Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Feb. 13, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
.) 1 0 ' THE DEMOCRAT. The Advert isei's T:ii-: m:mm( i: n BATES -LOW. E. E- HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. Vol.. i. WE Ml ST WOKK Ki: THE PEOPLE'S W'Ff.FAKE. SCOTLAND NECK. V ( Til I'USDA V. FIX, Kb A I Y 1:5. JSim. ii li r i t i o n ' j.. F , , Ni). I." n i TTrvTUn 1 HAVUlfilfi 1 4 . LX. ML 1 A ji P Ii O F E S S I O N A L Aycock fc Daniki-s, C. C. Danikks, (Joldsboro, N. C. Wilson, N. C. Aycock & Daniels & Daniels, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Wilson, N. C. Any LuMness Entrusted to us will be Piomptly Attended to. 1 4 ly. 7 A. Dl NX, A T T O R N KY At LAW, Scotland Ni: k, N, C, Practices wherever his services are required. febbi ly. W. 11. KITCHEN, Attounky and Counsklok at Law, Scotland Neck, N. C. tOQ? Office: Comer Main ami Tenth Streets. 1 ' D AVID HEEL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Enfield, N. C. Practices in nil the Courts of Halifax anil adjoining counties and in the Su preme 'and Federal Courts. Claims col lected in all parts of the Mate. .'J 8 ly. W.H.DAY, A.C..oI.LK'ol- FEK, R. HANSOM weldan. Henderson. weldon. I'AV, j'tLLICOFFER k RANSOM. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Wei. don, N. C. :? s 1 . rjHOMAS N. H ILL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Halifax , N . C, Practices in Halifax and adjoining counties, and the Federal and Supreme Courts. : s ly. D !!. It. M. J O H N SON, Office- Ccr. Main and Tenth Streets. KJ 11 ly. Scotland Neck, N. C. dt. W. O. Mr DO WELL. OFFICE Comer Main & 10th Sts., Next door to Futrell & Speed, Scotland Neck, N. C. IW Always at his oftice when not professionally engaged else vdicre. 9 26 tf. H Hail Muiw Co., H AX ALL MILLS, 1MOJIMOM),YA. "BYKD-ISLAN I)" Patent R oil erFamily Flour, And all other grades of FLOUR. CORN-MEAL -ANT- MILL FEED. " 17 1 y. IVERVADSaLtj SI ABBES. It 11 It s K S. M ii XX s ALWAYS HEADY F or Hi n e (i O O D T C R N - O U T S at Cheap Rates. Passengers carried quickly to any point on or olf the railroad. Hordes well fed and properly groomed hy ti.e day or by the month at reafonable chargrs. T fill always scl! or trade, BRYAN & AIORRISSETT, Main St., Scotland Neck. N. C 1 :n Dm. FOR YOUNG LADIES, Noffoek, Ya. Lars!. Cheapest and Rest School in Tidewater Ya. 2."io students. 20 Teachers. Health record unsurpassed. ONLY $42.50 A QUARTER for Board and Tuition. 7 25 tf. ,7 r-w:: mtM&A Shutting' up llcr I'olri. SI'.-AN TKAI.b I'EKKY The fire burns dimly on the hearth, The light is turned down low; And wintry winds through hare old trees In fitful gusts oft blow. The mother pulls the curtains down To keep away the cold; Tucks tightly in the children's bed?, .She's shutting up her fold. She covers up the little hand Thrown over the coverlet; She wipes the plac on baby's choek Which one strav tear had wet: Kisses the little one? who .sleep And smoothes the hair of gold. Then kneels and 4,pravs theLord to kc?p.M She's shutting up her Odd. Oh, litile ones, fenced round secure With mother's love and care, What looks of peace and tru-t and joy Your sleeping faces wear! Outside to night some children, who Are tall and large and old, Are wishing they could be once more Sheltered iu mother's fo'd. Wliul We ( an Io. (Salisbury Herald.) Last Monday morning a bale of Rowan county cotton was opened at the Salisbury Cotton Mills, tlie cotton was worked into yarn, the yarn was carried over to the Knit ting ALUs and at noon men's stocks ing were ready for wear. Cotton in the bale at 7 in the morning and seamless hose at 12 o'clock! We may well ask: 'W hither are we drifting?'' We believe with the Baltimore Mjuuj't.cl'.rers' Rc-ord that we are drifting or rather push ing ourselves into the ranks of a great manufacturing people and hope that soon we will be in the front ranks of it. This new half hose made out of Rowan county cotton and manufactured by Rowan county labor has appropriately been named the "Farnieis' Alliance Half Hose:' They retail at 10c. This hose is not the shoddy product of a Northern or foreign mill , but the honest straight raw material grown in our own county and work ed up by hard Working home labor. These socks are seamless and to repeat a casual remark of a disin terested party they have only one fault, they will not wear out. We advise our peop'e when they buy socks, to ask for the Farmers7 Al liance brand, which is a guarantee for goods worth your money. (Fomeroy's Advance Thought.) Depend on yourself awhile and jive your frituds a rest. Men are bad because wc have not taught them to be good. To be alone is a million-fold better than to be in bad company. Tee chief beauty of woman is in her spirit, not in her perishable body. Men's wants are fewer than they generally trunk for, and generally of a different nature. Activity in some business pursuit, or in doing good to those in distress, is a sure way to lessen grid. No man loves his wife and chil dren unless he holds them as of more importance than his appetite for drink or gratification of self. There is far more honor in educat ing.persons to keep oat of crime than to imprison or hang them for being victims to circumstances I ; ft open for them to enter. ICein:irI:tlile ZSecnc. Mies. Michael Curtain, ITainiield, 111., makes the statement that she caught cold, which settled on her lungs; she was treated for a month hy her family physician, but grew worse. He told her bhe was a Hopeless victim ot consumption and that no medicine could cure her. Her drugget suggested Dr. King's New discovery for Consumption ; she bought a bottle and to her delight found herself benefited from first dose. She continued its use and after taking ten bottles, found herself sound and well , now does j her own housework and is as v.cll I as she ever was.-Fue trial bottles of this Great Discovery at E. T.J Wbitebon.l A Po. Dinlnne 1 .. - w-. - - - Q- bottles o Jc. and 1 000. Don't irritate vour lungs with a stubbcrn cough when a pleasant and Ofceiue remedy imy tie found in Dr. J. H. McLeau's Tar Wine Luna Calm! For sale bv II. T. Whitehead & Co If you ale all run losvn have iO strength, no energy, and feel vtry tired all the time take Dr. J. H. McLean's Sarsaparilla. It will im part Strength and vitality to )0-r system. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co. TUT7 irW CnH'pU 'white pillars of palae??, empty and Liix- iNi, uJ;Jili,;dm;Jttli Avenues of orange trees LY HON. HENRY W. GRADY. No York Ledger.) Same one, wittier than kind, has said : "Thi old uicMi ;f the South, sitting amid their rains and looking for better day?, remind me of the Spanish hidalgos sitting on the porches o( the Alhambra and look ing for the return" of the Spanish Armada." There Is pathos, but little fun. in that, to me. Thesi old men, for the most part, lived btainles9 lives. The curse of fallen humanity, slavery, under theJr wisdom and kindncs. largely lost its horrors and lived by the excellence of its administration when it had been condemned by trie world. About it they built a civiliz tioii th:tt in tender and engaging grace bas not, perhaps, been equaled. The scenes amid which the)' moved, as princes among men, have vanish ed forever. A grosser and more material day has come in which their oentlo hand3 could garner but scant il j , and their simple hearts beat but feebly. And so, without a murmur, they pass quietly from the stage never to give place to princelier and better gentlemen. A s they sit in the porches of their dismantled homes into which dishonor never entered, and to which discourtesy is a stranger, and gaze out to the hors izon beyon.1 which their Armada has drifted forever though the sea shall not yield them from the argosies that went down with their ships yet their sons , rendered back in God's mercy, shall hud them richer and broader in prosperity than that the)' have lost . Years ago I was a chum of one of these old gentlemen. That is, I would sit at his side and listen for hours to Ids quaint and coartly talk. 1 can see him now as f write his kindly figure , his ruddy face, his white hair, his lfale thread gloves', his closely-battoned coat hiding poverty an pain. And with his memory come3 the picture of old Colonel Newcome , as he used to stand in his black gown, with the order of the Batri on his breast, and answer "Adsum" with the pension ers in G rey friar's hospital. For my old friend, too, leaned in his old age on a charity he might have bought a thousand times over in his youth. One day he said to me : "Do you know , it appears to me that turkeys have lost their flavor?" I avowed that, to ice, the great bird was still toothsome. 4 'On my island." for he was one of those sea-island kings ' they fed largely on mast, which gave a nutty richness to their meat. I had thousands every year the finest birds imaginable." I suggest ed that from these great droves of turkeys he must have had quite an income. "Income!'' he replied; "why, my yoang friend, no Southern gentleman ever sold poalf.ry !'' I happen to know the old man's son a strong, upright , manly feN low. He came home from the war a bullet or two heavier thpn when he left college and throwing off his gray jacket hung up, however, for his children to revere he went to work. Sell poultry? Well, I should say so! He sells the eggs , tben he sells the meat, then he sells the feathers, then he has the soil of his poultry-house scraped up and sold. From these once despised resources sold with huckster-like exactness, though in larger spirit he has rebuilt the for j tunes of his family, and restored his father to independence. I see them often the oil man, trembling and aged, but happy ia the heart and home of his son the voung man confirmed in his new life, and hold 5 - w- tn2 11 10 inougu more f urenuous. j yct broadcr 3tld beUer th"n v lifo cver coald havC beea' A,'d ! tbeJ' lk out 'ogether-and they olLCU u""ormg aI,a res;:e.-t ing the other, though their lues are wile apart. I notice that the old I maQ'3 bami seeks vingly the young uian's shoulder, and rests there, er- j BObliDS l with lhe kn-' cf the ! commandment, as it b3s there! the unspeuka'ile llesMng of an bon- ored and grateful father! Along the line ol tlie eu!f coast,! ; near where ex-i'resident Day is now lies dying, and on tlie South Atlantic coast, from Darien to Charleston, tbere is where our Ilivm full is vet written, lucre the bat y et fii-s tbrouah deserted mansions wnere once beauty and chivalry gatheri d amid scenes cf splendor. Immense rose-gardens burst upon the traveller in the midst of a deserted wilderness. Tbrongh magnolia groyes gleam the lead the carious to heaps of ruins i fVinf tell r.f trr1 ilao,H tKl.lr years ago. On parterres where once ; peacocks 3wcpt in royal beauty, i! omenrd birds now lope and hover, Rabbits gambol by the Eg.it of the ; tii.i, n in cniurli rr . r 1 P "i si vlicrp rir.r-o , in splendid fetes the moon itself was j 9hamed. Swarms ot LCgroes, seek ing the coast by instinct, hold al most undisputed possession. Always the country homes of the rich poin'R of luxury and pleasure the busy South has not yet found time to reclaim aud rehabilitate these homes. Royal homes wero these old ''sea ili:ids" nriucipalities in area.duke dorcs in reetiue. The main product as the long staple cotton, which appalling. De( eut ne s, -ipers pay commanded three times the price ot j lor it, or it wonl 1 not go in Mich ordinary cotton, ad of which they j quantity. These scandal scaveii had a monopoly. Often a thousand j gers and coroners' strikers literally slaves were owned by one islander, ! gut the country papers, and by and on the mainland, tended his rice plantations. Every species of game thronged the forest of the island, aud the tropical fruits nourished. All that art and wealth could do to make these islands enchanting was done. Guests from both sides of the ocaan found there hospitality that j the best homes cf England could not i surpass. Pleasure vetels opened the sea to the planter and his friends, and his own ships c irriec' his cargoes to and fro. On the mainland was clustered the oldest and bbst society of the Sta'es. In Liberty county (Georgia) is the home of Lyman Hall, odc of the signers of the I)e- claration. It is now occupied by an j putrid stutr, and save their space illiterate negro. A mile away is the for better things? It's a snort old Medway church-yard in which' sighted policy that will for a "Hare lie buried four of Georgia's govern ors. Near ihat church, that cradle of liberty in Georgia, a few months j ago, a man claiming to be Christ j harangued thousands of negroes, They desertf.d home, fields, every thing, and lived with their new Mes- siah. The most horrible rites and I orgies ensued. Negroes of both I sexes, perfectly naked, g illoped on all fours around the false Christ, grunting like bogs, until they fell exhausted. When he was arrested they ran naked in troops for miles , following the sheriff's buggy. They then set &p a Mack Queen of SLeba, and worshipped her-. Despoiled of their quten, they rallied about a dusky exhoiter, who claimed to he King Solomon the obstinacy of their superstition liters II v paralyzing the industry of the county. This, too, a county that for half a century was the ruling centre of wealth and ; intellect m Georgia. The exceeding beauty and rich ness of the islands along the Geo rgia coasts have attracted Northern millionaires. Mr. Carnegie bought ! ''Dnngeness ," the old home of Gen eral Nathaniel Greene, It was hero that Eli Whitney, a tutor in General Greene's family , invented tho cot ton gin . At the first test of the gin the cotton packed on the roller. Mrs. Nightingale, Genera! Greene's daughter, observing Whitney's an noyance when the cotton clogged the machine, took her tortoise-shell comb from her hair, and holding it llrmly against the roller, solved the pro - blcm. It is at "Dungcness" that Li"ht Horse Harry Leo, the father of General Robert E. Lcc, is buried. ..ia .,oa -.,a r.,mo3 f,.r ? 1U liilt llt-J'O Ik LAJ JAJ rose-gardens . covering acres and acres, and for the beaut? of its old mnn "Tr fr,iP(rip res?orpd tlift 1 ! garilens, UV0UUC3 OU uiauauii, unii r. t.i...i; . no l.O 01 V. c ij a o 4 11 j -1 ' " j ,.w,,-.inafinnc. riicroro .ipu.iii.ii:iv fciieii.ii.-iiii.L 1 " v. 111. in 11 . . . 11 l , . 1. 1 . I... islano, near v,y, nas ueeu uougui oy a club of Northern men , who have already spent oer half a million dol '! lars, and have but begun. Jekyll's 1 js iXci wjlD cramc All manner of Rii l.rra .mil nnnrfa i-irv,U (l,;,.!-fo m.u n, Thofo ovr two bnndred deer in one drove. Wild turkeys, souirrels and opposumi abound. English pheasants j were introduced and have multiplied amazingly. The owners are delight ed with Jekyll's, and intended to make it the rival of Tuxedo. A li!ool llit to I'arine:-?. Mlickorv Press.) ti,., u,.i, 1 .o.ii thut flows' , ... fl,.1 t. .. ....... ..r1 ,nrf,;e t5. ! v- n 1. 1 1 of the farm Crt absorbent ...... .,...1 ,e ti.a i in a Lei i .us ct uo. si t u, j. iu )o ui j j i(J manure is verv great , and if: savCil woukl nol oniy dd fertiliziD ! in;Uter to th. tarm bin increase the i ..,,,nA f,r cri!llu If you feel ' out of sorts," and pee vish take Dr. J. McLean's Sar3a parilla ; cheerfulness will return and life will acquire new zest. I or sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co, ian!ul t r n e r. tate CLi-Tiie:.. T t .... T l r , . . turers Record coir.aitud a w ;-e an i time!;, t-dttorial prorating ;i;,i;lsI the publication f every exgi rated j .-n nation that penny a l.ner- could j vvitL- t i j k ii flu. ii?L ? to that editor. al Mr. Li ter M. j Wilson , the win- arm leel h.-aded j Commissioner (d A lil (.UlUl'il. ( wrote the fo'lowil! Word wisdom: ol You deserve the thanks of even j' man who despies the I bird that befouls its own nest. Tin 1. i . of sensational lot ur.dcr the head ol viohitions of law of some kind, that is telegraphed over the wiie and .-sent through tie mails i tivblowing half truths send forth a volume of I alsehoods that is not understood. It there was truth in thou it would be worth a man's life to visit this part of the world, or any part as for that. Fictitious localities are given feigned names devices that distort ingt unity to supply the spice paid. for. Will not your timely warning Fave us from further cndurar.ee' It is!, ot course, idle to appeal to the writers. The man who will understandmgly write such horrors is too pinched bv want or too careless of his acts to be reached. But will not the newspapers stop the flow of such of types'' make a public believe that a community is given over to violence as a past time. In tlx face of the. double murders, slaugh- j ter of negroes, suicides, terrible 1 IsnflVr-ng lrom star vation, mobs. ' ku-klux , how doas it happ -n that the law ourts are empty f The census shows an almost abnormal increase in population aud wealth. Surely there is need fur good memory for these, wretched "sil houette artists" of the morals of the day. A Vom:iii V:ij. (X. Y. Herald.) A Brooklyn Woman who for years had been looking under the bed for a man actually found one there night before last. And she was so astonished at her success that she I had the 'poor fellow arrested . A True Girl. Seaside. There is a girl and we love to think of her and talk of her, who comes in late when there is compa nv, who wears a pretty little air of mingled responsibility and anxiety with her youth, whom the others; seem to depend on and look to for i many comforts. Mie is the giil who helps mother. In her omi name she is a blessed little saint and comforter. She takes unfinish ed tasks from the tir:d, still fingers that falter at their work; her strong 1 1 figure is a stall' upon which th I gray haired, white facd mother i leans and is rested. She helps mother with the fan's sowing, with tho v.-ee!,-'s mendiiiL' with aebeerful 1 - v. -.- - CJ - ! conversation and g-nial companion-! ihip that some girls do not think i worth while wasting on only ' .rttbor A to! when (here rnmos n j imnui.i. .,v.. v.. s..- .. . .i t. 1, 1. ,,),.! o, t 1 e -i ' .... , c , i i-.fr.ti lion.l cn'n f-A ; uiu.-i jh-h ov , body of her mother lying unheeded- 01 er colli u. rouirn nanus 101 ... ..1 1 1 . (Ld. ; her long disquiet emei g d in rest, , something very sweet will be ini.; i rrlod with lie t oss anot the CI n 1 who hp noi mot hel' W I HUH .1 Ufclie( c- tion of Deace u: on Lcr head and ill j her heart. porliinitie, Great opportunities only present protection again-t coaibincd '.ornnr themselves once or twice iu a life- te power-.' ' time, and if you have been unfortu T:.:s pover of r- if-jro'ecu :, e'n 1 riate heretofore, or are not now ' an as-: -ric -'. If iu ti.e forma : profitably employed, you can .-ei.e ! tion of the slut- s, i;. the f- r.a.ti o. I a great opior tuuity to make your- self independent by at once secur ing : an aency lor the .Memorial olame 1 Ilon- 'J1"i,-I0Ii Davis, which i beiug piepared by Dr. J. W m. - - Julie. the '-lighting chaplain," with tle apiroval and assistance of Mrs. D"v:-- publishers, B. r. uohu sou & Co., lO'e'J Main street, llich- j mond, Va., arc anxious to secure1 the aid of a few more live, energetic agents Apply early : "take time by the forelock and not by the letlock," AN1 RAIL1H A1 t MMlM N N - a L it. W !.. r, '. v ''fa : . . . i : f r . f y n---. ii such a t ::: -'..'. s n"i 1 : - fo-.. .f ra.lr i , an i ta! n - is t he ans w i r '' in! ion 1 v :r. i .e'.i.n w , r if r :i T. r n : :s : :. y C':1 n5"' :t 'KlrSif-D ! r a . : iict:or 5 i vT i ur ir: v"r 1 ::!'' 5 x"4' rr,:sston has i.o ) e a ingle :ate in the I 1 It .--ly Ira-': ' t uridicti':i our the i .il i onsets oer t ' and tli only when that tu h: i lls.' rtate to aJ.ulVer. iSs-es I: Ti.e fr- trar.pirt'il v. a: i i1 iC'J' ju o. o:u' !a'e to :a. another state b f r- the !' l ml cotii!inssbn can :e i::n' to act. It would 1 e u: u,di be'l-T f -r count ry :;' that ctta.miH;ou o-;l : never a-umc jurisdiction in a:i case. 1 do a-t'rt a Jnct. i"i 1 have n means of kiowinir. I ,! ! 'ive it as inv ot i :::: that the 1 era! corn u:iss ou has Ucn worth to the railroads mure than five million . of dollars jiiinuallv and has ! uiiH i L lie people more than mx mi.l .o-.s ol dollars annually. I think the (-nation of that eomm'.sbion a stupeti- dous fraud upon ti. n. liis of the states ; ami that fraud must 1 i VI' f en conceiwd by tlie railro-ds and lobbied through Congress by rail road attorneys hy the aid of the moneye.l kinji of t!i it body. The railro.i L of this r-ta'e r . citizens of this '-t .te and are i.n ier the control of th - state as mU',;i m any otlier citizen. The Federal government lia- a sun. el control over these to.iH H iien goods pa-s from or e st ite to 1 hG oUlc'r- bl,nl 1 ' ,iavc finely sub: uue tier pe-oole .ol to it '1 he this under tlo- -'ovcrnmen. o. fhrnsv pretext of regulating cen uierce betwet u lie: state's, whieh it has a right to do. Tiie clause in ti c Conslili.! mi, giving Congress power to regulate commerce between the states coul i not have meant more, in the n.i'oL of its framers, than that no state shouM lay any embargo or tax ;. the articles made in one f-tate and sent to another for sale, and th:.: t!u tr.atiir between the state's shod ! l he fr?e arid uetramnu l.d. The Trainers of t ie Cons' Put intended to have ab-ioiulciy fn trade between the state, and m order to insure this, the power to regulate was delegated to Congress, Sorely it never entered the brain of those who established tin? gov ernment to give Congress the powi r to regulate wagM for t'rvic- performed by tie1, citizens of one state for the cit .-e.v, ot ano ... r tate. This whole matter as to nrvic. B "7 maivniua,s ano (orporu between the r.m of u reiit st atf - is one of cont ra and wns co eon- suleted an I left to he g )ver:i'-d the rules and law s aK ot her cam' re-' s Then how can a eommi-sioa creMed by the legislature intcrfoe with r. contract tnade in this state be t en the citizen or of this -'ate an i br other corpora! ion ci'izons? "-in.;! because the corporation is ar. a 1 a e w "; 1 r j ,- I- corpo Qoial eiti' ve-te.'. lv th 4peciac powers po -jiecine - r and no others. And th-e ations can cxocis- do greater i a f than w.s grin! them in charter, an 1 the 1" gi-latar.' con . -'rant, r.o more tr . Ihts'j e irporaf lori o- ! t.iaPl te fA'.i ha 1 : ; e n . right, vo ia,t in i..e oniovn..o.,. ! And who w;.l asrt ti,a. t: ("''! ever g; ' or eer he o:gv.i! 1 e- i to grunt , m tate , an v r :jo.l to tLo iCg . t : i r e -o u. ..".... t.j.... r I or to grant by carter to any c nation of individuals or to Duration the power to . ri v e i i , -,.1 , r. . r 1 -,.V. th 1 i. .. e iii -1. 1 . . u u I . ' of the ir.alier.a Ve right to rn a Fed. and wii L. h,s l the , tr.d e r ever at s ex:..st an i assert itself. pf.en sunenner. i either or jn lora! con; ats t l efn.-e aeveiL 1 to tl .- Co: tioij ()f the states by ratify::. g ti. em t.ltv a. 1 not so understand ,t. A r. 1 dien the to t;.e constitution of the tLev understood t nitcd .Va'es, t theV were reserving to the people. the ri; control their own state affairs, to govern their own citizens, an 1 es pecially the citizens cf their own . " i ! j 3 . i i . '. i;.,v 1 to .. v ; rob t ' f e a : , .p t u',d V , 1- i. l; ;n. i i . 1 1 a.i s 1 1 r:rl a:..! b C Ho:) Ml r .1 that tin V a th-' -) i ! ; : to -m i ' N a'. if f d ai.d w . , in b'-jbt s ot' t - the a ' : - ! w.-re tno i ;. ni tes ,;' v for i i to invent teat': wrongs and ::.. let the wor ! i k i. It s,.,--!.-, i , irineiples, if : ii r.o.- :.i .f t'o bo more ar, x : i a 1 1 r i lan t i ioh , if t :ir O'l !lt t ) defl) 1 ' 1 in n i t ehare' declare i I i- is ;,i t :i i r; w' i a' e mil e rije. a :, I th" lie1.', tun. i I i 't , ' 1 1 t r 1 1 ' ; 1 . ' e X ' 1 '.) 0 . - h i i , ! ':.!( i ;i . Ili 1 r po A . i ire.;i i o u teT a: If t:-.,. ,.r Vio!at"d t ir 'd not b-'en guii' 7 ti i e not If en their !-. r oei s ; A-' X b if t diserinr.uate f'toe of uu i man in f-ivo deal ii' g i v, f for and lee. eoul i th"y I ;r"t 1 1, s' h' no" ' a . io ' i I 'I i '! rni--,on How 1-" t r i !e r not b- ir 1 1 g i 1 e.i th" p' Op Wo-.l 1 r fio'ii the i'-'I -p-Ta ; 'his mor and the . A n e I 'i n;i lie i;i I I .1 rn i is I O : I : 1 t ii- ' . ) ! nt 1 i lf.OJ ll'i.i.i" I i Wm I f''0 I In 1 l ,t'l If io 1 K,d'.e-, ;i::d .'-:;.. ! Mi -. i no e p t , 1 ', : t ' I to b t Li i !iioi:r;t,' !i' w r.n'i'i." d. ware ni- i e ha ; i ' I ; i ;- 1 ', . ' ii man v; lei i pi i ' de-n't : t f " !.. Jornod ii :; ami !! b'-.i - n 1 . ' i . I . W in' :.-; '1 be ir.O - f O; i, i ' .'i:e ! (lire f j !' !:-'. i - ! ; a ' 1 ' ; P ed !t; ,i '. ':.' . 1 ia' ! '-' Dr. Mi !!'! ! ig-. An .Malaria v. a- gi n , a men! , to .in ol 1 ..i !;. lio:n tio IP e - "i Mi! w i.oin ' o: u i Ar. ; e, j a ; ; ( )ae d"-. eUi d le r ; .t .! do.se has cuicd thoasaiid , n . is the ubiy k:io wo Anttdo' r poifou oi ..iat.i;i.. !d h D; i : gists.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 13, 1890, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75