Newspapers / The Chronicle (Wilkesboro, N.C.) / Nov. 26, 1896, edition 1 / Page 2
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m WILKESBOO. N. O. N.tielet, no xrashee. At Balti more a Chinese laundryman who stood by this principle won a case in court. 'J It "will be . a disappointment to a great many persons to learn that Pro fessor Andree has abandoned for this year bis idea of crossing the Arctic regions .in a balloon. The season is too far advanced to jastify an ascen sion. - - The Minneapolis. St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railway has tried the ex periment of letting each locomotive engineer hiro his own fireman, and the plan is said to have worked very well. It i3 now proposed' to let each conductor hire his own-brakeman. It pays to write a successful opera. Hnmperdinck, the composer of "Han sel and Gretel,' who a few years ago was teaching and writing newspaper criticisms, has bought a beautifully situated castle in Germany formerly belonging to the Prince von Waldeck. Illinois is next to Pennsylvania in the production of coal. The mines are in the southern part - of the State, and employ 35,000 men. New labor saving methods are constantly being introduced, one of the latest being the cutting-machine, with which one man can do the work of fifteen. The frailty of the bicycle as a war horse was practically demonstrated at at some volunteer cycling manoeuvres in England recently, states the "Ar gonaut. Divining the route by which the enemy would approach, a skir mishing' party of the defensive force sallied forth with their pockets full of something. Arrived at the road they commenced scientifically to sow the land, or rather the road, with the seed they had brought, again retiring when the work was done. - The enemy on approaching discovered that the land had been cultivated with drawing pins, and the collapsing of tires was so general that the greater part of the corps retired punctured. Damage by lightning is unmistaka bly increasing, according to the direc tor of the statistical . office of Berlin. "Various causes are assigned, such as the employment of electricity in va ions industries, the continual change of form of the earth's surface by de forestation, drainage, etc., and the impurities introduced into the atmos phere by the growing consumption ol coal. Professor Von Bezold some time ago showed that for Bavaria the fires due to lightning increased from a yearly average "of thirty-two in 1833 to 1843 to 132 in 1880 to 1882, while the number of persons struck by light ning and of those killed rose from 134 and eeventy-three respectively in 1855 to 186 and 161 in 1885. An interest ing fact noted is that persons struck generally perceive neither lightning nor thunder, but receive the impres sion of being enveloped by the. Everybody knows that abroad, and especially in France, horseless car riages have been used with entire sue cess, and the long distance trials be tween the capital and Bordeaux have amply demonstrated the fact that the new class of gasoline motors are both practical and efficient. It may not be so well known that our American mechanics are also ac tively engaged upon the problem, but an examination of a recent number of a trade periodical devoted to the in terests of automobile locomotion re veals the astonishing fact that no fewer than thirty-five manufacturers are preparing to place self-propelling carriages upon the market during the coming year. In the same numbed J 1 1 1 -n . "-. I ueeuriueu ana illustrated oven eighty plans for the application o power for street and road propulsion J the various systems, including steam, electricity, both storage and dynamic coiled springs, and oil and gas engines It is true that the recent road trial at Chicago and Yonkers were not rej markably successful, but enough has been accomplished to show that . horseless locomotion is a possibilit in the near future, nnd with the e tension of the good roads system it - . i mi : i . i- a - a certainty, a no remarsaDie advance in bicycle construction, including t use of light seel frames, ball bear in and pneumatic tires, has bee'n an i 'portant factor in bringing about this result, a development almost as in " portant in its bearing upon social cc n ditions as was the invention of the - steam locomotive. And," after all, the steam railway is only sii'ty-five years old, while the trolley is a thing of res terday. .Truly this is the end of century, ; t' . , ; thf f " r CHB01CLE. (DULD WE BUT SES. Could we but see the flowers fair, That bloom around'us everywhere, ' Aod rcifh their perfume fill the air, W would not rush so fast along To mingle with ttie frantic throng '. Tiat crush with wanton haste The "oses by the jsvajf, intent ; On phantom pleasures, not content With present joys by heaven sent ta present And life'f 's best treasures waste. Bat, halting oft beside the way, At fancy's promptings we would stray Where lulling brooks 'mid arbors play j ol daily 'niong the spreading trees; With brow bared to the soothing breeze, fAnd rest awhile and dream 'Keath retrospection's shaded bower In tender blade and budding: flower, ' Of i Cure's book, at noontide's hour, We'd wonder well the theme. Thv s far from all that sears and blights We'd learn to know those pure delights That raise the soul to nobler heights. Tjhus, far from all the blare and noise Of jostling crowd, illusive joys Aud empty honor's quest, E'er pausing oft beside the wav, In ieace we'd journey day by day And at life's end, content, we'd lay Us calmly down to rest -Emile Pickhardt. in Detroit Free Press. COLONEL'SWAUGHTER. GEORGES OHNET. S she entered the room at the Gener al's soirees smiling, fresh, a murmur of admiration went up from the groups of officers crowded in to the doorways. She was followed by her mother, a little over-dressed, as is usuaf with wo men who have al ways lived in the provinces, who 6hpok her white curls with pride as if to feay : "This i9 my daughter," isext came the Colonel of the 123d, pleas ant, modest, intent on keepiDg off the T- e ll. . 1 3 - I trains of the ladies. Scarcely was the girl seated when a platoon of Lieutenants and Captains in their dress uniforms, with mus taches brown and blond, eyes modest or' bold, made an assault upon her list oE dances. There in the dazzling light, to the sound of sweet music, she danced, light and graceful. All were eager to please her. Her desires were commands ; ber caprices, laws. A Colonel's daughter! Well they knew that when the lists for pro motion were made out a careless eulogy from her, as, "Ah ! Lieutenant So-and-So: such a charming officer and delightful waltzer 1" mierht decide i - a career. She was just twenty-two and her lfe had been all gala days, traveling over France with the garrison, with banners flying and bugles sounding. Her mother began to grow impatient; she wanted her daughter to marry. But between the girl and her admirers a formidable barrier arose upon whioh ' i . i i i a as written tne mexoraoie wora, Portionless." And the officers flirt- d, laughed, danced, but never seemed o think of marriage To please the Colonel s, daughter for he sake of present enjoyment was well nougn. o carry matters as far as axriage was another song whose air ot one of them seemed disposed to learn, at least not one wno was re ceived with favor. For about a year tbe girl had had a timid, shrinking ad mirer whom she openly ridiculed af ter the fashion of coquettes. This lover was a large, boyish fel low with'a red mustache and'blue eyes. a native of Lorraine and educated at the Saint-Maxent school. " He had joined the army at the age of eighteen, had been wounded at the battle of Coulmiere, and wore a medal. The other omcers loosed upon him as an inferior because he had not been trained at Saint Cyr. Of peasant par entage, he was robust and sturdy.little inclined to talk, though well informed. Brilliant on the field, he felt out of his element in a drawing room. He scarcely know how to dance. The fear of armeariner lmDOlite had once m duced him to ask the young lady for a - n.... 1 xl rianu Kn r no nun an miTPd nil xue fifmrea of the cotillion by his lack of skill that he never attempted it a sec ond time. He would moro willingly have faced a battery in action than all those mockin? smiles. Hidden in a window recess, for hanra he watched his adored one waltzing with vivacity and grace Sometimes he was bold enougn to ap proach the mother and engage in con versation. This was the extent of his advances. With feelings of bitter envy he saw his comrades hovering around the girl, each trying his best to secure favor. He said to himself: "Some day I shall hear that she is to marry some of these favored ones ; then all will be over." In the desolate silence of his chamber he gave up to his despair. He tried to leason with himself. How foolish he was to even think of this spoiled child of fortune, suited only to luxurious surroundings, one was not intended for a poor officer. But in spite of himself his thoughts J&ew towards her. He saw her in his dreams smiling and whirling in the dance. She seemed to beckon to him with irritating coquetry. He thought. "Who knows: the might accept me I" At the thought his heart beat so fast that he was nearly stifled. At last be could contain himself no longer. His life became unendurable, He went to the Maior. who had always taken an interest in him. and begged him to sound the Colonel on the' bud- ject of marriage with his daughter, Without - making a " formal . proposal. He passed that day on the borders of the bwi&s lBke m the garden at ' Ver sailles, watching the carp jump in the THE J3Y sun, and tne future iooeu very uars before him. ' That evening the Major took him, aside and said briefly ' vMI have seen tho Colonel ; he , was courtesy itself, and here is his answer : Your protege has not a cent ; my daughter has no dowry ; it would be to unite hunger and thirst. He was right. Forget the young lady. If you feel disappointed, console your self with studying military tactics." The tiieutenant thanked him, but he did not try to console himself. As officers were needed to go to Tonquin, he offered his services. The follow ing week he embarked at Brest. And while with a bursting heart he was borne away from France on the heav ing waves of a stormy sea, the young girl, happy and thoughtless, danced jn the bright light, careless of all but hei joy. Two years had passed away. The General still gave brilliant fetes at his elegant home, but the young girl who had formerly turned all heads was seen there no more. The Colonel of t the 123d bad died suddenly, just as he was about to receive his stars. A monotonous life had succeeded the gay one led by his wife and daughter. All the brilliant officers who had hov ered around had disappeared with the pleasure and gayety. The new Colonel also had a wife and daughter ; these new rulers received all the attention, while foz the old ones was reserved the distant bow in the streets, then the sudden passing on. The widow and her daughter ex changed a bitter smile on these occa- sions as tney conunueu meir wuik. They went into the park to enjoy the sunshine of a fine .autumn whioh gilded the marble statues and the turning leaves of the great horse-chestnuts. They sat down, and listening to the military band seemed to see a gleam of their lost happiness. It seemed to them as if nothing had changed, and as if they might hear be hind them any moment the Colonel's voice saying: "Good afternoon, ladies ; to-day the 124th is giving the concert; its music does not equal ours. But the shouts of children playing on the grass near by was the only - 1 4.1. U -,1 THt mnflioi- nrifli sound they heard. The mother, with a sigh, tried to read the paper through classes dimmed by tears, while the daushter oast a longing glance toward her former admirers, whn snareelv knew her now. bne was nearly twenty-five, but her face re fined bv sorrow was more beautiful than ever. She was like a flower re freshed and purified by a storm. Sne had Inst n.11 that had made her so caoricioua and disquieting. Grave and sweet, she seemed to ue doing penance for her past One day she saw a new lace among the officers who promenaded past, emokinsr. chatting and laughing. In -" . - . , i a moment she was transportea to me General's ballroom, and she saw again her timid lover motionless in a corner, devouring her with his eyes. :l HIT1 IT1 lUCi V 13 llUU UlCUlCUautl r I A. I I TTa Raw her too. for he grew pale, and with kepi in hand came up to her. The widow hastily folded ber paper and. pointing to a vacant chair, said, with a kindly smile: "Ah! is that you, Lieutenant? wnat a long time since we have met. We are truly glad to see you. But pardon me ; I called you Lieutenant, out see you nave a miru Binpe uu juur sleeve. Then blushing he related how at the end of a six months campaign he had been promoted to a uaptamcy alter the affair of Nam-Dimh. After that he had been shut up in Tuyen-Quan with his commander. This terrible siege lasted five weeks, and they had to con stantlv beat back the furious Chinese, whose living waves dashed against the wAlU.nf the mined fortress. Me nad ViPn wounded the last day in supreme effort ; then from afar, above thfl olRindr ol tne yellow norues, ne had heard the bugler of the French sounding a deliverance. Oh, the joy of that moment I He saw the enemy flee, the tricolor appear, then he sank down without reuret. His condition appeared eo serious that he was sent back decorated with the cross. During the voyage he had rapidly recovered, and on his arrival he found that ne nad been recom- mended for promotion to the rank of I ir... Tim Indian lia.ATiarl in Rilanoa l luttiui. xug novv ouv. The mother, with her knowledge of the profession, knew that he was ten years in advance of nis former com rades. The daughter looked closely at the young man and found him scarcely recognizable ; his pallor gave him a decidedly distinguished air. Was it possible they had ever dis dained this brave soldier who, paying for his honors with his blood, had re turned to an assured future ! He too looked critically at the girl. Could the serious, reflective woman before him be the frivolous, capricious girl he had once known? She was a thousand times more attractive to him in her new guise. She was all he had ever dreamed Of and he was filled with a wild delight. Their eyes met, and his were filled with such adoration that the girl's lids drooped in em barrassment. When evening came the women arose, and the officer accom panied them to their home. They met regularly in the park on the days that followed. The mother read the papers and the young people talked. As autumn advanced and the yellow leaves covered the. walks it was too chilly to sit, so they promenaded tip and down the deserted park, happy in each other s company. December passed in an intimacy daily growing more tender. Still at times the Captain seemed nervous and worried. " One day, losing his usual self-control, he pressed the girl's arm whjch was passed through his, and the expression of nis ' eyes made lier be lieve that he was about to declare his love. He was silent, however, and fell into a gloomy, meditation. xus agitation increased as r tne new year approached. - He made frequent trina trt Paris and neglected the ladies. Thev feared ther had been deceived as to his intentions, auu wum nu w count for his behavior. At six o'clock on' tne evening ot De cember 31, the: widow sat reading tne papers which contained a list of the promotions in the army. Suddenly she exclaimed : ' " ' ' , ' "Here is nis name, xie nas ueou 1 .!' promoted i w.. At the same moment. - steps were heard in the hall. The door was thrown open and the one so long expected entered the room. " He smiled, flushed with pleasure. He paused be- fnre the two women, xne wiuow biv, extending her hand : "My dear boy, eo tnis is wnat wor ried you so. . In reply ne turnea lowarus mo " and said with loving pride : "Mademoiselle, 1 have a mturenow to offer you. 1 love you. win you be my wife ?" She grew pale at tne rememurauue f w tirst refusal ; then thinking of all this brave boy had done to deserve happiness she went close to mm, laid her head on his shoulder,and with her Hds pressed against the rough galloon so valiantly earned, she wept for joy. -Short Stories. How Coilee Was Discovered. The following is given as the orig inal discovery of coixae: .Near tue middle of the fifteenth century a poor Arab was traveling through Abyssinia, and, finding himself weak and weary from fatigue, he stopped near a grove. Then, being in want of fuel to cook his rice, he cut down a tree which hap pened to be covered with dead berries. His meal Deiog coosed and eaten, toe traveler discovered that the halt- burned berries were very fragrant. He collected a number of these, and, on crushing them with a stone, he found that their aroma increased to a great extent. While wondering at this he accident ally let tall the substance in a can which contained his scanty supply ol water. Lo ! what a miracle ! The al most putrid water was almost instantly purified. He brought it to his lips. It was fresh, agreeable, and in a mo ment after the traveler had so far re covered his strength and energy as to be able to resume his journey. The lucky Arab gathered as ; many berries as he could and, having arrived at Aden, in Arabia, he iuforined the musti of his discovery. That worthy divine was an inveterate opium smok er, who had been suffering for years from the influence of that poisonous drug. He tried an infusion f the roasted btrries, and wa3 so delighted at the recovery of his own vigor that, in gratitude of the-tree, he called it Cahuah, which in Arabia signifies force. San Francisco Chronicle. A Giant Balloon Fish. Who has ever heard of a balloon fish? Not the little, puffing fellows that are so annoying to modest an glers fishing froih a dock or small boat, but a huge monster that plows theseas fat away from land, and one who i3 a worthy compeer of the great unknown and highlyjrespeoted sea ser pent. Captain Slocum, of the sohooner Saladin, oult from Jacmel, Hayti, while in latitude twenty-six degrees north, longitude seventy-five degree? west, descried' tb the eastward an ob ject whioh at first he supposed to be' Lthe wreck of a small vessel. Alter ing his course lie ran down to the supposed wreck, a distance of about five miles. The following extract from the ship's logbook will explain the adve'nture : , Time, 7 :30 jwm., June 4, at 6 a. m.the object was first seen weather murky and at 7 a. m. we came up to it. It proved to be a large and vicious looking sea monster, such as I had never seen or heard of at any time. The body appeared to be about forty feet long and the tail ?bout sixty feet, with forked ends, each fork about four feet long. It had two feet, or fins, not unlike those of a sea serpent. The creature stood about twelve feet high out of the water, and was fully forty feet in breadth." New York Journal. -Facts About Human Life. There are 3064 languages in the world, and its inhabitants profess more than 1000 religions. The num ber of men is about equal to the nnm- ber of, women. The average of life is about thirty-three years. To 1000 persons only one reaches 100 years of life; to every 100 six reach the age of sixty-five, and not more than one in 600 lives to eightv years . There are on the earth 1,000, 000, 000 inhabitants. Of these 33,033,03,3 die "every year, 91,824 every day, 3730 every hour, sixty every minute or one every sec ond. The married are longer-lived than the single, and above all those who observe a sober and industrious conduct. Tall men live longer than short ones.' Women have more chances of life. in their favor previous to fifty years of nge than men have, but fewer afterward. The number of marriages is in the proportion of seventy-five to 1000 individuals. Those born in the spring are generally of a more robust constitution than others. Births are more frequent by night than by day ; also deaths. The number of men cap able of bearing arms is calculated at one-fourth of the population. New Houses Are Damp. Sanitarians give warning that new houses should not be occupied for several months after they are com pleted. There is a large amount of water incorporated with the building materials, and this should be given ample time for evaporation. Ventil ation is imperfect when the walls are filled with moisture. Tbe lack of ven tilation 'and-the .dampness- of such dwellings. are causes of much sickness. PERILS. OF SW0RDF1SHING, VrOU2TXSX OnpENTXJRU - - 02T TECEIR PUESUEES. The Great Fish Sometimes Plorcea Both Uoat and Fisherman In Its Fierce Gush Upon Its Assailant. T7 1 FTE E ST or t w en ty miles out J of the old port of Stoningfeon, CoDn., on the hither edge of cT the Gulf, Stream, is where the Connecticut fishermen go to do battle with the swordfish, whose flesh the world has just begun to prize. It is not by any means a life qf ease and inactivity cruising after these tolitary prowlers of the deep who carry their sabres intheir snouts. It is arduous and perilous, but despsrately fascinat ing work. Far out on the bowsprit of every fishing schooner there is a little iron banded pulpit" where stands the har pooner, weapon in hand, riding up to his fearless game. A swift and accur ate hurl info the monster's side and away he bounds, furious with rage and pain, with a floating keg attached to tne iron dark by fathoms of rope. The vessel sails after him like a tireless hound on the trail of a fox, and the marine hunters have only to keep sight of him until he bas exhausted himself with his mad rashes through the seas. When the time come?, however it may be in half an hour or it maybe twice that time for the plucky, spearsman to deal the finishing stroke 'to the warrior of the deep, then, i ever, hunter and game meet on fairly" equal terms. The harpo oner quits, the vessel in a yawl, armed with axe", club or spear, and pulls hia frail craft to the side of the dying fish. s' It may be that the moribund giant is breathless and really exhausted ; if so, the harpoouer bas only to draw up towhere is meas ured the bulky length upon the surface of the ocean, plunge his sharp spear into heart or brain, ordeal a crushing blow upon the head. But ifthe"big fellow is only feint- ing, there is likely to be trouble. Sulkily and warily, but motionless, he notes the harpooner's advance, and wben the latter has driven his boat to a point not half dozen rods away, suddenly the great fish arouses him self, shakes the letharsry out of hia frame and the brine out of his glim mering eyes and rushes upon his foe like a whirlwind. Barely does he miss his drive, and the fisherman, ia impotent to evade it. The fish cleaves the waves with the speed and fury of i a war horse ; a sudden dip beneath the waves and lo ! he has gone ; but the next instant the oarsman, leaping into the stern of his craft hears a great rush of waters beneath him, and with the sound of ripping timbers a long, slender black rapier is driven through the boat from side to side, Lucky it is, indeed, for the boat man, if he, too, be not in line with the straight, irresistible thrust. If he is, the sharp bone sabre will split him also as swiftly and easily as a cook skewers a chicken. Instances are not wanting in whioh a boatman has had both his legs speared through by the sword of a furious swordfish and himself firmly impalled to the sides of his yawh One Stonington fisherman was cleft in that way two summers ago, and I remember when a hunter of the marine swordsman was spitted in his seat, the boat lance penetrating into his body. Such instances are not uncommon ; the greatest wonder, is that, such is the awful fury of a wounded swordfish, more men are not maimed or slain each season in this perilous sport . of the Atlantic seaboard. A wounded fish seldom attacks a schooner itself but several seasons ago a big fellow drove headlong into' a vessel and his sword entered its walls, protruding several inches into the cabin. The fish, in his angry wrenching to free himself, broke off the end of the blade, v. Swordfish steak is as fine and savory a morsel as can , be gathered in the ocean, and tho demand for it is steadily growing. New York Herald. Eating Slowly. The opinion that hurry in eating is a prolifio cause of dyspepsia is found ed on common observation. The ill results of bolting food have been at tributed to the lack of thorough mas tication and to the incomplete action of the saliva upon the food, thirds of the food which we Two eat ia starch, and starch cannot be utilized jn the system as food, until it has been converted into sugar, and this change is principally effected by the saliva. But there is a third reason why rapid ity of eating interferes with digestion. The presence of the salivary secretion in the stomach acts as a stimulus to the seoretion of the gastric juice. Ir respective of the mechanical function of the teeth, food which goes into the stomach incompletely mingled with saliva passes slowly and imperfectly through the process of stomach diges tion. Therefore, as a sanitary maxim of no mean value, teach , the children to eat slowly, and in giving this in struction by example, the teacherf as well as the pupil, may receive benefit. Troy Times, V Fresli Tfater Eels in Salt Water. Up to recently ihe general opinion of naturalists was that even fresh water eels wouTd only spawn in salt water. An experiment was made four teen years ago of putting eels into three little Alpine lakes without out lets. In two of the Jakes the eels died out, but in the Cauma See they have flourished, although no additions have been made since 1887, some of them being four and a half feet long. The original eels must be nine years old at least, but as there - are . many" young eels of both sexes, the eels must have multiplied in the lake itself. Drug . ' Store. Wllkesboro, N. C. Keep on hand a fall line of Fresh Drugs, Medicines, Oils, Paints, Varnishes and Everything k?pt in a First-Olass Drug Store. Prescriptions Carefully Stors in the Old Steve Johnson Building, just opposite the Court House. Be Sure to Call and See Them. fi. SL STALEY & CO.. DEALER IN D'RILPGS 9 PATENT MEDICENES, - Ti TOBACCO, CKMJiS, Cigarettes, Fancy and ' Toilet Soaps, etc., etc. .v Prescriptions promptly and accur ately filled. Situated in the Brick Hotel Building. LIVERY & FEED STABLES, ft. C- WELLBORN. PROP- Situated on Main Street, east of th Court House. Good horses aBd new to hides of all kinds rdy for the accom modation of the traveling public. Horsei cartful ly fed and attended to. uivi us a trial and see how we feed. A .C. WELLBORN, Thikesboro. - North Carolina. R, N. HACKETT, Attorneys at Law, "WLLKESBORO, N. C. Will practice in the State and Federal Court. - " - . ISAAC C. WELLBORN, Attorney - at - Law, Wlllcenboro, 3NT. O. Will practice in all the courts. Dealer In real estate. Prompt attention paid to eolleetion of r.liima - T. B. Fnmrr. r H. L. Gkkx FINLEY & GREENE Attorneys - at - Law, WILKESBOIIO, N. O. Will practice in all the courts. Col lections a specialty. Real estate sold o ttSDmisalOBU RESTORING OIL WELLS. An Electric heater Designed t? Renew 'the Flov. 1 ,, ... exhaustion of so runny olf wells is tlift" the oil in passing upward through tlio stone, has clogged the '. porous stout with paraffin in such quantities that! the further flow istopped and :1 he well ceases to produee. ; In many oases the supply in thefarth lias ucft pi von -out. shys the Agoof f!teel, but it ouly ceost to flow when the exit is stopiiod. T1h stone through which the oil passes is of n very porous nature, ami as the liquid is in a crude, state, -the "thick matter be comes as dres. settling in the rock near the edge of the bottom of the well. Torpedoes have beon used t f tho.' I ; pt.V'UlV? ill. Hit" wellthus bmiking uj the cloggod mat ter, but this method" is expensive; A new method consist? in lowering a Pe culiarly constructed electric heater into the well. The machine which Is eih,: feet long and uesemblcs an .iron ear'-' ridge, is placed in the .bottom of tin1 . well and the current regulated so than the heater receives just enough to duce an enormous heat without me ing thf mehil. By this ..peculinv con struction; of the earbuu-paclied cham bers the intense heat is radiated abo"': into the rock in all directions. T&i' the paraffin tand other -refuse are soft ened and melted so that they run, a" when the, well is started i fresh flo takes place, just as strong as it & when the well was just sunk. f ' ; Criminology has been exalted into , n special department of science, a, has its authorities, whose statements are received as exact by many men of science and as absured by a large pro t portion of the unscientifio public BBrryBrps., Comprty
The Chronicle (Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 26, 1896, edition 1
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