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- A - . . . ' FEARLESSLY THE RIGHT DEFEND IMPAETIALLT THE WEONQ CONDEMN. r-a-4-V- ! ' .... ' ' 1 ... . --. ',.-. .- . ! ' ... 1 ' . ' . ft a I if J ter va . tl tot r 'Mid naked beoghs tha robin sings : That bads wul break he b so siu-s ' Bo sure that flowers and all sweet things ' WMKtuJetUe years end. 'inoagn. cold the wind, (Aim doubt r . - . " . ji nwiuu ana oomiort on tne way j He knows that all green blades wiU sprout, uowever late the fronts delay. He knows, by wonderful prevision. ... Tha$ sfMRaer soon will hannt the wood, And bring the barren bough frnitisn, Aud to the' empty nest its brood 1 ' - ,C? ,TA: Ml'TIXY AT SEA. -' nrawing 4 Graphic Description of the Mu tiny , on .Board the American " Schooner Jefferson Borden. , The story of tho mutiny on the Jef ferson. Borden, an American vessel at Bea, is thus tqld by a correspondent of the Tribune : Tho vessel is a large three-masted schooner, . and left. New Orleans for Liverpool The officers and crew numbered nine men, and the cap taia'sipfo was on board. The crew was augmented at New Orleans by the ad dition of three men, who hailed from a sailors' lodging-houseful the city, and to whom the captain agreed to pay the port price Of $30 f for the voyage. Their names were Miller, Clew and Smith. Severe weather; was encountered at sea, and f for?"8ome misconduct the Bailor "Miller was put in irons. He repented and signed a compromise and promise to offend no more. At midnight, on April 20th, the mu tiny began. The two mates of the vessel had already been murdered before the capt ain became aware of the position of tilings. About one o'clock he says,; he was awakened by Miller's knocking at his floOr and shouting to him to come to the forecastle, o see a1 man who had broken Ms leg. On opening the door he observed. . Millar Standing "with one hand behind his back and a countenance that did not at all events beteken peace. Ho naked hiur tvip it wob who was hurt, n.lwl tfinftnnnff ffm rmilv. T An Tknt Lnw fcffai Htfl -irtntps. ' but before he ould receive a reply, his wife, who ap- peared to have a suspicion that sorao - thing "cas " wrong, warned him from within ihe cabin not to go. , Fortunately he did not, or at all events he did not venture forth till he was armed with a revolver. Meanwhile, finding thi the mates were not iu their berths. Aa row the jeonclusoa . that sometK sorioua had happened. The bP 'ho had been ealldfl froir bed wenttocapt,-,"14 vL.a wa, the matt- AU the lttttor coud toll him in mn'ie8 weie no lu ti,04 oins. 1 The cook thereupon went or jock, aniJ whon Miller and the other wo mon had gone to the forecastle he went forward as far as the deck-house, where the bertha of U the able seamen were situated. . Seeing the Eussion and Smith talking ether, he asked again : " Wbero are a tea I V to which the only reply he was another request from Miller to comedorward and eee the mon with the broken$?i Hd emphatically refused to go forward, adding: " Don t fool me. Seeing nothing of the pfflccrfl of the .ship, and noticing the demeanor of the men. he was satislled that a revolt was being arranged and he at once informed the captain, who now came forward arm- ed as above stated and called upon the men to Buhgito his authority. The men, however, were very firm in their refusal, and at length the captain had, as he states, no alternative but to fire upon Uhem. Shot after shot was fired in through the deck-house window and through a hole made in the sidjs, and still, though wounded, they declined to yield.- 'Having thus secured himself from fur- ther attack, the captain began to oon- his position and to search for the members of his crew. The Swedish sailor was still at the wheel, he having, strange to say, remained there during the whole of th affray, neither attacking nor defending party appearing to think of him. The cook, of course, was with the captain, and the three men were in the deok-house. , This left three members of the crew to be" accounted for the two mates and the boy. The captain had at first his doubts as to whether, the former were not secreted in some part of the ship, but he concluded that the latter had been thrown over board. The men for a long time would not admit " that they had thrown them overboard, and, with the hope that they were still alive, he again and again demanded of the men what they had done with them. The American, Smith, at length volunteered to give up the mates if the firing was stopped. The captain replied that as soon as the whereabouts of the mates were made known, the firing should cease, searcn was made in every con ceivable part of the ship, but it was not until after the men had yielded to Capt. Patterson's authority, that -they admitted the fatal truth, anil Miller, who was suffering much from the effects of his wounds and from thirst, frankly con fessed that they had thrown' them over board. They had, in fact, been mur dered before the captain was called from his berth by the false alarm about the man with the broken leg. -Jt was the second mate's watch upon deck at the time' of the outbreak' and the method of disposing of him seems to have been that he was struck on the head with a capstan bar, he fallinj? in- five bullet wounds in one leg, one '?i his side, and one bruise on one should er. The Englishman .Clew is in the worst condition. He has two wounds under the left rib, nd he is not expect ed to recover. Smithy the American seaman, had been shot through the right wrist, and bullets had seriously grazed his left shoulder and two fingers of his left hancLv :. ; ;.; .. .V v :,. Though the mutiny was thus to all ap pearances effectually quelled, the posi tion of the captain and those who had remained faithful to him was by no means without cause for anxiety. They were at least a thousand miles from land, and with a large vessel to manage only, a crew of poor hands to ' rely upon the captain, two men, and a boy, For seven weary days and nights this small crew managed to keep the vessel in its course, but with what difficulty may be well imagined. Mrs. Patterson, with a heroio courage and devotion, made her self of great use, frequently relieving her husband and his watch, and so allowing him to take the rest he o greatly need ed. A Norwegian bark, bound for Lon don, was hailed, from which one man was spared. On Thursday the 6th of May, the vessel entered the Thames, having at the Nore the entrance to the river taken on three extra hands and a pilot, as well as a medical man sent by the consignees of the ship. The latter, Mr. J. Oi Eussell, of Gravesend, gave his attention to Mrs. Patterson and the sufferers.. Messages wero sent on board from Mr. Nnnn, the United States Con sul in London, and on arriving at the docks, Capt. Patterson was heartily greeted by a uuber of American cap tains, whose vessels were in port. . Various suppositions are offered as to 4he motives of the men" in perpetrating this terrible deed; The motive they themselves attribute is harsh usage on the part of the captain; but that idea is at once dispelled by a knowledge of the captain's general demeanor. Moreover, according to the statement of the lad, it would appear that their object was plun der. Thev freauentlv asfcf4 iUi EAMLV HAXS Of VAL1FOMXIA. Gem. Shermmn tnhU IVrNMl A'r. rntivo Tell ms Ahout Them, . General Sherman, in his newbook, tells days went In, and my attention was directed to a series of papers unfolded on his table," in which lay about half an ounoe of plaoer-gold. Mason said to me : WViof a tW I T tannluul it ami T- us about CaUfoniia m itraarl of 4a n. . and asked: "la it gold!' Mason asked ji-i,-... m. -1 ma if ! had ever seen native gold. I voyage of one hundred and niuetyight 4. 1844,1 was ia Uppet days; from New York. 'Eveirything on shore looked bright and beautiful, the hills covered with grass and flowers, the live-oaks so serene and homelike, and the. tow adobe houses, with red-tiled roofa and whitened walls, contrasted well with tha dark pine trees behind, making a decidedly good impression upon us who had come so far to spy. out the land. Nothing oouldbe more peace ful is its looks than Monterey in January, tereyamixed set of Americans native m'.f,fl,i . - . . .. I t "Still .m attftohnrl li mexioans ana xnaians, aoout one tnou- Qeorgia, and there saw some native gold, but it was much finer than this, and that it was iu"phials, or iu transparent quills; but I said that, if this were sold, it could be easily tested, finsk, by its mal ieabuity, and; next Dy aoios.., ItooK a pieoe in my teeth, and the metallio lus ter was perfect. I then, oalled tq the olerk, Baden, to bring an ax and hatchet front the book-yard. . When these were brought, I took the largest pieoe and beat it out flat, and beyond doubt it was only reply h missiles hurled at the Btvrn of t pieces of eastiroj cd grindstone, wr as a shower of arters I the Olrna3fimi Hlnhip whlouiT,i-0way"iJitoT": sea, 'but and what he saw there whether there whether it rolled over into the sea, as wna anv money or greenbacks. onmo nf tlnr men state, or whetnor au assisted to throw it over, as is more likely, does not clearly tfppear. Tne American- sailor next wqnt to the first mate's cabin, and told him it was eight bells and time for his watch on deck. On leaving his cabin the . unfortunate man was accosted by Miller, who felled him to the deck by a blow upon the back of his head with an iron bolt. The body waa auicklv disposed ' of in the same way as was that of the other officer, by casting it into tho sea. The man Jacob Lumber, who was at the wheel, says he heard cries of "Oh! Oh!" from the di rection of the officers' quarters, batilid not at the time suppose they came from the mate. His position would prevent him from seeing any tiling thatvas going on unless it took place amidships, as the helm is stationed upon the top of the officers' quarters, on a raisod quarter deck. There can bo little doubt that the fnodus operandi was planned for the murder of the captain, as the position ond manner of Miller at the time of the false alarm about the man with the broken leg would indicate an intention to belabor him on emerging, from the door. The boy appeared next day from the captain's quarters, and states that, previous to the attack on the watch, he was gagged in his berth. A large hand kerchief was tied tightly jrouud. his mouth, and his hands well secured with a rope, bv which they were tied behind A Long Drawn Story. Once upon a time there was a king who had a beautiful daughter who was much sought after in marriage, and being very fond of stories, ho made proclamation that whoever would tell the longest story should marry his daughter, but whoever failed should have his head cut off. "When this beoame known crowds of oung men flocked to the palace, each to a storv, but it did not lost long, and off went bis head. Then another went in, but with a like result, tod' -Bo -on) 4io one being able to tell a story long enough to satisfy the old king. The people then became frightened and for a time there was no more stories told. At last a young man expressed his determination of trying his fortune before the king. His friends tried to dissuade him from it, but it was of no use; he appeared be fore the king, who told him it would be certain death. But he began his story thus: " During the seven years of fam ine' in Egypt iu Joseph's time, there being nothing iu the fields to eat, a flock of locusts came upon a small hole in ono of the granaries in which the corn was stored : it was just large enough for one locust at a time to go in and oonie out. So a locust wont iu and got a grain of corn; then another locust went in and got another grain of corn; portions of a smash- o mado use oi by tne mutineers. In response to this, their 'first t-igu of open warfare, tho captain fired his revolver, Tliis caused the men to withdraw to tha dock-house for shel ter Tl?liBon showin g no disposition to emerge utoWhcir shelter, the captain held a oonsuHnsiwith his faithful ally Aikin, the cook, aunsdvith tis assistance collected all the avaflttuflirearms three revolvow and t doublpkrreled gun and mode ready fef a renewed attack, Tha mta; lwtfrt, did not emerge from , their quarters,Vnd at five o'clock in the jnorning, when day had broken, and ain Kularly chough a perfect calm had suo- oce'ilod the boinkTous weather that had attended them without inU-rmisaUm from Booton,- tk captain crept thither, and finding the mon all dozing, b hit upon ths bappy exne JJebt of naihng up tha - decavhose door. . They did not offer any oppsyition Ui this course, but per aUtciitly rtfrtsed to surrender then aclvwi, and declared they would notyiald anbmiiuricm to tha captain. Capt. I'ftt terson, though hi this dire extremity, and suffering . an anxiety which can . eamly bt Wlrued, iv-Ud, apparently with great mercy, lit offered to accept tha submission ot tha men on their eon- ntlnf to U putin irons, but plainly told them If thry dii not ha would lira upon them and ta disable then, YM Bottles, boftSSSaa He was thus dragged from berth anfNjJpped into the- lower hold I of the forecastle?" managed, in course of time, to extricate4 Himself from -his bonds, and he seems to have climbed up through the hatchway, and in tno oara nesaoftho night to have crept aft and secured himself from disoovory in ths officers' quarters. The boy, who is a native oi uuiais ana whose parenta reside there at tho pres ent time, atatea that tho men auspectd him of watching them and anticipated that ho would, if not pnt out of the way. bo very likely to thwart their plans. They would no doubt have murdered him hid they not knows him to be skill ed in the use of thp wheel, so, as they surmised, they conveniently stowed him away until such time as his serfices would be reqgired to awtnt them in get ting the ship to land, The men having surrendered, they were brought upon dock and secured ia irons. It was then found that, with ths exception of Clow, who was seriously wounded, they were not so badly hurt as to be totally Incapable of work, or so much disabled as, without restraint, to place them beyond tha reach of further fear. Tha following day even Miliar and Smith took a turn atths pumps. Their wonada were dressed, and though carefully watched for tha remainder of tha voyage, they wra well attended. It was discovered that 3Iilkr had raaeivtd the my corn" " Go on with your story, " said king; " wo will imagine all that." " Oh, no; I cannot go on with atory until all the corn is out." So ho went on: "Then another locust went in and got another grain of corn" for about three months. Whon the king asked him how much they had got out, he answered: About one oubio foot." The king groauod.and the man went on with his atory about three months longer. Tho king then asked him if ho wan't most done; ha answered: sand all told.. . They were kind and pleasant, and seemed to have nothing to do, except such as owned ranches in the country for the rearing oi horses and cattlSj Horses could be bought at any .prioe frpm four dollars to sixteen, but no horse was ever valued above a doub loon or Mexican ounce (sixteen dollars). Cattle cost eight dollars fifty cents for the best, and this made beef net about two bents a pound, but at that time no body bought beef by the pound, but by the carcass. " Game of " all ; kinds elk, deeri wild ' geese, t and f ducks was abundant; but coffee, sugar, and small stores, wererare and costly. There were some' half -dozen shops or stores, but their shelves were empty. The people were very fond of riding, dancing, auu of shows of any kind. The young fel lows took great delight iu showing off their i horsemanship, and would dash along, picking up a half-dollar from the ground, stop their horses in full career aud torn about on the space of a tul luck's hide, and their skill with the lasso was certainly wonderful. At full speed they' coujd 'cast their lasso about the horns of a bull, or so throw it as to oateh work all day on horsebaoK"in unvxAg cattle or catching wild horses for a mere nothing, but all the money offered would not have hirod one of them to walk a mile. The girls were very fond of dano ing, and thoy did danoe graoefully and well. . Every Sunday, regularly, we hud a baile, or danoe, and sometimes intoi spersed through the wk." ' J At that time, what aow San Fran cisco was called I'erbaTBuena. .A naval offioer, Lieutenant Washington A. Bai tlet, its first alcalde, hod caused it to be surveyed and laid out into blocks and lots, which were being sold a sixteen dollars a lot of fifty varas square; the understanding being that no single per son could purchase of the alcalde more thanone in-lot of. fifty varas, and one out lot Df a hundred varas. Folsom, how ever, had got his clorks, orderlies, eta., to luy lots, and -they, for a small con sidemtion, conveyed them to him, so li.-.. i. i . . uiuii us was nominally ine owner oi a gooi many lots. Lieutenant Halleck had bought one of each kind, and so had Warner. Many naval- officers had also invented, and Captain Ealsom advised me to buy some, but I Lj actually in auled that he should think mo such a fool as to pay money for property In suol a horrid place as Yerba Buona. espcially ridiculing his quarter of the citj then called Happy Valley. At that dnyMontgomery street was, as now, the buahess street, extending from Jackson to locramento, the water of tha bay loaing barely room for a few houses on i( ast side, and tha publio warehouses Still, we attached little importance to the fact, for gold was known to exist at San Fernando, at the south, and yet was not considered of much value." " The whiter of 1848-M9 was a period of intense activity throughout California. The rainy season was unfavorable to the operations of gold mining, and was very hard upon tha thousands of homeless men and women who dwelt in the moun tains, and even in the towns. Most of the natives and old inhabitants had re turned to their ranches and houses ; yet there were not roofs enough in the oouutry to shelter the thousands who had arrived by sea and land. The news had gone forth to the whole civilized world that gold in abnlous ' quantities was. to be had for the more digging, and adventurers camo pouring iu blindly to seek their fortunes without a thought of house or food. Yerba Eueua had been converted into San Francisoo. Sacra mento City had been laid out, lots were being rapidly sold, and tho town was being built up as au ntcrpot to the mines. , Stockton also hod been chosen as a convenient point for trading with tsje lower or southern mines. , ; Captain Sutter was the sole proprietor of the former, and Captain Charles Weber waa waa as yet known'as '"JTrenon uamp;- . ttemt f Jnterfft. , . :,i . . ...... The man of tha Tha type-setter. - If a man ia natural nowadays, ha ia charged with trying to be ecoentriq or . . "7. . .:: :m . . en who stir up strife are generally oo wards. An anonymous writer is care- ' ful to bob ia any sauna himself. I ' Many a man has reached the summit ' ; of fame and then looked down into tha : humble valley ha come from and longed ? to be back agaia. 1 How a woman can keep on talking while she Is twisting up her back hair ', and has her mouth full of hairpins is a " mystery not yet explained. j It is stated that there are eight millions ' of German-speaking people in tha Unitud t States having three hundred newspapers - A New York State man has been prac-" tioing eight months for the Stato shoot, hoping to win a two dollar medal, t our- teen dollars per day woukm t hire him to plant corn. -, Make a note of this, young men, and , when you are " oldest inhobitantij" you , can tell your grandchildren that' in the J year 1875 navigation was not open ou tha " canals until May 18. -! If an&yaang man expects to go to v New York and .marry a youuglady with a brown stone front just because he ; parts his hair in the middle, he will find out that he has mode a mistake. ' ' ' r i George III., speaking to Archbishop Sutton respecting his huge family, made tha remark: "I believe your grace has -better than a dozen." "No, sir," re- ., plied the archbishop ; "only cloven.''. "Well," replied the king, "isn't that , better than a dozen t" . ' - 4 V Are the young ladies' of the prosout " day fit for wiveB I" ; asked a' loctum?" of Apprehentlon in the Went. ' A gentleman who has lived In Nebras ka, ant who is oonversant with the .de vastation caused by grasshoppers in pre vious years, states that neodleas appro hension has been caused bv ' recent reports from the West. It has been ebated that not onlj'lre the grasslioppers d0'ng. mu.oh damago to the crops of Kansas farmers,' but that the insects, having crossed the Missouri river,: are destroying the crops growing upon farms in tho western tier of counties of Missouri. It is furthermore stated that farmers in the Westfear that the locusts will crow the State of Missouri and de vastate the wheat fields of Southern Illinois, nitherto, the gontloman stales, the grasshoppers have never passed be yond the seoond tier of tho river ooun- tiea of Missouri. Hutched in the monn tains, the grosahoppers in the first year of their flight eastward rarely reach the Missouri river. Indeed, the "grasshop per line " of devastation the first year is at least one hundred miles wost of the Missouri river. At the present time, they are not full grown, and do not fly in clouds as they do the first year of their flight frem the mountains. Thoy will probably bo destroyed after only short advance into Iowa and Missouri. They deposit their larvsa in the ground in the fall Sometimes, as hut fall, wher the whiter 'is very late, the larvrn hatch out, and in the cold weather short- his audionoe. f "They are fit for husi bands," responded a female voice ?but the taoublo is that you, men are not fit, for wives I" The applause,", was great, and so was the discomfiture of the loo- turer. ' ' The Constitution of New Hampshire contains a religious prosoiiptive clause.! .'. Goverhori Senator or yepifoRta,tIrn- . less he ia of the Protestant luUgiori. At various times attempts have been made : ' to strike out the pro3oriptive, but they hove foiled. ' The first ounoe of blood injected iutu Gen. Frank Blair caused an effect upon . tuo gwerai . Bimuor to lnioxioaiiou, Upon mvestigation, tlie physicians' dis covered that the subject who had fur- nished the blood had been on a bit of a : spree the day before, and with tha blood had been transferred some alcohol. If . was a dear case of drunk by proxy. Talk about . puzzles, but hero is a tough one : Two men, A and B, bought one hundred acres of land at $100 per acre. Each paid $5,000. A took hie i share off the north aide at 110 per acre, .. while B took his share south side, at tiW per acre. How much land did each got I How can the question bo fovedl Of all the men who have figured on the problom, no two agree exactly. , ' . This circumstance aught to diminish their numbers the present spring. No grasshoppers of this kind have ever reached Illinois, at least any that were recognized or oommittod any remarkable devastation. another locust went in and got another giifcw-vL tlin anoJW wet on a sandy beach about where tha ly following, are inevitably destroyed. locunt weus ui hiu gun iraminii gium ui i vuuiuiuu uuw buuillh, viz.; ner the intersection of Sansome and CaJornia streets. Along Montgomery stnt. were . tho stores of Howard A MdnsFrank Ward, Sherman k Ituokol, Rcb irCo., and it may be ona or two otbrs. Around the plaza -were a fow hoses, among them the City Hotel and tin custom-house, single-story adobes wu tiled roofs, and they were by for tbi most substantial and boat houws in ftaplaoo. Ths population was estim. Id, at about four hundred.' of whom Wkaa (natives of tho Sandwich Mmds) forraoxlthe bulk." 71e time passed rapidlv awsv until " Oh, no, Uiey have g( to clear cnU ta spring of 1819. whon the great dis- the seven granaries that it toon acven ivory wu made, which at once produo- years to fUU "Then another locust l a social and financial revolution in went in and got another grain of oorn. alifornia. The event is aim ply record- Ituattmn iMHeh. The Hussion punch must be a nice drink. It ia made of a mixture of vodka. champagho, nalwka (which ia deflnad aa a kind of gooseberry wine resembling tho French caU, which is much affected by ths Bussiaus) and 'any other kind of wine that may be at hand. A'prioots, melons and cucumbers are put in to flavor, and sugar to sweeten it, aud the whole is then ignited and allowed to burn till it boils. Sensible people who should aoo such a drink as this, and ba- Tbe king here broke down and said: 1 by the author, without the preliml- come acquainted with its preparation, " lane my daughter, taae my kingdom, iury nonrlHh of trumpaHSwhioh a man take my lands, everything I own, but, I loss oommon aenso would not have in the name of the prophet, have done ailed to sound forth on tha occasion. with those Infernal locust," I remember one day that two toon, 1 ' : " " rl""" k 0111151, CaUM iutO tfaO OffiCC SUd Tha worst thing, that has appearediuirad for the governor. I asked their about the accentrio James Lick is thenntinena, and one answered that they RUteraent that he has bean sued fonad just come down from Captain Sutter S55.000 by his physician, for eervioaon spado business, and thoy wanted to during a period of Iwenty-two jmxtmm Ooveraor Mason in person. X took Wa ,hope this will be contradicted, fortBem in to the ooiontl and left them if true, it puts Mr. Lkk ia a vary awktogthr. After some time tha eoldnel ward position, oame to his doae and aaUa4 te ate, 2 would know what to do with it without hesitation. But there are some remark able individuals who think, it proves nothing to have other people experiment with such a compound, they mint try it for themselves. It looks as if Mr. Mo Gahant had felt called upon to allow the mixture to work upon his own .constitu tion, for he sy: "Though palatable and inainuating, it is the moat diabolical compound I have aver tasted. Evary drop of it is laden with headache for a week and dyspepsia lot a fortnight," A Colorado Boy. In September, 18G0, the first babe . saw the blue Idaho firmament aud breathed the ; crisp mountain atmos phere, uudor circumstances littlo hws primitive than those which attended iU Savior's CirHu David Cartwright and wife wore the parents who were render ed happy by tho little fellow's appear ance, and the boy was born under tho . spreading branches of a pine tree, which is yet standing, near the center of the village This specimen nugget soon became the pot and, it is said, the somewhat demoralized pot of tha , rough miners, and, catching their rov ing disposition, he rambled around the. confines of tha camp, at the 'rather youthful age of two years, with the ap- , parent ease of an Arab, He was called . "Bock," on aooounk of hit wonderful , hardness, aud often showed bis appro-, ciution of the honor oonforred upon him, Tha crowning act of Bock's life so far as knownwas just before ha discarded . his waddling garment, at the age of two and a half. While on his way to saporintoud the waking of soma ex tensive gulch diggings, ona day, . ha tnmbled head foremost lntoa wU, whera the bottom could only be found at a dnpth of thirty feet, Upon striking ha found only six inches of water, and didn't roposa to be worried much by such a fall, so immeiliately commenced calling for hlp. It was his sad fate, however, to remain there tis long hoars before bulng discovered, but when men finally came to the rvtmio his pmit-up wrath knew no bounds. There a nu crying about it, but such a vully of invectives, topon tho heads of mgtotful parenta nevar before fett fMm clul.liih hps. Hsre ia a aampla I "Youflukl kin Uj in a wall all day wtfwut nuflln frat liki, a fog 'Fywaut no better faddcr'd madUar'a 'en I'd da wifeat ahiiUn " . " 1 r u il ii i -..vi . -r : v ... ... n
The Weekly Ansonian (Polkton, N.C.)
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June 16, 1875, edition 1
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