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The 0 vol; in. NEW BERNE. N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY I. 1885. NO. 234. maim LOCAL NEWS. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Newbern Theatre. F. H. Pelijitiee Attorney at law. Journal Miniature Almanac. New Berne, latitude, 85 6' North. .' , , , ,: longitude, 773 3' West. -tun rises, 7.11 ( Length of day, S in sets, 4:56 I 9 hours, 45 minutes. Moon sets at 6:52 a. m. . 1885. January. New Year. . Not much rice coming in now: The Cotton Exchange will be closed to-day. A happy and prosperous New Year to all our readers. Now let us all resolve to do better than we did last year. New Year's Gift l and a happy new year, will be the greetings to day. . Corn is looking up a little. A cargo sold on Monday for 45 cents in bulk. , 7 We publish to-day President-elect Cleveland's position on Civil Service Reform. If he adheres . 6trictly to this position , won't somebody be disap pointed V Our Register of Deeds is off on a New Years' hunt down to Slocum's creek. He will accept our thanks for the quar ter of fine venison which no doubt he intends to bring us. Our colored citizens celebrate to-day as the anniversary of President Lincoln 's emancipation proclamation. They will parade the city and have a number of speeches at the theatre. 'The stolen cattle advertised in the Journal a few daya ago have been claimed and proven by the lawful own ers, they having seen the advertisement. People do read advertisements. Yesterday was a beautiful spring day. liy reference to the journal lilea we find that 1883 went out with a thunder storm.' While the last day of 1884 was quite warm enough for thunder show t era, yet the day was bright, calm and 1 pleasant. "X The negro Charles bmith who was lynched near Clayton a few days ago, it is said, was known in Onslow and Jones counties as a bad man and a bold thief. The lynching was an outrage upon the laws of North Carolina and receives the condemnation of all law abiding people, but it is somo relief .to know that one of the characters at least probably deserved it. The night watch services at the M. E, Church last night were solemn and im ' pressive. As the bell pealed forth the news of the dawn of a new year the congregation, kneeling, wero sending up1 fervent petitions to the Throne of Grace for a continuation of the blessings of an All-wise Providence during the coming year. The meeting was inter esting and well attended. ; The advance agent of the Staudard Dramatic Company, Mr. Warner, is in the city having the bills posted for this troupe which will appear here on the evening of the 6th in "My Partner." Mr. Warner has been working for this troupe for a number of years, and his gsod judgment in the selection of points and properly advertising, in connection with the fact that it is a good troupe, has much to do with its success. Murder Near Dover. A telegram from Capt. C. K. Hancock at Kinston yesterday evening informs us that the wife of Mark McCleas, an ' industrious and inoffensive colored man, was biutally murdered at her home on ,- the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad, ' about two miles above Dover, on Hon day night while her husband was at j Kinston, by a negro man named Alex Black. ... (Teast of the Holy Innocents. ; ' The parish of Christ Church gave the annual feast to the poor children at the Chapel on George street yesterday. a. This feast is generally given on Holy Innocents day, but that day falling on Sunday caused the postponement until yesterday, when a largo number par took of a sumptuous dinner and many ' others were supplied at their homes - with a substantial remembrance. A Good Salesman. " That' was'a "good salesman who sue - ceeded in getting a number eleven boot on the number fourteen foot of a cus tomer yesterday which required; the , combined strength of himself, the cus- . . tomer and three stalwart colored men, and an hour's hard labor to get it off. The old man . was in the awkward . predicament that he could neither trade nor travel, and as the help was a treat, he left, concluding that it was most too warm to wear boots anyway. . A. M." Bilker requests us to give notice that he will sell no more goods on credit to any one. He sells very cheap but must have the cash. 1-6 Personal. Mr. I. B. Watson, the member elect from Hyde of the House of Representa tives, arrived Monday night on the steamer Elm City and will remain in the city a few days before going to Raleigh. In conversation with him we find him to be, not an Eastern, Western or Center man, but eyery whit a North Carolinian, and in favor of such meas ures that will redound to the good of the whole State and not for one section to the detriment of another. Mr. B. G. Crisp, of the firm of Blair & Crisp, recently burned out at GoUlsboro and again at Laurinburg, is in the city and will, engage in the country produce business for a while. How to Spell It. The articlo on "Now Berne" was writton by Judgo Clarke, who says B-e-r-n-e is the way it is spelled in Switzerland. But Rev. IJr. Vass was there last summer and he says he saw it in large letters on the cars and other publio places without the final o. We have always been under the impression, in fact, we think, the geographies al ways gave the final e when speaking of the capital of Switzerland. Hence, we always writo "Now Berne." But there is another View to take of it. By refer ence to the oldest books in the office of the Superior Court Clerk, some of them dating back to 1713, we find it written '"Newborn," and it is said that it was so written m the act of incorporation. If this method of spelling tho word has the sanction of law, is it not tho right one? Since we have brought the sub ject to notice we are told that quite an extended discussion was had on it immediately after the lato war, and the result was, just what it will be now we suppose, that every one went on writing it his own way. Berne and New Berne. In December, A.D. 1710, a colony of Svvit;s and German Palatines, under the leadership of Louis Mitchel aud Chris topher, Baron de Graaffenreult, landed at the Indian village of Chattoka, at the conlluence of the Neuse aud Trent rivers, and founded a town, which, in nouor oi un urauiieuremt, wiio was a native of Heine, in Switzerland, was culled New Berne. This town was in corporated by act of the Legislature passed in the year 17':5. Dr. Alexander Dallas Bacho, in a lec ture delivered beforo the Suiillv-onian insuiuto in iiu, spenKs of Jienio as follows: 'Berne, tho capital of tho Swha Con federacy, i,i in appearance thoroughly a Swiss town of the old school. Its site is a bold promontory nearly surrounded bytheAar, a tributary of the Rhine. The appearance of the town is very quaint. Entering it from the south, three gateways are p:issed in succession, at intervals from each other, benoath towers winch mark so many epochs in the extension of tho walled town. Bo- fore the use of artillery Berno was a placo of great strength, the site having oeen selected in the twelfth century for its military properties, by Berthold of Zahringen, the founder of the city. The fronts of the houses in the principal streets, as in the Italian towns of the Middle Ages, rest upon arcades, which form covered walks for passengers. The heavy piers of the arcades render the shops dark, but this inconvenience is more than counterbalanced by the pro tection from the winter's snow in a town almost among the Alps, and at an elevation ot sixteen hundred feet above the sen.' Tho streets are provided at in tervals with fountains of curious de vices and rude execution, in which, be sides tho figure of the bear in various "armor and attitude," are warriors and goddesses, and remarkable above all, the terror of children, the great Kinder f resser, or ogre, who with the head and shoulders of one poor innocent in his gaping mouth, in the very act of swal lowing, has a bag full of similar choice mouthfuls about his neck, apparently struggling to escape the fate of their comrade. In one of' the towers is the famous clock of kindred taste with the ogre. Before each hour a cock flaps his wings and crows a warning. A figure representing rattier lime reverses his hour-glass, and opens his mouth as if to cry aloud to the careless. At noon is the grand procession of the bears, who, marshaled by knights and soldiers, issue to the sound of music and pass before the figure of Time, first on all fours, then half erect, and finally rampant, figuring thus the different conditions of the town, of which they are patrons. The figure now raises a wand and strikes the hour upon a mimic bell, keeping time with the striking of the clock; the cock again flaps his wings, and for twenty-four hours the bears have rest Tho regard for bruin in Berne has been the growth of the ages. The accidental killing of a bear by the Duke of Zahrin gen on the day of founding the city placed the effigy upon the coat of arms, and perhaps gave same to the infant city, for, Borne signifies bear in the Swabian dialect. The effigy of the bear was connected with the conquests of the warlike burghers, and the living animal kept to amuse the people by his antics. A whimsical old lady left-a handsome estate to the town to maintain a family of bears forever, and in 1798 the animal became associated with the misfortunes of the canton as it had been with its rise and prosperity. The sav ings from the estate of the bears Bbared the fate, of those of the canton, when the French armies j appropriated the thirty millions of specie in the vaults of the treasury. The bears' themselves wero removed from their ditch and transported to Paris, the huge cage con taining the father of the family having upon it the' insulting inscription,' not yet forgotten by the people, of Avoyer (President) of Berne. One only lived to return to his home at the general restoration of the spoils of Europe, but the bears of the present generation ap pear to have forgiven or forgotten the sorrows of their . parents, and, all un conscious of their own present depend ent state, are as diligent in climbing poles, and as active in begging and quarreling for nuts and ginger bread as if the present bear-ditch had always been the abode of both parents and cubs. "In October, 1831, the confederated cantons adopted a republican form of government, which declared the sov ereignty of the people, the liberty of the press, the right of the representative council to originate measures, tolera tion of religion with an established na tional church. Every, citizen is an elector of the first grade, and every hundred of them chooses an elector of the second grade, who votes for the representative council. On the 12th day of September, 1848, the revised federal constitution now in force was adopted. This instrument is very similar to that of the United States, only paying somewhat more deference to States rights, and vesting the executive power in a cabinet (Federal council) elected by Congress in joint session, the chairman whereof being denominated President of Switzerland. "The Swiss are distinguished for fru gality, perseverance, hardy enterprise, high moral and religious feeling and lofty patriotism." Sidewalks Again. Editor Journal : "Truth " says to improve the sidewalks the means could be raised by "economizing in some things, say dispense with the lights and apply the funds so saved." Now as the principal lights used at pre tent by the council are furnished direct from heaven, we should dislike to see them dispensed with, and have grave sus picions that the funds, saved would be so slowly raised by such economy, that those perverse swearers would be placed beyond the hope of redemption before the improvements could avail them. The city now furnishes lights at the ongine houses and police headquuarters only, and it may be that i why the sidewalks have become so suddenly un bearable. Aro not sidewalks generally under the especial care of those owning tho proporty in immediate contiguity '( Z. . . The Latest News. Chicago, Doc. 30. A dispatch from Pierre. Dakota, sayB: Pierre is one seething mass of flame and all efforts of the citizens are unavailing to stay the lire, lho wind is blowing a fierce gale and the mercury is down to tweuty-five decrees below zero. All the pumps are frozen solid and it is impossible to secure water. Men, women and children are working desperately, endeavoring,, to save property, caring nothing for the intense cold and looking only to the assistance of others. Tho tire is now sweeping towards tho river. Madrid, Dee. 30. At Granada to-day a Jo ileum was sung and prayers were ottered for the cessation of the earth quake. At Priego, in tho province of Cordova, tho shocks came while the theatre was crowded with people. A terrible panic followed. Many persons jumped from the galleries and from the windows upon the crowd below. Two were killed outright, and forty were more or less seriously injured. At Malaga two lofty chimneys, forming a part of the gas worts, tell to the earth. The patients in the hospital were so ter rifled that they forgot for the time being tneir maiacues ana nea to the open air, The convicts in the prison refused to enter their cells and remained all night in the court yard. Alhama and Santa Cruz were completely destroyed. The soldiers are at work clearing up the ruins in search of corpses, which are found in large num bers. Many of them are horribly dis figured. Tho number of persons killed is etui unknown. There is no doubt. however, that tho report which fixed the number at 900 is an exaggeration. There is much distress among the survivors, Madrid, Dec. 30. Every fresh detail received from the district in which the earthquake shock was severest adds new horrors to the great calamity. At Ner ja, a town of 5,000 people, in the province of Malaga, and 27 miles east of the city of the same name, tho earth quake was followed by a hurricane. This finished the destruction of many houses wHich had already been brought to the brink of rum by the previous shock. The inhabitants fled in terror from their houses and camped outside of the town. Much suffering has been oaused by the scarcity of provisions The alarm in Malaga, however, is now subsiding, and affairs, it is believed will soon resume their ordinary course, London, Dec. 29. -To-day is Glad stone's seventy-fifth birth day and the' occasion is being celebrated with great festivity at Hawarden. .'. Birthday greet ings reach the great leader from all parts of .tho empire. -The Prince of Wales has sent cordial congratulations Many liberal bodies take advantage of the day to present the ' grand old man' with addresses expressive of continued confidence and profound admiration The newspapers, without distinction of party, devote leading articles to the eulogy of the great statesman. " Key West, Fla.,Dec. 29. The steamer Hero, from Wilmington, N. C, for Port of Spain, arrived at Nassau on the 26th. short of coal, and with her boiler tubes leaking badly. She will await material to repair fromNew York. 1 A. M. Baker requests us to give notice that he will sell no more goods on credit to any one. ne' sells very cheap but must have the cash. 1-6 It is wise to provide against emer genoies that are liable to arise in every family. A cold may be a dangerous thing or not, depending upon the means at hand to combat it. In sudden attacks of cold, croup, asthma, etc. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will prove the quickest and most ettective cure, and your best friend. Obituary. Mrs. Susan J, Hancock was born Oct. 21st, 1819, and died in New-Bern Dec. 19th, 1884. She was the daughter of Jonathan and Elizabeth Blaney. She joined the M. E. Church June, 1837, and lived a consistent member until the silver cord was loosed" and the Master called her to "enter in through the gates" and receive the reward of eternal life. She was married to James Han cock Deo. 28th, 1850. She was a devoted and an affectionate daughter, wife and mother. She possessed a good mind, which was welt filled with useful knowledge. Kind, generous, and charitable, she was always ready to help the needy, to the extent of her means. She did what sho could. A sincere and devoted Christian, and warm-hearted Methodist, she had many friends, and served the Lord with fidel ity, and blessed her generation. Her husband died January 20th, 1884, and she followed in less than a year. "One by one" we pass over the "Doath-Riverl " One by one, we enter through the pearly-gates." Three children are left behind. Mrs. M. O. Humphrey, of Goldsboro, and George G. Hancock and Ida, in New-Bern. Hosts of friends are left also, who mingle their tears of sympathy with those of the heart stricken children. Her memory is blessed. Our dear sister died in great peace. As I stood by her b.ed-sido, and watched the closing scene, 1 was deeply impressed with the blessed truth: 'Jesus can make a dying-bed Feel soft as downy pillows are, While on his breast I lean my head And breathe my lifo out s-veetly there." Sister H. had long been battling with the tempestuous waves of the sea of life, and sometimes driven by fierce winds amid raging seas; but her faith in Christ was firm and unshaken. She knew in whom she believed. The precious promises of the Bible cheered her soul. She could say: "The Bible is my chart ; By it, the seas I know. I cannot with it part. It, rocks and sands doth show. It is a chart and compass too, Whose needle points forever true." Her happy soul looked forward with blessed hope to the "Land of puro de light;" and by faith saw glimpes of her glorious home, and longed to be there. Laud ahead!" its fruits are waving O'er the hi lis of fadeless green; And the living waters laving, Shores where heav'ly forms are seen. Rocks and storms I'll fear no more, When on that eternal shore. Drop the anchor! Furl the sail! I am safe within tho vail." Let her children and friends pcrvc God and meet her in Heaven. L. S. liUKKIIKMK N. B. Methodist Advance and Golds boro Mi'MMtjcr please copy. Nolice. To the officers and members of the Craven County Teachers' Association, and all those holding teacher's cer tificates: You are expected to meet at the col ored Graded School building Saturday at 12:30 o'clock, to attend to some par ticular business pertaining to the Asso ciation. By order of Alexander Bass, Pres't. J. G. Sutton, jr., Sec'ty. A. Case without Hope. Jno. R. Boker, of Macon, Ga., writos: "In 1878 I was attacked by the most ravenous sort of cancerous sores, that ate great holes into my ilesh and spread rapidly over my body. 1 received the very best medical attention; was dosed with mercury and potash until I was so crippled with mercurial rheumatism that I could scarcely hobble about; my throat and mouth were badly ulcerated; my hair began to fall out. So wrecked was my general health that I became a physical ruin and my life was a burden. For a long time I was bed-ridden, and my suffering was so intense that I prayed for death as a relief. I exhaust ed the whole catalogue of patent medi cines, in each case, following the direc tions religiously. Each in turn seemed to aggravate the malady, and none of them benefited me in any way. When life was apparently hopeless I com menced taking S. S. S. To this Specific I owe my life, in ten days l com menced improving, and in a short time was perfectly well. My hair has grown. out thicK; my neaitn ana strength have returned; the ulcers in my throat and mouth are entirely cured; my appetite has returned, and for the first time in years I enjoy my food. Every sore has disappeared from my body. I weigh as much as I ever did in my life, and am perfectly healthy in every way. The very germs of the cancerous anhction are destroyed. v Not only is the terrible malady that was preying on my life, and which every one pronounced incurable. entirely cured, but I am also relieved of the bad effects of the mercury and pot ash mixtures that I was fed on for years." " lie ware of fotasu and. Alercury mix tures, gotten up t imitate our specific, they are dangerow. Our Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis eases mailed free to applicants. Swift's Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlan ta, Ga. , N. Y. office, 159 W. 23d St., bet. 6th and 7th A.ves. Philadelphia office, 1205 Chestnut St. ' Tn Anv Krulv ttrVirt haa A ianaaa nt I V, pnot or lungs, we will send proof that Piso's Cure for Consumption has cured the same complaints in other cases. Ad dress . - E. T. Hazeltine, i Warren, Pa Geo. Andrews, overseer of the Lowell Carpet Corporation, was for over twenty years, before bis removal to Lowell, at flicted with salt rheum in its worst form. Its ulcerations actually covered more than half the surface of his body and limbs. He was entirely cured by Ayer's Sarsaparilla. See-certificate in Ayer's Almanac for load. ; COMMEKCIAL. Journal Office, Dec 81. 6 P. M. cotton. New York futures dull but steady; spots quiet. Middling 11 1-16; Low MiddlinglO 5-8 Ordinary 10 1-16. FUTURES. MORNING. NOON. EVENING. January, 11.23 11.11 11.09 February 11.16 11.09 11.06 March, 11.26 11.20 11.17 April, 11.39 11.33 11.80 May, 11.50 11.45 11.43 June, 11.63 11.57 11.55 July, 11.72 11.69 11.66 August, 11.78 11.75 September, 11.40 11.38 October, 10.80 . November, 10.65 December, New Berne market stead v. Sales of 29 bales at 91 to 10J. Middling 10 3-16; Low Middling 9 13-16; Ordinary 9 3-16 RICE. New Berne upland $1.00a$1.05. domestic market. Cotton Seed $10.00. Seed Cotton 3.50. Barrels Kerosene, 49 gals., 85c. Turpentine Hard, $1.00; dip, 81.60. Tar 75c.aS1.25. Corn 45a55c. Beeswax 20c. per lb. Honey 60c. per gallon. Beep On foot, 5c. to 7c. Country Hams 13c. per lb. " Lard 13Jc per lb. Eaas 22c. per dozen. FREsn Pork 8a9c. per pound. Peanuts 60a75c. per bushel. Fodder 75c.a1.00 per hundred. Onions ?1.56a2.00 per bbl. Field Peas Hides Dry, 10c. ; green 5c. Tallow 6c. per lb. Chickens Grown, 40a50c; spring 20a30c. Meal 95c. per bushel. Oats 50 ets. per bushel. Apples Mattamuskeet, 80c. per buBh. Turnips 50c. per bushel. Wool 12al7c. per pound. Potatoes Sweet, 2ja50c. Furs Coon skins, 30c; fox, 50c; mink, 50c; otter from $3a0. wholesale prices. New Mess Pork S13.00al3.25. L. C, F. Backs, and Bellies 9a9ic Shoulders Smoked, No. 2, 8c; prime, 8Jc. Nails Basis 10's. 83.73. FliOUR $3.00a7.00. LARD-81a9c. Sugar 5a8c. NewfcernTheatre. f thn Old Favorites. S r AND AUD DRAMATIU CO. .HiUlary Bond and Orchestra. 1"-vc-o Only I CO.MMKNC1SQ TUESDAY, JANUARY 6th. In the I'lny that made Its author famous iu a night, entitled Admission 50c. Gallery, ffie. Reserved seatF, now on sale at Meadows' Drug Store. 7"c. id P. H. PELLETIER, ATTORNEY AT IA W, NEW BERNE, N. C. Ollice on Soutfi Front street, third door from the cornerBf Craven street. Will practice In the Courts of Carteret, Jones, Onslow and Craven. Special attention given to the collection of claims, aud settling estate of deceased per sons. marlwtl Church Sexton Vanied The undersigned is authorised to employ a COMPETENT SEXTON for the METHODIST CHUKCH of this city. Apply to B. G. CREDLE, deSldfitwlt Sec'y Board Stewards. XT. S. Mace IS AT THE SPOT At Market Wharf, Selling Drugs, Paints, Oils, Varnish, Glass, Putty, and all kinds Seeds. , also Canvas, Rope, Twine, Oakum, Galvan ized Spikes and Nails, and other Ship building supplies. CHEAP FOB CASH. dec.'!l-Uw Notice. By virtue of the power conveyed to me in a mortgage executed by R. B Blackledge and wife, I shall sell at the Court House door in Newbern, on WED NESDAY, the 21st day of JANUARY, lSSo, at 12, M., the Real Estate con veyed in said Mortgage, being a tract of land near Newbern, on Trent Road and Haywood Creek, being the land that descended to R. B. Blackledge from his mother and is known as the Hatch land. Terms of Sale, Cash. W. G. BRINSON. ' Dec. SO, 1884. 20d Largest Stock, Greatest ,Variety, AND THE Best Goods, AT. THE . , Lowest Iricesi AT WILLIE S. MIDYETT'S, On Neuse street, at the place -called DRUG PUND. Uive hira a call. deolWdtf 1 Bologna Sausages AT 10 Cents Per Pound AT UIRICH'S. Wholesale Oaalers. FLOUR. Tlie Klonr Ilou-.c of VVYI.I K. SMITH nn. of lialllmori- 1ms n natlon:il reputation for the extent of their busiccss auil character of goods. Jhelr KKANKSOK lLOl'R ARK ALWIT9 UNIFORM, STKI'iTLY It LIABLE and de tlyeretl at the I OWKST MARKET lUilCKH. CAKES ANDCRACKliES. The Old and Vejl Known Firm of JAS. P. MASON A CO. supply ;i lull lino of every va riety of CaliPK anil ('nickers. Satisfaction In every instance tuarnnteed. TOBACCO. The Whol sal,' Tohncco House of KINK BROTH Kits S ( o., of Baltimore, so long and favorably know ii in iliis mm kut. have made inc their jf nt ! : this section; mid I will be) pleased to recei .! orders for their superior lines of uooils. i-.verv variety of Tobacco ar. best prices. I am Sol above (inns ; Agent here for the being in daily receipt, market quotations, I oftolegraplii' can there foiv guarantee LOWEST FULLEST SATIS- PRICES ami FAOTJOX. Goods onU red by telegraph. JAS. W. MOORE dccludwu i FRENCH SPOLIATION CLAIMS. Persons intereKicil in tins - claims are in vited to call upon or ai'.drcns ti.e subgcilber, who will cive tntm-inn! ion n relation to tho claims, and prepare t.icm Pr collectlor. A. K. ALLEN. Oi fii ks: I'll! Wnsl.ln-.Moii St.. Boston; 119 Broadway, New Yoi k; 1,21 York Ave., wasmiiKion, i c lion. (JEO, Counsel. not twt:;x win act as i!ec2l dw-m Extra Eari . Peas. A! the foilov Bushels i : o B. St I'NlI.l i I'liihidt Ip1,;.; above) J-.HI : k.-:. Al. K-li Is .,. cs, in lots of Five 1 r inuhel. i:1'-! so early as ...or an I Field CO., ' 1 .iriiuoovi Mil. ' 17 5 GG b A.N I) Pickled Tripe, LOW, Wholesale or Hetail, At LOVICK'S. dec" I lw CHEISTMAS! We have a Varied Assortment of Goods suitable for Christmas Presents, sucn as ; Silk and Satin Scarfs in fan cy Puzzle Boxes, , TIES JkJST) BO'S, SILK AND LIKEN HAMERCHIEFS, INITIAL SCAliF FINS. II. HOSE, COLLAES AND CUFFS, SE-IRTS, SUSPENDERS SLIPPERS, ETC. " H0WAED& JONES, GENTS' FURNISHERS. oc23dfewJj)tnl-" .- Going! Qmg I Going! COME AND SEE MY . Stock of Holiday Goods! Fresh from New York. GOLD, SILVER, and ". ; . PLATED GOODS OF ALL KINDS. . ' I bought for CASH, and can sell t suit the times. - Come before they are all Rons. In possible to keep them at tho. prices hare put on them. , ' DON'T FAIL TO COH3 TO SAM. K. EATOI ; ' MIDDLE STItF.ET. J Li M i. , 25 Kegs
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 1, 1885, edition 1
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