Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / Oct. 7, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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JJ ™ VOLUME XV. Reporter and Post. PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT DANBTTRY. N. C. PKPPER k SONS, Put*, it Props a*Ti!a mr n M nrrrnH; Cne Year, i>aoat>)e in advance §I.BO Hii Months, KATE* ojr AOI|RHSI«U: One Square (ten lino. or Ism) 1 time, *1 on yor each additional lu»ertV>n no Contracts for longer t into or piorc .pace I'UJI q m«d. tn pro|*>rtimi to the at-we rite«. Trmnaleiit «rtiPTtlpei - will h* exi>eo«*.l to remit accenting to ttieae rates at tlto time ttacv acini their linn. Bui-iaeae t.'actU rK be ln-ertet at fan Dollars per annual. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. A. J. BOYD, . 3. \V. REID, P. B. JOHNSTON, JI'LIL'B JOHNSTON . BO YD, -REID ft JOHNSON, Attorneys - at - I^avv, WENTWORTH, N. C. Messrs. Reid and Johhsnn will regu larly attend the Superior Courts of Btokea oounty. JR. L. HAYMORE, ATTORNEY AT LAW Ml. Airv- N. C. Social attention given to the collection ol claims. I—l2m )V. F.' CARTER, &rTQB«VKr-*tr'l>,i! IF% MT. AlliY, SUKKY CO., N*. C Practices where vev his services are wanted F. DAY, ALBERT JONES. 3D ay & Joaes, manufacturer* ot SADPLKKY.ItAKXESg, COLLARS, TRI'SR No. \\. Baltimore *tr«*ot, liultiiuore, MA. W. A. Tucker, 11. C.SmitU, II.S. Si>rat;ghi> Tucker, Smith &• Co.. Manul'acttirhrtt A: wholesale Dealers in BOOTS, SHOES, HATS AM) CAPS. Ko. 250 UuUituoru Street. Baltimore, J/«l. 11. J. «* It. E. 11 EST, w il u llenry Sonneborn A' Co., WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS. to Aaiioyerst.,(l>etircutiUcrman X* Luuiuardßtal HALTIM'JItF. Ml). D.SONNEBORK, B. BI.IMI.INE Stei/htn I'utney, L. U Blair it*. 11. ML#*, .WITH STETHEN PUTNE YS' CO. H'hvUmiit' Jcult'tß in Boots, Shoes, it ml Trunks, 1219 Main Street, R ept. ft-Hl-ilm. lILCUMOXD, VA. f lUCII Al(l' SAM I. V. GOODWIN. IJK.NKV IIKNDKItKON. DH'II'D W. liACON. WOOD, BACON & CO ln>lM>rtcr« mini .Jubhem of DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, mi/TE GOODS, ETC. Niw. 309-311 Maiket St., PHILALKLPHIA, PA. -« Parties baviag CUT MICA for sale will find it to tbeir interest to cnespond with A. O. 80HOONMAKKK, 158 William St., Now York. R. s. OGLESBYT WITH a W. SCOTT. WHOLESALE NOTIONS AND WHITE GOODS, HH Main Street -.1 V LYNCHBURG VA. o. 1 uerTCicK. witk VINO, ELI.ETT k ORTMP, Ricuii(yJD 1 VA.,, Wholesale Dealer* la BOOTB, SHOES, TRUNKS, AO. Prompt attention paid to orders, and satis ction gauranteed. pm~ Virginia Stall Priion Goodt a tymalty March, 6. m aonsaT w. powaas. aniua u. TAVLO . R W. POWERS A CO., WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, Dealers in PAIKTH, OILS, DYBS, VARNISHBS, VtMoh and Amorioan WINDOW GLASS, PUTTY, &C 8»lt»KIN(J ANDCiIEWINO . CIGARS, TOBACOO A SPECIALTY 1305 Main St., Richmond, V»; A uu ust Om 10— m ii.soit, n; a\s & oo„ W'.'OLESAI.E OROCURS AND COMMIS SION MERCHANTS. 3o S Howard street, corner of Ixinibnrdi BALTIMORE. We keep constantly on hand a targe an(. well aaeertnd stock af Orocpriea—snilabla lot Southern aa I Western trade. We solicit con signments of Cotatrj Produce—tuch as Cot ton; tt-athers; Ginseng; Beeswax Wooi;pria>;; Fruit; turs; Skins, eta. Uul for do ng busiuessare such as to warrantquik salcl nd prompt returns. All orders *UI havo our mj>t attention. y! OO TO 1.1 IWI» tire block, W inn ton, TV. C. FOB GOOD Flues, Sheet Iron tod Horns todde Tinware at Liyiner Prices Also Roofing aud Guttering at aLort notice, at BOTTOM TRICES. Sept 16-ly J. W. SHIPLEY, Corner Main aud Srd Street. Under Jacobs Clothing Store. MAKUPACf I'RKtt OF Harness, Bridles, Collars and Saddles, Also dealer in Whips, Homes, Brushes, Lap Robes, in fU:t everything in the Har ness and saddlery line. CHEAPEST HOI SB L\ U'KSTKUN' NORTH CAROLINA. Will sell my own manufactured poods as cheap as yiu ean boy the Western anil Northern city made goods. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. Has a stock of the old array McOlcllan Saddles on hand. Come and see me Sept 26 1-y. /frown Rogers Co Wholesale and Retail HARDWARE. Largest lino of SIIOKS in Winston. Agricultural Implements- MACHINERY of all kinds) HARNESS Aj\ I) SADDLES ire. PAINTS, OIIJS, VARNISHES, *c Special attention invited to their White's Clipper Plotvs. Agents DuponCs old ami well known Rifle Powder. .Sept 26-ly Doors, Sash, Blinds. Having rebuilt our Planing Mill, Door, Ha-di and Blind Factory, snd fit ted i: up with all new machioiry of the latest and most approved patterns, we are now prepared to do all kinds of work in cur line in the very best style. We maaufactnre DOORS, SASH, BUNDS, Door Frames, Window Frames. Brack ets, Moulding, Hand-rail, Balusters, Newels, Mantels, Porch Columns, and are prepared to do all kinds of Scroll Sawing, Turning, ko. We carry in stock Weatberboarding, Flooring, Ceil ing, Wainscoting and all kinds of Dress ed Limber; also Framing Lumber, Shinglea, Laths, Lime, Cement, Plaster, Plastering Hair and all kinds of Build ers' supplies. Call ana Bee us or write for our prices before buying elsewhere. MILLER BROS-, WINSTON. N. O. Oak Ridge Institute. A FIRST CLASS HIGH SCHOOL With Special Business College De partment ADMIT BOTH SEXES. AKIJ LL *?ul tlioriigh 4 years Academic Course of Study In C lassics, Natural Science anil Mathematics. One of the most nourishing anil successful llusiness C'oileg es South of Washington. 20(1 students from various Slates last year. .Special classes, Kail Tcm of IHM), in Elocution, Vocal Mus ic, anil Pedagogies, under the instruction ot expert and experienced teactiers. Depends for patronaße mi its thorough me!ln HU, and refets to its students ill all departments of business and vocation. New Literary .Society Kalis, Rending Room A-e. Ku'l corps of experienced teach ers. Location in every way ilesirnhle. Fall term opens August 10th. For Catalouge, &e., address J. A. Jt M. 11. HOLT, Principals. Oak Ridge, N. 0. GEO. STEWART. Tin and Sheet Iron Manu facturer. Opposite Farmers' Warehouse. WimTOR.'XC., ROOFING, 6UTTERING AND SPOUT ING done at short notice. Keeps constantly on ltand a tine lot of Cooking and Heating Stoves. "NOTHING HIICCEEDH LIKE KUCCEKH." DANBURY, N. C., THURSDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1886. TWO BON EH. , lUi lIAIUI k. BURTON. A wild rose S|mke to a city rose "How sad is your lot, your life! Tou miss the kiss >f the wind that blows In the open field where tlie glad stream flows, And the duys with summer life." Tha city Sower softly srnilad, For slie knew wliat things are best; "How little you dream of love, poor child! What time you are out in tin' tempest wild I sleep on my lady's breast." liultimore, Mil. —l'hiltidt Iphia Ameriean. TIIK. THE WEATHER-A HYK.\. JAMKB 8. t'OOI.BY. Time is a weaver; the sw!tt flying shuttles Are weaving ilie threads of our lives in his loom; Often lie |>urts as from friends wluun we cherish, Ties, fond and tender, o'er breaking too soon. Tangled and torn seem the threads to our vision; I)ut the weaver rests not, and each life lias its place; h'Hin in the dawn of eternity's morning, Its beauty unrivaled, the patterns we'll trace. Sadly we part from the frieniis of ourehiid hood. liitterly weep for the loved we liave known The skill of the weaver is sure aud uner ring- And thickly with mercies our I'alliways arc strewn. Why need we despair, then, whatever our portion? (iod is our Father, our Saviour, our Friend. His Is tlie hand that is guiding the shuttles, He having loved, ever loves to the end. —The Current. A Fascinating C?rl BT V. W. ROBINSON. Author qf "For ller KitAV "The llomnnce of u Hark Street," Hie. CHAPTER VI. A CRISIS. Two months had gone by before Maj. Crawshaw entered tlc huge caravansary again. It was six in the evening when lie commenced bis dinner there ; it was half past cigbt ere be had finished. It wan,a quarter to nioe when he took the liberty of proceeding to the counting bouse, which Misa Daly was thinking of closing for the night as he appeared. ••Good evening, Miss Daly. I trust yon will excuse so late a visitor." "Certainly major." Tbey shook bands together, and then Ruth Daly atkod it he bad been in the oountry or abroad. "Why ibould you think that!"' be asked, almost peremptorily. "1 thought you diced bero very fre quently—at least I understood you to say so," remarked Misa Daly. H l did say so. 1 used to dine here very frequeotlj." said the major; •'but I b.tve altered my habits lately," "Indeed." "Besides," be add}d, with a sudden ness wbioh made Miss Daly jump, *1 did not want to be a spy again upon you and my nephew. I—l thought if be ebose to come here, and bad made ap his mind to oome here, I bad batter keep away, and leave you to your selves." "That was very kind of you," said Miss Daly, quietly ; "but his people would have been very much alarmed, and not at all obligod to you." "1 don't care," said the major, bluif •j- --"Ob, but you did care onoe." "I'm not afraid now of your making a fool of my nephew, or of my nephew's being able to mike a fool of you," bo said. "And it has struck mo that if he were really in love with you he oould not havo a mote sensible wife, and the sooner you settled the matter the butter, il it's comiug round to that. There." "Thank you," said Miss Daly. "And il he has said anything to you —he's infernally sly, and I can't make him out at all—l should liko " "I have not spoken to Mr. Todd. That gentleman does not know I am at the International," interrupted Miss Daly. "Not ye*!" exolaitned the major. "And you don't want bim to know, pcr • hape V "1 should leave the place at once if he knew 1 was here, and if he became as fool IN h a fellow as be was at tho Juiiu tion," replied Miss Daly, firmly. "I thought of telling him you were hero I " "If you do, I will never speak to you again !•' cried Miss Daly. The major looked astonished, hut be took her baud, promised not to tell young Todd, hoped he hud not offended her, and weni his way. He came very regularly to the interna tional after this; he altered hie habits again. He was evidently a man noi very long of one in ; £Jifthr:igh Miss Daly. The Old club, l'sll Mall, saw very little of lilln once more. Its peace and rest, its Rapacious arm chairs in the smoke roomi its suug din ing room, where the viunf|s wero to bis taste, and the waiters not hungry for fees, were all deserted for the stir aud bustle o! the flash establishment at Lam beth Bridge, aud the nnxod assembly which poured into its mammoth dining room every evening at six, aud talked and laughed loudly, aud went ont red faced and staring into the streets. The major did not speak to Miss Da ly on every occasion that lie pa'rohized the International; ou the contrary, he kept his distance to an inordiuate ex tent, aud was content with a good even ing once a week. He knew she was in the counting bouse—safe in the count ing house—and that no young Todd was hanging about the doors, ipid that was enough for him and his purpose. For bis purpose, thought Miss Daly, a little indignantly, now aud tMon, was to keep his eye upou her, to sispcct hej ; his mission in life was to keep guard on bis I neph'cw and herself, despite all that she i had siyd. As if she were not to ho be ! lieved-. as if he had any right to watch her in tins odd, meaningless fashion, as | if it answered anv good purpose, or j would have been of any use, had she ; I br.ju ilsposcd to assert her rights, and ! elude his old-fashioned vigilauce. And yot ho was not a spy. and scarce ly li'H like ono. H" 11 - his horror of playing the spy even, aud seemed an earnest, thoughtful, grave gentleman at most times. She wonder | ed why Koranic so often to the Interna I tional, for she was sure he did not like tho hotel, and she could not understand why he put himself out of the way so frequently to exchange a few words with Mr. Freshwater, she being also pure that he did not like Mr. Freshwa ter, whose manners wete obtrusive aud "loud," and wbnge head had beep not n little turned by the suooess of his mam moth establishment. He must oome to make sure his nephew was not hovering about still, otherwise there seemed to be no valid reason why be should take so much pains to render himself uncom fort able. One day he came to tho hotel before eleven in the mnrcing, dressed in a new surtout coat, wiih a flower in his but tonhole and a hat so glossy that ho .might have shaved himself lu it. lie marobed to tho oounting house, "as if the place belonged to him," said the bead waiter to a subordinate. "Do you know what to-day is, Miss Daly ?" be inquired. •'Tuesday, is it not "Tut! tut! I mean what auspicious day V "N-no," said Miss DuV Then she lookod at his new coat nfid shiny hat, and thought he was going/to he married. She felt sorry he was and suro in her heart thai ,'CVas by a de signing widow with money in the funds, and aoiuc half a dozen grown-up sons and daughters byway of family encum brances. "I am going to a wedding " "Indeed!" "My nephew's wedding. Mr. Todd onters the holy state this Homing. 1 am his best man." Ho watched her very closely, with his olear gray eyes fixed and uublink | ing, and Ruth Daly objected to his stare, and felt herself reddening beneath h:s guic. "This is a surprise," she remarked. "Yes. He's married this morning," he sari, « a tone almost too triumphant to please Miss Duly. It seemed to say, "I have won the game; yon are out of the reckoning at last, and there's an end of it and you. "I hope he has made a wise choice," ssid she. "I think so S'lH e not a .. ■ ,t" a girl, but.i woman ut n ind, v.i. ill look after hiu. and the in rm- - • I 'ings to bim." '•You are satisfied "l'erfeeilj Mtisried." "That is all right, then," she mur mured, in so dry a tone that he looked at her very sharply. "I suppose you think that when I am satisfied everybody ought to be, Miss Daly !' he said ; "or rather you tbink 80 1" Miss Daly laughed. "I cannot say I have considered the matter very deeply," she replied; "on the contrary, my thoughts have been wandeiiug somewhat strangely." "In what direction, may I ask!" "In yours." "My dear young lady," ho oxclaiin ei y eagerly, 'l'what do yoo ueau? Did you say in mine?" When you asked me what auspicious day this was, I '.bought you were going to your own wedding she said. The major stared harder than ever, and his lower jaw dropped on to his satin stock. He took bis new hat off, and brushed it the wrong way with his coat sleeve, and then put it carefully on again. "God bless my soul! what an extra ordinary thought," bo said "Not yeiy extraordinary, surely." "That any one should think—that you should think—l was going to be married this morning l Dear me! I wish you were not troubled with such silly ideas, Miss Daly." "Silly 1" "I would have preferred you think ing I was going to be hanged," he said, techily, as he walked away in great haste. "Cross old bachelor!' said Miss Daly, with a pout, as she turned to her books, "it is as well, for the lady's sake, that you aro not fioing to be married, Maj. Crawshaw." An-l certainly Maj. Crawshaw was not particularly amiable on his nephew's wedding day. He scowled at the uiin i ters—there were three divines to tie up young Todd and his bride securely; ho prompted young Todd in his respon ses in an unnecessarily high key; abused the beadle on the church steps for gct tlug in .Ills way nnd_lumt>UnK cvor him, in undue haste to participate in the general distribution of fees; and at the wedding breakfast ho was graver aud gruuiuiur than benefitted the occasion. , He was very thoughtful, also, and rnado but a clumsy, spluttering speech in re turn for some one proposing tlie bride groom's relatives, aud sat down distur bed in temper afterward at his own miserable failure. "I was never so embarrassed lu my life—never, Sarah," ho said to his sis ter, who was at his side iu purple velvet "That fellow ought to have been shut for lugging in such a toast. Ridicu lous !" "I don't think you are quite well this morning," remarked Dowager Mrs. Todd. "I was never so well in my life." "You seem a little out of sorts to me." "I don't know what yau mean,' growled the major, "but I'm sorts— heaps of the in." "Ah woll, we have you to thank for all this liappiness," said his sister in a low tone, "for if it had not been for your ooiuing down to Uatileton, and ta king Kdw:u to town wiih you, who could tell what might havo happened ?" 'I ho major ooughed in his throat but made no reply. TO Ba CONTINL'BD. SW EDISH MANNERS.^ One great peculiarity of travelling in Sweden is the extreme quiet and laok of flurry. The Swedish are a taciturn aud noiseless people. They do much by signs, and never shout; a Swedish ciowd makes singularly little sound. Swodes, even of tho lowest class, never push or jostle. It is tho custom to do so much bowing and bat lifting that oae is obliged to move more slowly than in England to give time for all this o lur tesy. When a traiu leaves a platform, or > steamboat pier, all the lookers-on lift their hats to tho departing passen gers and bow to tbcm; as a compliment to the poorest person in tho streets you must lift your hat. A gentleman pass ing a lady on the stairs of a hotel must do the same. To enter a shop or a bank with one's hat on is a terrible breach of good manners. If you enter or leave a coffee room you must bow to all tho occupants. I'asscngcrs on board the littlo s'oamcrs which ply about Stookholin invariahlv raiso their hats to the occupants of anj othor boat which passes near 'honi. Tho very men in charge of tho locks ou tho canal bow politely to the sailors as tin boats go through. Itnagi e English barges in dulging in audi amenities.—London Society, ADVANTAGES OF THE STOCK LAW. A few years ago a gentleman living in this county wrote to a sensible, in telligent aud thoughtful man living iu Mecklenburg asking him to give him tho most convincing reasons in favor of the stock law which his experience of it had pointed out to him In reply he divided the advantages to be derived from the stock law under three heads, as follows: (A.) Advantages to stock. 1. In the facility for .uproving blood. 2. It assures regular care and atten tion. 3. No milk cows go dry. 4. No stock crippled whilo depreda ting. 5. Stock is quiet and contented, not restless aud ranging, 6- Sick stock is cared for at once. 7. There is leas straying, stealing, witting in swamps and killing by rail roads. 8. Stock is much more docile and gentle and much less liable to learn fence breaking. 9. The spreading of infections disea ses, vermin, mange, &c., is avoided. (B.) Tho advantages to the land. (a; More laud is brought into culti vation. 1. By tilling fence rows anal ad joining land that was formerly lost and 2. Because small fertilo spots as basins, narrow bottoms, So., can be cultivated that would not pay (o fence. (Ii) Hotter laud can be tilled, be cause 1. The best can be selected without regard to ability to fence it. 2. More manure is saved, so that tho whole farm is improved. (e) All outlaying land improves at the same time and without cost by veg etation decaying and not being trumped and ehumo'l 1 y stock when wot. (C.) Labor, tiuo and expense are as follows : 1. Making and repairing largo amount of fencing, which anybody can calculate for himself. 2. Cleaning up fence rows. 3. Hunting up strayed stick, driving up cows, watching fields, Ico. 4. Keeping up expensive water-gaps and fencing washed away in freshets. 5. Especially as the above has to be done at once and cannot be put off aud is often done at great exposure, some times costing as much us the small remnant of crop loft by the freshet is worth. 6. Fields can bo entered at almost any point while going in and out (espe cially bauling), saving much labor, time and injury in a year. 7. Much private difficulty, lawing &.0 , is done away with, because it con forms to justice and order—the justice of every one providing for his own ; order as enjoined in the power and, "a place for every thing and every thing in its place. The above are the conclusions drawn by a Mecklenburg man who has tnsd the law for years. It requires only a trial to make the most skeptical enthu siastic in favor of it and many who were formerly against the law have been con verted by merely passing through a stock law country and noting the ad vantages that are plainly visible.- Lenoir Topic. ENSILAGE. During tho past two years a thorough investigation has been pursued by Dr. Lawcs, of England, regarding the val ue of ensilage for feeding purposes, and the final judgment, which that careful investigator arrives at, is not calculated to euoourage extravagant expenditure in the direction of the erection of silos. Ho states that if he bad not built a silo ho should not build one now, and that be should not abandon the cultivation of root crops for winter use. It might be well for farmers to take a hint from this in their future practice.—Ger-nau town (Pa.) Telegraph. A NEW MIC A KIEL 11. Mica mines at Buckingham, Cana da. opened last spring, are repre- I sentod to be "larger in quantity and 1 higher in quality than ony found olse ; whote in America." Trained cutters have boon obtained from Frank -1 iyn, N. C. In driving an adit into the bill 100 feet five (.operate veins were diiclosrd, the purest crystals tho deep i est. lrvn, Philadelphia. NO. 14 BRIEFS ADRIFT. An lowa insurance company offers S2OO for the best plan of a tornado cave. A little giri only eleven years old has full charge of the telegraph offio* at Point Arena, Cal. A contract has been awarded for • million dollor bridge to span to Missou ri at Kansas City. John O. Whittmr, the V assachusetts y liberal donation •t.ffurers, also Goo. ~'j a handsome suui i rk and Cliieaeo there arc five express companies doing business. The rates have been cu'. so low that the transfer of 100 pounds be tween the two ci'ics costs only SI.OO Tho Lick observatory iu California has cost nearly a million dollars and may be considered another of tho world'* wonders. The telescope, which bas been under construction six years, will be completed next winter and astrouo mers arc expecting great results. The hsroic bronte statue of that able South Caiolin.i statesman, John C. Cal houn, has arrived at Charleston from Rome. It oost $14,000. The monu ment upon which it is to bcjplaccd will cost $70,000 when completed. A New York physician declares that the oyster properly prepared is the most wholesome articlo of food known to man. [lt is certainly the most easily digested flesh diet and for that reason as well as for its nutritive qualitys is to be recommended for the sick.—Repobt- KR-POST. Every post office in tho United States became a special delivery on October Ist. Every postmaster will bo held re sponsible for the immediate delivery of mail matter stamped with a special de livery stamp, within a distance of one tutlu uf iW > pout u a. v , a • stamps cost ten cents, which,'must bo attached in addition to the regular pos tage. / One of the most noteworthy contribu tions yet made for the relief of the suf ferers by the earthquake at Charleston is that voted by the survivors of Kear uy's New Jersey Bngade at Elisabeth, N. J., for the benefit of the inmates of the Confederate Home at Chatiestoc, which was badly injured by the shock. The Union veterans voted to dispense with the band that always accompanies them to the annual reun ion of tho brigade at Gen. Kearney's homestead, and to give the sum of SSO instead from the object named. Com menting on this, the New York World sayi: "One such act as this by the surviving soldiers of the Union armj their former foes is more significant than all the mouthings of the politicians as to the complete restoration of frater nal feeling." A good many peoplo Vill be surpris ed to learn tbat tho biggest building in the United States will be the City Hall of Philadelphia, for the oourti and mu nicipal offices now in proses) of oonstruo tion. Between $11,000,000 and $12,- 000,000 have been expended upon it since 1872. It is estimated to oover 2,800 more square feet than the Capi tol at Washington. The tower oa the north side will be surmounted by % statue ofPenn, and its extreme height when completed wili be 535 feet. It has now leached a bight of 270 feet. The part designed for the Supreme Court and its office* bas been finished add occupied by the Court for nearly ten years; the Court room contains a murul monument or tablet to the mem ory of the late Chief Justice SharswooU. —Exchange. An interesting featuro of the bext State Fair will be the convention of Northern settlers to bo held during Fair week. If these gentlemen have found North Carolina congenial to their social and industrial habits, and are satisfied with our climate, soil, laws aud peoplo, wc expeot good from the con vention. North Carolina is ready to wclooino thrifty, industrious farmers or manufacturers, aud we trust the North ern settles already amoug us can com mend it to others as a safe plaue tor tho investment uf capital aud a pleasant land to live in. Wo hope every North [ cm settler in this comuiuuity will at tend.—New Born Journal. The peanut crop in thu State is ev aluated to reach 123,000 bushelr.
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 7, 1886, edition 1
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