Newspapers / The Morning Post (Raleigh, … / Jan. 30, 1903, edition 1 / Page 6
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rHk.ilORNING POST- FRIDAY, JANUARY. 30 1963. i V i i j i n f a i 1 I i r A . 4 I 4' r t ' 5i i ' ? I. : s: 5 1 ' i i U 3 4 i s id i 4i 1 ; ' UNIVERSITY OF ' NORTH CAROLINA Supplemental Rtpirt to Trus lets' by President Verr iblt Growth in All " Dtpartment The board of trustees fthe Univer sity of North Carolina held an Impor tant meeting in the office of Gov, Ay cock, who is ex-offlcio chairman, yes terday at noon. The most notable feature of the meeting was the hearing of a most gratifying and important upplimental report on the University work, submitted by. President Venable. It follows: To the Board of Trustees. gentlemen According to the sug gestion made at your last meeting, a lull report as to the condition of the University has already been placed in your Iiands. Since the publication of that report, the University has suffered a' great . loss in the death of Henry Farrar JUnscott. Professor of Latin. .For six years Professor LJnscott has been connected with the University one year as Instructor and five years m.m professor. Ills scholarly attain ' ments were of a hlrh order and he made a deep Impression upon both students and faculty. During all those years he has served the University faithfully and ' well, cheerfully doing verything in his power for Its "strgthenlng and development. He will be greatly missed In the class-room and in ail that makes up the life of the University. It only remains for me In this sup plementary report to transmit the re ports given by the professors of the various departments rlaned in their charge. It Is gratifying to see that all report growth and increased efficiency in their departments. The Department of Medicine at Chapel Hill has had 75 students in at tendance this session and will be un able to properly instruct a larger number unless increased laboratory and lecture SDace is . furnished for them. The department at Raleigh, in which the last two years of the Medi cal training are given, has opened un der most favorable circumstances. The thoroughly satisfactory manner in which the work has been done this fall Insures the future success of the school and the indications are for an attend ance next session of as many students as can be accommodated. The Dean. Dr. Hubert A. Royster, writes enthu siastically as to the future of the de partment, and I agree with him fully that It Is destined to be one of the most Important in the University. It seems to me that it would be wise, as soon as practicable, to establish in connection with It a Department of Dentistry, and 1 trust this will be done In the near future. " The Department of Law has a 'reg istration of students exceeded only once In its history. As soon as possi ble, considerable additions should be made to the Law Library. More use is made of this collection than of any other section of the General Library. The Department of Phannary has an Increase of about thirty (30) per cent over the largest number previously In attendance. It Is doing excellent work lor the profession in the State. The scientific departments all show that good work is being done. Some 'are overcrowded with students and more room mustbe secured for their work. This Is especially- true ,in the departments of biology and chemistry. In all of them books; charts, models, and apparatus are needed. The character of the work done is shown by the following facts: The Geological Department has sent out within the pat two years eight men who have places In the United States Sol! Survey, and several others who have positions In . mining, economic geological work, or Mate surveys. A large number has been snt out by the Department of Cherrjstry, twelve within the past two years. Since Sep tember, ten applications for trained chemists have been received which could not be filled. The present labora tory affords space for only about twelve men In the highest analytical classes. More space is presslngly needed so that ( more men may be made cmfwy vbgkaadnldeashrdl mfw trained. Our young chemists have made a fine reputation for themselves and the University, and it will not do that any should be deprived of the oppor tunity of securing this training. Some further evidences as to" the character of th work done in these departments may be given. . Thirty four scientific papers have been pub lished from them within the past two years. At the Pittsburg meeting of! the American Chemical Society one-! ninin or a:: tne papers presented cnnie from the laboratory of the University of North Carolina. At the meeting of the Scientific Societies In "Washington. tte University was represented by fourteen delegates and six papers were presented. As a further evidentce. It is gratify ing to know that the Carnegie Institu tion has appropriated 11.000 to aid Pro fessor Duerden in his work upon the corals. The- American Association for the Advancement of the Science has appropriated 1150 to Professor Banker ville for his researches upon Thorium. The National Academy has added 5300 for the same work and th "Welsbach Light Company has presented him wiui preoartions o be used in thl3 work valued at 11.000. These a rtnrn- priations and gifts have been made oecause tn great value of the wnrv- already done was recognized and there was promise of yet more valuable re sults. ' The growing reputation of the Uni versity la these lines draws ustudents to our laboratories, but I am con fronted by this serious difficulty. These laboratories are already congested to a Point which threatens the excellence of the work. I have already pointed out to the Trustees, making the only sug gestion which seemed feasible to me. The present x-hemleal laboratory oot .about 1,000. it was adapted to the v instruction of 150 men. but la not large enough for 367, the present number in the class. In 1900-'01 the number was 233. In lt01-'02. it was SiS. Both the medical and pharmacy departments are dependent upon theehemical. lab oratory for valuable courses In their schemes of Instruction and for the suc cess of these departments it is Impera tive that abundant space and oppor tunity for work be provided in the lab laboratory. If a new laboratory is erected, costing $25,000. the Chemical the Chemical Department can be ac- onmmfviated In it for some lime 10 come. The Department of Biology, in eluding Botany, can be provided for in the present chemical building and the classes in histology, bacteriology, and -physiology- can thjerf have the space at present assigned tothem and in addition is able to make any provis ion for permanent improvements In its Institutions, this money should be ap propriated and-the relief given. Other wise, I am at the end of my resources In providing for the chemical biologi cal and modical students." When I undertook the admin Istra-tlon- of University affairs two and a half years ago. I found the" Alumni Building irx'omplete and -no funds on hand for Its completion. I .have col lected nearly J9.C00 for this purpose? and some subscriptions are still unpaid. This has been r rob ably the hardest task which has fallen to me. The sum collected completes the 138,000 contrib uted by the Alumni for the building. It is very necessary that the installa tion of the department of physics In this building should be furnished. Part of the first floor has been equipped for the purpose, but the basement still re mains untouched. I do not believe that I can successfully appeal to the Alumni for this purpose. They did not propose to do more than place the building at the service of the University and I have exhausted all mrsans known to me of increasing the fund. It will require 13.000 to purchase and install the nec essary physical and electrical appara tus and fit up' the six rooms of the basement as laboratories. Until this Is done, the department is greatly ham pered in its work. The Board of Health recommends that the University secure and utilize certain Fprlngs for Its water supply. This by no means nullifies any work hitherto done upon the water-works, which were wisely planned and eco nomically contsructed. It will proba bly require 11,000 to purchase the right to the water shed and construct the gathering basin and pape line. A sub-l sldlary engine Is needed at the pump ing stattlon. as the present one Is in constant use and any break in It may leave the University without water for weeks, stopping the heating plant and the lighting plant, and causing great risk in case of fire. This engine would cost about 1500. Lastly, the damages awarded the mill owner on account of water withdrawn from the creek by the University, amount to $1,000. I know of no funds from which any 'of these sums may be paid and yet they must be provided from some source. Lastly, the University has been forced to pay Interest on so much of Its appropriation from the State that by March 1st it will amount to nearly $1.20 This has caused a deficit for the year. I am making every effort to keep down the expenses of the University and to collect all that is owing, but unless relief comes from some source, a further curtailment of expenses will be necessary. This means a step back ward o nthe part of the University, which will be most unfortunate to the University and the young men of the State. I don ot think that I could haw foreseen the extraordinary demands which have been made upon the re sources of the University. f The governor was requested to lay before the General Assembly present needs of the university as presented in President Venable's report. about contraction when contraction'", is billties, ito complex to fit well his sim-1 lands 4 of which Uncle Sam recently desirable.', as ..well as .expansion when exnansion is heeded. "Shades of the Commoner ! exclaims, our New rYork contemporary."' "Have -the Democratic members" of the Banking Cotnmittee forgotten Mr. Bryan's repeated denun ciations of a banking currency and his suggestions hat the , - Government should Issue the: paper money of the countryH Evidently y they have -forgotten them or - have decided deliber ately to Imore' them." , - ' :. It is not quie fair, however, to put the responsibility for the atitude of'the Democratic party in this question upon Mr. Bryan's shoulders. In 1900, indeed. It was his Inflexible stand on the Vioncy questlon. coupled with his still unques tioned, pre-eminence in the party, :that put upon the party, the terrible handi cap of a-re-afflrmatlon of the Chicago platform of 189 in all Its parts, and especially- Jn its free-silver feature. But 'Mr. Bryan- . used no compulsion upon the 'Democratic Coven tion of at Chicago; if ks platform ex pressed his personal views, it was be cause his views reflected the feeling of an overwhelming majority of the Con vention. "What:-the. delegates to. thaj Convention said in the" platform, about national banks was not', the .fruit of Bryan's leadership, but of .a prevailing sentiment. "We denounce,", they ' de clared, "the issuance of notes intended to circulate as money by national banks as In derogation of the 1900. the J On the largest of these. Tutulla, he has built a naval station. , . There are about 6000 people on these islands, and about 1000 of them are chil- ple nature. He did not know, and has-took under his care. never learned, the meaning' of It-all. Still puny politicians must keep the black man to the fore. He must keep his tlace in the calendars of current things. , Other Issues may come up. -: dren. , None can overshadow him. He is the? The people .are not black. They are most pernicious and most persistent ! of a gnt brown and yellow complex problem that ever 'stirred the. politics fJon As it is warm there all the time, of any country. I they do not bother, themselves with In the meantime the world should? .. . t- v-'- -. . Imuch clothing. plae his crimesand. the crimes tooj . Americans came to the is- of ten committed against him, the . " " ftV ,mmd tn at while the chil- iypchings, the burnings and all the S T! iid in other unspeakable, shocking offensesTj re" "rc , "M AT" thev knew not to his door, nor at the door of the I the thick tropical woods, they kner white mpn nf th..QM.tw of, fnt-i what an education meam anu the integrity of Caucasian blood, but at the door of ' political .. desperadoes who jarred him out of his naturally do- them were attending school. The children , are intensely curious about the United States, and ask stran- clle and gentle status by giving himjgers all sorts of questions concerning the ballot, and attempting to fit his the great country oi wmcu i J ercMffltTailot 9 " 5 GreensborQ, N. C. We open enr fall season with :rttf Itrjo stock or tp!e acd up S ,s., troplens for suits, overcoats and trousers. A" trial rder solicited. Sitijfactb, guaranteed. ' simple .nature -toy the complex and heavy responsibilities of American cit izenship. - - , FIRST SHOT AT BUNKER HILL "Don't-flre until. you ",sfee th whites of their ,eyes." Every". American school boy knows that "that .was the order at Bunker Hill which "Old PuV' aVid Colo Democratic Convention - did not limit 1 pfe9COtt and eGneral Warren ga-e Itself to the reaffirmation of the Chi cago platform, and , especially, of us silver plank, as demanded by Mr, uryan; ix aaaeu-.oi n un 'Kt-viu antl-natlonal-bank plank, in - which oc curs this declaration: "We.- are op posed t othls private corporation pa per circulated as money, but without legal-tender qualities, and ' demad the retirement of . the national bank notes as fast as Government " paper or silver certificates ran be substituted for them." The change of attitude indicated by the action of the Southern .Democratic Representatives in the Banking Com mittee of the House is. therefore, something much '. more profound and more significant than a breaking away from Bryan influence." The truth isl and it is singular to, what an extent a fact so ! patent is usually ignored that there had .been for many years, indeed one may. say ever since the Civil "War, a preponderant tendency In the Democratic . party toward . unsound money schemes. As far ba.ck as 1868, the first Democratic . Convention after the war adopted -a- platform very strongly tinged with greenbackism; and it "was not until. 1876, when, the powerful influence .of . Tilden stamped a different character upon the party, that it overcame the odium of this po sition. In 1875, in Ohio,'' the memora ble campaign of . Hayes against Allen had been "fought out on the issvfe of fiat money against sound money, and resulted in a decisive victory for the Republican and - sound-money side. In later political history, there has bieen a constant struggle within 'thtf party between the tvvo opposing tendencies, with the numerical preponderance mo3t of the time on the side" favoring un sound experiments, with the currency. Of course, it has. been very, largely a sectional division, with the South and West standing In the main for the one side and the North arid East for the other. 1 The" significance of such a manifes tation as that given by. the minority of the Banking Commltee lies' most of all in the indication It affords that the South is at last coming to look upon money questions not from the stand point of the -Adullamite but of a co equal citizen of a great .and prosper ous commercial and industrial nation. This has at all .times been the case with a strong minority at the South and with a notably large . number of Influential Southern newspapers; still it has been very decidedly the exceD- to the patriots. But one v. man, John Simpson,', of Deerfield; N. rH did fire before that range was' reached, and got hjs man. 'After the-- battle ihe ' was ar rested, but discharged .without court- part now. They call tne uovernor, u is a naval ocer sent out by the Uni ted States, "Tour Susuga," and they speak ' of the President as "His Afi oga." Vr-'" Of all the possessions of the. United States, the TutuIla ' group alone lies south of the equator. Children tnere, loking into the heavens at night, be hold some of the constellations which you see, but' they also see many which you can never see the Couthern Cross and al the starry groups o fthe sides of the Southern Hemisphere, while they miss many which you see every night, such as the Great Bear and the Pleiades.-. -. ' The Vhildren of Tutulia and Manua are forid of singing and reading aloud. As soon .as a child of these islands is old enough to work he leaves school . a a 1 ' . a d v- m , t Jl IAl maruai wnen ne saia:."ii you coum-iei ; dnd goes to help his father colect co those Britishers come any nearer to you i coanuts; the white ' meat of which is i.eports were also presented from the j tion. Now these repreHentatlev South treasurer and bursar of the unlvcr-jern Democrats quietly ignore not mere- jl Mr. Bryan but th! emphatic decla- The following were re-elected on the ! rations of the last two Democratic executive committee: A. B. Andrews, j platforms. In 1WC, under stress of II. H. Battle. F. H. Bushee. J. S. Parr th h?rl tlnA tu. a ,.n - - j --.- . . u . v. uin..', i nv. .uuimii iir ar ii . S. Kenan. R. H. i ment of the South and West rose to J. u. firaham. T. S. Kenan. R !wls, M. IX, Fred Philips. Z. V. Wal sr. Those In attendance upon the meet ing " yesterday were: Governor C B. Aycock. presiding; E. M. Armfield, T. B.il!c3". R. H. Battle. V. S. Bry ant. P. H. Busbee. Josephus Daniels. W. II. Day. 11. A. Doughton. R. M. Furman. J. W. Grahcm, A. W. Hav- wood. F. C. JamtA T. 55. Kenan, R. II. J lewis. P. B. Mea.ra Char. M. Tsmct. Jas. Psrker,' G II. P.ntrerson, M. A. Ramsay. B. Wa:kr, H. Well, also Preside-t V.nabla GETTING RiO .v OF ITS INCUBUS (Baltimore Sun.) Th New York -Journal of Commerce draws attention to the importance of the attitude toward bank currency ex hibited in the report of the Democratic minority of the House Committee on Banking. "We believe," says the re port, "that the banks of the country, under proper and wise legislation, safe guarded so as to secure a sound and roJve.nt currency, are the agents and instrumentalities to Issue the currency of the country and we further believe that the legislation should be so framed as to permit the issuance of an amount of currency at all times adequate and sumcient for the business needs of the country, and which would be retored when not needed for th? transaction of legitimate business." This report was written by a Southern Democrat, Mr. Talbot of South Carolina, atid has been followed up by the introduction, by an other Southern Democrat, and member of the Banking Committee, Mr. Pad gett cf South Carolina, of a bank currency bill which is commended by th? Journal of Commerce as "one of the very best bills on the subject thus far Introduced into Congress." The bin provides that notes baaed on gen eral aeets shall be Issued only to banks having a certain proportion of bond secured notes of the present kind, and provides for a graduated tax on cir culation, the object belnr to hHn- w m its utmost height and overwhelmed all opposition. Xot only has that Hood now receded, but it begins to seem likely that the spirit both of the South and the West in reference to questions of national "monetary and- banking pol icy will, before long, be indistinguish able from that of the Xorth and the Easf. For this consummation if It shall come, the . whole country vi!i have reason to be profoundly thank ful. To the Democratic party it will mean the setting rid of an incubus under which it has been rendered pitia-helpl-MS during the past six years. Tli B?ee of Conttntton , . (New Orleans Times-Democrat.) Why should sectionalism open" its bleared and bloodshot eyes ag'iin? Or.ce It was put awayi-put away in Its bullet-riddled and blood-stained regi mentals. Long since the vines had clnmbered above the broken, shafts of cannon, and" the wrens, nesting in the eaves of the ruined , castle,, had been twittering the song of love, peace and humanlty. The. nation' was restful. Why this sudden rippling of the wa ters?. Is the "black man ever to remain the bone of contention? Who and what is he that he should remain so persist ent Jr to the fore? r than they" were without firing, you are made of different' material than I am." The gun' from .'which 'John" Simpson, afterward . Major. John '. Simpson, . fired the first'Shot In the most famous battle of the Revolution, says the Kansas City Star-,is nowf.iT Kansas City, Kan., in possession of SaVnUel NV Simpson, a grandson 'of the eRVotutlonary soldier. It was only a few days" ago that Mr. Simpson" received 'the gun (which is a perfeet tpye of the old, flintlock mus ket) from his elder brother in eVrmont. Acompanying it was another relic al most, if not. quite, as interesting. TJiis is the original commission issued in the year 1778 in the name of the State of New Hampshire to the "second lieuten ant of Captain Simon Marston's com pany in the Battalion of Troops raised within said State for the defense of the States of New England and New York, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Ste phen Peabody, Esq." : " The . commission, a- feac simile of which Is shown, illustrates thj. Joose political tie that bound the thirteeen States in the early years '6 the war for independence. The. troops in which John Simpson was to' ba a second lieu tenant were raised for the defense of the "States of New England and New Y'ork." They were evidently more than State malitia and leSfs than national soldiery, yet in ciryunction -with the troops raised by the other: Common wealths on their separate account and; collectively through the Continental Coneress they established the Ameri can nation, s The authenticity of tlie commission is proved by. the document itself. lit i3 attenttd by the seaPof the State and signed in authority by the. President and Secrtary of the- Council , of New Hampshire. Notwithstanding that it is yellow by age, the fnk has faded very little, and the whole, wrfclng'Ts" as dis tinct as when it was'first issued. A more romantic Interest. would at tach to the old musket. That it was John Simpson, of Deerfield, N. H.f who fired the first shot at 'the battle of Bun ker Hill is declared in the New Hamp shire Gazetteer of seventy-five years ago, and that statement was the publi cation of the prevalent belief in New England at that time. Other early chrnicles in the possession of Samuel N. Simpson make the same assertion. Major Simpson was ' living , as late as 1S23, and bequeathed the story of the gun along with ,the. relic itself to his son John and his daughter Hannan, who remained on their father's farm near Deerfield Before they died they gave the musket and the commission to a nephew, Dr. Timbthy G. Simpson, grandson of Major Simpson, who is still living in West Fairlee, Vt. Dr. Simp son is 79 years old, and, being without children, sent the heirlooms to his brother. On the death of the latter they will become the property of his sons, Charles L.'and Barnett N. Simp son. The narrative of these interesting me mentoes of the Revolution has ihe further authentication. -of the acount3 of the Samuel N. Simpson who now possesses them. MK Simpson is one of the best known men of Kansas City, Kan. He was a pioneer of Kansas, coming to the state in 1854, and taking an active part in the Free State move ment In close association with Dr. Charles Robinson, the first Governor of the State, to ,whosy efforts, Mr. Simp son believes, more than any other, was owing the Free . State victory. "It is something to inspire patriotic reflection," said. Mr. Simpson, In giving the history of the gun, "that, this old musket that started the firing at Bun-: ker Hill should now be in the posses- drfed and sold to traders under the. name of copra. The children also work at farming ' oh the small plantations where tropical fruits smd vegetables are raised for domestic use. Their , homes mostly are mire huts, set in the clearings of the dense forests or stuck away among the trees, of a grove 6J tropical trees. Afl the boys are good sailors. They begin to go out on the water with their fathers when they are very young, and by the time they are 10 years old they can handle the native boats with great skill and dexterity. Good men Wanted Salaries Guaranteed for One Man in Each County in North Carolina No rman wanted who cannot furnish best references and prove his ability to work. f Men will be placad on salaries and not on commission. , V V & If yoix have a good mind and want to make money, address at once J- LX BOUSHALL, Manager Etna Lif e Ins. Co., Raleigh, N. C. Quality Not Price The bride , (weeping) Oh ! J-Jack, we've got to, j-just got to, give-up-p b-boafding, and glgo to h-house-keep-ing-g. . ' ' ' Hubby Why. lovey, what's the mat ter? ..! . . - ' ; -: The ' Bride Mrs.1 Vorrits has been telling me all afternoon about the trouble she has with cooks, and h didn't have anything to tell her. Harper's Bazar. Is the chief consideration with -j In buying our drugs. Th bst money tm buy ! used in compounding prescription at this tors. . Yon may ta aure of ahras getting what ths doctor prescribe if you boy or us. Tb'jk mioato' and you'll see how important this la, B bBBlTT-WYNNE DRUG CO., S3 Foyettvll Strstt t t . t ' . It ALEIOII, 1. . The Lady How, oh! how can you be always drinking? The Wretch-i-Well, lady, I am blessed, by nature wit a fine" capacity, and den rtiddy practice has done a lot fur me, no doubt, lady. Chicago Daily News. Of Necessity Look for the largest dealers to cpnsume their enormous output and sell to the dealer at a lower price than small factories t?an make them. We represent as directory factory agents several of the largest piano and organ factories in the world, . and our prices on first class instruments are the lowest offered in North Carolina. You will find here! a large and varied stock to select from. No second hand goods offered as new ones. Everything as represented or money refunded. DARNELL cv. THOMAS, RALEIGH, N. C. Jy of Awards at the Pan-America r. Exposition appoint ed to-pass upon the merits of the art.ci xhibited hare pronounced: rpHe Jnderwbb d Vye Fastest, &a Strongest, tShtf Simplest, "Ufta most Complets and the Most Practical Typewrite Mod a wniTEa in iimiii Vor Oataloguft writ to VR. L. LIND5EY, State Agent, PU21HAM. X. . WOLlill Ho Agents . Wanted In Every own. UG' Pat. March 16 and Nov. 9, tSq :' Pat ia Canada Nov. a, 1897. Write For Information And Terms. . , TO SELL THE Non-ispnbus Potato, Squash and Plant-eating Pests Insecticide. HARDWARE on ler RALEIGH, N Let alone, allowed to "move alone the! even tenor of hla unimaginative way, ! sion of a descendant of the man who he is the most jrentle and nicest docile of : used it then 'a' descendant who isa o fall human creature. 1?misH nn citizen of the Renublic. that rsultrl because of grievance, real or.' fictitious, from that battle, and yet lives in a and he Is a fiend incarnate.- What son j great State 200O .,nii!es distant from of the South can recall the faithfulness ' the scene' of the fight formed of terrU and devotion of the black, man to his tory then, owned by Spain." ' master's family during anii. before the ! x Through the efforts of Mr. Simpson war without a-prayer that e may be and his cousin, Mrs. Jerusha L. Chal saved from his friends at the North? man, a granite monument in the Con Jor ZZnnSSZ. ?, Vhe doormat gregational churchyard of Deerfield tZ , 'f lhC war now. marks the grave of Major John h loZt of the American Revo. .uf.IT ha . . ... : lUUOn. .......w ..v. .wum naie siasea nis lire to orotct. ' . v .- And who is to blame for it all? Surely not the poor. . ignorant, mis guided slave of yesterdav. Th dio. honor Is on whiter sklna than his. The MUTUAL LIFE INS, COMPANY Of Philadelphia. ASSETS OVER FIFTY MILLIONS SURPLUS OVER SIX MILLIONS. T:; ; Commenced DoingBusiness In 1'847; in Korth Carolina in 1874. THE BESTJCQMPAN Y FORTHE Lggllgg THEREFOReItHE BEST FOR THE AGrENT. Several Special Cacl.aauf K.moan TTardi (XewYork Sun.) "Almost exactly, in . the middle of the islands sorfnkld firr th ffvutii t- blood is on he hand which; gave him'cific Ocean,to the eastward . of-Aus- the ballot With its Tfimnu r,nn.;. -tiu c ' j- , gents Wanted. IMOST LIBERAL CONTRACTS TO DESERVING MEN Agents can do more business for fHE PENIT than for any other company. Ask its 4,000 policy-holders in Norh Carolina, carrying over seven mil lions of insurance. . ' Gold Bonds, Endowments, Life, Term and all other approved 'policie rates with large guarantees, and annual or deferred dividends.- s at low ' kleneral Agents for North Carol Ir.x. RALEIGH, N. C, 1 3 , 1
The Morning Post (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 30, 1903, edition 1
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