Daily Reflector, November 1, 1895


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]







THE DAILY REFLE

Vol. 2.

GREENVILLE, N. Gs, NOVEMBER 1, 1895.

~

New

Creation

in

WRAPS |

at

MunfordTs

Fine
Clothing
Shoes
and
Dry Goods
at

MunfordTs

NEXT DOOR TO BANK.

|N. ©, The

LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO
JOTTINGS.

BY O. L. JOYNER.

The Southern Tobacco Journal
this week gives an illustrated ar-
ticle On six presidents of tobacco
association in North Carolina.
They are all young men, and
the Journal mentions the fact
that Mr. G. B. Hughes, president
of the Tarboro Bourd of Trace
is one of the youngest men in
the State to hold such a respon-
sible position. In a week or two
the REFLECTOR will give a gooc
many tiestrations of the Green~
ville tobacco market and the men
who have made it. Among'them
our president P- H. Gorman who
by the way is the youngest. man
in the State holding such a po
sition.

The Kansas City Zimes has the
following reference?Zto the daugh
ter of Col. J+ 8. Carr, President
of the Blackwell Durham Tobac-
co Oo:

The engagement is announced
of Mr: Harry C. Flower, of. this
city, to Miss Lida Carr, daughter
of Colonel J, 5S. Carr, of Darham-
wedding will take
place this winter. Miss Carr
already Las a
friends in Kansas VUity who will
welcome her to a permanent res"
idence. She has been the guest
on several occasions of Mrs. T. J.
Templer and Miss Tess Templer
and of -other -friends. . Miss Carr
spent the summer in Europe and
has just returned to her Sodath-
ern home, Mr, Blower: ia one of
the mostT ~popularT and . delightful
of: the. young. soriety uicén. of
Kansas City. : aay also: cahyat ot
summer ia gat of
his time is Rint i 4 6 per-
fecting of business plans in Bos-
ton- Mr. Flower and his bride
will live in Kanwas city.

. Export and Imports.

merce

Abe the: month of Augnst, 1895,

; aeerenener 51,437,092, and stems week. -

| pounds is 2,317,558 and in; value

large circle of}

_ The exports. of domestic leaf
tobacco from. the United. States|

NHR M0 HANDSOMER

Than any ever produced. My Clothes, Hats and
Furnishings, ITm talking about. Look over

the stock; itTs complete now, and see if you
donTt agree with me. One of two things I al
ways mean to do: To sell you better goods than
you get elsewhere for the same price; to sell
you the same goods lower than you get theni.

FRANK WILSON, :

The King Clothier.

H. B: CLARK.

Fw

and trimmings to 695,489 poulideT
more, a total of 52,132,581 poands |
ofthe value of $4,654,008. For
the same month of last year the
exports of leaf, stems, ete.,
amounted -to 49,815,023 pounds
worth $4,570,972. The increase in

kept §

$83,036. The United Kingdom
took 21,778,233 pounds; Germany,
12,676,552 pounds, and France,
4,661,608 pounds.

The cigar exportations were
183,000 valued at $3,773, for Aug:
ust , 1895, and 123,000, valued at
$4,231, for August, 1894. Of cig-
aretts 45,743,009, valved at $112 -
201 were exported during Aug-
ust, 1895, and 42,255,000. valued
at $122,475, during August, 1684:
The value of all other manufac-
tured tobacco exported during
August. 1895, was $241,626, aud
during August, 1394, $243,864.

We imported duriug August,

1895, 2,762,618 pounds of leaf of
the value of $1,559,119, and dur
ing the same .month last year, 1.
816,059 pounds of the value of
$1,323,929."Southern Journal.

JOEL PATRICK,

COTTON -- BUYER,

GRIFTON, N.'C.
wil be in Greenville Wednes- |

is

best

r

H. B. CLARKTS

oFor First-class goods go to

day and Ayden mes of each .





a

"

DAILY REFLECTOR.

D. J. WHICHARD. Editer.

Subscription 25 cents per Month.

' Entered as second-class mail matter.

EVERY AFTERNOON (EXOEPT SUNDAY)

"
LOVE AND MARRIAGE.

P tome Reasans Why There Are Not More
_ oEuppy Unions.
- hatmatrimony is a happier state [
than celibacy when it meansa union
of hearts as well as of. fortunes: there
is little doubt; but, though many
people marry.for love, or something
they mistake for it, very few of
~eos ~anions lead to lasting happi-
ness. Why is this?

The great reason seems to me to
be that in most lives the ruling pas-
sion is self, and upon this rock ev-
erything which comes in contact
with it is shattered sooner or later.
4 man will often fancy himself very |
muoh in love with a pretty and |
sprightly girl, and all the more so
if she has some means of her own.
Now, the real fact of the case very
likely is siraply that the girl amuses
him, and he pictures a little homsa
with her as its mistress as a pleas-
ant change from bachelor o~dig-
gings.�T In fact, what he calls love

~~"is only another name for pure, un-
\. adulterated selfishness. He thinks
" of himself and not of her, and when

he discovers, as he soon will after
marriage, thatshe has rights, claims
and wishes to be satisiied as well as
himself, he will probably at first
feel-very much surprised, and then
aggrieved and indiguant.

Perhaps the girl may be inher
way as selfiéhas the man and have
married for the sake of position,
wealth, independence from parental
control, or some equally unsatisfao-
tory reason. If this be the case,
as stom as the little veneer of mutu-
al att¥actions and sympathy which
they called love has worn off, then
both man and woman will find the
marriage bond irksome and will look
back wistfully to their old days of
freedom.

In a case like this certainly we
cannot say love has been destroyed
by marriage, for, though both young

people may have fancied they leved,

it was a mere delusion, which time

�"� and better acquaintance must inevi-

tably have dispelled without the
help of matrimony.

Leek at a higher and a happier
marriage, one in which both parties
start with a true affection for the
other and a capacity for greater love,
: -@iso with a firm purpose of
mg the other happy. A few
yan Boone and how does one find

»

dlovers? She is proba-

her children and her
Ear yee gee 8 and her husband is
to

im portance
her. veWhy is this? _ She has.simul

asiatiaan cus seinen ihiens Jones
bandTs love by her demonstrative
affection, which in unmarried days
was kept in check by maidenly coy-
mess and modesty. For a short time.
it pleased him to feel he was her all

no separate life and interests, but
then her " devotion palled on
him, and at last, as it were, be-
came quite: with the sweets
for which he had never obtained an
appetite by fasting.

For =e to be happy love

encouraged, carefully |
nurtured and: guarded, or it will
take wingsand fiy Se eee eae
dome Notes.

_AN ORATORTS MEMORY. "

it Sometimes Troubles iim, as Mr. Depew
Can Testify.

Few of our greater orators have

had good-verbal memory. Mr. De
pew complains that it is the most
embarrassing of his intellectual.
weaknesses. With a memory which
is marvelous for-events, and which
carries in great detail things which
have happened years ago, neverthe-
less Depew finds it a very severe, |:
sometimes an almost impossible in-
tellectual task, to commit even brief
passages to memory. ConklingTs
verbal memory was not, at least at
all times, to be depended upon, al-
though some of his speeches he com-
mitted upon three or four readings
ofthem. William H. Seward had a
marvelous verbal memory. Having
written a speech, it was firmly fixed
in his mind after one reading, and
that capacity President Cleveland | Gea
also possesses.
The perfect preparation of a speech
was, in Wendell PhillipsT view, that
one in which the mental operations
were assisted in no way by outside
aid. Only two or three times in his
life did he prepare with pen and pa-
per an address, ana he always felt
that these two or three speeches
were the poorest of his efforts. He
was constantly studying the art of
oratory. In his daily walk or in his
reading metaphors and similes were
suggested, which he tucked away in
his memory, and he even studied
action as he watched the muscular
movement of men whom he saw in
public places.

He believed that a perfect speech
could be jrepared only after intense
mental concentration. Of coursethe
mind must first be fortified by such
reading as provided facts. Having
thus saturated his mind, with infor-
his eyes.closed, making mental ar-
rangement of.the address. In fact,
he used to write his speeches men-
tally, as Victor Hugo is said to have
written some of his poems. A speech
thus prepared Phillips thought was
always at command of the speaker.
oo 1¢ vary

fatone time than at another. but it

in all, and that outside him she had.

must -be. cherished, and-it must. be

would always be Seamnoany the
same speech.

This method-of preparation ex-
plains what has been a mystery to
many persons. The sevcral re

of his famous lecture on ~oThe Lost
ArteT differ in phraseology . and
even in arrangement. His oration
upon Daniel OTConnell has _ been
printed by different publishers, no
two of them agreeing either in form

oration: at Harvard afew years be-

and therefore never Bevised one. He
was firmly of the helief that tae
printed thought and the spoken
thought should be expressed in dif-
ferent: form, and that the master of
ope form could not be the master of
the other."Philadelphia Press.

Subscribe to the Datmy REFLEc
zoe cents a month.

a L. Starkey & Co.

-" AGENTS FCK THE"

CITY ELEGTRIG. LAUNDRY,

WILMINGTON. N. C.

This Laundry does the finest work in
le. South, and prices are low. We
make shipments every gpa fs Bring
your work to our store on Monday and
t will be forwarded promptly. Prices
furnished on application~

+ MATES? AVES QUIENESS QUICKNESS.

"SEND SND YOU R"

JOB -:- PRINTING 3%

"TO THE"

REFLECTOR OFFICE
"IF YOU WANT"

First-Class Work.

%
%
%
4

GEE |

THE MORNIN = STAR.

Six-Dollar Daily o1
ss inthe State.

Favors Limited Free nae
of American Silver and Repea

per month. Wee $1.00 p per
your Wu. H. ARD, |
&Prop., Wisiagme, Nc.

or diction, and yet the speech is; §
practically the same. Only one of| |
his orations is left exactly as he de-| &
livered it, for he only delivered it; @ ;
once. That was the Phi Beta Kappa! Mile

fore his death. Mr. Phillips never} a=
read one of his speeches in print, |

ESTABLISHED 1875-

S.M. SCHULTZ,

PORK SIDES &SHOTLDERS

JARMERS AND MEKUCHANTS BUY
ing their yearTs supplies will find
their interest to get our prices befcre put
chasing elsewhere. Ourstock is complete

n allits branches,

FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAk
RICK, TEA, &c.
always ut LOwEsT MARKET PRIocEs.

TOBACLO SNUFF & CIGARS

we buy direct from Manufacturers, ena
bling youto buy at one profit. A com
dlete stock of

FURNITURE

always onhaad and soldat prices tousult
the times. Our goods areail bought and
sold for CASH therefore, having no riak
Desesseeseasegs |to run,we sell ut a sone margin,

3. WM SUCHUL Lz. ~traenville. N C

Cheap Excursion Rates

ATLANTA, GA.
Sept. 15th, to Dec. 3lst., 1895.

The Atlantic Coast Line

Through Pullman PalaceT Buffet
Sleeping Cars between New York and
Atlanta Ga. via Richmond, Petersburg,
. Weldon, Rocky Mount, Wiison, Fayette-
ville, Florence, Orangeburg, Aiken and
Augus a. For Rates, Schedules, SleepT
ing Car accommodations call on or ad-

dress any agent Atlantic Coast Line, or
the undersigned.

J. W.MORKIS, C. S. CAMPDELL,
Div, Pass. Agt. Div. Pass
Charieston,s.C. Richmcnd Va.
T. M. EMERSON, 8. M. EMERSON,
Trf. Mgr. Asst. GenTl. Pass. Agt.
Wilmington, N. C.

oo Barbers.

AMES A. SMITH,
.. TONSORIAL ARTIST.
GREENVILLE, N.C

~"-

of the Ten Per Cent. Tax. 01 on 6 Patronage solicited.

deege EDMUNDS.
Seaiet Opera House, ee

Gentlemens Clothing! given to cleaning

~







- se

THE POWER OF SCENT.

| Eustances Showing That Ratt'senakes Have

It tu = Wonderful Extent.
I donTt know whether rattlesnakes

*l have the power of scent or not, but
from what I have beard, and espe-

vamp of Slain 28 tice came} Professional Cards:
into the ficld. It was a rattler, and|.

it mafie straight for the house. I) " o
followed it. Tt-went fn at the open| Tikes. 3. 3aRvis.. cd aber LB Ow,
door. The dead.snake lay on ied SE ¥

floor. .The live. one. went up to it

=e s

m., Gren a w@. Arriy
Tialitax at 12:00 a. oS ae Weidon rit bes
laliy except Sundav.
ae ba yc gg rg branch leave
a �"�., arrives,

ecrves es wales ~at Pa 7.35
pt Sunday. oe
: tralue of seotlond Nek Braach, ©
Train | ? '

oat
« Bey
leaves Plymouth

Shae eee� ceive,

arboro 10.

9.2 revurning

Cc, via be |

cially from what I have seen, it and around it several times and then ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. � a
would seem to me that they not lay still, as if thinking the matter prnsiagertipnecome feviioged date
only have that power, but have it|/ over. I watched the UishiSie ieT Ses 1G Proction in, aii thesaeeets .
to a most remarkable @egree. One minutes, and he nevermoved. Then | 7 a ga
M | summer in northern Pennsylvania I I stepped inside the door. Like a|?:*# rae by ae. sh
57\10 & ' | killed a five specimen of a rattler flash the snake threw himself:intoa ee TA FLEMING
axes (ads: _|and carried it on a stick two miles| Coil and faced me, glaring fiercely x
Beietli o|to the place where I was stopping. | and making his rattles sing. I didn't my om .
; 2 2 cs A native of that locality on seeing like his looks and shot him with 1 - .
~ esilo 20 the snake said: revolver. I no lorigér had sny doubt} i. 0- LATHAM. BARRY SETENER =
1. 95}10 20 oThat's a she rattler, and you| that the snake of the week before| | ATHAM & SKINNER,
i a vtne! 2 hess folks around here want to wateh "wae fn meat fo Fae con k has ns aencnemeepatleti@ 5 0) 400. a
v FayTtteville out. Her mate will be along looking and was satisfi. that this. one was ede eS
Ar. Florence | 7 20) 30 for her tomorrow or next day, sure,T | the mate of the hired man's victim. | SREBS UAB. BG oo
: ss I skinned the snake and ok the But. how had they followed the trails John E. Woodard, FS 7
g ie | earcass to the hogpen and gave it| of their dead wives? That's what}; . Wiledi, Ni ©. Greenville,
_ # BQ� | te the hogs and� thought no more has always puszied me.~-New York). JOODARD & HARDING,� aunt
Pee P. M. la Mw | Sbout it. - Next forenoon I heard a} San. __ uT-LAWs. .. =
Ly Wilkon o2 08 6 20| loud scream from one of the women Greenville, N.
LvGokisboro | % WW 7 05| of the family, and she came running Icon em aaa Specie] attention ven to collections .
re nella a : - oe! into the house deolgring that she . and settlement of : ,
ngto P. wl A.M had seen ne rattlesnake on the BY ©. L. JOYNER. j. F. KING, " :
xS wy? i i oThe first time,TT she said. **that Tors."_Green eeoee osdeowouk to 2} ? ~ Z .
Ts = a live rattlesnake has been around| |, Brighs.... sscoreesfto8
Dated 7 * the house in 25.years.�T oo . eeopeenver © --3t0 4. ~ ; , 3 -
Oct. 6th 6a | c. sa ~ Luas"Common 4to 6) LIVE oe
1895. - mA. %, zs I hurried out, but could see noth-|"";, emcee ee " bo 15 9 " wey i
- : "" |_"_ | ing of the snake. Itoccurred tome , woecserce see ad sT es hie £2
~ ja. M.IP. M. then what the native had said about Fine.... cocc cece 2 60 8 ® ~
Ly Florerce 8 15| 7 35 th to of the dead snake follow: Curress"Common. . . ooe-6 to ll deimeemce vsti: 3
Ly Fajetteyille| 10 55! 9 35 eme Good . to20| On Fifth Street Fi :
Ly Selma -- | 12 ing her. I walked toward the hog- « Fine... |... 95 to 8% reet near rive
ar Wilstn 1 20]11 28 pen, and there I discovered a rattle- oon sees : Points. :
-| snake moving to and fro on the " naan ne
= \ Cotten and Peanut, =
i ground in front of the sty and act- carried to ahy "
sz ing as if it were looking for a place|and peanuts for yesterday, as furnished gtaes at t roabOunDle, rat
".|____.. | to get in. I watched the maneuvers|by Cobb Bros. & Commission Mer- _ Comfortable chicles.
1. wiki arT os eM. of the snake for a few minutes and | chants of Norfok :
v snlnater Mi on «| 7 80) then killed it. The snake wasa male, . 7
1 pve, et , $ 3} | and the native at once declared that Good Middling aa
ar Wilson - | 1.00). 10 27| it was the mate of ~he one I had) Low Middling 8 1-16} :
Ly Tarboro 28 killed the day before. The front/Good Ordins 74 2
- 7 i . : stgop where this snake had just Tone"steady. :
a 23 made its ap at the sped | Prime PEANUTS. a | :
zo z was the first place I had stopped|/y i) :
. with the dead snake and gone from|Tancy 33
| Pp. M. P. MiP. M,| there with it to the Span $1 bu
pl ol sdetta hp nS 11 87/ 10 32) | perhaps, in spite of the ciroum-|Tone"steady
ae stantial evidence it, would
Ar Tarboro 4 never have belicved that this snake Greenvill
» Uv Tarboro was anything else but one that had Corrected by oe
yea Meas 2 3 be pid come casually to the premises if %| Bntter, per . 18 to 25 - =e a
" similar incident hadn~t occurred a Western Sides 6 to 7 6. ne ove or she a =
Train on Nootiaud Neck Braneb 20aa} couple of days later. A man who/Sager cured Hams 72 to 188) Te eo sult ion and ~bent
saves Weldon 4-00. Halifax 4.¢)| was working in haying on the place} eo.) weal ta ts tweet. f,
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 p| lived four miles distant gut wens Flour, Fail , tendons epi iden adel |
w.. Greenville 6.87 p. m., Kinston 7.35 , y
in ng, leaves Kinston 7.20 home Saturday night to spend Sun-|Lard
= : eae 6 day. On hia way back Suuday after- Oats

noon he killed a rattlesnake in the| Sagar
road and brought it in. It bsppencd Salt Seck
to be a. female, and warning. wae
| given that a lookont better be kept Eggs per doz
for its male. As a matter of ouriosi-
| ty I tookT the dead snake from where

the} @! ry)

[ome and took to an old vm
[house end took it to an old vacant}

_ 2088 ¥ Sonera 6 _. | ther "

ML EME
a 3.inMONLY,







=

ee pend eas-aece bee "1
wens and mail train Bquibs That Did Wot on: oMappea. o
eS Seal na
: : When our thoughts. ura:
M. leaves 1610 A.M arrives 9:50 A ~ ~Thos. McGee, of Mt. Olive, is fa town. Eleventh month. to the = many things
~ T have ny
hak aie ) arrives 2:00 P. Te i ow 2 i da: went to Kinston! tires day of: November. this-winter for the comfort
M., leaves 2:16 BP. oreday evening of yourself and family turn
css arives ersay Wash| | W-2T. Wateon,s prominant swtectic: The year 18 five-sixths gone. tir rr toward the
mpton heh pega 2: hile conist of Danville, spent Tharsday The next important date ~is the .

~~ area tar W
day and Seeurdey,
ee

aight here. weddings, then comes acai l
.| Mrs-E. B. Moore and children, ofjing day, all in this mouth. . (ney |
) Wasqington, are yisiting her father, oo
The REFLRETOR ~boys wanted ex-Sheriff Allen Warren. | Car load of choice Prairie stay! ,

to get Off ~forT the cireus to-day 1.00 1 ts. M Wh wit ote
and we did uot have the he Mrs. Thos, Wilkerson, of Raleigh opener 4 per 100 at 8 eptayed you Se and

ot to let them: - So the eld man arrived Phursday to visit her parentsT best assorted line of the
= Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Lipscomb, | Dr W. H. Cobb, of Whitakers, fellowing goods:

Big lot Bou-Papers, Moaurning |~ se bis girl. When a fellow gets to day.
Paper, Slate and Lead Pen ng in the middie of week youmay; The atresta now show what a
Penholivrs; ~20; jést'fa'a at look out. great mad a littie rain creates.

flector Book Store. 4 MPhe Big-Show. _..} Selfs Show, keep your eyes
Sells BrosT circus arrived this sg ea, ane the ta pen er ie

those Southern aders at UW. BS.
Greenville Colle riate morning and the smali boy is|SmithTs. ~

happy, also the big bog... There; ... . a
3 This is Ail Saints Day, but in

ay | We ® great crowd at the depot to Greenville the saints an ~etn net
welcome them in and everything both got under the circus tent. |

wasinahurry. It 18 the largest)
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2495." Allltented exhibition ever. in thie| re idee shooting is in order
Modern a oMusic will pe|Seetion..The parade-at 10 oTelock have been .after them. today but

taught . ag 8 po as if pian. |this morning. was good and ex- for the circus.
graduate Instructio ." --
° Discipline firmn, but kind, ceeded ~any ever seen here. They The weather is so bad and the

able, Are n Caliathenton nave three brass bands and they |circus horses so broken down by
Ta yer address the ree made things hyely. People are| pulling through the heayy mud

cipal, Greet ville N.C here from every smutty corner|that the circus will not give a per-
land everybody seems bent on formance tonight.

having a big time. Tne menag- The passenger train Seed: on}.

ie ~is very large and* is alone|three eae tee hes er rh ond

orth - cesion- comm ecrowd coming
eee the etsoas: from Parnts down the

Falkland Items. road. {and Childrens Fine. and Heavg

. Mi. Whichara gays that nthe found Shoes: and. Boots tn_ endless
at ALELAND, 3 ° Noy oA 1906. | » dle at the Atlanta Expositoin|styles and kinds, Carpets, Rugs
© were & see the raidjiat coufd® eqhal the Southern Foot Mats, inys, Flooring

has kept bouse'almest by himself. Tom Tyson went to.Ayden last night}Will preach at Mt. Pleasant Sun-| :

Y C01

m wy a2 1; varied kinds.

yesterday. ~Leader, at D. 8. SmithTs- a one fate Oi hs, Lace Cur-
Saineé og rare . .j, Many of our people will attend! , ""~. a ins, uin Poles and Fixtures,
Ries = STOCK or"]/ f ti. fire big circus.in Greenville to- ett nie feet Ce nara eee ont & See
of 35% May. AIS Si ror Show youa fall line of Capes|_ on delight you that will sur-
CLOTHING, | oo. zinc. tom 0 eh 0 prise oad delight pou bth
= Gov. Elias Carr lost about) Sbow you a beautiful line of /°2 744 and price, Baby Car~ _-
J \eighty bales of cotton: by fire| Wool and Silk Plaids rieges, Heavy Groceries, Flour,
yesterday morning. No insor" Show ~you an Scaut line of eat, Lard,T Su , Molasses,

| ae vo and Trimmings, . |52/t, Beoging ng and Tics, Peanut
. coos, SHOES, mn 3 imino = ow yon ones per aod finer| Sacks and TN ine. . We.duy.
) a assortmen of guods than ever. a ; Z . Ore
x - Wate a 2 (oF Ke _ Show yon that you will profit COTTON AND: PEANUTS.
Gents Furnishing Goods roks Bamber Co. of Washingto®|by going to LanG~s Snow. 2

is here suryeying and making! J |
I will be mighty giad to wait on préparation for a new rail road| A party doen east was blested{,, pias SK sree |
a you andshow to you my stock. - whice main es built at once. Mr.! with fwins"both boys. ~He chris- | vt has 8. SHO = ofon
You will be surprised to hear ~ ve oan tened them Peter and Re | en. : } canTt
bh my Low Prices) that. I reduced sear . nother blessing of like pried, peat.
he will tinis.

since-I bought my Low Tariff 7 occurred ~@ year after, both eirte,}) hieon: ~@HOERS for
[Fou fa Wulld me up stra we can boast of two, wail: quads jan bevy father called thet ss yd = ie are
A Bs twine has been a png |

Goods'miost Bé soldat == ~ : - -fale.te nm for'a. time, 28. one weal!

i

secu niatis ween wee tor these: o ttiwinw eo


Title
Daily Reflector, November 1, 1895
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - November 1, 1895
Date
November 01, 1895
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NC Microforms
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