Newspapers / Bertie Ledger-Advance (Windsor, N.C.) / May 16, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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f"".V i I ! ' 1 ! ' 4 OR 8 PRICE ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, INVARIABLY W ADYANCE. OUR MOTTO: DIEU ET MON DROIT THE LEDCEH PUBUSI?tQ COnPAnT. VOL. XII. WINDSOE, BEETIE COUNTY, N; C, THUESDAY, MAY 16, 1895. NO. 23i ) i 'V 'v i -I r;" Y ' , i ft. i , I ) - I Mil l , ' . : 1 a . 1 b - - Understood. Within the dwy morning's htish There sung a mellow-throated thrush And drop by drop the honeyed tone Fell on white stars of bloom alone. I know not did the flowers below ' N '... Hear all his secret yet aglow With dawn the daisy turned her eye To greet the daytime in the sky. . Then came two lovers hand in hand On journey toward love's promised land ; And bird and blossom, light and tone Were understood by them alone, jv ' Eugene Field In Chicago Record. ; think two people who love one another trulv!onght to be able to live happily on eight hundred a year, without quar relling hause : it is not eight thou sand." . Certainly Jack Holf ord was not at all modern or else he would have un derstood that to a girl like Maud Sey mour, "who had -known poverty in its most trying form all the "days of . her life, the chance of catching a million- ing him for his money, and that, but for his money, she would not have al lowed him to touch even the tips of her fingers. But he wanted her, and he was prepared to humor her so that he might obtain her. Of course, when they were securely married, he would stand no more airs. But for the pres entwell, he knew that girls were like skittish horses they would shy all across the road at anything or nothing. Won Back by an; Accident. Tlio sun was going down behind the1 Bishop's Wood in a blaze of blood-red splendor which lit up the western half with a strange lurid glow like the ''re flection of some vast conflagration and blotted out the brilliant coloring of the landscape in a dead neutral tint of gray. It would not be dark; however, for nearly an hour to come. "It looks as if the Bishop's Wood were all on fire," thought a girl 'who was seated on a style on the border of Bloxover Wood, a wide expanse of copse and woodland stretching across the sloping hills to the east of the val ley, with almost as broad a sweep as that of the Bishop's Wood on the steeper slopes which walled in the western horizon. She was a slender, graceful girl, with soft, confiding blue eyes and a delicite , flower-like com plexion, and with a piquant suggest ive! less of expression. She wns attired iu a smart covert coat of melton cloth over a salmon and white striped cotton skirt expressive at once of the pres ence of autumn and regret for the summer which was past. On her head was a little sailor hat with salmon rib bons. Her well-gloved dainty little hand was toying with a light ground ash walking-stick. She turned towards the man who was leaning against the stile, quite close to her, gazing into her face; and with the very action the' soft eyes became hard, and the pretty mouth set in an expression that was far from pleasing. "The fact is, Jack," she said, with a laugh that was all bitter,' "I am not T 1 li wuiwjj ui you. i aon t love you as you love me. I love you just enough to be miserable without you,. but, not enough to be miserable with you. It's all that wretched -money;-.You see; you have never known what it is to be really poor, and I have. Your income, which makes you so comfortable as a bachelor, would mean more penury if you married a penniless girl like me, and, oh, Jack, you can have no idea how heartsick I am of counting shil lings as other people count pounds, and wondering how on earth we are going to make ends meet from month to month." . ... , "But surely money alone will not aire like Cecil Higgins was an almost The party broke, up the next day, irresistible i temptation. If Mr. Hig- and, as the engaged couple were both gins had: no V appeared on the scene, returning to London, it was inevitable or if he had not "openly shown his ad- that they should return together. " In- miration for her and pointedly ex- evitable, too, was it that he should pressed it to their hostess, Lady Sciva, kiss her at parting and promise to call who, of course, had passed it on to the next day to be introduced to her Maud 'in confidence," matters would mother. She forced herself not to have been different. Then she would shudder when he kissed her. , have been content to give her hand He was most punctual to his word where she had bestowed her heart, on the following day, and it musj be And happiness might have followed allowed that he played the ardent the marriage. But now her mental lover to perfection. He showed him equilibrium had been upset. She self the very pink of politenesl and dreamt of jewels in heaps and gold in respect to Mrs. Seymour, who was a streams she who had been obliged to little tow-haired woman, with big, sell her one bracelet of any real value doll-like blue eyes and an affected in order to provide herself with some manner. She had been known as the reajily money for her visit, and whose pocket-Venus once, and if thiscircum- ornaments were in consequence quite stance was ever forgotten or. ignored modest in their simplicity. She knew it was certainly not her fault. MADCAP BISMARCK. eh ffco lug Lfnx. xa rfl Ey A. Stevens of St. Albans was zo&k ins the round of his traps in the Bald ImpetUOUS and Boystering Boy- Mountain region; one day Uat fU hood of the Great German. . when he discovered strange animal inoneofthem. Ho approached cau tiously and saw that it was of the lynx species, but a specimen of which Lb nau never Known, ino animal was somewhat larger than the ordinary In his youth Bismarck was terribly loupcervier, had a longer tail, and was ficpl To Win His Wire Became Sedate as a Judge- . wild. "The mad Bismarck," his neigh bors called him. Drinking, fighting and horseplay seemed to bo his solo ararTSements. He would fill his anccs trul home at Schoenhausen with guests and insist that no one should rise from the supper table until sunrise was at hand. Then those who were sober enough would go to bed, and those minus the tufted cars which charac terize this animal. Mr. Stevens has spent years In the Maine forest, and is familiar with the natural history of its products. He ebvs he has never seen anything like this and thinks it must bo a cross bc tween the lynx and cougar. As ho approached the animal it toro at the who' were not sober enough would Lp fastenings and furiously endear sleep under the table. Bismarck, tho orcj to ct at tll0 imntr. heaviest drinker of all, would remain sober as a judge, and would amuse himself, after his guests had retired, in firing pistol bullets through tho that by a single word she could cover herself almost from head to fodt with priceless diamonds. Had not Mr. Higgins talked hourly and not per haps with overmuch good taste of a certain riviere of diamonds which he bad bought at a fabulous sum at' the sale of some Russian princess, and which he intended as his first present to his future bride, when he had found Mr. Higgins brought a box of bon bons and a case containing the cele brated riviere. It was his view that no woman could resist the united se duction of sweets and diamonds. There, no doubt, he showed some knowledge of feminine character, but he would have exercised a wise discre tion if he had not kissed : his fiancee on his arrival. Nor was he altogether her? And had not every one except j wise in his choice of topics of conver- Jack Hoi ford at onna looked n.t. Maxirl 1 satlOU. Seymour as much as to say: "Thou art the woman?" It was enough to turn the head of any girl: and so it is not surprising that Maud SeymouVs brain had not proved superior to the intoxicating influence' to which she was exposed. - All that she had to do was to say "No" to Jack at the right moment and then 'Yes", to Mr. Higgins. Could anything be more easy? A little firm ness, a little common sense and the thing was done. Then farewell for ever to poverty. Moreover, she would put the case so sensibly to Jack that he would quite understand and agree that she was acting for the best. But when the thing was done, and Jack had not taken it sensibly had "Do you remember that young Holford who was staying at Lady Sciva's?" he observed after a while "Yes," replied Maud Seymour, very slowly and deliberately, marvelling why he had introduced a name which it would have been better to avoid. "Well, it seems that he has had an accident, ' continued Higgins, quite unconscious ,of any danger. "An accident I" gasped Maud, be coming suddenly as pale as a sheet. "les. 1 reau an account ox it in the papers. He was in a railway col lision and " "Not dead!" with almost a shriek of agony in total oblivion of her en gagement. "No, not dead," replied her fiance, M A staring at ner curiously, "DUt very Mr. Stevens did not wi&h to injure tho skin by bullet marks, and tried to walk around so as to fret a shot In tho animals ear. Bat tho ' savago felloe bcaroonnLoorjanuirigutcning xne in- wn P w;h m 4nw.rJ th mates alofost to death. At other times I k ,fr I MWMta MSS WWk44 WVM V M V he would go riding about tho country vain endeavor to catch tho btast look- like tno wnu norseman nimsen, jump- ing in another direction. Tho hunter ing aucues ana lences, ana spurring hid behind a stamn and after a lonrr , - - V his horse through places whero no 9 other man would dare go. "Once," ho says himself, "I was riding with my brother, ho in ad vance. Suddenly he heard a crash. He turned, and lo! it wss my. head that had struck the ground. The sad dle was broken, but my head wasn't On another occasion while riding through the brushwood in a forest I lost consciousness and lay for three or four hours beforo I came to. When the doctor examined my hurts ho said that it was contrary to all professional rules that I had not broken my neck. In view of his impetuous character and eccentric manner of life, it is not strange that when he asked for tho hand of Franlein Joan von Puttksmer in marriasro her parents bluntly re- erone awavon the contrarv. with an ger and despair painted on his pallid much mashed up. They say his sight Wlr loinr, Whinrlhim nr.nvpr IS SO lUrea inttl U IS prODttDie the 1 smart of several home-truths which he had planted in her self esteem the outlook did not seem so decked with roseate hues as it had ap peared in anticipation. On the following day two important events happened. Jack Holford, who had been summoned suddenly to town bring you happiness! many rich unloved and unloving wo-! men whom we see around us. Do they and that diamonds bring them any consolation for want of love? Isn't it better to live on a smaller-income with the one you love than starve for want oi Jove with riches all around you? Love must be better than money." "Yes, Jack," replied the girl, half tenderly, but still with bitterness, "if we were all. .Or if we lived in a Garden of Eden, where costumes might be had for the picking and house rent was a thing unknown. But aa it is, it is easier to live with money alone in a big house than with love alone iu a Bmau one ' AJ1 tnat talk about love in a cottage is - really non eense, you know. Love will not stay m a small house. He is cramped and frozen by his environment and the i re sult is jars and at last rows. 'And then one day love flies out of the "window and does not return." . ' Lo people never quarrel in big houses?" inquired Jack in a low voice, hich was shaken with emotion. 1 'Yes. But there is plenty of space lnd the7 have their J own rooms 5 and need not meet until the cloud's have Passed away. But in a small house tbey must meet; or : leave ' it, ' arid- ack, can two humahbetdgs'sitfo- Kether without saying a word, and if joth think they have a grievance, can 'hey keep their tongues off it?" "AH this is too modern - for Jme," moomiy. can't an- Look at the ou imP0ltant business so Idy Sciva feeiing for others. that he will never " But Maud had burst into wild hys terical sobbing, and it was long before she recovered even the appearance of calm. All the while Mr. Higgins sat star ing at her with the hard, unpitying expression of a man who compassion ates himself too mucn to nave any j "Then it seems that this is the man you really love?" he said at last, when, the sobbing ceased. Maud did not answer. Her silence and her bowed head were eloquent in themselves. "Well, what are you going to do?" he continued.. Maud did not reply. She did not know She did not seem to have suf ficient command of her faculties to bo able to evolve a plan ; she drew a long quivering breath, and wiped her eyeB miserably. - "Of course," he said, roughly, "you don't expect that after this our engage ment is worth a straw?" "No, no, no!" she cried eagerly he had struct the right chord of her timo peeped out, but tho cat's wicked eye was upon him. Finally Mr. Ste vens stepped out and decided to try for one of tho gleaming eyes so stead ily fixed upon him. It was a dsndy shot, piercing the eye ana coming out under tho car. Lew is ton, (Me.,) Journal. , r Blindness on the Incrtaie. The startling announcement is made that whilo the population of Missouri increased 100 per cent tho number of . -, ... cases of blindness increased ZZO ' per cent, and that this proportion ex ceeded tho showing of any other Stato in the Union. - Statistics show that blindness is on the increase in this country, notwith standing tho greater knowledge and fused hiq He was still very young, skill in treating the many auction! and they preferred to wait years to which tend to destroy tight and tho see-it lie would abandon his reckless ample facilities now afforded all classct habits. Bismarck, however, ..did not of persons in tho cities in tho way of propose to wait Marry Traulein 1 infirmaries and free dispensaries, xor Joan he would whether her parents I caring for the various diseases of tho were willing or not So he visited eye. This incrcsse of percentage ox blindness prevails' throughout tho United States, but is much greater in some of the Western States. In Missouri tho last oClcial returns show an alarmingly increased ratio of blindness over the last, census. " Eyo diseases and blindness aro raro among primitivo people who know none of tho vices of civilization. Practically put, a largo .percentage, perhaps at TrnMn a fw vwb Xcri Zeaeterfi txlr taroeJ e.ntlr!j jrmjr. . Joha J. ru.af-b. dlra -ro's srv CM cf Xa M'arW.tba-tso ttf Txi'J 7 cj hn th izbt of one cr. 4 . The :At4 of Hotft llt STTva Is Tb Kla of luir. Ui tU fsUr. Tlcicr Ufa I cot l&3rJ it lb Car cf Hr. tea t errry fosllvfcU Iowa la a'J fizzj. Ilearr IL Hrl. Trwilit cf a.JJcrTTV Dr. WillUa IITmrl r.atU. ifc Zzt. wix corTTrn. jfti. rm-'if cirxii lii A taxori42 U I ,t rU1! . Yrx?.zi mv a j'sxt t Ikta jn . Mror 8WJT. cf Chl'Ajr. torttaCisf A Loovloa c,rirf-r'rfcT tiOajtaia M tAa. of ta CMjM At, 'it -feaw?-JjrM atbotlty a ttw it rry cf savu xr fAT- ' - . , - ; '0vlAa4 t&j ttml rrc3nXi f r vmcbtlaf toar srotia ! llrt wyril aa toca hi mi of cT.- i-r; if. , 3!aal Grrt. la of tl eiaty yrjr. , U tlU aa a-rtlv tipta ihbr la X.sia. Brut ar-prmaf ta kt1 c tr ta ArTt. Crsla-Oearrt Wirtlzxrt 0aej . b rrr tho orrtiwr la cu, u ti-i aa4 vtftrra rlZ cf twrt, typist! ym,V staaliac. " ' Acbal.b l It rl aar. I lf.t AJrrj tb fSSOUA rtior. llf;r& Crt Uz hi Ut anqulrtUta toiOff JUimU li U IncUa. arriJtwct aa4 &UIir,tsntX TTfJ a yrar la la (irr,.a r-Tj'.rr. Th BdUta ch.Ut wta r-x:?X' ?oct,l la hitherto tUTT.J lo nl calf la uj? tea few art. w mUr . V. wUr jUr.?". aa4 cot Ixt lUtWa. lb llt rt U arysa. aj j rrrioc j tzmrxr'i- Profwwor Iirl-;. rj ItO.nrr-kzj. wto wbiraaoaach Lju tra ynua, Im r lxai bU pro!wr5ii' Xu --t.!t" : attacks ww tnAi ca tit p-aJy, ai ltr lnj trMl wish tai-ta bTiJ. Ctui lit;ss lh?xicireny. , .- Gcarvl Gort WaIIao Jcam, of D-Its i. Tawv rwwatJy ktrtti fcu ' alay-f.ri UrUxlAf. OathAt o-Anioa kM tat;!.l to dlacwttb his coV.nri la it CtJ'.i StatflB&raAifr Jas W. Lrvlt-ary. cf JUli, tbe oliit UrizK ei-fiattcr. Uj U tw ytr Mr. Joan's trsJor, ,aat Ji-07Ttra;r ritca, of MJctlfAa. . . k ' JosalL EUrlact 5rIortt,trsj UUals sal fTTylo;j wittccv ts:'.., aai Ki '5aiHalarf LTt 9?xtC3fK) irttH rrt-i:!. lit , wm tcra la tb HotAk Va;y, wiita ai rslbtr a win i3lxryjnsss-ur?. i.a a was t ty, At lh uran h u. rel nnUt ILsolTHolXekulIcsl his fvieiVT,nzx iU:- ttt t tr a tCAA cf iCTJ a' fri: t aal starts' her every day, taking no noticoof her family's rebuff. He knew that sho loved him, and that sufficed. This state of things however did not last long. "See here, Herr von Putt ksmer," exclaimed Bismarck one day, "why do yon refuso to let mo havo your daughter?" "Because, Herr von Bismarck," was the reply, "you are not fit to bo any woman's husband. You ride and fight least twenty-five or thirty per cent of All day and drink and swear all night blindness is preventable The two Your life is a scandal to tho country, potent causes that operate sgamst pro- said, and. as hostess, of course, she ought to knowwent away early in thC morning- so early that only one or two early-rising men were about and there was no general leave taking. In i the afternoon Mr. Higgins, who was a bier man with a great red face garnished with huge sandy whiskers, proposed to Miss Seymour in the library, where they found themselves "by accident," and was accepted. So curiously constructed, however, is the feminine temperament that in the very hour of her triumph a sense of indescribable loathing for her ac cepted bridegroom came over her which not even the appearance of a magnificent: diamond ring could re move. " Therefore it was decidedly un fortunate that the happy fiance should consciousness at last "Of course not have made overtures to seal the bar- I have behaved very badly, I know, gain with a kiss, though there was cer- Yon. could never forgive me, -I am sure tainly iiothing unusual or outrageous at least not now but I was think in such a desire under the circum- ing that it is so terrible that he should stances. - - 1 ' ' J - l- be alone wounded, helpless, blind That, however, Maud felt she could dependent on any chance nurse. If I not endure. Sni was terribly afraid could 'only go to him " of offending him j but she, knew that ."Then why in heaven's name, girl," if he kissed her -she must scream cried Higgins, half wrathfully, half -and struggle from pure physical re- tenderly, "don't you go to him?" rmlsion. Another- day it would be I And that was why, as poor Jack different, of course her nerves would Holford lay' moaning on his bed of Bismarck looked ' at him in silence for a moment and then roared out: "Donncr wetter! Is that all? But it is absurd. Come, and give her to me and you will see me as steady and " sedate as a bishop. Come, I swear it!" Sincerity was stamped on the young man's countenance and words, and Herr von Pnttkamer finally gavo his consent to the marriage, though not vention, leaving to the , moralist and the Christian reformer the correction of the conditions inducing the risks, aro ignorance on tho part of the af fected and neglect, often combined with ignorance, on the part of the at tendant St Louis Post-Dispatch. be more under control,; and what- was a kiss, after all? Was she not -going to marry the man. She put him off how she .could Lheverremember and as she did so she marvelled that he did not under-' languish, he heard suddenly a .voice which sounded in his ears like that of an angel of light, and as he listened to her assurance that whatever hap pened she was his now, if he would take her, vitality seemed to revive in JlJze and predict what would happen Utahd. ;. He grumbled a good deal, but bim; and from that moment the case, ,f we quarrelled. I only know that I did not persist The truth was that as the doctor Baid, began to take a fa- yma oe perfectly happy in a small I he did unaersianci inai sue um uoi yoraoieurn, ana nis signi was save to8e with the woman I love, and I7 really love him; that she wag marry-1 after all London World. " X Huge Kraut Factory. A correspondent of tho Country Gentleman describes a sauerkraut fac- without misgivings. . Bismarck, how- tory near Chicago, which in the fall ever, kept his word. He wrote- to his slices up 230 to 300 tons of cabbage sister, "All right," in English, to let her daily, by winter filling 33 tanks 20 know that his suit was successful; and I feet in diameter and 10 feet deep,, he bought a Bible. Wild riding and trodden down by men in rubber boots. all-nigh i drinking-bouts had no attrac- the whole holding over 15,000 barrels. tions for him any more. He became I vrorth about 310 a barret Sometimes a sober and pious man and a tender and affectionate husband and father.- New Orleans Picayune. Horses Peculiarities. . Horses are very much like people in the choice of their company. Some people would as soon be in tho com pany of horses as with human society. Some horses aro' very particular who handles and drives them. They will fret and fume in the hands of one, and 1 panta tented while being handled by an other. These peculiarities and adap tion of men and horses to each other should be considered of more import ance than is usually thought of Mass achusetts Ploughman. tho vats are filled twice in 'a season, the succulent being shipped to every part of the lake regions, tho Missis sippi valley and even to the Allan tie and Pacific coasts. Cabbsgo grows well on the black soil prairie about Chicago; gardeners raise 15 to 20 tons per acre, and are paid $10 to $15 a ton. Tho plants aro raised .chiefly in Tennessee and Georgia, and shipped in carlosd lots of 500,000 to C00.000 Conceded IU Mrs. Peck-" This paper says that a sea Captain says that in times of great disaster women are more cool than men. Mr. N. Peck I have seen instances of it "You? I'd like to know when." "When they were getting married. Indianapolis Journal. X Close Kesemblance. "There aro some points about your writings that much rescmblo Shakes peare" said the editor. "Do you think so?" cried the de lighted author, who had brought his contribuiion in with bis own html. I . . .... . V. I I "les, mo euuor couunueu; -yon employ almost tho same punctuation marks." ItccktymUMcJTribunc tt Sorely. Miss Dimple I detest whiskers I I positively set my face against them I Jack Chipper Ob, th'at I had whiskers, Miss Dimp!e! tfi to trasa abciVt .eoMtT s - THE UOoVvyohUL 4 "nil r, m . Tbrallfl SuSfatu J.W?) wTia Wctna. .... . , arJr walHoadaty. f Stca tbottat iraTifttat at9 ca a J4rtk laNw, Tcr C.iy. , f 8xAlIpoVl ro?"Wc. IleVsx4ra &1U rnjf4oyn la 0rlaaJ, CIM? . ,f M. Wottb. th baout taaa taliilaT ha hi tiiM h4 970 avta ta hi raej. IxhwSoo ffr ac Uv ftdTAUa Anry of hATlnj? ctjnrl t!w r-Alltf' I"ja. - .... I'J There axti aXI.OCO fAv-tory frUla Lc z.. a aotwecty-jr-vja J of la-t '-mhA pcy-ciA-Uoa. FexaaW toclMak are bmiiit fa ta Ur ta raru. They Urcan nrtly, aai ar coaxtnjr'y pollt. It U sartM last all U Nw HaUal cctloo aaaJ-A-trtT will latrt-a9 lt tifi cf tbHr OTrtilTL ' ' rotUTUJ (IVaa. layi lo i acr.W cf V0O orptnltl abanuKh cfta CaisM Kla Workers of AartoL i - Tbtjbnrt vrtka fprecsa of tb Nrw Tcrk lref ekaatac forr I vl 1 td l-e a col?fTi taaa from Albra. (it. , ; ,( ,. Oprmlisx Bloer la lh V-viir DJtrV-t on tae Donisuro aa4 Oaio rtI will cca their mlarw wlia tew era. ( The tmlUt'Ei; f raJea unaj la rtilAde.'U lTi withJrawn ihHr deiev: frc-a lh Calle.1 fixlr Ibor lr.ae. ' Tb Tailed CVtoa Ota tay, cf Ca- trai FaIL. B. I-. rarlayirw: haai. La nTAaool wa?n froaa Crw la larTrcrst. iMnU) rrat irvH rtrw la H-o-treal, GanaJ. IhAt ho-ilrir rlt la city trt5a ca tbi IooImjI for caavliiAi. Tout hanJred IrlJi cuU . arrtwl ta w Tort ca ooc ft earner lh ther day la rxrch of wort. Tfcey tri'trc froci tao falort r , ... , t.;m IVru Ua cheap ULor aaJ rxtea4re rcU CeUU who- rlat will thJpfM lo f.:4sU oo tb rac4ac by A &-"w caraoy fanacl tor Tb Fremra rrej44eat tsi dA-JiM IhU all Rate aa4 rther dorce-tlr? t lAf rreiieatUl raaatloa la Tart ar la retire rt"!icJ a Laar fatt. ao to fy Ufl cki ot cf Lit en rarju. "!.. Tbo ronfere- cf iTTaat prli wx hll aI Uutervn H All, IcaJcm. tT th tirT'm cf mtLrlaacjrlb Ios:j'?, JtaaU Uaico. aa orjrAatralloo -t hotirmajl ca I be Ua of the o!0T trA oalca. ' A rjtmtjef of IH1 wvrtrr.! Ita Trc laa lS.4-) roUerk. wb fcaTrt Urn cot vT eajpioyatct atonl a jar trrtmr ta tbrir re fail to trcrk at It? mla 1 trt.acrl at a coal r t oo-rt4 a rrCc-llca c f Zi r eif. .. Tba Fnfa-ra Minister of Faaoe U ;rr;ur lajca Wll'ly, wblcji yrn oter trrz.j yrars Wbob tc lata rc4 fr Sflmj yrari for laiperaaouAtioa pcsA& t-loar T2 la li Cafc h"AtkaAV? will rt-xr fro-a taa 8iAi aa anooAl t-mo at uc-'airl Xl tl CUTt- rarw ttwera tblr ra4t al 172. ri in i T4't,ttT rk at h-a I all alflctb1itn "avir4iac ! Ian' Ia4s trial Review. i Tb laJcjttn la wbla tb earning f o;tral4ie auS rrsjloyej hmm already tra taerRASl kr m .illTtr a la laUei a irraeral njnraM tacresaat. TL jjrouad lost dartn tfc dreica l blajc rocoTerM a fart a reajoaal Jy raa b ez poctftd, aad )t L graUfylax to b aU to fl IhAt tb reooTcrj Uoacy azJ rBaacz.t. (I ci " m r v-. I m " baa act apart Acjrrt ij. aj a 11 tci: lij, ta' U kaowa as Eear-a C7 J
Bertie Ledger-Advance (Windsor, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 16, 1895, edition 1
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