;r wage. Minnesota farmers sent money to aid Chicago's unemployed, and recommende 1 the Populist party to their consideration. The last great strike of th British miner cost about 4500,000, of wiiic.i about tWKOn was contributed by trades union other tu.au miners. A London jeweler maintains a pearl fish ery of his own in West Australia, where he employs 500 men and tw-jnty-t v sailing vessels. When city work wa announ'el for the uuernploved of Toronto 1000 men besieged the City Hail before C a. ni. .-.nd hundreds were on hand at 5a. m. Work was provided for 1500 men at fl.33 a day. In his report on the effect of the business depression on the laboring ciasses of Michi gan, the State Co nmissio.-v-r of T.,:ibor siys of 2966 factories inspected 377 were wholly shut, 572 were run oa short time, resulting in a loss of labor of 36,6J7 hours a week in the short-time factories. It is estlmata't that John Y. MeXanc' trial for e!e-tioa frauds at Gravcfe-n i N. Y., cost hi u in counsel fees and other ex penses not Jess than 160,009. He is worta over half a million dollars. Secretary llEaBERr snew Lit! makes the active list of thtj navy consist of 20 Rear Admirals. 60 Captains. 100 Co n n vi ler, 74 Lieutenant Commanders. 25) Lieutenants, and 75 Lieutenants of junior grade. 0FPEIX0T0 LATER NEWS. Twenty students of Swarthmorc College, Pennsylvania, have locn snpn-ll for thirty days for hazing Lawyer John W. Hutchinson, Jr., of New York City. Tnt Central Ioard of F.du at ion at Pitts burg, Penn., votod (2.) to 2 refusing to pay any teacher appearing in tin public school in the garb of any religion order. The Junior Order of American Mechanic ap plied to Judge M 'Clung for an injuu -tloa restraining the uuns from teaching In tha public schools while weiring the drss of their order. EvtLlNE LoYToy. of New Bedford, N. J., hanged herself on her twenty-ninth birthday presumably because of nn unfortunate lovo affair. A rcRM anent committer of on huudrtvt to secure goo-', government aud the prosecu tion of election criminals was chosen by tht people of Troy. N. Y. Atak rUriH, Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue, Toledo, Ohio, I under arrest charged with emlez7.11mr 37,oo from th Defiance (Ohio) Saving Rank, i.-f which he was cashier. Road agent forced tho railroad clerk hi Woodward, Oklahoma, to open his safe, and they secured 10,0b0 booty. R. W. Paok, formerly President of the Merchants' Nutionr.l Rank, of Port Worth, Texas, shot and instantly killed A. It. Smith, formerly cashier of the bank, dtiri&g a quarrel. Secretary Carlisle has asked Cmgress for f 100,000 for the Buffalo public building. Tut: President made the following nomina tions: Samuel True bU, of Now York, to be Pension Agent at New ork : Chnrle P. P.i.ikcly, Register of the Land Office at Rt Keman, Montana ; Clark S. Rowe, Register of the Land Office at Chamberlain, South Da kota. At Vale's saw mill, in Sombra township, Canada, tho lioiler of the saw mill ei ploded, killing James Cornell, the engineer, and throe of Lis children, who were iu tho engine room ith him. A head-os collision between ho Montreal nnd Quebec express train, near StWbrooke, Canada, resulted in the killing of the engineer and a train hand who was iu thecal) with him. Rabid wolves are creating havoc among persons and aubnals in the ii terlor district of Russia, and over thirty roniterit of sumll outlying villages, who have been bitten, have been treated for rabies by physicians In Moscow. Tub United States steamer Marlon was nearly wrcokod In a typhoon iu the China Sea. Chief FonisiLAn, the slave trader, whos depredations among the natives in the hi lush rfphere in Africa led to the recent lighting in that territory, resulting, in several instances, In tho defeat of the Iiritish sailors, has been captured in French territory. Seventy-seven new case of typhoid fever were reported in Buffalo, N. V., in one duy. Justice K fcN net it 1'. Si iiihu.ano, Mc Kane's heuchman, was found guilty or iiiIm demoanor at Brooklyn for hi connection with the election crime at (ira vesend, N. Y. Rev. Da. S. I). N'ovi.h. pastor of the Second Reformod Church, died -. i t t 1 1 1 y at King ston, N. Y. He was in church r- hearsing a pally for a wedding and dropped den I. Thk nuns who have been teaching in one of tho public schools iu Pittsburg. I'.-nn., gave up the fight and told their 2-"d pupils to report at the parochial school. Chari.es Thomi-hon and his wife, of Damas cus, Ala., were killed by lightning while driving to church. John Bre tit, a young German Inrmer living several miles south of Ravenna, Neb., killed his wifo, a bride, of four month-, and then blew out his own I. rain with a shot gun. John T. Ford, the veteran theatrical man ager, died suddenly at hN home In Balti more, Md. The House Committee on Commer-e faon a llfo-saving6tatiou at Bust Marion or liocky Point, Long Islund. The British Government withdrew the ad dress In reply to the Queen sp-ed. a amended on Mr. Labouchere'- motion, and tho Houso of Common- adopted a new ad dress without division. A number of arret" of Anarchist" havj been made at Rorne and evid. n e of a big conspiracy discovered. The fiftieth birthday of the King of Italy was celebrated at Rome. Queen Victoria has le.'t En, -Ian I for au outing iu Italy. REVENUE ESTIMATES. The Senate Tar J II Hill Decrt-aoes th Present Hevenue t:i'2,HHt,lHi. The figure as laid before the Senato Finance Committee of the rivuu'i under existing law and .intimated r :vofiuc under he House and Senate Tariff bills show that ihere was imported during the ia.f fiscal k-ear 53f).:j79,0.W.5.'. of whi-h 00,06U,.W. 10 W.L-- dutiable, yielding a duty of tl'JH, 'i73.4W.07, the average ad valorum rati be nig 19. 5H per cent. The House bill gives 12 J, 603. 001. 17. at u rate of 35.52 p T cent., and a de reac, in the revenues ot i 73.60. 14. Ml. I ho Seii.it e bill i'-lds a duly of i65.'.0 i, 771. 45. at an Ht'-r-tge rate of 34. i 'J per cent. .with a d'"-r-ase in the revenues of but r M 4';o,5HJ.52. I he estimated rcvenii-s by I he ;-' u it" bill arc ; From customs, jlO j.ffO J.Vi l. : : from addi tional Internal revenue income, t ;o,'00.000 ; spirits. 20,000,000 . cigar. - i.O Kl.bo'i ; cig n r-t tee. 1 .500.60 ) ; pUyin c ,r I-. - :J,H)i,KXJ. i'otal additional rcvei.ii . ;(,:;. 0 io.0'. i&yking tlieVKal carried by the bin. oinxid" of th present internal f v -iiu -, '-.ll'K 103 771.4'). BURNED AT THE STAKE. Youngsters I'iay "Indians" at Cam den, N. .1., With Serious Effect. A number of l.ys playing "Indian" on a lot at Broadway and Mechanic stre-ts,Cam. den, N. J., tied their companion, Charles lianey, aged thirteen, to a stake and built a fire around him. His clothes were burne-1 fro.n his body. The other boys txvarne frightened and ran away. Young haney was rescuM by a colored man who hard the lad's crie aud carried him to his home. The lad suffered intense agony. Shauld he survive his injuries, be will probably have to have both of his hands amputated. The police are leoking for the boy whe tied lino to the stake. THE two nouses of rarlivncnt met at Montevideo, Uruguay, tor tic purpose of. electing a President to succeed Dr. Hereia Y. Ones, whose term expire 1 ou March 1. The ballot resulted ii tae e!e.-ting of Senhor Ellaurl by a majority of fifty-four votes. Senhor Ellaurl was President of the Repab Uo hi 1873. Ellaurl has declined to accept,
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
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March 23, 1894, edition 1
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