Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / March 28, 1889, edition 1 / Page 1
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E. E HILLIARP. Editor and Proprietor. WE .MUST Wui;K KIl THE PEupi.E'S WELFARE. nt rlplloM. t I . Snprr Win VOL. V, SCOTLAND NECK N. C THURSDAY, MARCH 28. ceo 1 UO 1 1 micro STATE DIRECTORY- prnM G. Fowle, of Wake county, (i.)verr.or ; salary $3,000. Thoma M. Holt, of Alamance county. Lieutenant-Governor and President of the Senhtc. William L, Saunders, of "Take county, Secretary of Slate; salary $2,000. George W. Sanderltn, of Wayne county, Auditor; salary $1,500. I.mnald W. Bain, of Wake county, Treasurer; salary $3,000. Sidney M. Finger, of Catawba L)-t", Superintendent of Public Instruction; salary $1,500. ihco. F. Davidson, of Huncou- -county, Attorney-General; salatj .i0'jO,and Reporter to Supreme Court ; salary $1,000. aVav.-s P. Glenn, of Guilford county, Adjutant General ; salary $0.00. J. C. liirdsone , of Wake county, Stat Librarian; salary $730, .T. I), Ronshall, of Camden eonnty. Chief clerk to Auditor; salary .f 1 003. Covnusou's Council. Secretary of State , Auditor, Treas urer and Supt. Fab. Instruction, State Board of Education. (Jovernor, Lieutenant-Governor. Secretary of Stale, Treasurer. And iior, Supt. Fub. Inctruction, and Attorney-General. Surnr.ME Court. William N. 11. Smith, of Wake, Chief Justice. A. S. Merrimon, ol Wake, ,1. J. Davis, of Franklin, J:wnes E. Shepherd, of Beaufort. A. C. Averv, of Burke, Associate Jis-t'u-es. Salaries of Chief Justice and Associate Justices each $2,000. Supreme Court meets in Raleigh on the fust Monday in February and last Monday in September. REPRESENTATION IN CONOEESS. $,((tc . Zehulon B. Vance, of Buncombe; term expires March 4t.i. 1'.U ; Matt. W. Ransom, of .North amptnn ; term expires March 4th, 1580. II'wsc of Rcreseittutu's First District, T. G. Skinner, Dem.; Se cond District, II. F Cheatham, (col.) Rep-; Third District, Chas. W. y,leClamary, Dem. ; Fourth District. 15. II. Hum), Dem.; Fifth District. J. M. BroWer, Rep.; Sixth District, Alfred Rowland, Dem.; Seventh District, John S. Henderson, Rep.; Eighth District, W. II. II. Cowles, Deai.; Ninth District. H. G. Ewart, p. Halifax County Directory. GF.NEKAL A: SEMF.LY. ? ,,r1?T. L. Emrv. ;,;i,e-V. II. Anthony, T. II Ta lor. Will A. Daniel, County Supt. Fu'liiO Schools. W . F. Parker, County Treasurer. II. I. Allsbrook , Sheria". L. Ymon, Register of Died. J. T. Gregory, Clerk Superior Court. W. 11. Whitehead, Coroner, Hoard or Commissioners. Dr. W. R. Wood, Chairman; W. K Rowers. Sterling Johnson, II. J. Rope, J. II. Whitakcr. W. A. Dunn, County Attorney. Interior Court Thos. N. Hill. Judge; E. F. Hymnn and S. S. Nor man , Assocta e Justices. S. M. Gary. C ork of Inferior Court. .1. M. Grizzard, County Solicitor. Ti.v.r. for Holding Superior Court. March 4th, M;iy lll'Ji, Nov. 1 1th. .March and November Courts are for civil cae only except jail cases. SraMam! Xecfc Town Directory. A. Whie. Msyor, C. W. Dunn, Town Const itde. Town Commissioners--.!. Y. Sav age.R. H. Smith, Jr., Dr. R. M, .Io!;n--on , W. A. Dunn. CIIUKCIIKS. Episcopal, Rtfv. Walter Smith Rector. R ip;it, Re 7. J. D. Ilufham, I). D Pastor. Metholis Rev. Mr. Harrison. Pastor in charge. Prbuiiivo R.iptist, Elder A. J. Moore, Pastor. T E It E R R A U E P.. -Dj:ai.E7. ix- '!!dl, SALTED, SMOKED BEEF, l'i:K, SAFSAiiE AND I5L F TONCUES. Vt-H No. v.",. First Market EirilMOXD VA. ;-dy. l-20-Cm. (t, i r i,-r liih.-d jir':n Xlie farmer's Icciien. ''Well, wile, I hove atu'isd it over, Pv give it a good deal of though, I've reckoned the cost and requirements, the trials which at ease will be fought; I've looked o'or the pages of trouble, and j itted the items all down, And at last I've deci led we'd better be moving off to town. "I know the old place is a relic that we always intended to keep, And we shall, for we'll rent it to some one who knows hew to plow and to reap; Yes, we'll rent the old homestead, not pell it, so you needn't begin with a frown. Then, after the thing is all settled, we will take our departure for town. "This matter I long have considered, and now then 1 think it is best. That we rent out the lands and the house, and seek this new Eden of rest. We must try to be up with the fashion" () pshaw! we're not any too I, I'm sixty and you're about fifiy. Not a very big figure all told. "'I've purchased a house of a towns man, 'lis fully two good stories l.ih. I got it at pretty low figure, so I thought it would be best to buy; There's every convenience we're wanting both insi le the mam ion and out, The whole thing was bought at a bargain, lor I think I know'd what 1 was about. "You see we can taks up our quarters, and you, if good fortune attends, Can put on your best new apparel and call on your fashionable friends; While I, with my latest cut trousers, and you with your new pin-back gown Why the papers are bound to take no tice, and say we're residin' in town. "To be sure! we'll be ever so tony" 1 guess that's the word that they use; They'll invite us to dinner and -upner, and be mad if we dsre to refuse. We'll rent a new church-pew and buy new bo iks, and should the good peo pie desire Our assistance, we'll lend to the calling and send forth our notes in the choir. " So the farmer, sood soul, foiir.d a Unant, a man that "could sec 10 alf.iirs," And he rented th? premises safely and dropped agiicultural caies. lie drew up the rentabb; papers and copied them off in his book, And now that the business is settled, let's go into town for a look. "Why, Solomon! what is the matter, is there anything cutf th way? I've been thinking I'd tell you of some thing, and I guess I will do it to day: You know 1 attended the social they diin't give me an invite, And my Lclings were never so shattered as thry were on that very fame night. 'I hcird one pround feminine critter make different remarks about my face. And one of 'em saH how my speeches didn't tit in their natural place; I never i I sleep with a grammar, so I tried to keep perfectly cool, But I guess how if 1 dared say it, I could o'tohl which of us was the fool." And the farmer agreed with his help mate, he'd a trial of a similar kind. He said i- had badly hurt, and was prey inr jut then on his mind. And taking affairs altogether, combining the grammar and face, Why. he thought that "if Betsy was willm' they'd just move back on the place." A Iloy'M ( nmpodlloii on SirI. CartJut'je Blade. The, following amusing composi tion written by some one of the smart youths of Carthage, and which was doubtless intended to be read at school, was picked up on the street last Fiiday by a Bhule rc poiter: "Girls is strange animals, not so big as their mnrnin'as, least ways they aint til! they get grown. Most of them awful stuck up and wears bussels and eos?ests. Their bnssels is sometime b'ggei'n they is, and I never could see no good in em, eepteu to s?t down on. Girls thinks they is mighty smart, and they get grown at 12, and chews chewinggum and looks sorter like a cow chawing her cud. Some girls is pretty and some, is ugly, mostly ugly. Rut all of them think they is pretty and puts on airs and powders and paints and wants to get married. Girls aint got much sense cause they loves boys and boys dont caie nothing bout them I'm mighty glad I aint. a girl cause they cant go in swimming and have fun like boys. And this is all I no about giils' cept my girl and she's a daisy." Clipped from Sanfoid nress. 'I he .Imlxe was I'lixzlcd. The following from the Wilkesboro Cnr.ONicLE appeir.d in the Ili.kory Carolinian last week : "A witness wa? c.illed on to testify as to the soberness of a certain party on a certain occasion, in the court room last, week. The witness an swered that the party wa3 "as sober as a Judge." There was a giggle in court, and the witness, remembering where she was, turned round, looked at His Honor, and then as if to re cant her former declaration, said very plainly, that the parly was "perfectly sober.' His Honor is considerably puzzled to know wheth er the delicate reference was intend ed as a compliment or not.'' iiii.i. .vf; s wow. Some or tfie Chambermaids One Meets on the Road I had a very trying experience last week. It wa? painful, but not fatal. I had been traveling all the night before, and fatigue and brain ' fag were together fighting for my ! very existscce. I got a r orn when I arrived and retired to seek much needed rest. I had j i st retired, in fact , haviug carefully locked the door and left the key in the lock that the curious could not look in through the keyhole and see me a- I lay there asleep and make a $5,000 painting of me. Just then there was a slight rattle at the door, such as you hear whin a chambermaid attacks it with a pass key and comes in the room to sweep holes' in the carpet and fill your lungs full of debris. I smiled i;o myself, for my own key was in the door, and I said softly, as I b.i'hed my blush ing features in the pillow : "Aim! aha! ye cannot enter now." Rut she continued to rattle away with her key,and I scon saw, with horror, that my own was beginning to lose its grip , ar.d finally it fell to the floor with a loud report, having been pushed out of the lock from the other side. I can hardly describe the horror of rny situation. I thought of hand ing my handkerchiefs and perfumery over the transom to her, and beg ging her, if she had a mother fir any other r I ttives in whom she h id any confidence whatever, to go away. I thought of going to the door and tell ing her that we had better go through life as nearly as possible by separate routes, and that I needed re6t really more than I did society, but I did not dare to get out of bed for fe:ir the door would open, and I was who for it did now bui,t open, as I had feared, and a tall girl in th.; prime of life, with a ishing eye and distended no-tril. came into the room. With a wild shriek I covered my head with the bedclothes, shuddering till my teeth , which were in a tumtler of water near by, chattered together. ' Go away, you hateful thing," I ! said, "and never, never come back agaiu any ra re." Rut I want to change them sheet,'' she said. ''Go away,'' I said again. "Even your oico is hateful in coy Fight. Take my beautiful Seth Thomas silver watch if you will, tm oh! go away, and heaven will reward you even better t'aan that." She then slunk from the room, but it was a long time before I could so to sleep. Even then my dreams were iroubl. d anil my mind filbd with apprehension. I t'longht I was be ing pursued by a red eyed unicorn with a navy blue stomach and a Chinese l it tern tied to ids tail. I tried to shake him off, but I could not. He led me down into the in fernal regions, and insis'el on show ing me the iron bridge and the high schocl, ami spoke of the great, pro- ..rneo flll., r1P e ,wl ooM )!,. I v. r, "l I 'l.,: , .lli'i LlJ.iu they wero likely to get a nevr and competing rtjad in there this summer; and he showed me tb. library and walked me out to the fair grounds and down on the L-ike shore , so that I could take a sulphur bath, and spoke of the. desirability of the climate for people with bron- cliiai afLctions and wantid me to speak of it n my letters to the press, and said he would pay me well for it. Jiu-r then I heard a knock on my door. 1 was so glad to have any body knock, instead of picking the lock , thai 1 asded : "Who's thert?': A rich, manly voice replied, l,Me I was glad to hear tie welcome voice of one of my uf sex. Mil so I undid the door for the. gentleman with greit alacrity. Just as I was ; bounding lightly back towards mv couch with a merry laugh , the party atr.illj.l inln tl-.-i ; -.idd'o (,!' llm 'oearing a small ..at rare . -ilecti :i of clammy, mucilaginous towels. She was a heavy set chnmhermai I with terror cotter hair aud a bass voice. I do not complain. I do not mar - mnr. I do not repine. Hut I sa that a chambermaid ought not to do that wny. A chambermaid who has a bass voice ought to seek cut some! other calling. She may put a guest's slinners so far under the bul that! be cannot get them without calling out the hook and ladder ompany. She may weep over his letters from his wife, or drown her sorrows ia his bay rum, but she rught not to take a bass voice into a hotel nnd expect to escape criticism. Mayor Weston, now of Grand Rapids, before he became wealthy was a newspaper man in Denver and used to slop at the oM Renters' hotel. He had a raining deal to write tip for the piper , an 1 connect ed with the deal Wis a Georgetown superintendent whom we will ad dresi a Julius II. Civvyo. Mr. Cavvyo was to furnish the partien tars to Mr. Weston, but early in the day he began to meet o! 1 acquaint ances and to cement their friendship by means of a powerful solution known as embalming lb; id. So, at 11 o'clock, Mr. Weston pa Julius II. Cavvyo to rest on hi? own little bid at the Planters' ar.d wept out to prosecute his researches in relation to the Hold Fp Mining and Improvement company. The 1 ! Planter' hotel was rot exactly like the Huffman house r ti e GiUey house. You could te'.l the difference almost as soon as yon sat down at the table. If you spoke to the wait er about the terricity at, the steak or the longevity of the butter, he would give you a tart reply, and you would have to get along wi L that for d 's:-er'. One man murmured about the steak and said it was too tough, so there fore he would not est it. 4You won't eat it?" calmly replied the loose jointed winter. "You say on won't eat it ?" "I say o because I can't cut it No man can cut that steak. You can't cut it with r.cids. So I won't eat it." "Well, you will cat it," said 'he waiter, reaching around as if m the act of adjusting his bustle. ''You will eat ir. or I'll wear it out on you!'' He ate it. But amonj other things there was a big alarm bell in the tower of the Planters', which was wont, to ring for fires, fu:io;a;-5 and .tbcr enter tainments. T' ' .ope hur in the I ual1 an'1 when l!' !iClP r ;,;e Piniv !ac0 Wil9 required in order to sup press a fire or a not. the fir-t man to the bell rope saluted the snowy summits of the Rocky mountains with this wild alarm. While Mr. West. ti was getting his information on the streets, the great bell awoke the echoes in the fastness of the canyons twenty miles away, and the excited populace swarmed to the Planters' to learn what great calamity had befallen the new city. Mr. Weston got, there at last, and, e u'. of breath, rushed up to Ins room. In lie hall be found Julius II Cavvyo ringing the bell. His suspenders were draped and opm!" were dripping from his chin and the tip of his Venetian red nose. 'Whit has happened?" panted Weston. "What are you ringing that btli for, Juliu ?" "Will, what do you s'oose I'm ringing the bell for? 1 am ringing i"r a cioan eowei or a iunerai. ii i -XI A- Ill 1 a r l Tri ine "ci mere win oe no inner al, but if 1 fail, you just wait here a minute and I'll give you the first view of the corpse fr your bright j an' rac" raIer-' ! 1 O T ll If Ovl'l. IY1 Nye in New Till-: AISIZ!.V1 EtIK'li ?',!!. Some Fin'e Srr.c ivr.xs or I J adult erated Frovti: ?; Journalism. Our Circulation. There are newspapers which do more blowing about their circulation than we do, and there mav be a few who add more subscribers l n a single week, the Ki krr gets there just the same. We heg3n Oa a circulation of two (2) copies, one of which we carried about j the history of Wilson was perpetra in our o.?n pock-, t; and the other 1 ted. The house of Dr. N. Ib Ucr went as a d-jsdh ad to the p.ost j ring was ents. red and 'J(l in bols, master. We now work I'M copies some specie, (two or three dollar.- which are paid for in advance. This ; a gold watch an 1 chain, a pocket is an increase of 1)1 per rent, in ' knife, uid a case cf surgical instr.:- i j seven month, and. we've got a do! j lar which says no otl er r.ewpaper J in tie world can equal it. We do.t : o'aim that t! Ki:u--r tnr.kes Kings ! and Emperors tremble en tl cir I'ered the Araer ia ' ilirn-.i rr Si. it. ll IS I t it his moral Planum f the masses a thousaii t j er i ent. but we do kn- w that we hare made life wo:t!i the hung for a good many ! neople out this way who w.-re ready j to hang themselves when our first j nuxber was isiued, ?nd that every j new subscriber who comes has faith that we will make a better man cf him. Orr. Excuse. We have been se ! vere-ly criticised because we refused to attend the funeral of old Pete Shinly, who died on the street of too much wLi.-ky one right List week, j It n claimed tliat: Old lte w3 our creditor in the utm of twelve elolltor.", ; r.nd that it was shbhy in n not to! see him plat. ted. In the flc-t !a; Old Pete owed us two dowu-s br rowed mont y ; in-teu l oT o r uw,i? him. Ia th? n xt our Sunday pant nloons needed a jiateh about fo r feet square at the T.d opposite the bow, and we d d not ca.e to su j- ct ourselves to ri-iic.Ie for the snkc f fallowing ifT. We c m keciour back behind us in i.ur own olbce until bitter t:mts arrive, ar.d tha.'s what we are trying to do. We have sent to San Francisco for a pitch the color of our pantaloon?, and when it arrives and is wcl.led on to the spot, Richard will be Ium?elf aain. ... I address a public mcelirg on the j topics cf the day. i Must Take Tukir Cuanufs. Three times during the past month we have surprised onrself mi 1 he public by-raopping the floor with as sailants, whi!e on tvf evasions wt have inominiously took to li ght. We state it as a ph s'.oloical f:ict that there are t.mc? whea we hud a1 ;et fight a dozen men, and other limes when we'd run from a good sized boy. Parties planning to lick us must Le prepared to tske their chance. We ma- fight like a lion or run l.ke a j .ck-rabbit. Ex. &ENEKAL NEWS. V MAT IS PASINt; IN AND Ol 1 F TIIK STATE, AS (TLhKD ITIM Olit EXCHANGES. The WiUon Cotton ?LEs will soon be enlarged. Windsor Le-Jncr : Mr. Scot Gnf fin, of Woodville, has a setter pop three months old, which is consider ed by sportsmen to be the moat pre-' cocio'js canine youth Ciey I avc ever seen. J'oints well, and is ar eXcel - lent retrisver. Mr. O. could be ir. - j duced to part with him only at a fancy price. Durham Plant ; Rev. R. T. Vann says : Tiie man that dies a swearer in this world, will Lc a swearer in the other world, and the man who dies a drunkard in this world will Lave the same appetite in hell : but let me tell you that you need not want to go to hell, for I can assure you that hell Is a dry town." Goldsboro Aryns : Last Sunday there wa? a general mevtirg of the O. S. Congregation of t hi 3 city, and although their Rabbi's term does not expire until net September they unanimously re-elected him for nn other term, at the same time glvin" him a Summer vacation of three moaths, which Dr. Moses will spnd in Europe. This speaks well for the Doctor's popularity among his peo ple. Naslm.le Avowant We learn that the Rocky Mount Cotton Mill, in this count)-, are making rapid progress in enlarging and increasing their capacity. A track is being laid from Rocky Mount to the ir.iii so as to give better facilities f t r shipping. The splendid success of this mill serves to illustrate the ex traordinary advantages th'n locality affords for cotton rpanufacturing. A Darlic ttururlj. (Wil-rn A tcli'rr.) Wediesdav night of last wei tie boldest rubier), peihaps, in j uK-nt we; stolen lioui the Dr's ! roin. The circumstances wc rc-a- foilow-; Dr. ILiring went home al out 1 1 :'Yh His room is on the ! second boor. 1 ne ba.l lamp wa j bumi.'g and !.e entei...! hi- r..oui, undn fd 1 retire 1 withc' i trik- ; ing a light. Retween twei;- m j one o'clock h ; w..s aroused by a noise below a if some o e w;u , leaving Cue heue. He stej iK-d j out into the hal. way and saw the; ; front door open. Slipping hack I j into lis room Ins trunk standing j oj-n attracted hi attention. An' ! examination revealed the losses al-jTiii: Kr; k t- or Mai-.i.iaoe. j j ready enumerated, all the aitiek-s! Tea;d:ei 'Who was the fmt - being removed from the pockets oi his clothes. Tin trunk k-.y has i been taken from his pocket, and; the trunk opened, but the contents' had not been distuibcel. It was a bold and daring burgarly, an I there is no clue to the fjuilty party eir parties. ltihoj I.jittun dltroirr t rrru--'!y lr liiiinnlii. I': n A'-.,- '. ' R ! i u;n, N. C. , Mar. b l'. I tli 11k I have mad" a i ry al ia !! l:(nery. nnd I am anior. that others shoifd a!. etny tic lerteli" of it. 1-Vrt e.i ly twooar ' I haw t e-n Mi!rering greatly fr, m ; hep!f :i's at irubf. and fre quentiy hae Hot Infoi ab to dep ! more tbnn one or two hours during ! the nig' t. I hnvw tried a great, ' number of proposed r- medics, s-onr 'of which hat r helped me a little, ! but not for any length of turn. A ' ttl e more than a foitui 'hf ago, r. wliib. rfr.vitiJT f tit-, Ik.i m of ., -',' .1 irieini. m use roumrv, mv gomi !tf('v: 'irriii.rlif inf., tV n:ltl,r quite late in the evening, a bounti fill supply of fieshly iiated pea nuts. As I am vei v fond ol them, when they are not too much cok d. I I ate quite treelvon them, and soon aner ienred to ihii. i n irio inej next moinin-that I had euioved i the !!" f sleep I had xpenenced for over a month. I attributed tin at once to the peanuts and detei uitnedtotiy them again the fol lowing evening. I d.d so, and also drank a glass of fresh, sweet Milk after I had linished the peanuts Th-it iii-tht I slept still better, and now, for a fortnight , I have partak en of the peanuts and the milk i r ry ,yV, and have Hot only! slept iemaikably well, but hae also fully recovered from a slight attack of indigestion which bad troubled me l eftre. I now find i that peanuts -r f Uy r""''--! and ) not r liotf, .sons to be at .-ill i burnr, are sur.lv a remedy fbi sleeplessness, and abo for that form of indigestion which is ne ol the produeiii;; eau-es ol sic jY ness. ! There is a popular inipr-' ston i ! t hat peanuts ru ' indigestible, but I have nevfr found them so, unless they were too wi?"7 roasted, or had been roasted m iny do. i 'm . When too much c-ioked. or when stale, they eeitainly nr imHyvstKle. but when carefully roasted md fresh, they ir.nntj. digestion. They should Le eaten sb ;i t!y h.Tore go ing to bod, and not more than a ha'f pint should be t .ken. Tl:-y MAldHNEs arid TALH'HI' should be roasted hfor- they aiel SU.NS" PdliLI'.i:-, FN'GINLs, shelktl , and shelled onlv as theyj and S A W : u I G K I .- J a i ir " , i ii 'J MA( IllNLKV. fire eaten. A hall runt ot shelled, v i , i " . . Iltlts would be too many. jtcnii .nl.v mje:i .r nuu' . i- ;iv. ii I commend this ienie.lv, with great eonlidenee, to tbos5 who are i alllieted with insomnia, jiartieulaily if indigestion is , in part, the cau-( of it. The peanut is a very valua ble article of food, when eiiefullv roasted, and partaken of in moder. at on, I Lo: e none of my readers will imagine that I started a peaj nut f.-.im, and am wishing to create i. -i a boom -in that nri.cle, but I shall :P3 .OCSOiOn Opens jan.lt. be rf joieed if what I have written! should be the means of bestowing CerTns moderate, ranina from on anv others the gre.it benefit i which I have derived from this sim - pie agency. A Mf''i jltloriic. O ire-nvnb' ll'jo,',,, I A gojd ene is told on a Greer.-1 ville law3'er. He jwns some land! over in Rethel townsldp near the 'line of the railroad upon which some timber had been cut to use in con struction. Learning this he ap proached the contractor who was in Greenville, and said Lis land had .'beer, tre-p:.e'ed upon and th-.- tim ber cut without any authority, for i which he proposed to bring s-uit. "My frier.d." sjid the c mtraetor, ,lI i: o' my business, ar.d would ad-vi-e y.'a to consuit an attorney L i fore v--u get too ha-i'v." At oat tht time somebody w.'.i -p-.-re-I the coatraetor that, he was trd!;:i: to to ; ' " in : cro ( r ar.d .1 was a ti.ar l iOOl A I.lMle 'iiiiit'iii- .on tititl 'I' lie ii. i Viva- Pie. have aiiotiie; Ma, can piece , of mince pie?-' " No, my child , you'd dream of; your grandmother.'' " I lik'-1 to dream of my grand- j motl.or , ma. She ned to give me; two pieces of pie." Chicago llr'-l. j in?. n? ' p;:pi! 'Adam." "Who was the second man'.' "A data."' "How do you make that out?' "Because he got manied , and pa says that always mal another nrrtn oi n fellow. 1' l:u i' K M 11 N A !, W . A K W A T I Hi: N E Y A I I. A W r. I'r t r , ; r, i. W." A; : K ! I ' ! I , and r. 1 N. r. K. lin.Uf.i:, AlIll'A'V A ? 1 (. . S.t . N-vl, N. C. I. . 1 . . . , 1 i a i 1 r wi.rnur !i rr I. 1 vv II 1 1 -1 me a ad oi- I A I I 1 1 K 1. 1 .. D Al'luKNId A I ,W , II n j ii ; k, N. I'ract : m all thr t'.m: ! . f ! U and a t..it,m t- a I i i t'. T,,1U: an 1 -h-ti ..,ri. iv.-n. l V I w M "A Y- A 1 '"' !" Wf ) 11 ' z)i.Lii'oi'ri:u , i:..v!. A 1 I'i II N M Y A 1 LAW, Wi : i i, t Mv. Si N- A ! !', A ED iRN'KY AT LAW, lisru ! n. N . ( V 1 'ra. t ! ; in t h I ' ur adj'llll 11 1" l 'Hill til' Ail liu -'ii'-s w j i ! i II 1 ti.Oi. rMliMAS N . II I'I., AT I t ib'NLY AT ! ! A W, ! !; ri r. i i - to 1 .1 O ll i ii- . Mi l t y ( 'oUl t s. II ! vh i .pre: I,,MN AK" 1 1 , A i:K- A'i J o unkv and ( -:.i: Lu Hal:: N. ( -t i t i Pri'-tii'f wlnTc ir hi , ,'iirc 1. Snti:i! ati !iti :i f claim--. 1 . K. M. J N S iH'.-i:- C lo 11 ly. M-u.i I ' : i. J. L. KITCHEN, j a i. i.n i i ;: il'IANOLS. ORGANS. Sli'iVINd i''2'"l'',v' ai-.u' . ::!v i n e a i l l ACADElrlY. Scotland Neck, N C- i -l)l'--o'J 0 per GCjOn 01 tbjent Weeks. yoarfcin family of jr;ncipal H. per TTiOntl. L ,:A io l hi a! a' i n ; lo:e of e ri. Mr: :. ;! v m-i.'al. J-'.ir full'T inforrii-itton . no. v !- C'AC.)? Principal. S ' ' I land N : i i: , N . '. 1 10 Sin. o0 '.4 MULES T A FINE STOCK AL WAYS ON HAND. Ahf. MAY I'.K M I !!.!. A iS ex JOHNS )N. SCOTLAND NKfJ'C, N. C. i it tr. Old papers for sale at this r.fti e t 50 per hundred. JLLVJJL
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 28, 1889, edition 1
1
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