Newspapers / The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, … / Feb. 3, 1898, edition 1 / Page 1
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ex. H h lU rpY 1 rA mwmm WW (.1K0K AMD I XCR EASING CntCUIOTIOX. "TRUE TO OURSELVES, OUR COUNTRY AND OUR GOD AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM VOL. 16. SMITnFIELD,NC., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1898. NO. 41 v - UJ Fifty Years Ago. Wk. c! imag-iac Uat tfci sk14 fc Ta tc where, ia tighttta itt y-threa Tt vkvtc woe ! 4-woim! r ( trch mx4 S14 SowtaaUiaap!ycaroaa... Rtrt tt ta Fair wit the prise caafcrr4 y ijtr'i Villa, ay th warld preferred. Chaflk. they i iwrt ikow, fca they started-aa yaa n Ayer's Cathartic Pills bare, from th tims of their preparation, been a continuous success with, the public And that means that Ayer's Pills accomplish what is promised tor them; they extra "where others fail. It was fitting, therefore, that the world-wide popularity of these pills should be recognized by the World's Fair medal of 1893 a. fact which emphasises the record: 50 Years of Cures. Ransom's Flask of Catsup. Chi.: Trltane. One of the most courteous and D"lite representatives of the a S utn who ever came to Wash ington is cx Stnator Matt V. Random, of North Carolina, who has recently returned to this country from Mexico, where he was the American minister. If there is anything Matt Ran som, " as he is called, prides him self upon it is hiscurtly manner and distinguished bearing under anr and all circumstances But his dignity was given a jolt at the Metrop-ditau Hotel a day or two ago in a maimer that the punctilious North Carolinian will never forget. Only a few minutes before the incident occurred he had been lecturing a constituent on the evil of drinking; and pointing to hiaiselr as an example of sobrie ty and total abstinence. Hang ing upon his arm at this time was a light-weight overcoat, and his hand was tightly gripped around the handle of a small leather satchel. One of the bell boys grabbed the overcoat and satchel simultaneously lor the pirpose of taking them up to Mr. Ransom's room. In his haste the bellbor tripped and sprawle 1 on the fl ior and a sus picious looking black bottle slip ped oat of one of the overcoat pockets and was smashed into a thousand pieces on the marble floor of the hotel corridor. "There goes my bottle of cat sap," said Mr. Ransom, without changing a muscle of his face. But the odor that arose from the marble floor was suggestive of the strongest liquor ever brewed by a North Carolina moonshiner. Awtul Coolness. Arl -it Coastitatkva. Durant was cool to the last; 50 was Cyrus, the Atlanta mar derer, and talking about cool men on tbe gallows a murderer, while ascending to the death trap, was offered a cigar by a man ia the crowd. He accepted it. when another man shouted: "Don't you want a match, pardner?" No, thanks," was the reply, as the sheriff was adjusting the black cap. "I'll light it when I Set there!" A Victim of the Vaccina tors. F-nk I. Staatoa. An old Georgia darker, with hu arm in a sling, was talking to another on a Wes End car yesterday. ' Yes, auh!" he said, with em phasis. Ts gone np now, fer sho!' You see dis arm in de s!ing, don't you?" "s." "Well, sub." the old man con tinued by way of explanation. Til be eighty year oH next harvest; I done see lotsof troub le ia my dav, bat by de grace er God I miss de Ka Klax. I miss de Vigilance Committee, I miss ds Whith Caps en I miss de Reg ulators, bat now, in my old age. p'ease God. de Waiinators xch enctu at!'' . A Napoleon of Color. Norolk VlrjrtoUa. In the island of St. Helena, where the white Napoleon ended his das a prisoner to the Eng lish, a black Napoleon is living now also a prisoner. It is a Mngular chapter of coincidences hk-h fe ms-to unite the for tunes of the house of Bonaparte and the bouse of Chaka. Early in the century, when Napoleon was overrunning Europe with hi- armies and dazzHng the minds of men with his genius, an EfgH-th sailor was wrecked rf the Afncnn coast and wan derr-d into Zalunrd. He was taken before the voung chief. Chaka, and to him he told of the wonderful outside world, of which the chief bad heard rumors, and as all the world was then filled with the name of N po!con, he told of the rise of the Corsican and how he had cocquered nations and built up for himself a great empire. The story of Napoleon captured the fancy of Chaka. and be re solved to be an Afiicau Napo leon. Then began the ris of the great Zalu power in South Af rica, and Chaka spread his con quests over great territories and subjugated neighboring tribes and built for himself an empire It flourished until it broke itself to pieces against the English, just as the empire of the man whose name had inspired its building did before it. The em pire established by Chaka stretched along tiewhole south east seaboard of Africa, from Limpopo to Cape Colony, and extended far inland. When the English landed in Natal in 1824 the empire of the Amaxula was the most power ful in Africa. Chaka mads a treaty with the Hng'ish. allow ing them to live in Natal, and for this he was killed by hts brother. Dingaan.in 1823 Then began the struggle between the white man and the black man which was to end in the destruc tion of the empire founp-d by Chaka. Peace and war alter nated, and all the time the Zalus lost ground Finallvio 1833- the British 'elt bound to blot out the Zulu power. Then it was that Cete- wayo. the beir of Chaka. sum moned forth his whole force and burled his "impis" or regiments on the British. At Isandclu the Zulus broke the British squares and routed the redcoats, but the end was the -capture of the chief and the breaking1 of the Zalu power. , In this war the bou3e ol Bona mm 1 parte again became mixea up with the fortunes ct the bouse pi Chaka. The Prince Imperial, grand-nephew of the rn.in whose example had inspired the build ing of the empire of the Amazula, went out to fight in the ranks of the English and was killed by a Zulu spear. In 1884 Cetewayo died, and the quarrel was con tinned by his son, Dim'zulu. Dtmzulu was conquered, and now he has been sent to St. Helena to end his days on the spot where the man whose ex- ample caused the Duiimng up oi the black king's empire died. As becomes the head of a great and warlike line, Din:zala is ac companied in his exile by ana- meroas retinue. His two un cles, several chief, a physician and a clergyman, with tbtir wives and children, make np a household as numerous as was that of the great Napoleon when at St. Helena. Thechaplain of the royal ex iles is Paul Hitimkula, a "cate- chist'from Cape Town, who was invited many years ago by Cetewayo to come to Zululand and teach the people. He is called by the Zulus Doctor Paul He accompanied the exiles to St. Helena of his own accord. Dr. Wilby, an Englishman, is the physician to the exiled household. All the Zulu attend- ants who wait on toe exu-s wen. to St. Helena of their own accord. Dinixalu spsaks and writes English fluently, and is a man of more than ordinary intelligence. An effort is now being made to procure the release of Dinixala. It ia argned that his return to " a a) his own people would convince them that the English intend to deal fairlv wit them. Bat the British Government wonldhard Ir dare to place again in the wart olsth valiant nation of the Zalaland a man of the abili j Aod t3w brarerj of Diaiiala. GENERAL. NEWS. Senator John L. McLaciin. of South Carolina, was re-elected Tuesday. The gold reserve Hps reached $163,670,000. the highest point in about seven esrs. The steamer City of Seattle sailed for Alaska with s'x hun dred passengers last week. The Diamond Match Compa ny ha been sued for $750,000 by a Michigan lumberman. Hannis Taylo, ex-minister to Spain, has aesioanced his can didacy for Cor g ess from A'a hama. Three earthquake shocks ttar lUd the residents of Htltna and other Arkansas towns Wednes day night. Postmaster General Gary has issued an order changing the color of the one cent stamp from blue to green. The official report from Bom bay says there have been 834 deaths from the plague during the past wetk. ... Because she is onlv lJJ.M'Rs1 Hanus. o! Chicago, III., a Taw graduate, is not permittea practice in Court Fire destrojed the immense Union elevator, filled with grain, at East St. Louis last week. Loso $2,000,000. English "manufacturers have been doing a thriving business supplying Indian insurgents with modern arms. Judge L. E. McComns has been elected to succeed Senator Gorman in the United States Senate from Maryland. Hon. W. J. Bryan was a wit ness to prove the good charac ter of the defendant in the Dra per murder trial at Jacksonville, III. last week. Mrs. Susan E. Wattles, who has jast died in Kansas, was the widow of Augustus Wattles, the close friend and co-worker .of John Brown in the "underground railway. Fudge Reagan has withdrawn as a candidate 'or the Texas sen atorship and the friends of Gov ernor Culberson are sanguine of his victory over Mills for the term .beginning March 4, 1899. A bill fs in the Seriate reqnir ing that cadets to West Point shall not be appointed unless they are bona fiJe residents ol the districts represented by Con gresmen making the appoint ment. The Wheeling. W. Ya.. Iron and Ste 1 Company posted notices of a reduction running from 10 to 20 per cent, in the wages j of all their plate mill handsJ The men threw down their tools at once and closed the mill, throwing 00 men out of work. TheiTurkish Minister of War, Rii Pasha, has been ordered to pnpare 80 regiments, with a minimum strength of 1700 men each, i for service in Roumelia next f spring. The attitude ol Bulgaria is causing uneasiness and the Porte has sent remon strances to Sofia. It is regarded as settled that the Naval Appropriation bill now, being framed by a House sub-Committee, will contain three items, namely, $1,000,000 for smokeless powder, $500,000 for reserve ammunition and $93,000 for the establishment of a Government powder factory. The Italian Government in tends to submit to Parliament a bilHm posing a tax on titles. It proposes that any one desir ing the title of Prince shall pay $&00. Five thousand dollars wl obtain the title of Marqais, while $4,000 will bay the title of Coant. Any one may become a Baron who is wiping to pay $1,000. Hallie Erminie Rives, the young Southern aathor and cousin of Princess Troubetzkoi, formerly Mrs. Amelie Rives! Chandler, is a patient at asani-j tarium n Brooklyn. Unnerved by hostile criticism of her recent J work, "Smoking Fjx," and overtaxed by the effort to get out another volume dealing with Southern problems, she has been removed to a sanitarium for treatment and rest. Her doctor thinks Miss Rives will be con vaiescent within a week or two. In "Smokins Flax" Miss Rives . defended lynch law ia the booth. Dr. John Hall. The resignation of Dr. John Hall, so long the pastor of the Fifth Avenue Presbvterian Church, in New York, announced on January 9, excites interest that reaches far beyond the boundaries of Manhattan Island. Thirty years ago he came from Dublin to take charge of a church known as "the richest Presbyterian church in Amer ica." Under I. . Hall that church has been known' not only as the richest, but ns one of the most religious r hutches in the country- There has 'never been ary qnestion as to th? influence or the prima rv purposes of that church under Dr. Hal', or as to the sort of gospel that has been preached there, or as to its ef ficiency as a Christian body From cyeiy point c.f view whereof the public has any knowledge Dr. Hall's pastorate has been superlatively success ful. No reason is give n for his retirement, except that his own opinion it was time to shift h:s labors and responsibilities upon younger shoulders. - Dr. Hal isof Scotch descent, and was born? in Armago, Irelacd, in 1829. He was educated in ; Beifast College, and licensed to preach in: 1849. He preached in Armaugh, and afterwards in Dub-in. and came to New York m 18G7. During his pastorate his church moved from Nine teenth Street up to its present site, on the corner of Fifty fifth Street and Fifth Avenue, where -the present church edifice and parsonage were built at a cost of more than a million dollars For ten years, from 1882 to 1892, Dr. Hall was Chancellor of the University of New York. He has also been a trustee of Princeton and Wellesley colleges, and chairman of the Presbyte rian Board of Home Missions. Harper's Weekly. Not His Fault. A minister met a little boy Sunday afternoon with a ''string of fish, none of which were more than two inches in length, says the Ohio State Journal. "Don't you know." said the minister, "that you committed a sin in catching those little fish on the Sabbath day?" V'Tain't my fault," replied the boy, "'cause 'the big ones wouldn't bite."- The Devii'a Rock. Over near the West Yirginia border, but on the Kentucky side of the line, is an immense stoue which is known as 'the devil's rock' because it is always burning hot," says a correspon dent from Ripley, W. Ya. "I went over to 'the hot rock' as some of the mountaineers call it, and must admit that it is the most unusual freak of nature I evei looked at. The stone is 10 by 14 feet, and looks like it is about 7 or 8 feet thick, although there's no way of measuring the depth, only a few inches being above ground. The rock con tarnan so much heat on the day I yisited it I could hold my bare hand on it but a few moments. Where the heat comes from and why the monster 'radiator of nature is not cooled by the blizzards ard snx weather of winter is more than I can deter mine. The superstitious will not go near it, as it is believed bv many to be the very 'chimney corner of the hades.' J took a picture of the great natural phenomenon, but of course that can give no adequate idea of its most wonderful . characteris tic." Exchange. Wisdom of trie Serpent. Chicago EreaiDK Foat. He persisted id using a frag ment of his broken slate, much to his teacher's disgust. "Why don't you tell your mother you broke your slate?" she asked. "I'm sore she'd give you a ce r one. "Course she would," replied the bor, "and she'd call it a Christmas present. I'd rather wait till next term . b f ore I ask for it." Graceful Amenities. Cbieajro Kreaiajr Port.- He went down oti his knees to me once," said the- haughty beauty. "I have been told," returned her equally haughty rival, "that he used to work in a shoe store, bat yoa have given me the first corroborative CYidence of it." , What Advertising Is. Press aatl Printer. Advertising may be done in a thousand wys. Any method which tells anybody about any thing ' is advertising. Adver tising is anything which con veys a message about a business or a product. If a man opens a store and tells his frknds about it, he is advertising the store. It he prints his announcement on cards and hands them to the passerby, he is advertising the ttore. If he put his sign above the door, or goods in the wiadow, j he is advertising the store. If he mikes a hundred dupli cates of his s;gn and nails then on fences or dead walls where peopleican see them, he is adver tising. If he4 ?ins a church or a club, or a secret society, his name and bis business will become known. and he will still be advertising. If he causes his sign or his card to be reproduced and printed in a newspaper, he is doing the same thing that be did when he tacked the sign, on the fence or handed the card to the passerby He is putting his sign into the house of every reader of that paper. This hypothetical man is a re tail dealer. He is in direct con tact with the people to whom he seeks to conyrythe news of his enterprise. Tne principle is exactly the same with the maker or handler of gocds that are to have a more than local sale. Of all the ways of advertising. th best, most certain and cheap est is that of using the columns of a good newspaper. Intelli gent people with money to spend always read the paper. Remembered the Name. Kanaaa City Journal. Some of the society people of Atchison are telling an In gal Is story which, though undoubted ly untrue, loses none of its xlev- ersese ch'that account. One of the Ingalls girls, who is alleged to be very choice of her company and very proud of her father, re cently attended a semi-public dance. In the course of the even ing she was approached by an Atchison young man, the son ol a grocery keeper, who had known her from infancy, though not intimately. He asked her for a dance, when she replied as she drew back, a little supercili ously ; "I think yon are the son of our grocery keeper, but I infer that you do not know me I am a drughterof the Hon. John J. Ingalls." "Ingalls? Ingalls?" musingly inquired the young grocery man; where have I beard that name before? 0b, yes, I remember now; your father was the man who reported the worbett-t'itz- simmons fight." How to be a Hundred. i Sir James Sawyer, a well known physician of Birming ham, has been confiding to an audience in that town the secret of longevity. Keep the follow ing nineteen commandments and Sir James sees no reason why vou should not live to be a 100: 1. Bight hours' sleep. 2. Sleep on your right side. 3. Keep your bedroom win dow open all night. 4. Have a mat to your bed- room door. 5. Do not have your bed against the wall.' 6. No cold tub in the morning but a bath at the temperature of body. 7. Exercise before breakfast. 8. Eat little meat and see that it is well cooked. 9. (For adults) drink no milk. J ' 10. Eat plecty of fat to feed the cells-which destroy the dis eased germs. 11. Avoid all intoxicants. which destroy those cells. 12 Daily exercise in the open air. 13 your apt Allow living no pet animals in rooms, x hey are to carry aboat disease germs. 14. Live in the country if yoa can. 15. Watch the three DV drinking water, damp and drains. 16. Have change of occupa tion. 16 Take frequent and short holidays. I 18. Limit your ambition; and I 19. Keep your temper. Burled Treasure. Own Till Weekly. . A verv large hole ground, at the root of in the a large walnut tree on the Yankee Hall farm, near Pactolns, has caused much speculation as to by whom dug, for what purpose and when dag. - The- hole was discovered a short while ago, and there was an impression under some roots, as if a jar, pot or some vessel had been taken out. It seems that no one knows anytning about it except that the hole was found as left by the digger? It is the current belief that mon ey was found. If so who buried it there? The pirate Teach is said to have made ma&y trips up Tar river to what is now Yankee Hall. On the farm of the late Gen. Grimes, now owned by his son, still stands alargecypress, near the river, known as "table top." The top is flat and bushy, the tree towers above those surrounding, and tradi tion savs that Teach used it as an observatory es the river and country for several miles around could be watched. It is not im probable that Teach buried some of his treasure in that sec tion, and that some unknown has unearthed some of it. Teach had a sister who lived on what is now a partef the Grimes farm. He visited her often and many traditions are of wealth buried by him in that vicinity. Belief in those tradi tions have led to many - fruitless searches, and numerous holes in the ground at various different resulted from them. Editorlalettes. Fond da Lac Beporter. Editorialettes are the latest thing in journalistic columns. The idea evidently emanated from the brain of the same thinkerette whose idealettes have recently been expressed in storyettes and sermonettes,. A city editory is really behind the times if he does not meet the fad half way and publish some local- ettes. A Fairy Codfather. Harper Weeklr. January 17 was fairy godfath er's day at the Baker chocolate works in Milton, Massachusetts. On that evening was distributed the $43,000 left by the will of the late Henry L. Pierce to the employees of the business of which he was manager. Two hundred and forty-five men and 185 women met the officers of the corporation in a large room in one of the mills, and, after a supper and some discourse from Mr Pierce s executor, each re ceived a check for one hundred dollars. The oldest employee received a special legacy of $2000. It is not recalled that there was ever a testator whose testamentary provisions gave more acute satisfaction to more of his personal acquaintances than those of Mr. Pierce. There has been no audible grumbling about his will. He did every thing that was expected of him, and a great deal that was not expected, surprising very many people, and disappointing none unless, possibly, some mem bers of one of the learned pro fessions, for as yet there has been no hint of a lawsuit over his will. The will ran over with miscellaneous kindness and be nevolence. Mr. Pierce ought to have kept a school for testators whose purposes were philan thropic. If Stephen Girard, A. T. Stewart. Samuel Tilden, and Daniel B. Fayerweather could have sat under his instructions awhile, the memory of all of them would be sweeter, and the general public would be a gainer by a good many millions of use ful money. Is there not some one living who has had experi ence of wills and is competent, by disposition - and knowledge, to open such a class ior tne in struction of testators? Might not Mr. Carnefc'e undertake it, or Mr. Pierpont Morgan? Yes know Casey, the contrac tor," said Mr. Dolan. Oi do." replied rafferty. "Is he what ye'd call reliable?" "He is the most - reliable man Oi iver knew. Whiniverhe tells vfz anvthtn' ve kin depind on its not bein so." Washington Star. Carolina Cuttings Dan Rippey committed suicide a; Durham Thursday. The inco;tie of the University last year was $50,000. William Jackson, colored, died of small pox in Charlotte last week. : It is sai? that Otho Wilson is a candidate for postmaster ol Rale'gl. John Evans who was to have been hanged Jan, 26, has been given another respite of thirty dnys. Collector Duncan has appoint ed Henry C. Thompson, ol Orange county, to be his chief deputy. The Raleigh health board has advised all citizens of Raleigh to be vaccinated, but no compul sion is to be used. Prof. T. M. Tiernman. husband of "Christian Reid." the well- known North Carolina author ess, died last week in Salisbury. There are 501 students at our University this year. Eighty six counties of North Carolina, and cine States are represented. The United States War De partment has recommended that $3,500,000 be appropriated for mproveraents in Beaufort har bor. Mr. Pimhrolr Tnnca formrltr of Wilmington, hun homtyhf tin $80,000 house in New York city a m m and will make extensive im provements. Ashe viile Presbvterian church took up a collection amounting to $500, for borne missions in the Asheville Presbytery, on bunday, January 23rd. 9 Dr. Thomas S. W. Mott. assis tant physician at the Central Hospital, for the insane, Ral eigh, died last week, aged 27. tie was to nave oeen married soon. A. A. Thompson, of Alamance county, died suddenly in the school room where he was teach ing. , He was 60 years of age and bad been engaged in teach ing for a number of years. Col. A. M. Waddell, of Wil-i mington, has accepted an invita tion to deliver the annual ad dress to the graduating class of j the Medical College of South! Carolina, at Charleston, April1 1st. I The President has appointed Hamilton Glovtr Ewart, of North Carolina, to be district Judge for the Western district of North Carolina. Ewart has been judge of the western crimi nal court for the past two years. The trustees of the University ' have granted President Alder man a leave of absence for three months. He will at once sail for Gibraltar and visit many places of interest on the shores of the Mediterranean, returning throigh Italy, France and Eng land. An Iredell county man who owed $750 to a Statesville creditor, who had made an as signment, wished himself to make an assignment to pay the embarrassed Statesville man. He went to a doctor, a neighbor, desiring to make bim assignee, and gave in his assets as two mules and eleven children. The doctor declined to act. A homicide occurred in Wilson county Friday night. T. K. Lamm had a dispute aboat a settlement with Pearson Eat- man, one of his tenants. Eat man sh6t Lamm with a pistol, Lamm then threw Eatman down and stamped him to death, also seriously injured Batman's son and wife who interfered. It is thought that Lamm will die from the effects of the pistol shot. Tested AND TRUE. tba food para, wbalextma and deUcloaa. Absolute! fur First Indictment for Flirt In e. KnoxTiile Dispatch. The Knox county grand iurv has indicted the first victim of the "fohnnv law." enacted hv the Tennessee Legislature last year, makipg it a misdemeanor to flirt with schoolgirls. 1 be case, if tried, will proba bly go to the Supreme Court to test the constitutionality of a law which infringes an inherent right to firrt with a girl. Mother Goose Up to Dato. Sing a sonc of penitence a fel low full of rye; four and twenty serpents dancing in his eye: when his eve was Opened he shouted for his life; wasn't he a pretty chump to go before his wifer His hat was in the oarlor underneath a chair, his boots were in the hallway, his coat was on the stair, his trousers in the kitchen, his collar on the shelf; but he hasn't any notion where he was himself; when tbe morn was breakinc some one beard him callr his head was in the ice box, which was the best of all. Ex. Dad For Doth. Pittsburg Dispatch. There was once an "Irishman who bad a face that, as one of his friends once remarked, was "an offense to the landscape." Next to his homeliness, his pov erty was the most conspicuous thing about him. Hence the un sympathetic comment of a neigh bor. "How are ye, Pat?" he said. "Mighty bad," was the reply; sure 'tis starvation that's star- in' me in the face." "Is that so?" rejoined his friend. "Sure it can't be very pleasant for ay ther of yez." After years of untold suffering from piles, B. W. Pursell, of Knittersville, Pa., was cured by using a single box of De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve. Skin dis eases such as eczema, rash, pim ples an&r obstinate sores are readily cured by this famous remedy. J. R. Ledbetter. J. W. Benson. Hood Bros. Rev. B. B. Albritton, a native of Pitt county, but now living in Pamlico, is now in his 82d year. He is a member of the Free Will Baptist church and has been preaching fifty-five years. Dur ing that time he has married over 2000 couples and received and baptized into his church 3,456 members. King's Weekly. There are three little things which do more work than any other three little things created they are the ant, the bee and De Witt's Little Early Risers, the last being the famous little pills for stomach and liver troubles. J. R. Ledbetter. Hood Bros. J. W. Benson. Rev. Dr. T. DeWitt Talmage and Miss Elencre Collier, of Pennsylvania, were married Jan uary 22. Dr. Talmage is 66 years of age while his bride is only 40. This is the third time tbe noted divine has married. Royal HK7DIR WOOD'S SEEDS axe apccuuly grown and gf frf A tn mmr K twA anA rgquiremgnta of Southern Growers. Wood's Descriptive Catalogue is most valu able and helpful in riving cultural directions and valuable information ' about all sceda specially adapted to the South. VEGETABLE add FLOWER SEEDS, Cirsss aad Clover Seeds, See4 Potatoes, Seed Oats and all Garden and Farm Seeds. Write for Descrtpthre Catalogue. Mailed free. T. W.-W00D & SONS, SEEDSMEN, - - RICHMOND, VA. THE LARGEST SEED HOUSE IM THE SOUTH.
The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 3, 1898, edition 1
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