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SALISBURY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1S69. NO 35 - . i ; n : i . - : f a 1 - - i , THE EXAMINER. PUBLISHED TRI-WEEKLY AND WEEKLY, BY y TEfcks CASH1N ADVANCE. O Trl-tVeeklyyear;" - - - f $5 00 :-" O ?A. ft".'.6:jnonthg, - v - 3 00 , " " 3 months, - 2 0o ,2W.HW .-..;. ' 6 months, - - - 1 25 4- RATES QF, ADVERTISING. Ten linear joy one yichr , space - to constitute square.' .'' "'. '.". ' : One Square; fitet insertion $1 00 ? Each subsequent insertion, 60 Liberal 4eductu3ns made, by special contract, to large adVettiiers; YX A . I f ; T j ; J.Oouitf (wtTertieients- wiI tb jb!rgeI ' 25 per cent, higher than the regular rates. 4 " Special NbTidss jcharged .60 .'per cent, higher than ordinary advertisements. For ferUgementa? inserted irregularly, 25 per "cent, higher than usual rates will be charged. Funef ai7otfceTwill be. charged as adrertise ments':- The simple Announcement of a death or marriage will not be charged. 4 1 Address air'eommu'nicat!on8!to - ,;.....-' f f NUTTALL & STEWART. We offer tlft folio wing mducements to ttose -who will take the-pains-to get up Cluba iand send us, ,the names of Annnfitl Subscribers, 'with the subscription' price" ftlie'Tri-Weeklv Examiner-r$5,00,Tpr the Weekly, $2,00. : CLUB BATES FOR TRI-WEEKLY. Fora Club, of 7 . subscribers to Tri-Weekly Examineia opy lot Ih sjime .wiu.l furnish ed, for one year. j " . For'a Club of -10 subscribers We Will pav: " in en?1 20 "rf 30 60' 4 i 10,00 15,00 25,00 iV aClub of 7 'subscribers to'WeeklEx miner a copyvbf tlife sama'. will be furnished for one year.AV.l'v !i ,;7vAW .V For a Club o 10 subscribers .We will pay r-j in-cash, t 4 , 2,50 l " 15 il ! t) ; ?75 These rates will fra strictly, .adhered to, and th amount promptly paid to any one com plying with them. ' - ', : " " .rT Our Tri-Weekly and ' Weekly-Examiner contains more 'reading matter than any' pa-1 pers of the kind, , published in this part of the (epuatry ftnd the subsQrjptipn price is. much lower.- a : ; . i Good, active, enterprising canvassers can make mdiiev. W.etring up clubs for the Ex aminer r as .well as do much Jfor the g6.od of, the people and country, by aiding , to circu late niucii needed information, sound politi fcal rrinciples, and Well selected' reading mat: xter, calculated aud intended to excrte enter prize, encourage industry, and iye tone, and character to society.-: -(The field is open.and a fair ehance is given to all. Who -will furnish us the first Club ? ! ; v : - - , '' fif The name of "each subscriber should CLUB 1 RATES' FCR WEEKLY.' ' DISTILLING BRANDY. The growers of fruit are in so much doubt and perplexity on the subject of making bran dy, we have thought it proper to publish the law on the subject., Not haying the law itself before us, we have taken from the circular, of a supervisor the following which is no doubt cor rect. '; Such a law operates hard and harshly upon the pe&ple of the Western portion of the State who have small orchards and small stills and have hitherto relied upon them to raise money for the payment of their taxes. The following rules are established for the guidance of officers and all persons proposing to still brandy : ! Supervisor's Office, ' Richmond, !Aug. 1st. 1869. Section 3, Act of July 20, 18G8, provides that the Commissioner of I Internal Revenue may exempt distillers of brandy from apples, peaches or grapes, exclusively, from certain re quirements of the act relating to distillation of spirits.' The following rules are established for the" guidance of officers and all persons pro posing to distil apple brandy! 1st. Every still must be registered on form 26 with the Assistant Assessor of the proper division. 2nd, Each person, before commencing dis tillation, must give notice, on form 27 of his intention to run ; the number of stills propos ed to be used ; the capacity of each still in gal lons ; the ize of the lot on which the distilling is to be carried on ; the kind and character of the building: what kind ot material of fruit is to be used; and an estimate of the gallons of bran dy that can be produced in 21 hours. ANCIENT ANGLO-SAXON MARRIAGE CEREMONIES. By the Anglo-Saxons the bond of matrimo ny was held to be most sacred. No man could lawfully marry without first obtaining the consent of the woman's mundbora, or guardian, who was her father, if living, and if not, some other near relation. If suchcon- Isent was not obtained, the husband was liable to penalties, and he acquired no legal rights over either the wife or her goods. For this consent the lover always paid a mede or price, in the nature of a present, according to the rank of the lady. It was therefore advanta geous to the father that the " spindle-side," or female part of his family, to use Alfred's term, should outnumber the " spear-side," or male members thereof. The parties were sol emnly contracted, and a friend of the bride groom became surety for the woman's good treatment and maintenance. Her dowry was fixed ; and all the relations of both parties within the third degree, were invited to the marriage feast. Each one made some present to the couple ; . and the mundbora gave them arms, furniture, cattle and money. This was called the faderfrum, or father's gift, and was all the fortune that the bridegroom received. On the day oefore the wedding, which gener ally took place within six or eight weeks from the time of the contract, the invited friends of the bridegroom went to his house, where they spent the day in feasting. On the next morning they went armed and on horseback to the house of the bride, under the conduct of the foremost man, to receive her, and con duct to her husband. This martial show was both for compliment and to prevent a rescue, by any former lover. The bride was led by A matron, called the brideswomen, followed by many young women, termed the brides maids, and. attended-by her mundborand be given iri full, with Post; 'Office, County and spirits drd. A special tax ot Sd7 50 trom; August other male relations. On her arrival she was will be required of each jdistiller received by the bridegroom, and solemnly be- "4th. A bond for not less than 85,000, to be trothed by her guardian. The united corn approved by; the Assessor,, must be given in panions then proceeded to the church, at every case. . . . tended by musicians. No marriage was law- 5th. A capacity tax of $2 per day must be ful without the nrenence of the mundbora at paid by each distiller producing the 00 gallons the ceremony, and he gave the bride to the or less each 24 hoare. ; , ; ) bridegroom, saying : "I give her to thee to 6th: Each proof gallon of brandy, before be- be thy honor and thy wife ; to keep thy keys ing removed or consumed, must be inspected and share with thee in thy bed and goods' The and. gjiagel bj a guager, who will mark on each parties received the nuptial benediction from package the number of proof gallons j the name the priest sometimes under a veil or square of the-distiller; the place, (town or county) piece of cloth, called the carecloth, held at where produced ; the date of inspection and each corner by a maij.tp conceal the bride's name of inspector; and also ffiix to each pack- blushes ; .but this was not used whea the bride age a tax paid stamp, denoting the tax, at 50 was a widow.' ' After the benedictibn both of cents per proof gallon. The distiller ' will be the parties were crowned with flowers, which required to pay at least 80 per cent, on the re- were kept in the church for the purpose. . A ported producing capacity as' fixed by the Sur- ring was used at the marriage as well j as at veyor., . - j , r the betrothal. Some authors say that at the 7th Assistant Assessors can b appointed as marriages of the Anglo-Saxon the mundbora g-Q he3jx) be fixed by the Commis- presented the bridegroom witH one of the 8h V a' i ""'f ' I i brides shoes, as a token of the transfer of au- nuTT imTilu.f...f mQ3 gffi Notice of the thoritr ; and she was made to fceltha change charged withper diem tax of 62 for each wort eustaii(las"Bound oath "to use his ing day of 24 hours, until he has mailed a writ- wife well, on failure of which she might leave ten notice to the Assistant Assessor that he has him ; but he was allowed to bestow a moder- ceased running his still or stills. ate castigation upon her. After the marriage 9th. At the end of each month the distiller ceremony all the company returned to the must have all spirits made by him during the bridegroom's house, where was held the wed- month iruasred and inspected: and each pack ding Feast. At nmht the bride was conduct- ae shall have affixed thereon a tax paid stamp ed to her chamber and put to bed by the which must be purchased of jthe Collector, and women, and the bridegroom wa3 in like man must be affixed bv the guager, together with ner attended by the men. The couple both all the marks of brands required in paragraph being in bed, their healths were drank in 6 of these instructions. The distiller must al- their presence by all the company. On the so make a return at the end of each month to next morning, when the bridegroom rose, he the Assistant Assessor, under oath, of the num ber ef packages and gallons sold or removed, and to whom sold or delivered, with the resi dence of the purchaser or receiver of such JUGGERNAUT. THE GREAT UKATII ERN FESTIVAL THE CURIOSITIES OF IDOLIATRY. About this time of the year, tens of thousands of pilgrims arc making their way from all parts uf India, to the shrine of that god which has the power, as they believe, to obliterate the transgression of all who make their offerings to him in person. Jaggernaut, the lord of the world," has been worshipped in the sacred town uf Pooree, in the Southern part of OrUsa, ling about three hundred miles from Calcutta, lor seven hundred years past, and the pilgrims constantly increased in numbers until the year of fatal fainiue, when the. whole country was strewn with the dead. Five years ago the at tention of the English public was called to a celebration in honor of Juggernaunt, within a few miles of Calcutta, at which several natives fell or th row themselves .beneath the car and were crushed to death. Of old, the great fes tivals were never deemed complete unless the triumphant path of the god had been stained with the blood ot his worshippers. But the priests dare not encourage that custom now. U a devotee flings himself down before the idol, the Brahmins cry out that it was an accU dent. The idolitary, however, still cost hun dreds of lives every year. The weak and sickly perish by the wayside, and a cholera epidemic usually breaks out at Pooree when the city is over crowded with pilgrims. The poor crea tures are huddled together in a way which seems almost incredible to the European. The tem ple of Jaugerniuth stands in a large enclosure in the centre of Pooree. There is a Grecian column of black bisalt in front of the princi pal gate, j brought from Kanarok. The god lives in a large tower, and about 640 persons employed to minister to his supposed necessi ties. There is aa attendant who puts the idol to bed every night, another who wakes him, a third whose office it is to put water and a tooth pick comfortably within his reach, a fourth to paint his eyes for him every morning, as if he were a faded beauty, sevetal others to cook and give him his food, one hundred and twentv dancing girls to amuse him in his heavy mo ments, and 3,000 priests to worship him and plunder the pilgrims. All this goe3 on vear after year, while the pilgrims throng every road wnicn ieaas to me snrine. A Terrible Calamity.-A terrible ca lamity occurred in the town of Caldwell, New Jertey, on Sunday evening. A" young man named Stephen Jrierce was waiting home Irom the Methodist Episcopal Church, company with . . i vouocr ladv. when tncy were overtaken py a violent storm, which was preceded and accom panied by thunder and lightning. The entire village was suddenly illuminated with an inwtae iigm, ana nerce ana ma companion leu 10 me ground. The lady was stunned, but she soon recovered, and screamed or help. . When balp rzWx, rr.-Jh- C-r "TfT .7 "T wuo bad accompanied her but mangled remains. His boots were stripped from his feet; his limbs were, severed and lacerated, and the features were not recognizable by those who had known him in life. , The unfortunate young man is said to be the third one of his family who has lost his life by the same cause. lie was about eighteen j'ears of age, and was respected in the neighborhood where he resided. MY WIFE. With what love and respect the good man and worthy husband speaks of that dear crea ture whom God bas'gtTen him fora companion through lire. Note his actions and observe his better half, and yoi will see that her image is reflected in him. I care no bow great a maa he may be; I care not how austere and strong minded he may be ; so that he loves her. 11 er influence is felt every day, and her loving words and feminiue dependence 'exerts a pow er within him that otherwise might have slum bered unknown add forgotteo. In the language or Bulwer, her image glossed in his soul, lures him on to those inspiring toils by which man masters men." Our greatest statesmen, our greatest heroes all amitute their success in life to the potent influence of either a wife or a n.oiher love. Man must have something to love, something to stimulate him and raise him from that state of thraldom in whsch thecires and anxieties of an every day life usually plunge him. " What friend can take a. wife's. place; who but she can administer consolation which is ev. . er free from suspicions, the hope of disinter estedness, other than that of a holy desire and deep anxiety to make you happy? Let all the world forsake and abaudon you; let trials come upon you and calamities befall you, yet iu her presence and loving affection you may alwayi find a harbinger of love, truth and devotion. Men have yearnings for disinterested love. Once convince a man that he is beloved for himself aloni, independent of his wealth, his ncues, anu nis situation, or ot the many advan. ges oi wnicn ne may possess let him sec, I say, that he is loved lor himself, and you make him your slave for life. Such a mm at oiessea with a noble woman for. a wife, is ca pable or performing things that would discour. age him had he not some one to offer him thosft little words of consolation -which lighten th burdens of life. f i Singular Freak-of Nature. The Cou rier b informed by a correspondent that in the upper part of the State there lives a young ex-Confederate soldier, whose leg was ampu tated during the war, near the thigh." After amputation the wouad .ropidly healed, and he was sent home. About . n. vpar afW n. fleshy protuberance was seen to grow out of the flesh, which, in the course of a few months,' took the shape of a foot, and since that time it has been growing finely, until now the man has a perfectly new. foot and leg growing from, his thigh, which, in a year or so, promises to supply the loss of his leg in the first instance. If this be true, it is the most wonderful freak of dame nature that has ever come to our notice. i NUTTALL & STEWART. N I). IIAlilUS, 10th, .Brandy cannot be removed from the distillery premises without it has been guaged and the taxes have been paid. lltb. AH blanks, forms and instructions in gave his bride amorgengabe, or morning gift, which became her separate property, and was the ancient pin money. All the company me to the chamber before the couple rose, 0 hear this gift declared, after which they t feasted again for several day3, until the pro visions were consumed, and then, having made presents to the husband they departed. The wedding dress of the bride, and three of ,.if . WHOLESALE AND CfflffAr RETAIL DEALEB. IS must have the Assistant Assessor mate tne survey required by section 10, Act of July 20, 13th. The capacity of the still will, in! each case,. he determined by actual measurement, by r- ; ?-:.'-.-.-, TTi- t noun? tne numoer oi irauous oi water ic jveroseue uipa auuiuw, quired tQ fiU it Patent fcfmt-JarsJ-'dfcc, &c. &MSSrMI) relation to distillation of brandy should be fur- her maidens, and of the bridegroom and his nished by Assistant Assessors." attendants, were ot a peculiar iasnion ana 12th. Every distiller, betore commencing, color, ana migm not oe worn on any oiiicr occasion, ihese dresses were at hrst tue per quisites of the musicians who attended the marriage, but in later times they were given to some church or abbey. r , 8tort ppppsijf tansipn ouse, Salisbury, .If.-C. jJ firODl ;s J THE CBUST OF THE EARTH. If we bury a thermometer fifty feet below the surface of the earth, the murcury will re main at the same point the year round, in winter and summer, showing that the influence ot the ' D R .'GO DDIN'S COMPOUND ur I . GENTIAN BITTERS Cures Chills and Fever, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Colic, Sick Stomach, Bronchitis, ABthma, JfearalgiaBeumatiswi, &c . r A UNIVERSAL TONIC ( i i. sur, satiand reliable preveritfve and cure for U Ma'arial diseases, and all diseases requiring creneral tome lmDression. ' - '-- 1 v Prennred onlv bv Da. N. A. II. GODDIN and for 1 4 - . . , ., JAMES T.' WIGGINS, Sueeeasor to'J. fl.5 Baker iS Co.) Proprietary Agent and Wholeeale deaier in Patent Medicines, Norfolk Virginia. - 14th. As a rule a 100 galloon still is held to have a producing capacity of 35 gallons of proof brandy in 24 hours, and will be charged in ont? ovunt with Xft rr Mtif. nr 2S crallons Ctax 14) for each 24 hours a still supposed to sun des not at all reach below that depth. If De run. inis estimate anows percent. ior " '" .," . " boiling and is based on the assumption that mercury will rise one degree, and will ne in the only 80 gallons, can be boiled in a still hold same ratio for every fifty feet we go down. It J . . ' t - . j, .mi .. . i.- nnn ha aacilv n 1 ii la tori nt uhat nonlh nl: knntrn 1UU gallons, and mat tne sun can De run v Ti i seven times in 24 hours; and that a charge substances will melt I his would not exceed of law wines can be run in the same time as a n"y nines, xi wi i tnus oe seen u.at u e cru char-e of cider, and that 13 gallons of cider or sohd part of th earth is exceedly thin, will produce one gallon ot brandy. " proportion to the diameter; not so thtck as 15th A still of 80 gallons will produce 8 10 an egg shell, m proportion to the size of the as much as one of 100 : one of 60 gallons G 10 egg. With a crust so thin, constantly cooling as much; one of 40 gallons 4 10 as much; and producing a pressure upon the internal and 80 per cent, with which the distiller will masses, it is not strange that the bed of oce.-.n . i i tii 1. n.ti cVirnli1 a aorrfitnA anil fnrm Arxr liinil fitul fnn. in any case wniie running, De wun win ue --j o..v. -j --- gallons on an 80 gallon still ; 17 gallons on a GO tinents should sink and form the beds of ocean. jjai LLIKJ Li uiaiuc uai v v. ij v a u au oiii- 102 out I WHO TOLD THE XVS. It may not be known when and where and how Jefferson Davis heard of the surrender of Gen. Lee. On Saturday, the 7th of April, 1865 the Commandant of the Post at Dan ville sent for Capt, W. IV Graves of that place and told him that Mr. Davis wished him to bear dispatches to Gen. Lee's army. Capt. G. was soon in the saddle and speeding his way to wards th direction of the army. Many a stout heart as it found itself intercepted at every point by the enemy would have turned back, but with his usual dash the Captain flanked I every Yankee outpost anu rcacneu our lines just as Gen. Lee was surrendering his army. He immediately remounted and dashed for Dan: ville where he arrived on Monday about 2 p. m. THE INTERVIEW. . ' The President had hU quarters in a dwelling house on Wilson street an old brick bui'ding known as "the Benedick Place." Tothis house Capt. G. lepaired as soon as he reached Din ville. Mr. Davis was at dinner. Put he left the table and awaited Capt. G. in his reception room. As the Captain told the sad news Mr. Davis bowed his head on his hands and heard him through without uttering a word. He was thinking maybe praying. Then raising his h ad he said, " Captain, you tnu?t come in and have some dinner. This, we are told by Capt. G., was ail that was said.-o3ro;72fCorifr. look lor ItoneCty or probity among the acf- " xxiiniBtratiye o&cers of this countnr, and if modern Diogenes to start out . some fair day and take his lantern through every de partmenfc of affairs at .."ashiugtori city he would be as badly disappointed, we opine, &3S on a certain memorable occasion of old. There are few, men who have sat in -any ad. ininistrative chair, since the close of the war whose skirts are clean and pure, the latest against whom charges of corruption have been brought 'being the doughty Bout we 11 himself a"hd would-be futuro President of the United States. What these charges will amount to remains yet to be seen. T17. Journal. apr28-U-Iy D. T. CARUAWAY, AND DfiAtEE ritf 1 GROCERIES; PROVIS IONS, HARDWARE, GLASS -AND , - : CROCKERY .WARE, .' W A L L ; ; u i P A'P E R , W INDOW r v SH ADES, &C. lOROkPT attention ? given o orders, and to the 8ae,oft0otWi, tJrain, KaVaf Stores, Tobacco, pried Fruit, 'oa Conmissl6nJ ' Court Sotuae Biiilciiiae. ftilr . i - NEW BERN, N. C dk;; cs! iheerson, rvrMri! nTf ' I NKIS STREET, near Ennia Ut i-.av" ! Drug. Stores . afp0vtr&wly v ; - t v rri 1 lrn and 11 rvollnn 1J. o-allnna nn a nO fcu"u" - ft O I. . -ii, .... I 1 . 1 XoiinnJ nn a 40 aallnn still, i aay, ana wnoie cities nave oeen suns in me i -1.1 li-on m onn.iA aP i m A HT V a ctAt rf 0 VTfAft f I A 16th. If more than one sua is usea, tne pro- f- ut V"1- xuo V ". Anncr oan tv must he found in each case mountain once urose away, auu ujc uviu iuas- in the same wav. and the distiller mut be sea flowed out, forming a river 12 mi.es wide, charged with the full production, which in no case must be less than 80 jer cent, of the pro ducing capacity of each,till used. c 17th. Uthcers-must De vigilant in eijiorcing these requirements in their respective districts and divisions. " L : 4 L ' ' 18th. Anv nerson running a still . . V ; . . . w . which in its course melted down six hills six hundred feet high, filling up valleys six hun dred feet deep and spreading over a surface of eleven hundred square miles. On Pit. We learn from a letter written by a gentleman now in New York, that Andrew Jackson Jones, Eq., President of the West ern Railroad, in the metropolis attending to the matter of selling the bonds subset ibed by the State to his road ; and that furthermore, he is now incubating a political scheme, which he proposes to put iuto effect upon his return, by he establishment ot a newspaDer in this Con- gressional District, which has in view the over throw of General Abbott's political fortunes the elevation of Gov. Ifolden to the U. S. Sen atorship, the election of lion. O. II. Dockery to the Gubernatorial chair of rsortq Carolina, A Nut to Crack. If the reduced tax of without three fourths on whiskev. or from S2 to 50 cents payment of special tax, or . wtthout compliance a gallon, increased the revenue from $13,000.- with law and the regulation in relation to d is- 000 to 813,800,000 in one vear. what mav not tilling brandy, is liable td a fine of not less than be expected from lower rates of taxes on other $i,vvv,ana to imprisonment not less man six articles? liigh taxes lead both direct and in months, and to the forfeiture of the distilling apparatus and the distilling premises. Snake Bit. -John Smith owned a dog and Last week the do was bitten by a a calf, snake, in less dog got well.' John swears this h no lie, but tne naiteu iruiu. y umicuiur. The dog afterwards bit the calf, and than an hour the! calf died end the direct frauds upon the revenue. They drive nonest men out oi Dusmess, as the tobacco tax did by the hundred during the first years of its imposition, and leave trade and the market un der the control of dishonest officials and deal ers. N. Y. Expres. The house and store rents paid. in London annually are estimated at 8100,000,000: Can 8ucii TniNos nn, Canby? Under this heading, the New York Herald thus scathingly ajoetrophiscsthe " upright judge," the present military despot of Virginia: " While the deiot of France h opening the prison doors to political offender?, and grant ing u n i versa! am n m ty to other cla sses of pri soners, can it be that you; Canbyv in this freo republic, have the conscience to insist upon the rigid application of a form of oath giv ing your own interpretation thereto, by the? way that was onlv intended for operation at a certain critical period, now long since passed and gone? "Verily, there seems to be more justice "and moderation in imperial France than in republican Virginia under thy rule, Canbv ? o The Cotton Crop. We learn from dpt. Wootcn that the cotton along the Pee Deo and in that section is opening rapid I v. and 'that there is an abundant prcnject of a good yield. It is, in fact, opening faster in the Lolls than the hands can pick it out. The cotton of that section should properly come to Wilmington as the legitimate channel of trade, and we trust that the railroad bridge over the Pee D'e will b completed in time to reach the bulk of the crop. Journal. o A Magistrate wno ! Cax't write his Name. There actually qualified before the County 0mmiioner.sThur-i lay a negro mag istrate who can't write his name, and was compelled to atfix " hi mark" to the qualifi cation oath. Ilis name is George Page, elect ed for Holly township during tne recent elec tion. He will have a fine time matins out warrants ; and still he U al.ooneof the Trus tees for the township. Wtl. Journal. O ; A Niagira letter writer declares that if the cannibals are not less demnnstrativeof their de- ire to fatten upon their, visitors than the in and the occupation by himself of a seat in the hitanta of Niagara, he; shall I disappointed Federal House of Representatives. ' This will be sad news to the carpet-baggers. layetlt vilU Eaglz. Should not be surprised if there is somsthing in the above, for the Governor has been going down to the Standard office every day lately. He Is working up some scheme. Sentinel. . Gen. Schouler, of Massachusetts, io a pri vate lett r. says that if the liquor law is carried out to the end as it has begun, the Germans in J serviency which these sons of Mara have giv- in them. He took a stroll, and returned to bis hotel with the conviction that every boose was a custom house, every gate a toll gate every man a back man insisting that he should take : his hack, every boy a bootblack, insisting that he would black his boots, and every woman a siren ringing him into her shop. ... o- ! Senatorial Aspirants. It is said that Canby, in Virginia, and Reynolds, in Texat are both candidates for Senatorial dignitr, from th'oe respective States. The'blind sut- Boston. who have as an almost universal thing heretofore voted the republican ticket, will change front and stand like a wall of adamant against the party. j ' en to the corruct policy of a corrupt Congress certainly entitles them to a eat among the present immaculate body of Senator.-; Wil. Journal. . . ,
The Tri-Weekly Examiner (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 25, 1869, edition 1
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