Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / June 12, 1880, edition 1 / Page 1
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Ill THE- - A.STDN B a 1 : . . . : i Ipsa CDcrotcd to tlic Trotection of iro?nc qui Interests of the County VOL.1. Gahtonta, Gaston-Count N. C, Sat uiip a y : M o i in i no, Juni: 12th., .1880. No: 17. If fftte- t Charlotte, North Carolina, Practice limited to tlio Eve, Ear and Throat. ' . r JQyOflice witb Drs. Jones & Graham, 2?tos flf. pitman, At tor hoy a t-L a w, (opposite Court House,) i'ructices in the iSMe aW Federal Courts and yays ' prompt attention to business. Will negotitate loans. . Charlotte, N. C, "16 Juno 5 If. RO. D. GRAHAM, Attoriiey-at-Law, la the Slate, and United States Courts, Itecord Information, Abstracts of Title, Survey. i(C., furnished far compensation. Office, N.-K. cor. Tra'ae and Tryon sta., CHARLOTTE, N. C. marC-ly Attorney at , , DALLAS, JV. C, iri practice in Gaston and adjoining . ...j .1. Oi. I L.ll f...,t counties ana ine oime mm rwn iii,c.i. Hasinas promptly attended to. feb2l: y Am B. RHYME, GA STONJA: North Carolina, DISTILLER OF Pure Coppsr Distilled Eectifled 1 .-my the litt Make in the Country. Unlets filled on short notice M2l(im A. B. R11YNE. Cotton I have a nice hit of selected -and improved Colln Seed, which 1 am selling at 50 cents per bushel.' Call at my residence in east Gastonia or at the Gazette office. . , : ftb2l 3t , - M.N. CHALK. FAYSSOUX BROTHERS, Gastonia, North Carolina, tw gtm, ilfir Woods. They Lave just received a new at d well . selected siock oi Groceries. Coffeei", Molasses, Sugars, Cun dies, Cigars, Tobaccos, &C. , Highest market price puid for country Produce. . fcb28if J. R. WARliEN, BLACKSMITH, Main Street, Gastonia, N. C, llegt to call the attention of his friends lo tall and fet their horse neatly shod, besides all kinds of Hlorh itiithiiig aU ended to at extremely low prim. ENGINE FOR KALE. I have one (5 Horse Steam Portable Kh gine of the V Jipse make, in good order ; one Thresher und Separator, one Cotton Gin and Press for sale, the entire cost $2,000. 1 will aell the whole fur $1,200, warranted in vood working order. The Fogine mid Thre-sLr were usee) by Mr Sm re, ihradiing wheat in Gus'nii coun ty lust summer. Call u our i ffieo or address T. 1'. HF.AttD, Yorkville. S. C. J. K. EDDINS. goofescUcr & stationer, TRYON" STREET, Charlotte, N. C., -Keeps constantly on hand a full and well selected stock of everything id his line. Special attention given to orders by mail. Orders from Country Merchants solicit ed, apr 3 ; MAUEY & BEAL, Opposite Waddill House, Gastonia, N. C. 'Dealers in IE S OF ALL KINDS, Dcst Molasses, Coffees and Sugars, Cheese and Crackers, Candies and Nuts, Flour and Meal, Bacon and Lard, Cigars and Tobacco, Ground Coffees, Spices and T.eaa, Fruits, &c, it., &c'. COUNTRY TROD17CE. . Barter for Butter Eggs. Pa sura and give ui a call, as we are dotormiujj tor nofbcundersolJ. 3ni bBOCB Aunt Nora's One Great Cln. . "I am dying," suid my Aunt Nora to mo, a? I Sat beside her one autumn eve. For some time I Imd known that she eould not live long, yet licr wflrds scut a shiver through me. "I trust not, aunt,'' said I, clasping one of her wasted hands in mine; "you are no worse to-elay than for months past. Sure ly you should not give up all hope." "Wliy. should I care why should hope? . Life is but one long torture to me why need I mourn that ic is about to go? 'My womau's heart has borne too much, my child. Futo wove many a darksome thread for me." - ' I looked in wordless pi!y at l:er as she lay among the pillows, pale and wasted, and 1 knew that 'her thoughts had gone buck into the past by the slight smile that currcd'her lijis. 1 tenderly piisscd my hand over her fu ded liair, and, thinking of all the sorrows she hud faced uiid struggled with, I bent forward, pressed my lips to her hruw, und mui mured, 'softly: "My dear nunli !" Her large eyes opened and turned to my face. 'Winnie, may . 1 tr'II you?'' she., in quired." "Certainly," said I, in surprise; '"what can vou wioh to tell me, Aunt Nora?" 'My onu grcut sin my one great sor- row, wufl ner answer, was my auni muo: Surely the approach of death lud turned her bruin! Il-r great sin? Why, her life had been one (jreat saei ific ; her heart the ibodu of tuff- ring, since tlmt time so Long ago when t-lie stood, half cr.-zed with grief, over the dead body of her promised hus band, the handsome you 'g heir of the Linton homestead, that was now without master r mistress, a beautiful but deserted spot. AM, well I knew that slie Iuki sui- fercd, but none ceuld say that she hud lav ished her. wealth upon the needy, nnd iu many a cottage washer nam? spoken at the hour of prayer, reverently, with bless ing upon it. Sinned?" said I, softly. "Auntie, dear. you are but dreaming. Will you not try to sle.e? "Nay, chihl, ere long I will sleep sound ly, but 1 cunnbt die with it untold. Prom ise that you will not shiiuk Ironi me when I tell you, for, Winnie, since l took you to my heart, you have won ine to love you as I loved but once before. Promise me. "Auntie, dear, dear, nothing on earth could make me turn from you; no sin, however dark, could. nrak3 me love you less." . She clapped my hand convulsively. "Ah, child, you do not know," she said; 'upon my hand is blood, the blood of one I held dearer than aught else on curth. Winnie, do not I piny do not turn from me; remember I am dying!" for I had tried to withdraw my hand. Aunt Norn!'', I cried, in honor, "you cannot mean this; surely you of all on earth are not the one toslied the blood of a human I ifing! Auntie, d;ir!ing, you do not mean it., ; "Child, listen while I havo 'strength to tell, for I know that my hours are num bered. Do not condemn until you hear me. When I was young -and fair I hud many lovers. Heiress to a noble fortune; possessed of rich bounty, it was no wou der. Life was a perfect dream of joy for my father 'worshipped his only.uhild, and I had been too young to weep when my mother died. 'fJayly as some light butterfly, I danced along life's pathway, nor dreamed of sor row or enro. "Friends I had, yes, many a cne; but of all, I loved the best one fair faced girl. We hud met at Echool, and then I had fullon in love with her. It was not strange, for she was more beautiful than any pic ture I bad ever seen, with long, golden hair, large, innocent blue eyes, and ripe red lips, like those of a tender babe. Her f-kin was clear as that of a waxen image, and seldom held the least color. She was shorter than I, but perfectly, with tiny hands and feet. "I, with my dark eyes, raven hair, and tall, slender figure, elt nothing beside her for beauty, although many said I was fairest. "lie that as it may, when my father took me lo E , Lottie and I wept bit terly at parting, but my tears fell fastest, and she promised to trend the following summer with me in my country home. "Ah I Winnie, alas the day came ! I met young Duke Linton, and loved him with I he whole wild passion of my young heart You do noi know, child, how a woman of my nature can lore. Hut his deep gray eyes ami haughty brow were stamped upon the heart of the cureless pit I, nn. I are still cherished in the bofom of the dying wo man.; Audvet, oh. God!? hat I who so loved him him should have laid him so low 1" 'In Ileiven's name, aunt, do not say killed Duke Linton I" I cried, in terror. "Child," said she, calmly, "I did. It was I who drove the dagger to his faith less heart ; T who bent above him when he brenthe'd his lut. "Let me tell you all. I loved him as it is the fortune of few women to love, and "he professed to worship me. How my old heurt throbs e,ven now, .when I think of those happy days. God of mercy, why 'why were they so few ?" ' She paused a moment, then went on : . "We were engaged, and the day set for onr -onion. In a perfect dream of blrss, 1 wrote to Lottie Dent. She replied, and said she was going to visit nie very soon. "May hud left us, and June roses were blooming ere'Lottie came to me. ".More beautiful than ever, more careless and guy, she sprung into ny arms when I ran to her to meet her. "Do you know, Winnie, 1 have believed in presentiinnts since then ? for, us 1 stood with her clasped to my bosom, a chill cumo over my heart, as though the icy winds ol winter were sweeping across its naked chords. "Ah ! if I had then known why ! but it passed, and I did not know that God hud sent it as a warning that I held a serpent to my bosom. ."Well, days fl?w past, and Lottie hud met my lover. She liked him, she said ; but he wos not the son of man she would choose. Her fancy had always been for eyes of gloom, and hair Jikn the raven's wing. . "Day after day we three wandered about in perfect happiness, gayly plucking flow er by flower, not curing though they fa dul. I did not mind that Duke and Lottie often wandered off without me, but smiled lo think they were such good friends. "The day of my marriage was set,, and on the 4ib of October I would become a bride, I wns busy in preparation, nor no ted might otherwise have caused my heart to bleed. "But one day, it was us summer was-dy- icg in O'e first psrt. of September, IV''e und I were standing by the side of the pretty lake that may be seen from ' the li brary windows. 'Wo each carried a pretty basket of ferns and late flowers, rnd I was thinking how beautiful Lottie' looked in a floating robe of snowy white, the only color about her being the bright green of the ferns in her bosket. .'Ah, yes; in her hair she wore a bunch of bright red berries, with their green leaves. "In some manner, Lottie's foot slipped from the stone on which she stood, and in a moment she Was screaming ic the water, her ferns floating ubout her, and I one hand grasping some shrub that grew on the margin of the lake. 'I was too much frightened to move, but stood with dilated eyes, gazing in hor ror ou her sinking form, when some one rushed by me, and in uniioment Lottie was clasped to Duke Linton's breast. ' Poor child she has fainted," he said to me ; but I was not surprised that his very lips were white, for I myself was terribly frightened, and though it was feur Irst a human life was being quenched before his sight that caused lip and cheek to pa'e. Ah, me ! 'twas more. "Days flew on,' and the first of October was fading. I threw a wrup about mo, and went into the garden to ei jny my dreams alone. "With no intention of doing so, 1 enter ed a small arbor into which the. fading day light scarcely peuetruted. "Upon a table iu ono corner stood a small basket of fruit, and beside it was lying a pretty dagger, that Duke had been permitting us to admire in the afternoon, lie had doubtless forgotten it was there. I picked it up. Winnie, it mmt have been the devil that made me do it ; but as I stood with it iu my bum!, 1 heard voices that I knew. Could it bc?vYes, 'twas Duke and IxJttie. . "Ah, child, think of what I endured while 1 stood there in the gathering gloom, and heard him tell her of his love for her and beg that, ere the chain he hated bound him, she would flee witb him and be his wile. "Xo thought forme; no pity for the proud heart that he knew would sorely break ; no remembrance of the vows he had spoken' so short a lime before, came to him as he vowed love And devotion to my friend . And she? Wiuu'ie, she listened, and she promised to flee with him. Child, I think that 1 was man. I saw him clasp bcr to his breast and saw her raise her lips to his, then leave him and flit toward iho bouse. "He come forward, entered the crbor and 1 shall never forget his face as he stood before me. Shome.leowardly shame made him shrink. "As, God hears me I hud not a thought of murder.then, "but the dagger was still in my hand ; I raised the hand to point for him to go, und the steel eought my eye. I raised the hand higher, took a step for ward, and buried the blade in his bosom. ."He. fell at my feet, and realizing what I had done, 1 kr.clt beside him, fruntically called Ins name. He did not answer, and realizing that he was dead, 1 sprang to my feet and roshtd to the house. 1 gained rny own room, and bolted the door. "All that night long I paced my cham ber Poor, every chord of my heart strained to breaking. "Friend and lover, both were false. Her fair face had won him, and he wis-i.---- 1-mw la Jiear ,mih breaking liear and the world's cold s-corn as Inst l ni-Vht. . ( "-'!ro morning, dawned I hud come to a resolution. My pride was ni,ved. and Letter place him in the coqld'cartli, than know he had deceived and cast me aside. ' "One thought was mine, rny pride was saved. 'I kept my room next morning till I heard -u noise of many anil excited, voices irt the Iml! below, also tramping of many feet. Ah, they had funnel him ! Now now, f must act my part. "I opened the chamber door, fled down the stairs, nnd right up iothe ohj"ct on 'the hall floor. Then mv woman's heart returned. One glance at the rigid face. one sight of the criminal breast, und 11 fell upon the maib'u floor, in a deathly swoon. Many kind friends mini.-tered to rncfl none knowing that upon t'ie .hand that bore his bethrothed rin' rtste J liis'blood ."Lottie )nt took strong convulsions when she knew -of-' his rrinreL.-r, 'hut kit F next day nnd 1 never heard from her again.. . " 'They bore him to his grave the fast of thejiroud race of .Linton. I, in my mourn ing garb, followed niter, his nlmr.st bride'' the woman who had taken 'his !!!'.:. . Since that time 1 hr,?c vainly tried to kill remorse by my lavish charily the small voice sptakelh still. Even now, cs 1 lie on the bed from which I may not rise; ni I linger on the borderland of eternity (here is a fear that all was of no avail. -HV3inie.' in ihe hiok.:a 'voice ' was tears, '! took you from poverty when a child, educated nnd raised you tenderly. Loved you with n miller's love, und if you turn rem nie now in horror, how can I face my Judge aboe? Winnie, child, are you near me ?'' "Iam here, aunty," I sobbed, "I will not leave you. You have sufTerred lor the sin, and 'many - of. ''God's children have offered prayCrs .for you at. his' throne;, lie will forgive. His mercy surpassed) all un derstanding, and he will not rememher against you that one sad act ; lor surely, auntie, you were mil." 'Yes elarliiig,.'l..fiaid she, wearily, "bit I feel sleepy. Pray you beside nie while I sleep." For hour after hour I km It there, pouring out prayer after prayer for the. porting soul, for i felt that it was leaving, Hour alter licur till the dawn came on. and the . sun, rising high, fell upon the stark and rigid face of my-aunt. Dead! Ay, with the crimson stain upon it,' the soul had appeared at the high bar. Kind has she been to ine, kind as a mother. Standing above her celiin, they told of her virtues, her s irrows, her char- ties, her goodness, and I la-urd .one of thein say ; "Her lover was murdered,- you know, long long ago, Jhrt no one ever knew who did it." Ah ! it was well They laid her" beside him in the old churchyard, aud yet she' Is kindly remem bered by t e villagers who call her '"the generous M iss N ora. The Two Hrnr. A mon and his wife were mitorhm? throughout their whole community a liv ing in anything lv.it pence, All a oi.ee there wt8 a sudden change for the better, nnd the house or discord beeani" taele ie of concord, much to the astonbhmetn and joy of the neighbors. An inquisitive old lady ventured to inquire t he cau-e. . "Two bears did it" said the inatroifol the house.' ''Two bears." ejaculated the old lady, liflifi? up both hsuds. "Yes, two bears; and I'm glad thi'y ever came into Ihe house.' "7?at what in nature do you mean?'' " "Two Scripture bears." 1 "Two Scripture bears! why you puzzle Die more and more.'' ' Tis true." ' ' - "I dem't read in Serip'ure of two bears, bnt them two that eat up the wicked chil dren that mocked Klisha, and they must be dead long ago." "Two other bcurs are mentioned?" "I don't recollect 'cm." "Well, the Scriptures nienjjpUii ni, and their names are Bear and rorbcar.l. " Well.. I never!" At this stage rf the discourse we came away, and could no1: help most elevoutly wishing that those two eTiptiuo hears wVuld travel throueh the land and enter j Suiitluy Hialtnjr. An army officer in the civil war rode a horso which knew us well as a human le ing when the battle was impending. , The approach of the conflict always gave the beast the keenest terror; he trembled in every nerve, und was apparently unable to Stir. Rjt when Jhe. battle. was oiwbrr-gun and ho was urged forward into the thick of the fight, all tieinbling and hesitancy left him ;his nostrils were proudly raised in the air, and every motion was swift and fearless Soil is-with soma men in the l.'iiristian life. They tremble at the thought of enter ing the church ; they feci thcnui'lves utter ly unworthy to sit at the table of the Lord; their nr3't:w5?5iririUsc proyr.r: nwelin-j. ore. feeble and faltering. Dnt the believer who is. mof-t timid at the ontdist often becomes the most fiiarless and the most useful ol-u!!. That very honesty of purpose ami delicacy of action which harasses the would -be 'iiri.-itiu.ti with fears of his unworthmcss, is transmitted info the power which, with the-same feeling of personal humanity , can yet ell all things by the strength of God. I Rnidtiy Si ltou! Tin)' -'. . Vvn j, lii;j and Wnti-hliij. 0- la it not a sad thing that we should think it wonderful for Gcd to hear prayer? Much better faith was that of a little boy in one of the fchools in -Edinburg, who had atte nded a pr.iye r meeting, and at the last said lo his teacher, who condnetcel it: - '"Teacher, I wish my sister could be got to read tie Dible; she never reads it" . "Why, .fohny,' should your sister read the Dibk?" " "Decause if. she once read it, I am sure it would do her good, and she would be converted and saved." . - "Do yon thir.k so, .fohny?" "Yes, I do, sir; end I widi the next time there wns a prayi.r-meeting yon would ask jhe people to pray for 'my sister, that chc. may begin to read the i.ible." "Weil, well; it shall be dene, John." So the tcccher gave oat that a little boy was anxious that prayer should be i ff-rcd, that h'w sister might read her Bible. John was observed, to, get up and go out. . The teachiT' tU-i'igH it very rode e.f ,the boy to disturb the people in a crowded room , and ho the ue-t day, . when' the lail came, he Said: 'John, I thought it very rude of rou to get up in the prayer meeting, nnd go out.. Yoo ought npt toliavedoneso.":. "Oh, sir," said the boy, "I did not huvy-i te be rude, but I thought I should like to go home Xud sue my sister reading her Hib'e ! for the llrst time." Thus we ought to" watch with expecta tion for ticswcrs'XteiLOur prayers. Do not say, "Lord, turn my; darkness into light," rind -then go Oat with your candle, as th aigh vou expected ' tVdiud it eiuik. ' '-J' '-. . 1 - . S:niQfu. , . It is not all mention of a "neighbor's faults and tvi! deeds that is wrong, for We cannot but notice gross faults, and to speak of them in a right spirit, may tv perfectly right, and needful for self-defence and the good of society, 'j'iio sin and wrong is in being quick to see and publish faults, magnifying, them,, imagining them meddling with them when it is none of our business to do so, imd speaking of therr. from promptings of envy, resentment and rivalry. A slanderous tongue mover as naturally in' the element of . hatred as a fish' in the . water. One who loves, his neighbor as hir.isil!', and seeks "to' do unto others asjiie? wot; hj they should do unto him, can hardly be' a .slauelercr. The mischief of detraction springs from a mean, unlov ing spirit," soured by disappointment, fret ted by envy, -urged on "by meddlesomeness and miserable curiosity. When one-w ith such a frame goes from house (o house with the preface: T'hev sav, or thev do sav. ; but 1 don't know how tiue'1-t is, t(,iat this I man drinks; or, That in.-in and his wife j don't live very pleas;int!y "together; er. That man did not eimic by bis nioi.ey veiy honestly: or. I bis woman is no bitter than she should be it is very probable that then a bijyhidy nnd slaiuhier is ut work who greatly needs th: prayer, "Set a' watch, O Lord, before my. month; keep the door of my lips." H".' II. Leva; I). J., in Cht:hhi:i'i;i. ..'.. . v. .Fkku kjr 1 'eats. For the preiduefiou of 'ggs the food should contain an ample supply e'f those ingredients '.hat make up the eggs. An average egg weighs about 1,0(H" grains, divided i s follows: Shell, 107; white, 001; yolk, ii'SO. The shell is composed 97 per centum carbonate of lime, 1 p(reentuui phosphate of limj and magnesia, and 2 pf'rccnluin albumen; and the yelk ef 51 pe r centum water, 2S C per ciiiluia yellow oil, and 17.4 prcenima wjilor, 2.7 per efiituui mucus, 0.3 M rcen- ,l,m s-'d!s, and .12 per ccntui.i albumen. fat should be employed. The natural food ol (he fowl cor.sitsof insects, seeds, veget able matter, etc. Therefpre, there should he a variety of grains, animal matter in the forms ejf scraps of meat, or pressed scraps, chopped cabbages, etc.', or, as has been practiced, finely cut and steamed clo. ver Lay. There should be a great variety at all times, and Indian meal scaled and well seasoned with pepper or cliopped horseradish will In: vy .effective Are cent writer prescribed scalded Indian meal made intd a mush, which was cooked an hour or two and then fed hot with horse radish. It was reconnneniled to cook food of all kinds and feed hot. '.This might bo good as a stimulant, but corn raeul must be combined with animal food to produce fggs. A supply of powdered shells or tone should bo provided, not only to aid digestion, but to furnish egg-shell material. A correspondent of the Plymouth Chroni cle mixed hog's lard with the dough lifl gave his hen's ami asserts that a piece as largo as a hickory nut will set a hen to laying immediately after she is broken up from sitting, ami that by feeding a little" .-."a. ionally hen? may be made 16 lay all winter. ' Color of tJip Ilnli. The' varieties of color which charac terize the hair of different nations are in teresting to note. The complexion, which sympathizes with the color of the hair, or, rather, with which the eclor of tlio hair sympathizes' deponds .much on accidental circumstances a florid complexion, for instance', being usually the, -result of healthfulness of employment and whole s' ine food. In. the South of Kngland the hair is usually darker than in the' midland counties, and, again, in Lancashire and Yorkshire it is principally of a handsome brown. The females of Lancashire are especially celebrated for the beauty of their eyes and hair. -The Highlanders of Scotland are generally brown l aired, but in. some districts rather sandy. Parting ton's Encyclopedia says: "They are sehhuu bald headed, and in this " respect d;!T, r from the Lowlanders wheise hair is n ally more scanty." Among the Irish santry the hair is generally dark, and in some districts particularly black, espe liaiiy ab..ut Roscrea and 'its vicinity, "This' character," observes the authority just quoted, f'mnybe' noticed to prevail throughout a great portion of the south of I reland.'-;' The distinguishing trait of the Irish peasantry is the low eyelash, which is particularly dork and thick, more so than among (ther people except the natives ef Savfy. . In Xonnanely not a trace of the red hair, supposed by some to belong to the early Norman physiognomy, is now seen. Iu I'urgunely the light brown hair and gray eyes have succeeded to thu- as SLi teJ rntiloua character of its ancient con querors. The -prevailing colors of hair in France, are, however, dark brown and black. The Ger man pea.-antry are a fair compltxioned, gray eyed race, with hair of some shade of Crown', in some distiicts flaxen or yellowish, but very seldom red. The Spaniards ai.d Italians are famous for theirblack hair, but that of the. former is often coarse, while that of the latter is silky aiuHjeaulifuily glossy. . . 2oi all V a mw. There is a place in-Mame so rocky that when the Down-Masters plant corn they look for . crevices in die rocks, and shoot the grains in with a musket, they can't raise duck's there ao-how, for the stones are so thick the ducks cau't get their bills between them to pick up the grasshoppers, and the only way the sheep can get at the sprigs of grass is by griudmg their noses on a gri dstone. Put that ain't a circumstance. to a place on cthe- Kastern. Siiore, the land " is so poor "that it takes two kiMears to say .Kihlear,and ' on a clear, day you can sec the grasshoppers climb up a mullen stalk, and look wish' tears ill their eyes over a fitly-;. ere held : and tlio bumblebees have to to down on their knees to get ut the gr..ss; nil the mosquiteies died of star vation, and turkey buzzards buj to euii grate. --'Hut there is a country in Virginia. can beat that; lure the land is sej sterile iba't when the wind is at the north west., the y have to tie their children t !' p rlem from blowing away; tl.eic ii t.!;s ..-a fives lo SiC a man, and when it.e .V.s !'ui !: they have to le.in'airaint lei o ;'iii e hor-es lire so thin that il lakes lu'-.'ic ' ! limn to make a thudow, and, !, M-y h:!l a bef they bue to he.U Liu up to km e him down. The i; Grunt P .tte.s, oj!iuvcrl.Ur X. 1 1., relinked an ignorant preue,her f ' t xi'M",-nig th- e ffi'.v of priest, llerepi. Wc i.n ii n iin.i ded to preuch thef-V lo cv. iv ciir.ei." . ' - ' into a great uiaiiv homes. Thert le'rc food oonlainim: albumim ids and . ' - c : - -' i . " ' ' 1.'
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
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June 12, 1880, edition 1
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