Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Feb. 7, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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7 ADVERTISING IS TO BUSINESS u I: ThAM IS TO- Macliinery, IF YOU ARE HUSTLER uVKf;nr TiM'8 Business. EMOC A RAT. (- jk TiiAT(;KiT I-i:oi-:-:i.!TNf; Power. (. I t i I ill . ...,.. i( ( ! ertist-ment about THE DEMOCRAT, 1 . . 1 n .- -1 -. r u oil S07ESSI01TAL. v o MCDOWELL, :;, North corner New Hotel; Main Street. ;m OTI.VNO NkCK, X. C. Ww'.w-, at his office when not .fcf,.-i,,n;iHv engaged elsewhere. " 9 20 lv II. I KANK WHITEHEAD, X.rth corner New Hotel, Main Street. SfoTi.ANn Nkck, N. C. Always found at his office when "professionally engaged elsewhere. 7 C 1 v U. A. C. LIVI-RMOX, (-)H irl.;()ver J. I- Buy's store ,;!ire hours from '' to 1 o'clock; 2 to , 'c!..ck, p. in. - 12 ly SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. avid iu:ll, Attorney at Law, EXFIELD, N. C. Pnicfices in all the Courts of Hali f.iv. ji ad adjoining counties and in the Siij.reuie :uid Federal Courts. Claims roilccted in all parts of the State. 3 8 1v liV, A- "!'NX- A T T O R X E Y-A T-L A W. SCOTLAND Nkck, N. C. IVaetices wherever his services are v nil red. 2 13 ly oseph Christian. P. St. Geo. Barraud. . i'i judge Supreme ) ( 'ourt of Appeals of Virginia. ) iIIKISTIAN BARRAUD, J A TTORNE VS-A T-L A TP, Will practice in all the Courts, State ual Federal, in tlie city of Richmond. h'i, r Rnmil 10, Ch'thllx r of CuiiDllCrCC JiuiliJiixj, i : iv RICHMOND, VA. 0 K. W. .1. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, En ri eld, N. C. CMlice over Harrison's Drug Store. 2 7 .." ly mm mm FnrXD CREAT 11 E LIEF FROM L)MNLV AND OVERWORK HY THE USE OF TRADE MA1 IT WILL CFRE YOU INFORM ATI ON FREE. FOR SALE OR REN'T. A ( ! V. XTS WANTED. Jno. N. Webb, Late Manager. Atlantic Elec. Co. -11 tli St. Washington. D. C. 1 10 lm -. EV, ewelrv After six years experieu'e, 1 feel thor oughly competent to do all work that is expected of a WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. WATCHMAKER ash JEWELER. Store Koimirin k Timing Fine Watches A SI'KCIALTY 1 alo carry a full line of WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, VESICAL INSTR-JMENTlA AND FANCY GOODS. Spectacles and X. Eye Classes Properly l tl Fitted to the Eye. Z. hM 5??nj Michins THE REST ON EARTH. sFAVLr; MACHINES CLEANED AND REPAIRED. SATISFACTION" GUARANTEED. IF. Jr. JOHNSTON, At to HoM, next door to entrance. 10 6 6m. E. E. MILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XI. a Is called tlio "lather of DL-eascs." It is caused y a Torpid Liver, vnd is generally accompanied with LOSS Gf PFET!T. SICK HEADACHE, BAD BREATH, Etc. To treat coiisn r.ln r. successfully It is a mild laxative ioul a tonic to the digestive organs. Bv talking Simmons Liver llegulnor you promote- digestion, bring u a rog-(il-jr hal.iit of body Mid p-re von ;iiiouiiiO-;3 er.ul I;licstion. "My wife v?. sorely '!t.s?ic'-?ci v.-ii'i (Jonstipa tion ui.'i courjhir.g, foliowcl wii'n 'if.-'ji'i;; Tiles. A'tor ioor inc.-uh:, us: ..f il.l:ns I i vcr Regulator sir s airaobc cut irly rtlicvu-J, i;3i.iiug stri;jtU a.i.!(t.h." V.r. i. LEiifKK, DUuwi-rc, Oiiiu. Tn-ij only the lianuiiie. 'A'likh I::,, on tle Wrapper the rcJ 23 Tndc ciurk Signature of J. 11. ZK1I.2N & CO. YOU HAD BETTER JEST GO SLOW. When everything's a-hummin', And the town s a-goin wild When a fortune seem's a-comin' To every wayward child ; When every man's a tryin' To make the biggest show : Keek a-sellin' and a-buym', Rut you better jest go slow. When real estate's a-boomin', And the.'rices goin' high When everything's adoomin',1 Away up towards the sky ; When 'the corner lots are goin' As sich lots can onlv go I'm a-sayin' and I'm a-knowin', You had better jest go slow. When the auctioneer's a-crvin' And the dirt's a-goin' fast, And the people are a-buyin' Like they thought it woulda tlast, Then it's proper, I'm a-sayin', To be l'in' sorter low Let the band keep on a-playin', Rut you better jest go slow. When a feller's talkin' slicker Than the movements of an eel, 'Rout a way to get rich qmcuer Than to rob or find or steal, You'd better jest keep walkin' In the way you ust to go Let 'im kill 'imself a-tallan', But you'd better jest go slow. When the people are a-rakin' For the money here and there, And so many nigh cuts takin', And some not a-totin' fair ; When the whole town seems a-goin' Where they have no ice or snow ''Down brakes" keep on a-blovm 'Cause you'd better jest go slow. There's but one way I'm a-knowin'. But it's reg'lar and it's shore, And's the way that I'm a-goin', Whether rich or whether pore ; Then at night it's easy sleepin', And your conscience stands a show, When the Golden Rule you're keepin' And a-goin' sorter slow. Words cf "Wisdom. Il mi's J lorn. You can generally tell how much love there is in a man's heart by the way he opens his mouth. Prospering in a wordly way is very apt to make men stop praying that they may be pure in heart. There are people who never hear any music that suits them, except when the are playing first fiddle. One ot the first covenants that every young man ought to make with himself is that he will never run in debt. Every sin has a dagger in its hand with w hich sooner or later it will strike, no matter how harmless it may look. The Discovery Saved his Life. Mr. G. Caillouette, Druggist, Beav ersville, 111., says : "To Dr. King's New Discovery I owe my life. Was taken with La Grippe and tried all the physi cians for miles about, but of no avail and was given up and told I could not liye. Having Dr. King's New Discov ery in my store I sent ior a bottle and began its use and from the first doe began to get better, and after using three bottles was up and about again It is worth its weight in gold. We won't keep store or house without it," Get a free trial at E. T. Whitehead & Co.'a Drug Store. Q I CONCENTRATED u R For Burns. Seal ds.Cuts. Wounds. Sprains, Old bores, Ulcers, , . i Hun -Hounds, QURATOL Bone Felons, ' Inflammatory Swellings, Ringworm, Boils, Face Eruptions, DrUgglStS S8!l It 50 CentS. I I zema. Fever Blister., InflameH Tonsils. Sora throat, Sore Mouth and ALL INFLAMMATION. SCOTLAND NECK N. C, THURSDAY, EULOGIES ON VANCE. ELOQUENT TBIBUTZS To the Eloquent Dead. In the United States Senate a few days ago eulogies were pronounced on the late Senator Vance. His colleague. Senator Ransom, and his successor, Senator Jams, were the principal speakers. The tributes to the great Vance were touching and fitting such a life as his. We give the closing par agraphs of each. HV SENATOR RANSOM. He has gone. His massive and ma jestic form, his full, flowing white locks, his playful, twinkling eye, his calm homelike face, his indescribable voice have left us forever. He still lives in our hearts. The great Mirabeau in his dying moments asked for music and fur flowers, and for perfumes to cheer and brighten his mortal eclipse. Vance died blessed with the fragrance of sweetest affections, consecrated by the holiest love, embalmed in the tears and sorrows of a noble people. The last sounds that struck his ear were the echoes ot their applauses and gratitude, and his eyes closed with the light of Christian promise beaming upon his soul. On the night of the 10th ot April last we took his casket from these walls. We bgre it across the Fotomac through the bosom of Virginia, close by the grave of Washington, almost in sight tombs of Jefferson and Madison, over the Jamei, over the North and the South Roanoke, over he unknown border line of the sister States to the sad heart of his mother State. The night was beautiful. The white stars shed their hallowed radiance upon earth and sky. The serenitj7 was lovely. The whole heavens almost eeemed a happy reunion of the constellations. With the first light of day the people, singly, in groups, in companies, in crowds, in multitudes, met us every where along the way both sexes all ages all races all classes and condi tions. Their sorrow was like the gath ering clouds in morning, ready to drop every moment m showers. We carried nim to the State House in Kaleigh, the scene of his greatest trials and grandest triumphs ; the heart of the State melted over her dead son. Her brightest jewel had been taken away ! We left Raleigh in the evening, and passing over the Neuse, over the Yadkin, over the Catawba, up to the summit of the Blue Ridge, we placed the urn with its noble dust on the brow of his own mountain, the mountain he loved so well. There ho sleeps in peace and honor. On that exalted spot tne willow and the cypress, emblems of sorrow and mourning, cannot grow, but the bav and the laurel, the trees of fame, will there flourish and bloom in perpetual beauty and glory. There will his great spirit like an eternal sen tinel of liberty and truth keep watch over his people. Senators, I feel how unable I have been to perform this sacred duty. It would have been one of the supreme joys of my life to have done justice to the life and character of this great and good man. to have enshrined his mem ory in eloquence like his own. But whatever may have been the faults of these words, I have spoken from a heart full of sorrow for his death, and throb bing with admiration and pride for his virtues. BY SENATOR JAKVIS. In that section of the State where he was born, and where his body now rests, there are many grand and lofty moun tains standing upon their eternal base and lifting their heads into the very clouds. Some are three, some four, some five, and some more than six thousand feet high. Any ;;2 of them serves as a guide to the traveler and impresses him with its grandeur and greatness. But there is one that towers high above then. all. Mount Mitchell stands out boldly as the great centre of attraction, and it is to this that people always turn when they wish to gaze upon the perfection and consummation of great mountain scenery in a'l its magnificence and sublimity. So in North Carolina we have had 'EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. great men, any one-of whom wa and is! an honor to the State, -nd of whom 1 our i-eople have been ar.d still are jutly proud : but it is no disparagement to! those to say that Zebulon Buird Vance was the Mount Mitchell of all our great men, and that in the atTectious and love of the ieop!e he towered above them all. As aires to come will nut le ab'e to mar the grandeur and greatness of Mount Mitchell so they will not be able to efface irom the hearts and mind- of the jeople the name and memory of their beloved Vance. In the days of his toils and labors when fatigue and weariness came upon him, lie was fond of retiring to his na tive mountains, and there beneath their shadows, he found rest and restoration. When his life-work was done it was meet and proper that his body should be laid to rest at the feet of these same mountains. Shall his holy again be restored? Is death an eternal -leep, or is it rest to the body, which in God's own appointed time shall come forth again restored and re-united with the immortal soul ? This man was not too great to accept the teachings of the Christian religion. He believed in the immortality of the soul and the resurrection of the body. He was a great student of the Bible, and but few were more conversant with the Scriptures than was he. He obeyed its precepts and seized upon its prom ises. It was in this faith that he passed from time to eternity. And oh, Mr. President, what a comfort it is to know that our friends die in such a faith. Hov insignificant human greatness becomes in the presence ot death or any great manifestations of divine power. Man, isolated and alone is but a tiny atom in the created universe. In the busy hustle of life, with !u" ;:ionds and fellows shouting his praise, man feels his importance and his power ; but let him stand out alone in the dread dark ness of night vhen the heavens are black and angry, or when the earth quakes and trembles, and then how utterly helpless and dependent he be comes. It is in such times as these, as well as in the still more trying ordeal when he enters alone, as he must do, the dark valley and shadow of death, that a man is ready to acknowledge his nothingness and to cry out to an invis ible power for help. Oh, what a blessing it is in an horn like that to feel that He who created the worlds and controls all the forces of nature has us in His keeping, and, like a loving father, doth care for us and guide us. Our dead friend had that blessing. While in the sunshine and vigor of life he complied with tlm con ditions set out in the Bible upon which he could have the love and companion ship of his Heavenly Father when the storm came and death claimed him as his own. Shall Ave see him again? May God, in His infinite mercy, receive us with him into His Kingdom above. Ecn'-t "be a GrumToler. Greenville Reflector. What a happy world it would be if all discontent were thrown out. Many young people complain about their work, that It is menial and beneath persons of their talents and training, where all honorable work is ennobling. Ambitions are best realized by the faithful " performance of the present duty, however humble it may be. The doing of a lowly service may be the best, which the employer uses for bring ing out the strength of his employe. Generally an employer will see to it that '-he that ia faithful in that which is least"' has the opportunity to become "faithful also in much' A life spent in brushing and washing crockery and sweeping Uoors a life which the proud of the earth would have treated as the dust under their feet ; a life spent at the clerk's desk ; a life spent in the narrow shop : a life pent in the labor er's hut may yet be a life so ennobled by God's loving mercy that for the sake of it a king might gladly yield his crown. Never stand still in cold weather, es pecially after having taken a slight degree of exercise, and always avoid standing on ice or snow, or where the Xerson is exposed to cold wind. FEBRUARY 7, 1895. nmGC2A?n:3 baths. A ilOt TwClH FcllOXeCL t7 2 Ccli PlgS Prelects the Svstein. Baths should J largely regulated hy pernal experience a to what i bene ficial and what is not. However, it if well for every one to know .-ome funer al truths for instance, that a cold bath H not cleansing, and that an unmodified hot one predisposes the bather to cold ; and again that a tepid plunge is a hojeful bid for a headache. What then? What now, when it is a recognized and necessary mark of a lady to take a full bath every df.y, though our very wie grandmother did nothing of the kind? Well, unless you have a personal, physical idiosyncracy in their favor you had better drop the tepid bath from your list. It is much used, but it is not useful. Take hot aud cold baths combined and cold ones alone frequently. A hot bath, as hot a it can be borne, is very luxurious, ve y cleansing, and very refreshing, but ;.o one should stay ill it longer than tC e or eight minutes. Then a quick co! I sponge or spray removes all danger of taking cold. If you think this pounds severe It only shows you don't know. A cold sponge after a tepid bath is a terrible shock, but when you are just out of a very hot bath there u no shock about it. It is delight fuflv re freshing. We have been learning the joy of hot bath from the Japanese, luit be fore the Japanese became so fashiona ble Mrs. Langtry did much to start ac tresses on a course of hot baths, for to them she attributed (and attributes) her success in preserving her looks. Such f bath asthis, with plenty of soap, and a bath brush, taken every other uay, leaves one free to take a cold plunge on the day between with a good conscience. That is the greatest safe guard against colds and pneumonia in the world. It the bather is very deli cate the plunge can be exchanged for a quick cold sponge, but generally the plunge is the less shock of the two. Again, any approach to the tepid con dition makes the bath very chilling, very trying. The water should be really cold ; the bath literally a dip, and nothing more, in the tub. Neces sary "scrubbing" can be gone through on the feet. In this way the glowing reaction comes so quickly that there is no chill whatever. Violet Heakne. A Timely Epitaph. Ram's Horn. Some one has reported the following quaint epitaph from a Welch grave yard. It was composed in honor of a departed watchmaker and written on his tombstone. Here lies, in a horizontal position, the outside case of George Rutleigh, watchmaker, whose abilities ' in that line were an honor to his profession. Integrity was the mainspring and pru dence the regulator of all the actions of his life. Humane, honest, and in dustrious, his hands never stopped until he had relieved distresses. He had the art of disposing of his time in such a way that he never went wrong, except when set going by jhersons who did not know his key, and even then was easily set right again. He departed this life Decern her 4, 181 1, wound up in the hope of being taken in hand bv his Master, thoroughly cleaned, regulated, and repaired, and set agoing in the world to come. Cure Fcr Headache. As a remedy for all forms of Head ache Electric Bitters has proved to be the very le-t. It effects a iermanent cure and the most dreaded habitual sick headaches vield to its influence, We urge all who are atrlicted to pro cure a bottle, and give this remedr a fair trial. In cases of habitual consti pation electric bitters cures by giving the needed tone to the bowels, and few- cases long resist the use of this medi cine. Try it once. Large bottles only fifty cents at E. T. Whitehead & Cos Drug store. SUBSCRIPTION PKICK Ji.oo. NO. 9. Larger, irzet z tho Trr'.i Itrfr'n ".si ? V,.i.4V, Wji!toit P .ir.t. bms I-V.id. ! ermnt'i.t !atim e mnianJM by !.: ; tenant !onel 1$ Y. Kin?, and t,t- a is that CHgtmfnng ft;icerx . I the I'taJ rl State Ariav pet tneir jvth;nj; !. Khctricity m much r do to-d with the protivnon of lan 1 ppnAhc by means of torjol Atd an em-mv' ship- are to 1 hlonti to atom the help of fubm i:i: e !. that elovsnv i tv inav t .aid to l-e always on tap ."t Willetta Point. Col. King having handy a lar-e can r.on weighing ,"o.nh jwain-is Mud quantily of old tor .! wire. took, four teen mile of the wire. -oi!ed it around one of his gui.t, and pa...,! c!cvtti'!t through the wire by means of a pmcr- ful dynamo. At once an immediate magnetic force whs dee!oi-ed. You iray hao seen a little hor-dioe mag net, and how several steel j-eni- may ) made to hang from it. Thi bir mag net doe this same thing with fse can non balls which represent a down-pull ot l.o'J.") pounds. They hang together, one over the other, by an area of sur face which can le theoretically, but a point. At first, for eomenience' ake, in lifting heavy weights an iron pulley with a quarter-inch chain wa Used, but when the gun was a magneticchain aud pulley we re of no use. The chain le came as rigid as if it had lH')i a bar of iolid steel and rivited to the gun. I saw a man stand at a distance of some three feet irom the gun, and put ting an iron spike against hi. hre.it, the spike would stand out straight, a if he were a magnet. Then he cowred his chest with iron fpikes like a porcu pine. A heavy piece of railroad iron, weigh ing fully fifty pounds, when pished in to the muzzle of the cannon, was shoved out a certain distance and then drawn back by the magnetic force. The sol diers who work the magnet derive some amusement from the gun. When they see a green man, they say to him. "Blllio, jut hand us that crowbar lean ing against the gun." Billie, anxious to help, tries to take the crowbar, and linds that he cannot budge it, pull, haul, or strain all he may. It requires the efforts of two men, with a sudden jerk, to pull away from the gun an iron bar weighing about twenty-live pounds. This gun was mounted on a great iron carriage fully twenty feet long. The whole crriage was magnetic. Big nails would stick to it anywhere. I made long jendant.s of nails. It wa curious to see railroad spikes lift thm ielves up on a wooden platform, if they were live things making ready to spring at the gun. A RECORD of twenty-five yeaxa of cure is made by Dr. Ilerc s Ooldm Medical Discovery. In all bloorl dLsordi-r, this remedy baa num ered it aires by the thousands. ears of uninterrupted wo ceus iong ago ld tL proprietora to sell this rerneily aa no other blood -purifiwr can be noli They Lave ho much oonli dence in the "Dl- 1 icoLBCN covery " that they guaran U it in all disease that come from a torpid liver or impure blood. As a blood - cleanser, flesh -builder, and Ktrenth-restoriT, nothing like the "Dis coveryds known to medical acienoe. Dys pepsia, Indirection, Biliousnew, and the most stubborn Kkin, Scalp, or Scrofulous Affec tions, quickly yield to its purifving anl cleanaing properties. If It t!' osn't DeneSt or cure, you have your money bark. For Colic. Diarrhea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus and Cholera Infantum, take Ir. Tierce's Compound Extract of H mart-Weed. o n o Q o X LAXATIVE QUININE 03 j Moves the Bowels gently, relieves the cough, cures the feverish condition and headache and prevents pneu monia. Cures in one day. Put up in tablets convenient for taking. PRICE, 25 Cto. rOH SALE Bf ALL DRUGGISTS. (0 Q O O 0 x o a o o mi O COUGHS O x CO a. CO X tij t& VCOLDS ' T t N W. I II AT t 1 - 1 if IdAItJll'.s n ct 1 ; WUh jour AJrrtirmcnt ! the "i :"..! 1 ir I'J o, s,T. r :? JR.:H. 0. HYATT'S SANATORIUM, - ! :r i i J I 1 v Norfolk Commission Co,, 5 . . y.n .s. v . . ir.. .-. A ' '- J fruit-, Vei'e:ah!e. and ! 'rfl ; e. ! ;.; A 1? ,,..! h k, A -i. f . ) HlllKISO" -"1 be Hi' h ' ' OS- ! inetee. N'orf.ilk. V.i : 1 W !", '.t-hli r. f ;ii !. r' .0. ! M ! t; ' H hiL, I New Ben e. V ; V. It Pi!.- fte. !'..mk of Vane. i, ,,!,. i...,. ' ltrh on human .iT fi-r - .--oo ml animal' cmed in .'' n.inuo - h ! ford's S.inii.'trv o!j,,, 11,- i,it fail- , by P.. T WI.1Vbe.1d .. C .. I rucist .'! ! o.d Nis-k N ;. . II t 'XI ly. KntMlsh j.i Iti ftni.j.ent M !M- e all Hard. oft or ("a!!oJ--l Pump, oid and Glemi'hes fo'in ),.!-- IS! -d Spasin Stubs. Splint-. ! . bo c worin titles, r-pmiii. im,4 ' n Tlirotit:h, Cotiudi-. Kn -e .-" by tise of one iM.ttle W.ni . wd the most wondiftil Hieiiii-m t 'toe ever known, hold - E. T. 1 1' ! 1 .V Co.. DlUggi-!". -olland Ne-u. N. '. IO 1 ly. ci in i ni r.i 1 ma, Julia E. .b.hii-on. Malf-rd- P . South 'Hiolina, w rite" 1 had mi!!! id for thirteen year- with IV en. a. and U:s;t time." Confined ! Hi I I'd i he ilrhing Wii leiilb'i' My a- 1'iW jot me one -half docn (.-'- . . f ',' . d P.iilm. wliH'h entire!;. - ; i u .e. .0. ! I ask voll to publish lhi foi the lent-!,! of other- sulferiiig In :l v-u:.-i." "ei ad vet IM'iiu'iil . llog Cholera. 'I he famous Major H .' b"ii i.t "tue, whieh ''nil's an I po- ents b-.'ei .1 in hoes ;(nd jioiilt r 1-on s ., If .h.sey 's. an 1 at V.. T. While! f- I'ihi' ;'-!ore. The tiiedi-'Uie i- ,:!,i i om mended by many we-teru f..:i;ier- a- a sure cure. Try a pa-1, i;;e. At V B J(H' ' and l)i 1 u' Moie. rou ovkk 1 irrv vi: i An Mii am Witt-Ti ni. Pi mm. v Mrs. Win-low 's iH(thin;.' ;"ip ' UyH Usisl for over lift ye. 11 . fi.il lions of iniithets f.,t te'i ii;M'i n while tei'lhine, with Ji-tfeel - It soothes tb" ehild, sofiei,- '!,' ' I' ", lav all pain eiiie- w ind the be-t retnislv f .f !.o:!'- I p'u-a-ant P- the ta-fe. . -:d i. ! ' .' irists in every par' ( the W- 1. Twenty li e e-nt-a b -!i;e, Jt- . is inealelllable. P.e-me ,,;,d a - ',. f-.f Mr-. Win-low V Soothiir.' Ssiup, arjd t.d.e no other kitid. ce Will be wrV4 ;tii a m- ;-ir,',C mll, tiftr you incett 10 a fa PINIM TF.r'S JH, TENSION in JICAT0R A" 1- - AUTOMATIC TENSION RELEASER, The xnott corepl'-re ad 1 '- id led t J inv .'. .!-' ...al.- eve The WIIITX; ! Durably and Hantficrely Euilf, Of Fine Finish and Perfect Aijj!mMt. Sewi ALL SeaMe Art,";. And will serve an 1 ; V - , ' '. 'A.- : -I Uait of your r .. Active lJi.At '.-'.:. .. pied tern tury. IjLc-iIi r.... A. white SEWIK3 :ac:?'::: co., in5tt''f'. ! " MHOU'. f I ! t ' litl o'...'. All 4ealenkeep j- !..;. .-., M 't ' k A: Vouv Fa j , v, t r iti - rt 11 m
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 7, 1895, edition 1
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