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- , j . i ' , ; : . .; The Bmly Free FresSo- v A ' ' r - pj b ii.i s h o d o r v35k fte rnoonI pXC O jprl 3 vj n dkSSsS? tlSSSMi TOL.VI.NO. 30. i , . ; KINSTON, NV C, SATURDAY, MAY 0, 1903. , . , PBICE TWO CENTS. ' i I . ! I i i I ,,. ... . i ii. , . ii ; i i ., ii mi i, mi , , , . , n M , i , ii I . I.I i i . M M M M M M tm M M M M H M f ( i GENERAL NEWS ITELIS latters of Interest Coidensed Into . Brief Paragraphs. A LimS ABOUT HUMCROUS THUGS Th Pith of the World'i Newt That " , Might Interest Our Readers. An Item Here and There. --. Albert Alonzo Ames,; ex-mayor of : Minneapolis, has been found euiltv of accepting a bribe of 1800 while chief executive of that city. . , Eight thousand rockmen and excaTa- ' tors on tne JNew York subway bare re : fused to return to work contrary to , an agreement of the central federation r union, ,: r .'.' v ' Manchuria rivals Oreeon in fertility. timber and climate and has abundance of gold, iron and coal. It has the area of Texas and three times the. popula tion oi tne state or jsew xoric. The Russians; it Is announced, have re-occupied New Chwang with a large ; force and hare also put garrisons la the forts at the mouth of the Liao river. The United States will prob ably join Great Britain and Japan in a vigorous protest. An account of Dr. W. D. Crum - 'expenses has been received at the , treasury department. It aggregated oniy 90o.o aaa was mciuaea in uie regular account of the Charleston of . ftnA. ThA dniiptniint runnnt nav'mp. sonai lees ana expenses until tne ap pointment of the collector is conttrmed i bv the senate. v No fixed salary is vro- 4 vided for the collector of the port of Charleston, wno receives nis compen Batlon m ine iorm;of-fees and ex penses. Ten Filipinos appeared in the United states district court at rittsourg ana made application, or naturalization papers. There was difficulty in deoid . inc on lust what oath should be ad . .ministered, but finally it was arranged - for them to take out first papers and declare their, intention- of , becoming citicens of the united etates; in the oath they renounced all allegiance and fidelity to the King of Spain, the last " sovereign of which they were subjects, "It any allegiance tney may owe mm.' The plans submitted for, Washing ton's new union station provide tor a station 760 feet widej with room in the train shed for 18 trains side by side ; and six more leading out of the tun nel on a lower level, making 24 trains , in all that are to be accommodated at one time in the new structure, The -carriage porticoes on ach side of the station will be capable of sheltering , 200 vehicles at one time. A unique ieature oi tne Duuaing win oe a pn vate entrance and waiting room for - the president of the United States. John W anamaker will erect a jaew department store in New York. The building will be thirteen stories high, with a basement and sub-basement, and will cover the entire plot between ounn Avenue, tsroaaway, ixintn ana Eighth streets. The building will be of structural steel, fire-proof construc tion, and1 the exterior walls will- be of , stone, terra-cotta and granite. In the -center of the building will be a grand -court, extending to the eighth ; floor. and from it will extend a wide stair- -case to the top floor. The 'interior woodwork throughout will be of Santo .Domingo mahogany and quartered oaK. ua tne seoona floor win oe large auditorium. At the corner of Fourth Avenue and Eighth street will be the delivery department aadFagon -concourse. : There will be about 25 acres of floor space. The cost will be . between 93,600,000 and 14,000,000. . Too Great a Kick. In almost every neighborhood some one has died from an attack of colic or cholera morbus, often before medi cine could be procured or a physician summoned. A reliable remedy for "these diseases should be kept at hand The risk is too great for anyone to take. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has undoubted ly saved the lives of more people and relieved more pain and suffering than any other medicine in use. It can al ways be depended upon. For sale by -J. E. Hood, druggist. , CASTOR I A For Infants and CMlirea. v T1.3 KL3 Ycj I.I73 A!ntjS E!it Bears the Signature of XXfXXXXXXXXX'XX M ' TV J '. nntron M Did you say DRUGS? Then HOOD'S! ' M M M M M H M M M M M - M See Our Nice Line CANDY J. E. HCOD- : Orivatal TUw mt Wsaak4. ; The oriental Idea of the freedon which American women enjoy does no accord with that of Americana. - Ou Hindoo lady expressed herself as great ly shocked that American men should compel their women to go about In public unprotected, their faces exposed to the gaze of strangers, and a II index. gentleman with whom we talked thut expressed himself on the subject ol oriental treatment of women: "Yon say that we do not honor out women. Why, let me tell you that all Hindoo boys, till they are ready to learn the ways of men, are taught by their mothers. We are subject to oat mothers, and we know what you occi dentals do not yet seem to realise that to have good men and good citizens we must have good mothers. -Ton will hardly find a Hindoo man, whatever his caste, daring to ,go against the counsel of his motbt-r. Can you say as much for American menf Could as much, do our readers think, be said for American men? There are no asylums for helpless fathers 'and mothers in the orient. So long as there is a corner and a crust to be shared the parents in the oriental family have the lion's share. Household. latkUf la !. 1 . In 'Spain people smoke Incessantly under all conditions, at all hours and in all places, except In church. Men smoke In. the railway carriages; they smoke In all the tram cars; they smoke in all the minor theaters; they: smoke In all the restaurants. In the hotel din ing rooms, and, of course, In the cafes. In business offices the merchant and hl laFlr a'mnlra . In ihnnt tha ihnn. i. man, while trying to sell goods te a nt, as wltlwuti delay. I4dy; iwtlirop to ... roll a v cigarette, 1"-!? which, when lighted, be will puff In Hf "P: wb le the ship s writer calls her face.. You see conductors and tne ro to discover th laggards. It 1. driver of tram cars smoking. All the i the ?T S6??10 iUt,e', hackney cabmen smoke all the tone. officer of the deck to decide what while even coachmen and feotnien-ot;tew-or,,,"f D? private carriages sometimes smoke on m ers menagerie If the the box.? Beggars approach you. ciga-1 vfeset l 00 ber way homeward from rette ln moutb;,to whine for alms. If ; J??,- "y'rie a large you ask for tickets at a raUway office. Z 7 atto' om h .ia i- hi. tiA i friends of the sailors, v But these are bands you the dingy bits of pasteboard. The innumerable peddlers all smoke cigarettes ail the time. J. A. Hart In' Argonaut - ! . f The Orlfla of Tomato. English word of direct Indian origin most reauently . In use u to- mato. A native of tropical or sub- tropical America, It was cultivated by the subjects of the Incas and Monte- comas, as well as by the other seml clvllized natives,' long before ciie ad vept of Europeans on this hemisphere under the name of tumatl or tomatl. Though introduced into Europe al most as early as its congener, the po tato. It was many years before it made Itf way Inte popular: favor. There It was first known to the Engllsh'as love apple, to the French as pomme d'amour and to the Italians as poml d'amore, and these names are still In use, per petuating the old, widespread notion that Its use as food had an influence on the amatory passions. . ' . : Sparaheia mm tmm Itwaaata, Spurzheim, i the father'; of modern phrenology, while - staying in . Edin burgh, where he bad a great vogue, was the victim of a laughable hoax.! A number of -medical students submitted for the opinion of the phrenologist the plaster cast of what they said was a remarkably formed human skull. As a matter of fact It was the model of a big Swedish turnip (called In the Scot- Ssb tongue "nelp"). and of this Spurs elm gravely wrote out the phreno logical character. A few days later the following skit appeared In the leading ournalof the city: . The tide of tarn to Spurstaeim's name Rolled o'er the German deep; The tide waa apring: but flckle thins. . It now has tbb'd to "nelp." Paint Tour Bnswy For TSc totlOO with Devoe's Gloss Carriasre faint, it welgns 3 to sozs. more to the pint than others, wears longer, and irives a gloss equal to new work. Sold by B. W. Canady & Son. . Kicd Yai Haw Htwan Slgaatait of OAOfTOniA., Beanths j 1M Una TM t(3 W BH of 14 J-CUCJU&Z 0A07OXIIA. Bean tha A ' 'B T03 H3V9 Alwt B; tf.fff.tif.tif.ttt . 1 1 f. ?. ? f t AT . - -r all CODA FOUNTAINS The Most Sati;f ving, Cooling, Refreshing, Iaviuoratir zzd Delicious. : : : : ii..iiiai Nsoi. . A SAILOR'S MASCOTS. RUnIIuhii (MImUm Tka.ll . TikH rwm tke Bkor. Jack Tar .is notoriously improvident. and most oX oar naval seamen when they get ashore spend their nloney, be It more or less, with a lavish, hand. Shore leave Is limited to twenty-four hours, bat In that brief time the unre strained sailor manages to ran through about all the cash be carries with him, He pldhges Into a whir of 'dissipation and Is oftentimes cheated or robbed of a good share of his ready assets, but a percentage of the latter is also apt to go for anything that happens to strike his almost childish fancy. Mascots are the seafarer's delight, and: whatever he may" come across which seems to him to have a'talismanlc property be Is bound to buy It if be can; hence when the "pier Jumpers," as those on Shore leave are technically called, return in well filled barges to the ship and under direction of the master at arms climb up to the deck they are likely to bring with them a miscellaneous collection of goats, dogs, parrots, monkeys, roost ers, etc. One sailor on the Kearsarge. either In or out of his senses at the time, went so far as to purchase as a mascot a colored baby from Its mother for the sum ; of 40 cents and came aboard with It In his arms. He was not allowed to retain It however, and the child was eventually restored to its repentant and hysterical parent How many of the mascots may, be kept on board lies within the discretion of the captain. A liberal policy la pur sued In this matter. But manifestly ! there is a limit to the number of those that can be accommodated. The sur- only temporary tenants of the hold and would i not be permitted to remain on board long. Leslie's Weekly.-. tekool Cot.nt Im Ckla. Many strange school customs prevail 4a China. - The -girts in that country 8eiaoin to scnool unless they are the E Children of very j-leh people, School wore Degms before daylight, and after studying ; their lessons aloud for two hours the pupils recite them. : They then go home to breakfast, after which they return and study again till din- ner time, in tne arvrnopn they go again to school to prepare lessons for the following day. By this time It ; night This goes on every day of the week, for there Is no such thing as the Sunday holiday, t. : ( I BUUoa sad TrUlloal xnere are two systems of numers- : tlon In use at the present day,, common ly called the English and the French systems.; In the former the billion Is a million of millions, a trillion a mil lion of billions and each denomination is a million times the one preceding. In tha latter fwhlch Is the system used In the United States) the billion is thousand millions, and each denomina tion Is a thousand times the preceding. ' Wkr Be XVmu Slasrle. -' v "Why don't you marry?" asked one Frenchman of another. ; f "Because I must do it on certain con ditions." ' , "What conditions r " "Well, you know, the lady must be beautiful, rich and a fool. If she isn't rich and beautlfuL: I won't take her, and If she isn't a fool she won't take me!" ' 'v May aad Dooaibr. - " Our great-grandfathers bad a way of announcing marriage ceremonies which would - hardly i find favor nowadays. The following cases In point have been unearthed: . ' - "On Aug. 22, 1782. at Bath. Captain Hamilton, aged twenty-eight married Mrs. Monsou. an aged lady of eighty- six, but . possessing rank and much wealth." - "Robert Judge of Cooksbomugh, Ire land, aged ninety-five, to Miss Annie Nugent aged fifteen. Robert Judge was an officer In King William's army and was wounded In the nose." Lon ton Express. When you want a pleasant phvsic try Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver I ablets, 'iney are easy to take and pleasant In effect For sale at J. E. Hood's drug store. f. 1 1. 1 1 i 1 1 1 It 1 1 it 1 1 f. 1 1 1 1 ? e 5c Tobacco at the World's Fair. New Ewlaod Tobaooo Grower. . . The St Louis world's fair depart ment of agriculture is planning to make one of the finest exhibitions of the tobacco industry ever made in this country. Besides valuable cultural plot experiments for , illustrative pur poses, a great central space In the pal aoe of agriculture, 52x180 feet, and al so space along some of the aisles, has been reserved. . . x'.: s-, While this central exhibition Is not intended to replace the state collec tions or those of special manufactur ers, the department of agriculture of the fair will see that an exhibition is made to include every phase of the to bacco industry, beginning with the seed, carrying it through the plant bed, transplanting, field culture and growth, cutting, stripping, transfer ring to barns, curing processes of all types, transportation of leaf to ware houses, sales, delivery to factory, and thence through the various preparato ry forms to the finished product. An interesting exhibition of machinery to illustrate various manufacturing pro cesses will be installed. A. & M. Boys at Work. -There a re "505 students at the North Carolina College of Agriculture ; and Mechanical arts. Of this number 237 are paying their own expenses bv labor performed at the college or be fore going there. The college has laoor system wnereoy students earn about $5,000 a year. The spirit of work and economy is very stronar at the college. Even rich boys catch the spirit, and work at odd hours beside boys of the crreatest povertv.. Everv possiDie iorm oi laoor is represented, from barberlng and shoe-making to clerking, teaching and preaching. mere are plenty oi carpenters, ma chinists, engineers, v drautrhtsmen and electricians, and no end of farm work ers. It is a big sight to s4e the A. & M. boys at work every Saturday. -.5 . The Caaberrf. , ' , xne value or tne cranberry as a me dlclnal agent was early recognized by the American aborigines, who prepared poultices from them to extract the ven om from poisoned arrows. On the same principle they are used now as a. rem edy for erysipelas, taken Internally or applied as a poultice. ': In malarial and typhoid conditions the acfu of the fruit Is specially , commended, while dyspep tics who lack gastric juice are also of fered cranberries. ? Eaten raw they are eild to be an excellent remedy for bll leusness. .As a health food cranber ries should not be strained, as too much of their substance is lost k i Ootttaar to the Polat. 2 John (sheepishly)--1 I s'pose you'll be glttln' married some time? Betty (with a frightened air) Oh. dare say I shall some time. , . "I dare say I'll git married too.' "Oh." ' - "Pr'aps we might both git married at the same time," -; - ' v. . "Wouldn't It be awful. John. If the parson should make a mistake and marry us to, each other?" ' - "II shouldn't mind.". No; neither should I. to tell you the troth, John." 1 Baerpipea I Wero'e Ttm. " t Bagpipes are generally ascribed to Scotland, where they have been In use for a long time, but It was iq Instru ment upon which the ancient Greeks and Romans played. Nero is said to have performed upon it and an old piece of Grecian sculpture represents a player on the bagpipes dressed In the fashion that Is known today as the highland costume. , - Ha a m Reeor Hlaualf. Barker How could we ever get along .without street cars? Parker Oh. we could survive. The world waited over 1.800 years for street cars. Barker Tbat'a so. "And, by Jeemlny. I've waited quite a lot for them my self. Kansas City JournaL - DMi'l Tell. ' Ton mean old thing, nowl You said yon wouldn't tell Mauds about my be ing engaged, and you went and did, so therer . f ... i '- :v , 'I didn't do any such thing! I didn't tell her at all! I just I just asked ber If she knew!" Baltimore News. ; - Rldlealoaa. , Nurseglrl I never take care of a ba by for less than $25 a month. Mrs. Hyfly I couldn't think of pay ing that My Parisian maid charges only $40 for taking care of Fldo. New York Herald. , : Boaaeopatfcr. ' Biddle So you are a believer la homeopathy? ' Noble Sure. When I have the night mare, I put a piece of colt's foot candy la my mouth. Boston Evening Tran script , Wltk Raak, "Blood will tell." "Why. yes. Telltale blushes are Bui- nothing but blood." Philadelphia letin Temjierance is ruling passion of the ay and the soda fountain one of its trorcpst supporters and the most de ;V,':j1 and most satUfyin; of tb lev-ri-.'i oi.-l 1-y sod a fountains i I'epsi ( .a, t' e l't !-'a (iih.k. It is l.eaV.h- 1. Trv it. U-'.i. . Militiamen1 Had Poor Food. I1 Albany, May 4. AJ1 of the New York soldiers who participated in the fair dedication complain of the food they received in camp In 8t Louis. , Some of the companies asked permission to furnish their own food, and this was given them." They started a commis sary and cooked their own meats. A considerable saving has been made in the expenses for the St Louis trip. The appropriation for this purpose was 150,000. The actual cost of the trip will fall several thousands of dol lars below this sum. Governor Odell said that until he had all the bills be fore him he couldn't give the exact cost, but it would be less than the ap propriation. Gov. Odell expressed himself today fas being more than pleased with the reception he received in St Louis. All of the returned New Yorkers bear testi mony to the fact that all along the route of the parade the reception given to Governor Odell was second only to that accorded to President Roosevelt and ex-President Cleveland, and they say that the New York troups carried off the honors even from the regulars. Sawdust as Food for Stock, Baltmor American. - , Herman Schmidt, a Caroline county farmer, read in a technical German paper that wood properly prepared would make good animal food. As there are a number of saw mills in his neighborhood he is putting the plan iq to practical operation. The theory is that animals nave a decided liking for young shoots, roots, or shrubs, tree bark and other heavy food of the same nature, and the experiments have proved that the nutriment contained in such growth remains In it even after It has become wood, and that with a lit tle salt and water-added to it the saw' dust will prove to be a highly nour ishing diet. Pine, birch, alder, beech. walnut, and other woods have been an alyzed chemically, and tne wooa nas vastly more albumen,' nitrogen and fatty substances than straw. To the salt and water Mr. Schmidt is adding potato peelings, corn husks, canning bouse refuse, or any other slop he can obtain. Parrott Saves Master's Life. ; Washington. N. J., May 7. While making some repairs to his house to day, George B. Andrews, a civil war veteran, fell from, a ste pi adder and cut a deep gash intlis neck, from which he would have bled to death bad not his parrott' s .persistent .screams for help attracted the attention of the neighbors. Andrews had .. fallen against tne stove and became uneou scious. A doctor took six stitches to close the wound in his neck,: and said that had help been delayed thirty minutes Andrews would have been beyond recovery. ua his return trom tne war looa, Andrews brought this parrot from New York. It has been his constant companion since. He had made appli cation for admission to the Soldiers' Home and had been instructed to go. but finding he could dot take his 'par rot wltn turn, ne aecidea to stay. Immortality of the Soul. Ann Arbor. Mich.. May, 4. Albert H. Walker, a New York patent lawyer. who today finished a week of lectures on patent law at tne university o: Michigan, closed with an address o; "Discoveries, Inventions, Philosophy and Keliirlon of the Twentieth cen tury." As a patent lawyer he said: ,"I believe that the twentieth century ill see no such inventions as tne nineteenth, I expect the twentieth cen tury to prove wnetber the soul is im mortal. Either spiritualism will dem onstrate it by actual communication with departed souls or science will disprove it bv showing that every feel insr we have is produced by electrical effects on the brain. I would not be surprised if the existence of God were proved. , The majority of men in this AAuntsv aaaaaa atKolnfa ' .' " - vvuuti j sva v s)utvioii9i ; Southern Steel Trust.! Memphis, Tenn., May 4. The repre sentative of the united States bteel corporation, Mr, Dean, who has been ooking over the southern coal, ana iron fields for the last few days, has returned to New York with options re presenting many trillions of dollars and involving thousands of acres of mineral lands in northern Alabama. Before leaving for the North he would not say what the intentions of the Steel Trust were, though be inti mated that a gigantic su prise was in store for the people of that section Most of the property on which options were secured lies along the line of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. Marriage Behind The Bars. Roanoke, Va., May7 Miles Charles, Indicted for the murder of his business partner, C. C. Hatch, in Buchanan county, and confined in the county jail at Gruady, was married benina me bars today to Miss Heddie Tibbetts, the pretty daughter of Joseph Tibbetts, for many years clerk of the county court of Buchanan. Charles was a prominent merchant at the time of the tragedy. He will be tried next month. Mr. Joseph Pominville, of Stillwater Minn., after having spent over $2,000 with the best doctors for stomach trouble, without relief, was advlsell by his dru??ist,Mr. Alex Hichard, to trv a box of Chamberlain's fctomach nd Liver Tablets. He did so, and is well man today1. If troubled with In- iTfstion, bad taste in the mouth, lacK f appetite or constipation, give these ablets a trial and you will be !eapd with the result For sale cents per box at J.- E. NORTH STATE 1IEYZS HI. ' " ' "i ii-; vl'-: Clipped ud Caned From Our lord ' 4 C&rollna Exchanges. ODD 1ID IHTERESTIHG EiPPEIIZCS. Gossip Gathered 'from Murphy T Manteo of Importance to Our Tar Hear Readers. Mr. M. J. Poaresall, of Moultrie, Ga., a young brother of Col. P. M. Pearsall, Governor Ayoock's private secretary, was killed in a railroad ac cident in Georgia, Thursdays - The corporation commission electa John O. Ellington, of Smlthfield, atate bank examiner. - Last year there were five examiners, but no one man will dot the work. His term begins June 1st. : The five-year-old son of Noah Jor dan, colored, of Raleigh, was burned to aeatn oy playing witn matches, xno child wss left alone in the house and, when screams attracted attention hm was already fatally burned. He was taken to the hospital but died in av short while. Chatham Record: Working the pub lic roads at night Is something un heard of, but It was done one night last week by the overseer and hand on a road near this place. They were so busy on their farms that they agreed to take lanterns and torches and work the road after night, and thus lose no time from their farm work. t Goldsboro Headlight: Notwithstand ing the scarcity of laoor more land is. being cultivated, and to better advan tage, in thla section than in years. Our farmers have learned to farm on ad vanced ideas', hence are making their land pay. With their smokehouses afc home they have the Advantage of tha town man, whose living has increased at least 40 per cent. . Ashevllle, May 7; judge Jamea EL Boyd, who is holding federal court here; and who last winter so bitterly opposed the establishment of a court : at Wllkesboro. today from the bench gave utterance w some remarxaoie ut terances. He said he had not changed -bis mind concerning the establishment - - .. . - I..L1. & of the court, and characterized it aa a silly piece of legislation, and that If the hotel accommodations at Wilkes-4 boro were not improved he did not propose to stay. Lawyers here de clared that they were surprised to hear such utterances from the bench. - , .- Rocky Mount "Motor: The board of county commissioners yesterday award ed the contract of the erection of three new steel bridges to cross Tar river, one each at the falls, and the places known as lemon's ana uocKreirs. The contract goes to the Virglniav Bridge and Iron Company, of Roan oke, Va., the prices being 912,650 for the thro and to he cnmnletnd : within -ft months. The bridge at the falls, which is so important to Rocky Mount and as to that matter the whole county. - will be 26 feet wide all told, 18 feet be ing for driveway and two sidewalks of four feet. , Clinton Democrat: . The strawberry crop of the Clinton section is proving; . to be as profitable a one as we have had in several years. The cash thus realized puts our farmers in brighter" r spirits and hopes, ana gives an im petus to business of everv kind. Many, of our truckers are enabled thereby to pay spot cash for their home supplies . throughout the spring and summer ana some are settling tneir leniiizer bills, leaving their fall crops un touched. The strawberry crop has not been a full one here, nor has it any where else, but prices have been fairly- good, and about the whole crop win be aold. The proceeds of the crop will ; approximately mean $30,000 to Clinton and vicinity. -1 Monroe Jounal: One of the most re markable Incidents of which we have heard occurred on Mr. J C. Slkes place near town last Wednesday, . at the home of Mr. D. A. Cook. Mr. Cook . has a grand child two years and three ' months old. On the place is an unflnt ished well, covered over with boards as the workmen left it The well is just 47 feet deep by actual measure ment, and just after the rains of last week water stood in It ' about 17 feet deep. . In to this well the little child fell and though remaining In there a con siderable time was brough out alive and uninjured. The child was missed by its mother and a search was begun, r resulting in the discovery that the little one had fallen in the well. Its body could be seen floating, faoe up ward, and on seeing the family look ing down at it, the child began to call each by name. Not having a ' rope, ' Mr. Cook had to send to a neighbor's house several hundred yards away, to get one. He got It, ana together with it ana a pair or buggy lines, managea to go down in the well and get the little girl. She was floating, with only the . face out That she was not drowned is next to a miracle. She was perfectly well next day, and came with the , family to see Sparks' i show, which was here Thursday. . . v A Farmer StraUrhtenei Oat. ' "A man living on s farm near here came in a short time ago completely doubled up with rheumatism. I hand ed him a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm and told him to use itfrvely and if not satisfied after using It he need not pav a cent for It" says C. H. uayder, of Pattens Mills, N. Y. "A few days later he walked into the store as ' straight as a string and handed me a dollar satin?, 'give me another bottle f Chamberlain s Pain lialra. I want it in niv houe all the lira" for it curv d re.'" For sale by J. E. Hood, druj- Hood's Crv; stijre. ist.
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 9, 1903, edition 1
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