Newspapers / Bertie Ledger-Advance (Windsor, N.C.) / May 21, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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AM CE ONE DOLLAR fcR VEAR,' INVARIABLE IN ADVANCE. PRI THE LEDGEH FUSU$wr3 COUPAHi. VOL. XIII. WINDSOE, BERTIE COUNTY, N. 0., THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1896 XO. 24. J W II 111:' n Longing. hills slope down to tne vaiiey, tne streams run aowu w iuo oe. And my heart, my heart, Oh, iar one : sets and strains toward thee. But only the feet of the mountain are felt by the rim of the plain, ..." ., And the source and soul of the hurrying stream reacn not me cauing niaui. Xho dawn is sick for the' daylight, the morn ing yearns for the noon, d the twilight sighs for he evening star and the rising of the moon. , '- But the dawn and the daylight never were seen in the self-same skies', nd the gloaming dies of . its own desire when the moon and the stars arise. Ihe springtime calls to" the summer : "OhJ mingle your life with mine , jd summer to autumn 'plaineth low V "Must the harvest be only thine?" jut the nightingale go'ej3 when the swallow comes,ere the leal in tne Diossom is nea, sion of a man -of "hnMnoBr. vw return of post,' to say that if Herr Schrattenbak, . Junior, , arrived on a day specified, exactly at twelve o'clock M., he should become the husband of Julie, with money, of the meantime, also, as a matter of business Herr Necker informed his daughter that he had found her a hus band exactly suited to her mind, and that,, by a certain ; day, she must pre pare to receive him. Julie knew her father too well to complain or remon- out. At 1 o'clock the hounds drew and found almost at once the where abouts of a boar, having been ascer tained in the early dawn by the hunts man. Instead of at once taking to a portion, in ready flight, he first rid himself of two of hit 200,000 florins. In assailants, ripping them up with hii powerful tusks, then going straight away he left the hounds nearly 400 yards behind. Unfortunately he was joined almost immediately- by a "female boar" and the two went away very ' fast The boar crashes through everything, and ia CUBAN COMMISSARY l?"" u.imu, ami iacy eccul con:acraiio ubaomww xuiu ndiious uuuer digging littlo trenches and tarnlns The Greenwood Tree, After Camp Is Pitched Thp Ilea - Forage la The Forest. Ono'of the" most disappointed men in town is captain Bueneoof the Cuban army.' The cajptain, who ia a member of the largest banking houso in San, strate; she t relied rather on the expeV BtoppecLby nothing, while the hounds" Caba cam0 o ew York last dient-of love, and having sought her are'forced to pick their" way " through JaI on a 8Pecial rnission. Ho eooa dear Eckerlin,: . communicated all to the undergrowth, which is in plicei finished his business, and haa been him. On the morning fixed for the extremely thick, the field following trying eTer since to get back to fight marriage Julie trot th rlnr.Tr fnrtrri alone the vallevs with which the Wat witlx Us company. Twice he has at- half an hour, and at the moment nf I is intersected. The two boars raced jtudhen autumn sits on her golden sheave, I its striking twelve, a light chaise drove I neck and neck, for more than an hour up, from which descended a person- and a half, being often sighted as the? age in a traveling 'cloak, with a nose dashed across an opening, but the of the size and shape of a fish-knife, distance between, the hounds and their Herr Necker welcomed him," looked qnarry was diminishing rapidly, and first pleased, then greatly , astonished, at last the male separated from the at the size of his nose, paid his daugh-r female,' the hounds unfortunately fol ter's portion of 200,000 florins in lowing the latter. In t-pite of her bank bills, told him he had no time to condition, however, she showed a fast lose, saw him and Julie safely packed Par heels," and ran gamely enough up in the carriage with two of her fe- or fully an hour more, being killed Then the reign of the rose is dead. And hunger and thirst, and wail and want, are lost in the empty air, . ; . And the heavenly spirit vainly pines for the touch of the earthly fair. f , And the hills slope down to the valley, the streams run down to the sea, And my heart, my heart, Oh, far one 1 sets and strains toward thee. , t . Alfred Austin - tempted to get away, once, it is eaid, on the Hawkins and again on the Ber muda. ; "I was all through with my busi ness on July 20," said the cuptain, "and here I am etilL Every timo I've tried to get away something has hap pened. If the people in charge of the I pend on itbeing right. WON BY A NOSE. One autumnal made a flying tour through Germany, that is, I got, as rapidly over the ground as wheels iould carry me, and, on the afternoon of a day more than commonly clear and beautiful, I arrived at Wildbad iust ns the &un was over the Schwartz- TJiought3 of ; gooa male friends, beheld it " start at a gallop for the Hotel de Ville (where the ceremony is '. first performed), and was supremely happy. 'Ah!' said he, chuckling and walking to and fro, 'this is doing the business. ' Tremen dous nose,, that rather too large. In the midst of this 6elf-gratulation, there drove up to the door a lumber ing vehicle, from! which, to the un- B-ftld mountains. W made the more desirable' by speakable astonishment of Herr Neck , , , ' " .1 3'. t ... a two-fold appetite, becu- ur uesceuueu a personage wnn a nose v,ii rnHiin nlnnrr iv nearly twice the size of that of the morning ; at "mine inn," reason of pied me suburbs, but, on turning into " the street, near the Konig ; - Platz, : my, senses were completely dazzled r by as matchless a pieoo of humanity as ever bore the name of woman. She partly rested on the stone balcony of an , an tique mansion was ,' about nineteen years of age, --tall, finely, rounded, with dark auburn hair, shadowing features deliciously chiseled; and glowing with love and happiness. Within the room 6tood, With, his arms folded, and in a military costume, 'a young man of noble bearing, whose eyes were di rected toward her,, and to whom she occasionally addressed her self. I , gazed entranced upon that divine object, until the envious turning of another" corner shut her abruptly from my sight. I had fortu nately two or three more streets to be jogged over, whice served to modify my admiration, and to, remind me that I had not broken my fast since the and, therefore, on arriving my first, and, of course, most rational demand, was for the bill of fare. To cut this matter short, I; feasted somewhat voraciously, nor did I forget the' landlord's , Ausbruch Tokay, or the landlord himself, who favored me with his company at my particular request. . He was a jovial pleasant fello.w, and as good as an Arab at story-telling. "The lady of- whom,, you inquire," eaid he, "is the wife of a colonel in the army of Prussia, named. Eckerlin, and is considered the most beautiful woman of which that country can boast ; but her husband wellt deserves euch a prize, for it was by no common stratagem that he obtained her.", "Indeed!" said L "How?" "By a nose I" replied mine host. "The ladv's maiden name was Julie Ancelot;her father was a stock broker in Belin, and one of the millionaires. He loved his daughter, but was deter mined to have his own way in chdosr mg a hnsband for her. Now, among other crotches, he .was an enthusiastic , admirer of large noses, : provided -ithey . had a Koman contour, though he freely admitted he' had; never r beheld one of that : ultra-prominency which' entirely satisfied him. 'Just at this period he received a letter from an old school fellow, settled in Silesia, ho, as an army contractor, hadj be come immensely rich. His name vras. Herr SchratteQbakf and ..being 4esirous of seeing his son settled in life,-pro posed him as a husband for the Frau lein Julie. There was, however, he frankly J observed, one circumstance which might be deemed an' objection ; between his son's forehead and chin, there was a protuberance lyc beyond the Koman, or, .indeed, any other standard !" The effect of this commun ication on Herr Necker Ancelot may be imagined. He,' with all the oreci- at four o'clock after a very, good run of three hours. The coup de grace was delivered by one" of the field with a long dirkjshort carbines are carried by others, in case it is impossible to approach the boar, who is sometimes far from beaten when he turns to bay. Not many weeks ago an old boar ripped up more than twenty hounds before he was finally dispatched, and it is rare indeed when the boar fails to account for at least one hound in his last struggle. Bermuda had labeled their boxes tho government would not have stopped the steamer and I should bo back with my friends by this time, with a chanco to help them. Here I can do nothing. I am useless. "Look at colonel Perez there. Ho aud i began together. Wo wero old schoolmates, you know. He stayed a water this way and that, but It vu disappointing to go out tho next day and find that I had been irrisatisg molo holo. I set watch on the litllo pesU, and I eoon learned their hibiu. Sinco then it is no tronblo at all to get thcra. "In tho first plac. I found that a mole neTer comes straight to tho top of the ground, but always on a il&at, and yon will boo tho 'ground agiutcd for soma tima before ho throws cp hU hill If you Btep within twenty feet of him when ho comei to tho top bt will instantly Btop work and run, ItVno uso to try and titch hica then. "Bat a molo is tho victim of habit. If ho is disturbed at his work at 2 o'clock today ho will not cocao back until exactly 2 o'clock tomorrow. You can set a watch by him and de- Well. I watch around in my berry patch and Uko tbo timo whenever Idutarb Mr. Mole Tho next day when it U Uno for hia to co no back I Uko my sUtioa near hia hole. Aa soon as ho throws op his littlo mound I plant my foot be hind him and closo up tho hole. Then all I havo to do is to icoop him out oi mo tun ana drop Lim in ny and fought and now ho is a colonel,' 1 pocket kicking tcrltchicg like a good xi x coma nave got .deck, i a bo a colonel too, or dead. Oh, well, tho rainy season ia coming on and after that the fever. That will mako tho Spaniards sick. In tho last war - thirty-eight percont of them died of fever to say nothing of thoso wo put. out fellow. I kill him, stretch him on a shingle, and a man hero in tho city paya mo $1 apiece for then to mako puracs of." San FrancUco Tost. E riorlbui Unom" on Oar Colat. According to tho United Statct mint first comer ! He s entered, and pre sented a letter of introduction, which announced him as Herr Schrattenbak, Junior ! " . : "The stockbroker was bewildered, but before any explanation could be given the bride, the bridesmaids and Nose the First drove up. The ' rival noses were ''immediately ."confronted." Herr Necker gazed first upon one and then upon the other with unfeigned perplexity he was motionless, speech less. - "At length Nose the First broke the silence as follows: 'If there be de ception here I am guilty of it ; : but, nevertheless I feel confident of par don, since it is sanctified by love. Julie is now the wife of a colonel in the Prussian army. My name is Ecker lin ; my nose is not what it appears.' -As the India rubber appendage, was lifted off, Herr Necker recovered him self. 'This is V fraud,' soid he, Fashionable Dogs A few days ago a man walking in one of the most fashionable streets of Faris came across a lost dog. It was a small toy terrier, and was clad in of the way with our machetes and bul- odcialj, tho words, "E Fluribui lets. Unum," as ihey appear on our coica, "Of courso they cannot rido at all. are thero without tho aiaetion of law. Perez has told you about that, but wo Tho legend first appeared upon a cop can outmarch them, too. One night, per coin "etracV at tho NcwlTar;; about a year ago, wo broko camp and (New York) mfat in tho year 17cl started to meet Maceo and Marti I Tho United States was vcrT Tons:? at that timo and could cot afford the rases ct tu li'.T-r: la t- ri'izz. I: liuJ tt.iJt -ITirk Ti" J oa c ! Arc" Ji Lu tzskxt 17 . c.-a. flrJelUar:: f: ?. t !: tS. 'Sd X ' .i- :ua LjX:cr.e. Tt E:-. ct Gttv I lu 'tret t-r- wto tvi rtarM til th- r: jl tejx a ail tL cTm tLxz n.r ct aorzji Li Uc iru tr:;: p tj rzrzr?. a fclit.' ell rrc'Uetxc rZ tt-tt wr. tx'.-o wca It 9 Zni rrs r r fUI u c;.i. Eccitrr TTilrf, cf C:'.:rv:?. is a.-.!!-i-Una. Ccrxa Dcy.e. 11-5 t,rt'j il tTT-rrlttf sl zixXt n IlleerT rt'i T"-s ai4 tzi. llii aTxrac w ?t ix 11: j worll J otAia Sills, tl lxi ktjwa e4 11 71 raxtAa eartoftrrtcji, hxn Joa cll is tl cfitxtyhrwt Hit CrxVr rttxT c-.r X: Is tall ttxl a lxr ttr. et Itn t.rl:t -eraria t-xittj rcti ci tT re,' to .-- aa4 art:trrj r-.a.i,ncra, c:tJ jtu-M A.prl?v,jir. 1 c! zizj 1c? fi Tr&c, did la h"rTut aJrwdiji : a il as e t-;ityiiL 1 Jcitla UzCnlf tit Tr4T t;-rxr2 ct 175.03 tr03 tL mJ ct LU "IZMctj c Z 0r Owa Hs-ea, ail txM i;cx scut cl U la Ufztj C Trtrk. rirxr-T cf tt9 Cn '.-'. fir tllllrta ax n:t--2-T. Tcc ti a c :2 ct. Lx errr n::p.3 till ec i:rr. Ten'. rt rrvlj ci rarVrn rrvli Lr tr.!'.-tiil tcr?, Izt a ritli ilxxvlul is a fcir::j. Tt 1x19 T-iitl lr?a VTlv. ci !C- y -t Cry, wa C sixia vrim ta .trt ir-Kct 1 ta r-i5tiy a! tit C: 7 c? llkU, .-1 axrw it UiXTi-r ari t::m-:tr ti UL 500 yia as Uv vrxx cct la trow tLrsu Tc-ilD, T., t-U I:0 tii:t r-i-'ilrrt. Tdec?, Olio, lato Lira a Ui;r Telega (OH.3) tijvrtrvu tinc:::i, Tro& et;t?jtiCil t-iftiu ar c; an elaborate coat trimmed with costlv furs. In this coat was a tinv socket Wo knew ihJ wcr0 to Una containinff a handkerchief bordered fort" leftSes aw8J By noon tho next luxury of a mint, so a pritato individual 'With exquisite laoe' a irorked mono' had marchea elghtcoa leagues by tbo nano of Brasher o posed tbo gram, and a coronet Eound the wo were not too tired to attack a Ncwburg coining establishment with dog's neck was a gold and jeweled Paniaa column tnai camo uown on tho intention of turning out money of I bangle, and his coat was fastened by a brooch blazing with rubies and dia monds. .It is quite the fashion among the pretty and smart' women of Pari? to get up their pet dogs in expensive and elaborate costumes, to cover them with jewels, to engrave cards with their names, and to drench theix trembling little bodies with the new est and most pungent perfumes. . . The dogs in this country are scarce- our flank, a littlo to tho rear. We had a lively fight until five o'clock when Maceo and Marti came njx Then together wo drove tho enemy out of I sight tho realm for all comers. Exactly how tho words nE Tluribat Unura" camo to bo used aa a motto is not known, but ono thing is certain, tho Brasher copper coin bearing tbat We ought to havo been pretty legend and tbo dato of 1733 i the tired by that time. Don't you think moat Taluablo metal dUk ever minted so ? Well, wo wero not very frein, on this continent, being worth about ly so pampered. Yet thero is an sternly, 'and according to our laws the Italian greyhound in town which look marriage is null. ' . 'Not exactly,' said like a piece of Dresden china, and colonel Eckerlin ; 'fori have obtained our good king's ; permission and au thority to espouse the Fraulein Julie Ancelot -here it is. "Herr Schrattenbak, Junior, looked first at the India-rubber nose, then at colonel Eckerlin, then at Julie, then at Herr Necker, then at himself in 'the glass, and then observed : 'I am glad dogs in her part of this: for, to tell you the truth, I York Journal. have a secret penchant for a lady in Silesia, who admires my physiognomy much more, I fancy, than the Fraulein Julie; in fact, the lady; I allude to thinks me a handsome likeness .of the emperor Trajan. . . 'It you are satisfied, said Herr, An celot, 'I am sure I am; for I must own that I was somewhat alarmed at the size of Nose the First, but yours fno offense would frighten ax reei- mentl Come, let U3 be all friends, and sit down to a dejeuner in the wears a fawn-colored coat, tailor-made, trimmed with fur and buttoned . down the back with brass buttons. Sappho, as she is poetically named, wears Dresden and Watteau ribbons in deli cate hues. Such, in brief, is her Rai ment that when she goes to take the air she is the envy of all the little of tho town. New Soapsuds ou the Waves. but orders wero given to return by the routo wo camo and, hunting up something to eat from what the Span iards had abandoned in their flight, we marched back tho whole eighteen leagues, reaching our starting placo tho next afternoon. You 1 won't find any Spaniards to do that Wo couldn't if we weren't used to tho food and to the climate and hadn't lived out of doors all our lives. ' "Another thing in our favor, espe cially in tho hilly country, whero tho woods are dense, is that wo know what planta and roots aro good for food and what poisonous. Almost anywhere in Cuba thero is enough stuff growing wild to keep any man pavilion.' I need not add (continued beinS 60 diminished .that the vessel mine host) that the rival nosesstrange coma ue managed wnnouv uimcuuy. as it may sound, shook hands in a spirit of the most perfect amity ; and I am sure that you will agree with me that colonel Eckerlin (who is spend ing the honeymoon here) is worthy of juiie r " - - , - f Boar Hunting in France. On Monday, February 17; one of a series of boar. hunts (chasse.au. sang lier) took place in the forest of Mar chenoir, on extensive forest situated between the historical ... old towns of d Orleans, and not far from ' the Biver" Loire, the largest and longest of' 'French rivers. '-The forest or the greater part of it, is the prop-' erty of the 'Duke of Luynes, bu the duties of master were assumed on this occasion by his brother-in-law, the Duke of Naoilles. The meet," which was at 12 o'clock, was poorly- attend ed, there not being more than fifteen Some experiments have . reee nilv alive, if ho knows how to cet it Wo been- made, says Railroad Gazette, do; so wo can go about without. a which sjiow that soapsuds will reduce, commissary department When wo a seh almost as well as oil. This -was halt for breakfast or supper, thero is first tried on the Scandia, an 'English a bugle call aa a signal to prepare to steamer, in a storm on the Atlantic hunt get our sacks ready, etc Then Having no great quantity of .oil, the a second call, meaning disperse to tho master- dissolved a largo quantity of "woods. In a half-hour, perhaps, you soap in water, which was discharged iH 8efl tho men back in camp,each over the bow. The effect was nearly vith some fruit or vegetable that ho instantaneous, the height of wave3 I has plucked or dug out 01 tne ground. We eat those things and they agrco with us. . If tho Spanish eat them much they have a pain in tho stom ach. All: wo need to drivo tho Span iards out is supplies. We've- moro men than wo can arm. So it is no use for anyone to come to us looking Captain De'Gall of the French steam er Senegal, sailing the Adriatic, was struck by a squall and used soap and water with the same result The so lution when dripped over the bow made a quiet space about ten metres wide, preventing thS' waves from breaking over the vessel. The Deadly Hand-Arrow. One of the deadliest native weapons of the Chinese is the hand-arrow. . It is a bolt of metal three or four inches long and some 3-8ths of an inch thick. One end tapers to a sharp point, and the other As hollowed to admit , three or - four feathers . which act like an arrow. The. weopon i3 thrown with thefhand. An expert thrower will hit a target as big as a. man's breast at fifty yard., and send tho missile through a two-inch plank, New Orleans Picayune ,' r $2, 000, or twicoas much aa the famous raro dollar of 1831. So mo timo after coining his fsnous copper with tho odd latin motto as abovo described. Brasher tried his hand on a large-sized gold piece, pro ducing tho coin known to tho numis matists aa ''Brasher'a twenty. Tho Brasher Mtwenty" was not a $20 gold piece, however, for it lacked SI of weighing enough ; but of lato years it baa become very acarco and Taluablo because of tho fact that the legend in scribed upon it reads "Unum E Fluribus," instead of "'E Pluribai Unum. This coin ia now valued at 1,500. Taking Gold From the Sea. Tho tea' aa a wholo contains aa cnormoua quantity of gold, but every gallon contains a quantity expresaiblo chemically only as a trace Many years ago a patent was taken out for securing this precious metal from tho ocean, and moro recently another in j ventor has brought out a method that for economy in working can scarcely bo surpassed. Plates of iron aro to bo arranged in scries with plates of cop per, and their combined effect when immersed in sea water is to bring about a kind of electrolysis whereby the gold attaches itself to tho copper. Batter ies of this kind aro' to bo placed in tideways or attached to tea-going ships, and in procesa of timo a thick coating r izzo peptic, r. rz 1. in : TcrtCTT TL Irsa Zrl L'.l Ci:z.r ct 7- cxzo Laj axla ci u: rr--i r-ri:- t&c-i to rr:ra Lx tla Ult rJ? ci 11 - Kr.UlU ct Latt Tto rcixLl tints ct rsrcr. C"L. r tat-taa erusaaxlS lit sirrc at? ofca ca Sziij. Tha cxt. oaTrt!.io3 e t II r? t ar J I : raat t:;icf ?"r.l3c.l itum vriA Xx txlX la ItroU ta rtc.lrt UT. Prol 2 ral 8a51 Oosprrs. eft, XnrJ caa relen:ioa ct Litr, r ttrr Lx L2- Iaj cf c3 as !tftn ia ft. Lozli. li To ors.tr wort far Ci rcr wti i.slu:tr trcrx at LcJoa Is Uzz 13 UV: circles. ts Uierct. I a rrzlt cx;rt!iv cilery fifes Is IiTcii. la is rzwi or IL Cz. Mxs-a z. nJ fir eail s?TTic f VaHzkiirrQrzrx ct rr-w ocit aeUu.irrrreitIr5il-;t;jr:ci: ti aay t-st wtita UVr. 8cx 14"0 wtrficrs ta a sllprri i ": BATdrx. Hi:-, strac ti dhT txj. tra aTter rTla ejects. TLi c toils xsi Lxt t3 b exttM at a diacczzi. 4 Coal rr.Ir.!ig Is rrliS Ci firty cf rz'.z erx tath Tokoa t.:er tLa clzlz.: r-. 3L liets. JL tsA ct explicit ccaI m cia. r eitly tat h Forty 2IIU Crk dltr.:i. with wood at 5 11 to t II a ccrlUs coi vcta tt aa explicit tsx streak. TTIth 15,053 dwtlt! Iixllist aln'.r'Mt- Krw Icrk wlthia a few rU sl ir.rJ rsora aJtost ta foUsw, tt ett?rs f rr itm rt tiiect Citn:'lofevl to rt wcrt Cf xt ru - rr wlUUtO.CCOlfsattialtrr tit Un i-r-Izs tht txri tifa of tie r5t fr r: iMv Tha ona CUrsjo Hxllxij Czrz-xzr xl loin lU sl:r eijj'.jjes wl tT t-a ia 1:1 erne act lcs itsn tr tscrtis r-:i irl r7 svi4 tsr-4 tr4:tit ta tt- ccrtty" fccnriul. If tttr dl tit czzztxztj a-j tax txizi9 liJ gltca tit itzl.j uzv, CLEAN :?wS. for aiob. unless ho knows, tomethinff f Eld wiU bo deposited. Chicago nhnnt nrtillnrr. Thin Ten nltrhi no I IrlDUne. him, but I do not know certainly." New Xork Press. . 3Ioney in the Moleskin Business. "No boys, it ain't money that makes my pockets bulge out that way, but it is tho equivalent, remarked a gray- . haired, gray-bearded rancher from Mendocino, as ho took in tbo slack of a hay ropo that did servio for a belt. To tell you tho trctb, my breeches pockets, and my coat pockets, too,aro pretty well lined with moleskins. Within tho last year I hare developed into a molo hunter, and it pays. I Her Utile Iland. "Why," tho faltered." "did you hasten to pick op the glovo I hid dropped? Because, ho answered, boldlyf 'I thought there might bo something in it for mo sometime. And his worst tuspkiont wero sub sequently confirmed. Detroit Trib une. The Columbia river of Cicada is 1,403 rnilefc m length ;. tho ttrean of the aamo name in Oregon is COO miles. TKer art aioct CC3 iirjrrs La !crr T. rt Cry. Tfct xt.xII ct-Tjn Is r: xl . ; rr t : --1 ta Call! ircU wte: Clis. IIorxT cxrtUzr -rt ta it's flrrs-L ci rarls, Fnir. JLcc3r7 r-iSlT bscri: t23.CC3 -m of cjpcoMi la rcrila -I ZT.j ccz.it to 1 2 acre. -ii:.r Liilix's tJ r;rl- ni:.-cal to carry Urjclci as bar la 01I3 tuk l--ec;t a Law. Tha ATlsoaa Arrlra'.txnl Exr-Tirr.':.! Ktiiioa fc-is cs.lt cicAfc;al es;rl:tcu la lh etltart cf !e. Tit Ntw Terfc St-vk ri--..r tr crrxz tivl a co t j rr;: t : j r, j wir ca lit t -rkt si?;. 1,sj tiia li.ozo -i;r.ra it tn z..1 cot lit Lcxji9 ci Azerlrai Vflf-;i,a La Asriil. Tl c3tzzI:z" ta tn:t cf tit 0.-ii T:txl of H'a-ailn bu ".trzJ.z 1 t 3 rinc Itoot of tl'.m t-: tl IL'fl kIooLjl Tt 1 prti? x!s trrzx tit -riT:r-- lit Uiltfi 5:: It it. 1 tt !:-.- lr iii ol 9-tT re t'.-Tliz iLltTxX'.j ly tit tzzlrvlx, rv!ur:-3 i-.l tT ii-.: t i fi ir e drr-l tit f UuU;3 Arzzj la :-ry ! tc Ass; It ArT.-xa ZLxx t-l r ftilxlit Is wlj ! 'f-1. Tit rV.t eo-r'.:pt cf tl T :-'.t'rz. Tt iajrtf AJuo;tl:a hs. n'.i'. '.lit'-l & t-'.!:ri rut cf tei.lT2Tt cz'.i ca Vi-l t.-T-1 el-5kt4 tai:cx ca a tuzzzztz Hzlf,
Bertie Ledger-Advance (Windsor, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 21, 1896, edition 1
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