Newspapers / Bertie Ledger-Advance (Windsor, N.C.) / March 5, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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3 ' bW .is. rl i "1) (trr rl i i i t I 1 .4 1 PRICE ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, INVARIABLE IN ADVANCE. OUR MOTTO: DIEU ET MON DROIT. THE LEDGER ruCUSuJ: CC-PAM. VOL. XIII. WINDSOR; BERTIE COUNTY, N. C. THURSDAY, MA.RCH 5, 1896. NO. 13. Locked hi by Love.' Is the nfght cold? Blows the northeast across the naked mo'or? I have a warm, warm itom : Come in Ooma in ! and Love shall lock the door. Is the night dark? - ' Drift the dull clouds down dropping winter .-,! ; - damp? - - -I have a secret room : Come in. Come in ! and Love shall light the lamp. Is the night dumb? Save for the hoarse wind's cry of death and wrong? I have a music room: Come in Come in ! and Love shall make you song. Give ma your hands! . ' Ah! now I hold you, sweet, you shall not ; Quick, love, and lock u? Inland then-' " Swear that you've lost the useless key. - Pall Mall Gazette. JEALOUS OF A SHADOW, BY HELEN FOBREST GRAVES. Fresh as a rose looked Harry Morny as she came in from the woods, on .......... . yr , that clear autumu afternoon, -with her apron full of wild grapes, and her hat garlanded around with scarlet-veined autumn leaves. Her husband,' sitting, in his study, glanced up at her bright, flushed face, with 6ombre eyes full of past mem ories. "Is the world coming to an end?" saucily demanded Harry, as she flung the purple cluster on the table "for I am sure that nothing else can ac count for such a solemn face as yours Julian." He tried to smile. .,. "You have been in the " woods all day, Harry ?" he said. "Where else should I be?" retorted the young wife, whom he had married because she was such an embodied sunbeam. "You don't catch me pok ing myself up in the house when all the world is so full of brightness!" But she looked half doubtfully at him as she spoke. "Now you are going to scold-me. she said with a pretty uplifting of her nanus, as 11 10 waru ou huiub vuruui onslaught. "I can see the stern words rising up to your lips." "Am I, then, so stern with : yon?" he uttered. "If so, it is quite unin tentional. No, Harry, T arn not go ing to scold you." For he remembered that Harry was only eighteen and that he was eight and thirty. Harry came and she perched her self on his knee. ' . "Julian," she said, with a sudden burst of penitence, "I am sorry!" "Sorry ! And for what ?" He put his hand caressingly on her blond curls,: as he might have stroked a pretty infant's head. "I meant to practice to-day," she. pleaded, "and to read a whole chapter in 'Macaulay's History of England,' and to darn your stockings in the con vent stitch that Aunt Prudence taught ine; but when I got out; in the snn shine I forgot it all. Ob, Juliau, I shall never learn to be a companion to you!" - And she glanced ruefully around at the drifts of paper and open folios on the desk, and her radient face gloomed over suddenly, as she caught sight of a tiny photograph lying close by the inkstand. "Julian," she exclaimed, abruptly, 'why did you marry me?" "Is that so hard to guess, little "Yes, but why?'! she persisted. "I am so silly and shallow, - that is exact ly what Mrs. Meredith calls me, and my poor little grovelling soul can never reach up to the ' heights of yours. Oh, don't try to comfort me, I understand . it all!" with another side-long glance at the- photograph. "You loved her 1 She was a true wife -k rnn f T am nr-xr n. Tkl nirfVi i n cr : tn "Have I ever said such a thing, Harry ?" "A score of times," said Harry, get ting more and more excited, while the. deep roses burned vividly on' her cheeks. "Not in actual, words, per haps, but Oh, Julian, why did I ever marry a widower? She is as much my rival now as if she was a living and breathing woman, v Julian, I hate her!" "Harry! Harry!" "Give me that picture!" cried the young wife, snatching the photograph from the desk, and retreating a pace or two, as if she feared to be pursued. "It shall not lie beside you .'.at your work. You shall not carry it next your heart when you go out of the room I" I She paused, as if expecting a volley of remonstrances perhaps a stern re proof but he never spoke a word. He only looked at her with sad, grave eyes. , " - ; "y : "Julian," she hesitated, ; more en- treatingly, "may I have it the pho tograph?" ' 'Yes, " he answered. "I can re member how she, looked, without any counterfeit presentment.' Yes, you may have it, Harry, . if that is .your desire." ' : - - And ' Harry vanished . pat v. of the roomrhaUdelighted, half-terrified, at what she had done.' Swift as an ar row she darted down to a cool, shady nook at the foot of the garden, where a crystal trout-stream gurgled under the shadow of a canopy of elm leaves, and a twisted root formed a sort of a rustic seat. "Shall I fling it into the stream?" she asked herself. "Shall I tear it up?" But she looked at the soft, calm features, a gentler mood crept over her. "How wicked and babyish I am I" she said. "No, no I I will not tear up your face, sweet saint . - I should have loved you, too, if you had been living will try to love you now, be cause he loved you! Look down from your throne in heaven, dear white robed angel, and help me to be worthy to sit in your seat at his board to share your place in his heart!" And glancing fearfully around her, lest she should be observed, she kissed the photograph once, twice, three times, and placed it tenderly in her bosom. When she came back to the house she was quieter and more silent than usual, but she did not offer to give back the photograph to her husband Was she jealous of it still? And Julian Morny went right on .with' his student labors the labors in which nis first wife had ehared intel- ligently and helpfully. He had loved his beautiful Evange line so truly and passionately, she had been so entirely a part of his exist ence, that when she died it seemed impossible that he could ever place another woman in the empty niche of her being. But as time dulled the first sharp edges of his sorrow, and pretty Harry Tinton's winning graces stole into his heart, he began to realize that ""he. was not yet an old man nor a hermit. He looked at Evangeline's picture. "She would have bid me be happy," he said. "She would have told me that it was no disloyalty to cheer' the darkness of my life with a second love.", So he married the smiling young beauty, and the only grief that- cank ered his heart was Harry's insane, un reasonable jealousy of her dead rival's memory. Julian was no expert in reading the hieroglyphics of a woman's heart. "Harry," he would say, with a pained expression on his face, "If you loved me you would not talk in this way." - : - "It is because I do love you that I cannot help talking this way," she replied. And then her tender, "coaxing little artifices would be redoubled. -v "If you would only forget her," pleaded Harry. "If . you would only tell me that I am past and nresent . . . ... both to you." But he only smiled and shook his head. .- . , ' - ; . . "Sweetheart," he wo.uld say, "you are the sunshine of my present. With my past no living touch can meddle. Isn't that enough?" : "No," Harry replied, "It is not enough. And after she had taken triumphant j possession of -the picture, a- new r MW1"V, u" head. He was as tender as ever to the wife whose presence lent such fascination to his home. He did not ask for the return of the photograph, but he felt that there was something missing at his side. "He had declared that he could re member Evangeline without the pic ture, and yet he longed with an un utterable longing to look once more upon her face. He resolutely guarded himself from sitting iii judgment on the love- ly little sprite who loved him with such wayward, unreasoning affection; could not but feel that beeu cruelly unjust to Harry had Evangeline. So he left,off thinking about it at all, and applied himself steadfastly to the studies which had always formed the main occupation of his life. - It was a stormy night, mid-Jannary, with the snow-flakes whirling wildly, through the darkness, and a tumul tuous wind howling in the tree-tops. He had been writing long and stead ily, and had leaned back in his chair; for a moment's rest of hand am brV when Harry came in, attired in blacX; velvet dress which he had given her, and wearing aher round white throat a little cross of diamonds. The husband's serious face bright ened at the fair visiou. 'Why, my pet ! " he exclaim ed, capt uring the hand which was laid lightly on his shoulder, "what is the meaning of this extraordinary brilliance of cos tume? Is there to be a party or a cer emonious dinner?" "Neither," Harry answered. "Bat it is my fete day. Do you remember what anniversary this is Julian? Ten years ago today you were married to Evangeline Sedley." "I remember it, Harry, " he said sadly. "Cornel" She took his hand with imperious tenderness and led him to the little drawing-room, where hot-house flow ers were arranged in all the vase;, and wax candles burned. Above the mantle hung a crayon picture of his dead wife, smiling at him like a living face. " "Evangeline 1" he cried. 'Her very face! Oh, Harry, where did you get it?" "It is my anniversary gift to you, Julian," she said, i ''I had taken it from your little photograph. Is it not sweet ? Is it not holy in its ex pression ?"-;! v j f !w:-janj, thank you f or it 2" he- saia, in Droxen accents. "But you must let. me keep the photograph," pleaded Harry with tears in her eyes. "I have learned to love it. It is my guardian angel my sweet companion and counselor. Ob, I cannot part with it now 1" And drawing it from her bosom, she kissed it reverently. "Harry my Harry 1" said the hus band, "What has brought this change in your heart?" "Evangeline's face," she answered, m a whisper. He drew "her very tenderly to his heart. "Sweetheart," he said, "this was all that was lacking to complete my per fect happiness." "And do you love me now as dearly as you did her?" she asked. With his arm still about her waist he looked up at Evangeline's picture. "I love you, both with the same love," he answered, very impres sively. And Harry was contentSaturday. l. Night. How a Pin Did It. : At Exmouth, in the middle of the day, a hypnotized youth was brought out of the public hall with a bonnet pin stuck through his cheek, and placed in an open vehicle, in which he was driven round the town to the edi- v fication of the populace, in company with an individual smoking a cigar. According to the Devon Evening Ex press, the youth subsequently 'admit ted that he was paid half a sovereign to go tnrongn .tnis part ox tne. per formance, and that the bonnet pin hart him so badly, thai he was unable to appear as intended, at the evening entertainment When exhibitions of this sort, have to be resorted to in order to keep alive public interest in this impudent form of imposture, it really seems time for the police to in terfereLondon Truth. A Veteran Farm Laborer. A farm laborer died recently at Lyminister, near Arundel, England, whose wages while he could .work were three dollars and sixty cents a week, as he never rose above a work ing bailiff and cowman. He was able to work till he was seventy-three, when he had saved no less than one thou sand dollars. On this he managed to uve ior iweive years longer witn a little help from his former, employer ; j then, as he outlived his savingSjhe had j to bo relieved by the -Poor Law offi cials, dying a pauper at eighty-seven. and yet he MINERAL FREAKS. n r t . vr. . i DOme VJlieer UepOSU3 in ine H6W State of Utah, Remarkable Beds or Mineral Rub ber and Gum Asphalt, Utah,, the newest of the States, seems to be a mineralogical freak. George Eldrldge of the Geological Survey, was sent on there a few weeks ago for the purpose of looking np cer tain natural resources, and he hat re turned with a most interesting report Among other things, he found great deposits of mineral rubber enough to make gum shoes for a large part of the population of the United States. It is black, and it looked and felt ex actly like ordinary robber. "You see, it is quite elastic' aaid Mr. Eldridge, bending apiece with his fingers. "There is no telling bow many valuable uses it may be put to in the future, but I imagine ii will be employed largely mixed with the vegetable rubber of commerce. For a roofing material it has already been proved excellent In the mining towns of Utah mineral rubber ia util- ized commonly for roofing, being pre- pared in sheets consisting of a layer of burlap, with the rubber on both I sides. Nothing could be more thoroughly waterproof. Because it it so new not much is known about this peculiar stuff and its possibilities. Only a few tons of it have beenmirfod near the Uintah Reservation, where it is chiefly found. It occurs in veins, but the number and size of the latter are not reliably knows aa yet" ' Mr. Eldridge took np from hit desk a queer-looking, blackish chnnck of something, not easily ' identified that felt soft to the touch. "That is another unexplored min eral wax, and is found iu veins, like the. mineral rubber. Sit has not been mined-at all, but many uses for it are" likely to be discovered in the future. To electricians it will bo valuable, doubtless, inasmuch aa it is one of the best insulating materials for employ ment in their business. But hero is another interesting mineral substance, also from Utah." ' The specimen of this latter looked exactly like a piece of obsidian, or black volcanic class. It was hard aa any rock. "That is gum asphalt, said the expert "My chief business in Utah was to examine the deposits of this material. It is & wonderf al substance, and represents a great mint eral resource that has hardly been touched as yet It is nothing more norf less than an exceedingly pure kind of asphalt and its important usefulness is in the manufacture of varnishes. "The substance is found under con- ditions so extraordinary that nobody has been able to . account for them . mm m m. chiefly within and jn .the neighbor hood of.the Uncompabgre Reservation. ou are walking across the country and come nPon a Heer looking streak that runs straight 88 a. "OW flies. You brush away the sand, and beneath it you find that the streak ia perfectly black. It is a vein of gum asphalt, "There are many such "veins near the eastern edge of Utah, and 'some of them run over into Colorado. They have a tendency to run parallel to each stVta TBilli A.frnd from nntKwil in VbUtl t mmm w vwav mm. in mm www w southeast. . They vary in width from a quarter of an inch to . eighteen feet, and they are from half a mile to six miles in length. Nobody knows how deep they are. The greatest depth reached is 125 feet Thus far mining for the stuff has hardly got beyond the prospecting stage. Tho veins' are perfectly vertical. "These veins of asphalt represent cracks in the crust of the earth, made in a distant geologio epoch, and sub sequently filled iu with the gum as phalt. The stuff has much of the ap pearance and hardness of jet. Of course it is only useful for making black varnishe's. No, it will never be used for paving streets, unless, per haps, as an admixture with ordinary asphalt, to improve the quality of tho latter; it is too valuable, you see. I cannot tell you from what Bourse the substance was originally derived. It is believed that all asphalts aro of vegetable origin. We know that dur ing the gold forming period vast ac cumulations of vegetable material were laid down in beds transformed in Tariou and bee an vats, labie- ouentlr br chemical Droceaaei. Ao- v - cording to conditions coTerninr, wero metamorphosed into deposits of coal, petroleum or bitumen the hit being what we call asphalt." New York Journal. A Jloose Story, Telling stories is a fad cow. A Star writer heard ono spoiled by an icqula itiTe lUtcner at Willard'a. "I was up rn Maioo lajst innacr," taid one of tho lounger "where I had a moit exciting chaje after a raooie." What part of Maine?" a&ked the listener. "Old .Orchard," waa the prompt reply. "Tho nearest moose it 300 miles on an air line from Old Orchard. "I -aaid an old orchard," aald the tory teller. "It waa north of Watcr- ville. I went hunting, not expecting to find anything larger than a jck rabbit." "Hold on,M aaid tho listener, "there are no jack rabbits in Maint. "Well, by jack I meant a male, jast as we speak of male mulcf. Well, aa I I did not expect to see any- thing bigger than a ho rabbit, and had gone down into a atubble then I heard something aqneal, aid, looking up in an old apple tree, I saw a big moose sitting in tbo forks of a limb, ready to spring. "See here ; do you mean to aay that a xnooso waa in a tree? Don't you know that a moose is bigger than a bull and wears horns? "Certainly. Aa I aaid, I taw In what I took to be an apple tree, a moose, and as I approached it, I saw that what looked to bo tho trunk of the tree was the animal's body, ho aiding on hit haunches, and tho limbs of tho tree were the xnooso's horns, while in tho crotch of tho horns was his mouth, which waa crn, showing hia teetb, and he was" squealing!" ' . But tho man's audience was "gone. and tho story teller went away, mut- tering, "I seem to be kind of off on moosea. I've got to try some other animal." -Washington Star. A Remarkable Relic Miss Mary, J. Hook of Roaswell, Ga.,ia in possession of the oldest hick ory nut in tho world. This ancient and curious family relio was presented to Miss Hook twenty-five yeara ao by her great-aunt, Mrs. John McDavid of Cherokee County. The hickory nnt ia about the aizo of a common walnut, tho aurface is highly polished and ia beautifully and artis tically engraved: The carving ia too delicate for tho naked eye but with the aid of a glass every object is made perfect and shows the touch of an artists hand. On one ide or between the team tp- V "oe xeprcaenung mo cicaory I a j Lt.L !. r -: : . l . ttrv rr and the date "1731" are plainly visi ble. The lettera aro initials of Miss Hook's gTeat-great-grandfather, Wil liam Kendrick, who lired on the James river in Virginia and who did the engraving. In the next space ia a ox ttanding under tome bushet of beautUuI foliage wita. a wild Hog la the background, Next an otrich ttanding erect, and beneath are tho lettera "a H,Mwhich probably indicated that Mr. Kendrick I was a civil engineer. On the next ' space ia an eaglo with outstretched wings and talons, as if jast alighting. The fifth and last ia a squirrel holding a nut to its mouth with its forefeet. All of,, the pictures are perfectly plain, but to obserre the scenery and I make it more efTectire a glaaa ia nece I aary. It ia a remarkable family relio I and U well prescrvea, aimougu n is 1 164 years old. Chattanooga Times. The Wise Merchant. Bomantio Mias Hate there cot been momenta in your experience when life seemed full of unsatisScd wants? Grocer Wisehead Y-e-a, that so. Homantic Misa At each time I al ways fly to mcaic for relieC What do you do, Mr. WisthcaJ, Grocer Wisehead I adrcrtive. Absorbed. The boys How did you get away from your wif old man. Grimsby A few momenta before I left the houso her new bat rarue. Puck. TX US 0.1 V.'CT.LD WfTer will Tor C'.tr. to aa fi Tt tr'.'Tr:i mre i ; - Ut:ioa ct tzrtil t:iihr ai J r it n X tr.l It UrT9 O: hf:rr Th Clrrilt Cz.rt ct T- rT IUv-fir.l3 AT l'4t. r . I.. i:- A wo-ia :rllrc fa a lvr!:rr u C toa for.nsc! 42,o:o llrczji it aa caci la Gfrsy. ... r.ciA. or iZ4 :rct t-rxiir- r;-r.'- i : -. N. J.. tx Tot! fr Ht. Avery m 4'rnt to it lz:rzx:i :z.l La.i." r OosrnsMi aut to t- bt'.l la L.-.i i:. rrcHtly tbc'.!; n-'!r-.J e:,--'.' : . T.zjLZ 1 U Villus, tt Ljzt rii. Vt. - tlh. t-a rcailrs aa r-r.t? tbt Iirtoa aai lixiz9 yitci :z i ::, . : Im Kill c-Uirz a diiSy ria. Of Ct mzvzdlm for mrnzHtu T : z avsc, Kw Totk Cuj. 4 V -..: 1 tr. two tkxlx, ao Is tba lr- eui by nMucf ttriirjnta:iiTct.t -elalty of rrsTlllcxrTiiti vj iru;i" A fewUbcrtcj' na cralcrs ar Irf.zz t - lore aa anutloa for itm vizplzjxztzt : twiaabat fai!y BCcratUl ci:.Itr-s taj-.'. -wtrta.,Jlicij tta ar raa cf f;r'r t - . wtofcua4 '.c:llAr rr-rr-.c-r izzrl:t'' after tJillijc CtatLeJr tn. f ;ti. UcrtzoT$ ar cot frz.'.:Lzs cti,T cr' i tORTtatrai ct ttra la it.9 ctiiUAt: : z :ectrtr::y. tt o: Ttruii'.i cf z.r. i. . rowrr. Thy Lt uta i liv.zz it lirvhrg fcy !trf-i!y, at ! it fzr? f of It U titt twy tUi tl xz Jlr:.au- : water. ta3tr cf A:erl :xz I V rrri tbrr Jare4 to Gta:tala ty crrt cf 17 a ! -wajm ara dov vry aaxl to ! i . bos. Oa arrt fit g la G za: zz ala IL y f : z r. I It took till la tb tzozy cf tt czz:rv t cake caa cf Cal fvaai's dclUr. wtL 11 1 r ta4 to ij Itrro rrl-J f ;r trrrj.t:- Tfc fa! ai-ttM ty xtm r-ckra ll-y-leal rrct-vtlT Uaiia Uasf&lDvi: r . 13; for rxrsnlcs f ; fir Tralf t :, i -tajkis eetlsr, II; far c'.Uurr tzzrtlj, t " . tor ciTta fsnfralt, 13; f ar rra4w ca !: aortal Day. 15; for tarcttxranl:s.. t:,' r potittcal par2, 7j fcrtroiley exc-rs: 11. Tt talart cf laiUaa, a,i'r ta yn !:rt, rar!-i In olf i!ilr. fr;n V i -hr.:lzri la lt.liUt rrtiiirr; trj! t: aboaU 1- we t-cfore Urtrx rv;"l f.- tiat ir.Icn ttazl 1 1-9 a;r!::; t - M;'. irtigtl. Now It Ez;rrz Cccrt ctit decurttatltUlp-orj'wlttoarirfl a Ictloa caJtr lha Iit, owizz to tba c: -' . : In rrorUJoaa of cat of tbt 7il:zx. Taotx.a!ri falnlrra cf ??tw Icrk C,:r bata rrrrJ a UU wt'ca it iztr-!! r reject th llrt ar.1 llm cf cj writ. oa a:aoUiic? zt;z il trczz lz'.::::. . Ttey aay ttat tba prwst liv it Thy a'o a44a ticutlat taowircttt: r '. Uta tb EhoJj of tiilHaj: bsva a etar r- 1 that aclieaii to worksa art tarrti'.-c. Ail ufiJctawtU tri3wi to lai:r t:i UU. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Tha Prise cf Wales txs kli IL' L-r?l for JrtW,0X Paul, lha caifatrlw. eclart tlal t will never rrtara to As: eric. Lord XU2rarra rts detiloi to iazZ z yacit nczsz la tta lary-r eUjwa. Ttx lataPrla ITry ef XJu:?t.Vr? vz aa svocosjpJUl:e4 perfamer oa tie TlsUi- Qaa Victoria owat t3.0W.O'3 w:r.h ! cblaa. A Serros s U ea:isa:.i al t ' '?.' Tria? E-lwari cf Tort bow a yrar tz. ! a hkt clj. utob r;rl??sl la a L.'s.:? cartla ft at a c "Kark Twala" baa writ tea to a frt-li-. tbU eooaJry thai ba went awiy la ittt. t: will eoaa back la a Crrt eatia. Tba raj eta:a lzrzzrz: cf C. R. Grz-. Jr., la &a Cat. iarta? tbe f ti yr bare arralM ozz I IX. COO. XVwlicat Krzzr. of Trasjraal. baa f. teale-i to tba rza::er ct traur:trs I. aaasa to posterity. lie baa tlrrtz-tt..-Srea. , Earioa. the Trench drscuw, is tcv riitj. foar years U. wriaklM aad baJftaH.t -t labUe'.artla step aai briUUat 9jyzz:tr. aa Tcr. Her ry Arthur Jos', lbs d ran cut, U l ca of ia EclUa farmer, aal waa t ic! his early daysto took tjpaa tbj siajrs rarttaa borrr. Oecral tk-azai So baabpra co 'zjl'. for th rcrrniZczTT ct iIe! by tzz- j tblak that D:as ba ba4 b'j r c? it. Dlax will t a caalida: aUo. Aatoslo Xtare-3, tba Ccbaa 0:n!, i a fAtzX la bis way. lit b six tct Cra izrl- la beUtr. aai wH-rc3rti5s.' lie u aali to b l.?s?:y pedlar vita 1 zaea. ' rreaiiect Certlaa4 baa a?r-ie.i aa !-t'.-tattoa to deliver aa a-lirwa a tbe e k ra tloa of tba ISCia aaalvinary of tb tozz l. -of rriaeetoa Coij, Frlaoctoa. K. J., t-i: General TTeyler, tba tew Cassia -O'-t .'. ct Cut, a. Is safi to bare ; frrra tbi: j -callar race. It 9 Oercaa-Irua. trlr. en !ei trozx on cf tba oil Us-Alaa fan:'.: ct xrteu Frfj-l-ie-t Pro Tea cf tba Cti.'M Feaata Frye, of Halae, baa t-v-a ( -creaj tweatv-focr yra Half cT tbtt t b baa arrevl la tba F-zi'. aai bU rt . la both braacbej bava bva cli.'ti w:. . Cirtlactlca. NEWSY CLXANINCS. Hsssia will rai tea Coal U 110 a toa la f-rzih Afr'.ra. rolo oa triryH tba late? Paris cert la ;-ort. Iroa or Las ba dlcovfre-3 tf-tr CUztca Comity, Peas. A rro-vr la Cbsr'.la. Ey..f:3 a IU -Tonh 173 la a barrrl cfcvr. Tt9 larxt t::a-.ro srrovcr In it 9 ar::' rtztly av;r.c j ia Isxizz'. . z. Ey. lira, Tlzzl. ej Vrz'.-v, II., t-irz: btr IXia lintiMj a few cxj a.xx Tba rr.miti-.a cf Ex::lr.-a to r Africa ta if :3 waa z.j.j zzz'. -rist t It rre-reilr yti.-. A wo aa Lf'l::n;i --r ; -.t i S a tbrlTirr tz-'.zs la at 1 1! !lo. 2Lr.
Bertie Ledger-Advance (Windsor, N.C.)
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March 5, 1896, edition 1
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