Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / March 13, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE DLMOCBAT. The Advertiser's PAYOME. RATES LOW. HI DEMOCRAT Till. DIM iCT'AT d J ..". .a - o E. E HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. WE MIST WORK FOR T ! I K PEOPLE'S WFF.FAKE. u ! r I l I on I "o r r , VOL. VI. SCOTLAND NKCK. VC. THCKSDA V. M AIM II l:;. 18! me P ROFESSIO N A L . Aycock a Daniels, U. C. Daniels, (Joldsboro, N. C. Wilson, N. C. Avcock & Daniels & Daniels, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Wilson, N. 0. Any Business Entrusted to us will be Promptly Attended to. 4 4 A. DL'NN, A T T O R N K Y At LAW, Scotland Nkck, N, C, Practices wherever hi-: services are required. feb!3 ly. yy n. KiTCHiN, Attorney and Counselor at Law. Scotland Neck, N. C. fStf Office: Corner Main and Tenth Streets. 1 1V .avid 1:1:1.1., ATTORNEY AT LAW, Enfield, X. C. Practice in nil the Courts of Halifax and adjoining counties and in the Su preme 'and Federal Courts. Claims col lected in ftll parts of the State. 3 S ly. W.H.DAY, A.C.ZOLLK'OFEEK. K.KANSO.M weld'Mi. Henderson. weldon. I' AY, ZOLLiriiFl'KR k HANSOM. A 1 TOliNEYS A V LAW, Weldon, N. C. 3 8 1 v. rjrn:iAs n. hill, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Halifax, N. C, Tractices in Halifax and adjoining rounties. and the Federal and Supreme Courts. 3 8 ly. -JJFt. K. M. J O 11 N SON, OiTiCK- Cor. Main and Tenth Streets, 10 11 ly. Scotland Neck, N. C. ,r. v. o. Mcdowell. OFFICE Corner Main & 10th Sts , Next door to Wilson A llsbrook, Scotland Neck, N. C. MP Always at his office when not professionally engaged elsewhere. 9 2G tf. jryi. C. C. CHRISTIAN. Scotland Neck, N. C, "sf3 Can be found at his ofllce over Josey Brothers' store when not professionally engaged elsewhere. 2 13 tf. TIs Mall (Miw Co., HAXALL MILLS, RICHMOND, VA. "BVRD-ISLAND" PatentRollerFamily Flour, And all other grades of CORN-MEAL AND MILL FEED. 5 17 ly. I IYERY AND SALrj SUBLES. H a w s E S ALWAYS READY F on Hire G O ( D T V R X o u T S at Cheap Kates. Passengers carried quickly to an point on or off the railroad. Horses well fed and properlv groomed by V e day or .y the month at re;ifonab!e charges. i?" Till always sell or trade. BRYAN & MORRISSETT, Main St., Scotland Neck, N. C. 1 Jl em. FLOUR Iff i Tr.'. utn'r .niiiitv ii i. n 10 ICE.I'OICH IIPI. "Don't marry a man to reform him! To God and your own self be true, Don't link to his vice your 'virtue; You'll rue it, dear girl, If you do. No matter how fervent his pleading?, Be not by his promises led; If he can't be a man while awooing, He'll never be one when he"? wed. Dn't marry a man to reform him To repent it, alas, when too late; The mis'-iun of wives least successful Is tvie making of crooked limbs straight. There's many a maiden who ha tried it, And proved it a failure at lasK; Better tread your life's pathway alone, dear, Than wed with a lover that's fait." Mankinnd's much the same the world cvti, The exceptions you'll find are but few; When the rule is defeat and disaster, The chances are great against you. Don't trust your brght hopes for the fu ture, The beautiful crown of youth, To the keeping of him who holds lightly His fair name of honor and truth. To "honor and love"1 you must promise; Don't pledge what you cannot fulfill, If he'll have no respect for himself, dear, Most surely you then never will. "l is told u? that the frown of a woman, Is strong as the blow of a man, And the world will be better when women Frown on error as hard as they can. Make virtue the price of your favor; Place wrong-doing under a ban; And let hitn who would win you and wed you Prove himself in full measure a man." lilovck ofi tliim.m liin. (Phil. Record.) Gloves which are sold a9 kid are often made of human skin ," said Dr. Mark L. Nardyz , the Ureek physician , of Philidelphia , the other day . J'The skin on the breast," continued the physician, "is eoR and pliable , and may be used in the making of gloves. When people buy gloves they never stop to question at out the material of which they are made. The shop keeper himself may b in ignorance, and the purchaser has no means of ascertaining whether the material is human skin or not. The fact is, the tanning of human skin is exten sively carried on in France and Switzerland. The product is manu factured into gloves, and these are imported into this country. Thus, ou see , a person inay be wearing part of a distant relative's body and not know it.'' Then the doctor drew Irom a drawer a brand new pair of gloves. "There," he said, "is a fine article made from the skin of a child. As the hide of a kid compares with that of a goat, so, of course, does the skin of a child compare with that of an adult, and it is much sought in France for glove purpos es' .i v.ijifr.t i ii lail!i '1iooIj. (Miners' Journal.) The teacher who takes his text fioni the newspapers will enlist another powerful ally, and th.it is the parents and families of his pupls. The business man who can lind no time for books eagerly I peruses his daily paper, and takes S keen delight in discussing its news or its politics. Children who find it difficult to attrac. their fathers' assistance in their studies will lind him immedhttely interested when the news is the subject ot; their in quiries. Another leature of a good paper, which should commend itself to the teacher as an assistant, is the moral training which it incul eates. All great leforms, sll phi lanthropie movements, a1! patiiotic projects, find in the newspapers ! their strongest advocates. Virtue is everywhere praised, raid vice held up to obloquy, and the quali ties of energy, activity r.ud industry, as exemplified in the career of successful men , clearly portrayed as the secret of their success. '1 lie .ew lHscovery. You have heard your friends and neighbors talking anout it. You may yourself be ono of the many who know from personal experience jiat how good a thing it 13. It you bave ever tried ii, you are one of ts felsutich friends, hcaue the wonder ful thin; about it is, tht when once given a trial , Dr. Kind's New Dis covery ever after holds a place in tb Louse. If you have never used it nd should be tdllictel with a cough, cold or any Throat, Lung or Chest trouble , cecure a bottle at once and give it a fair trial. It is guaranteed every time or money refunded. Trial bottles free at E. T. Whitehead & Co,'a drugstore. A HOW BESSIE ERA VED THE BLIZZARD. BY KATE ii. CLEAR Y. (New York Ledger.) "The bra;est are the tendered, The loving are the daring!" Bayakd Taylor. "Oh, dear!" sighed Bessie, "how dreary it all louks !" And Indeed the view seen from the window of the big. white. West ern farm house was anything but cheerful. Bare , brown, treclefs prairie all around ; a sullen , wintry sky overhead, and not a living crea- j ture iu sight, except a distant speck j of scarlet down ia the "draw" ! Eihy Willie at play. Id doors it was pleasant enough. Iles-ie was a bri-k and tidy little housekeeper. When , immediately after dinner, her father had brought round the team, and he and her mother had driven ell' to town to do their regular weekly shopping, or trading.'' as they called it, Bessie had bustled about at a wonderful rafc. She had washed the dishes, and put tliem in a shining row on tt:e yellow pine dresser; she had polished the stove, and brought in water; she had swept the room, and sf raigntened the rocker cushions; sije had set " sponge'' for the bread tuat was to be worked at night, and baked early in the morning ; she had shaken the gay strip of rag carpet, and dusted the clockshelf, and ranged the chairs by the wall with mathematical precision. Then she had washed her facj and hands in the bright tin pan kept for that pur pose oj a backless chair near the door, and brushed and braided her soft, brown ha;r. She took off her apron of blue-checked gingham , put 0:1 one of snowy nainsook, bun a clean roller towel on the rack, and put a kettle Yf vyater on the lire. Then she bad taken op her ooe dear story-book , and sat down to read. It was a tremendously attractive book to the girl who had been brought up in the tameness and monotony of prairie life; it was all about great, good and brave women; about Florence Nightingale , and .Joan of AiC, and Grace Darling, and Ida Lewis, and heroines of every tinig and place. A beautiful book ! But Bessie laid it down with the con sciousness that she had been intrud ing, that the company in the bril liance of whose dee Is sbe had been basking was altogether too lofty and magnanimous for her. So she went over to the window and leaned her head agaiast the pane, and thought how hard it was to be a heroine in Nebraska. 'There was no war here, no plague, not even any Indians now. And nothing ever happened. And pondering over this had caused her to give a long sigh, and voice her discontent oyer the dreari ness of all crettion. It was no wonder her life was a wee hit lonely. The nearest neigh bors lived a mile away. Willie was too young to be company for her. What did he cfci'e about her vague, delightful dreams aout her hero ines? And her parents had decided she wa3 not strong enough to go to school that winter. Indeed, were she permitted to do sottiegirl would find it n recreation ; merely th?.t. For she knew quite as much as her rather inellieient young teacher could attempt to teach her. She was a slender, delicately formed girl of sixteen. Her hair, of a crispy silkiness, was parted over her forehead in old fashioned style. H-jr eyhs large, hszel. dreamy had a certain quiet, direct way ofj regarding one. Her rather clumsily j made gown had a frill of boras-made j crochet at the neck and wrists j How the windmill was creaking! And how the bare, snow-Oall branch es in the front-yard were rattling ! and what a brisk tattoo the skeleton sunflower by the back door was play ing on its panels 1 But Baby Will's was cnjiyln himself. Sha coal I see him running up and down t;e "draw,'7 dragging his httle wagon after Liin. She turned away, bne sut in the bi- wood-n rocker. She curled her - eU- ud hke a comfort-loving kitten, , . i .i - i Ar.d rocking and thinking, somes how or other, she rocked and thought the cozy kitchen away. She didt live in Nebraska, within five miles of the town of Babble. She was not Bessie Linard at all. She was a brave woman In a frail boat , out on a stormy sea. She was a helmeted heroine , leading hosts to battle. She was ! What a deafening r,oe ! Was ;t I the clang of a conairg army? Wss ; it the beat of drums, the clamor and , cla?h of sworis, the tread of march I ing feetr No, Dot any of these. Only the creaking of the fan of the windmill which was whirling at an astonish ing rate. Only the noiee of shaking window frames. Only the clatter of milk-paili piled outride the door. Slam? Bang ! Bessie sprang from the rocker. Erect sbe Mo ad, dazed, bewildered , still half asleep. A shutter had been blown violent! v a gainst tLe win do v. Had a storm begun while she slept? She rushed to the caeemert, lookpd out rather, she strOYe to look out. Ten fc-t beyond the pane sha could sec absolutely nothing The whole world was white, rriil, whirling. " A snow-storm !' gapped Bessie. But it was no ordinary snow-storm that had blown up. It was the ter rifij, the memorabL Llizr.-ud o! March 12, 1SSS. Suddenly she cried out, ench a frightened, qui .cring cry ; "Willie! Baby illb- 1" Oalck as a U ish she flung a heavy old shawl of her mother's oyer her head, end unlatched the kitchen loor. The furious wind tore it from her hold, and dashed it fiercely bad; against the wall. Vainly she strove to close it behind her. The snow was driving in, swirling over the floor. She loosened the storm-door. That, the win i dash?d into plr.ee jast after she hal made a frantic plunge into the 6torm. Oh, such a storm ! Bessie had lived on the prairie 6ince she was a baby, and seen the elements in their many moods and caprices. Bat she had never seen or imagined anything like th'13 . From the four quarters of the earth the wind seemed blowing. The snow had not the softness one as- sociates with snow. It was a dense, enveloping, impenetrable cloud, lill ed with particles, icy, stinging, sharp as needle points. The cold was in tense. Objects ten feet away were absolutely indistinguishable, Tn? Nay, they were mere shapes at five at thres . From the rear of the house a nar row wooden bidewalk ran down, past the barn, past the paddock, towards the l'draw.'' In that direction fled Bessie. The shawl was torn from her head. She held it in her fingers as shs ran. She would need it when she found Willie. But soon she was off the walk, and floanderin along through rifts and drifts of blinding snow. Where was the barn? She strain ed her eyes to maks out the familiar structure. It was blotted out. All the vorld was blotted out. She could feel nothing , see nothing but snow nothing. Where was the paddock? She was answered by running into a barrier. She flung out her hands as the shock eent her reeling. Her palms were cruelly lacerated by con- tact with the barbwire which formed the pasture fence. She knew now where she stood. About two 3'ards to the left began the descent of the bluff, in the ravine of which she had last seen the child she sought. Her ghawl wound itself around her body in a manner which impeded her pro- gross, as she stumbled s.0 on. could feel she was going down the "draw ;" feel, for tight was useless in Mich a stoi m. t:,o door litHn ,a t tr aha Pm,M nnlir finil liim ! m. n ? m rr 1 11 fil him croucbing ,!ow, trcmhlm.r. sobbing, frigbtcneJ ; and .rowins'sta.k herPi uu coi... , , , She tried to accelerate her speed 1 to rush down the incline trippe 1 , fell ; but she was up r.gain in a second , and battliag on. Down at last. Here, in the hollow between the prairie slopes, the bliz zard rsgril less fiercely than above. " Wiliie !'' s!ie called. She could hardly hiar her own voice "Willie !"' she shrieked. But the wind swept the word from her bps. and its souu 1 was soft as a sigh. 1 i If she could only set! She put up j hr hand and rubbed ter eyes. The ; 1 V i i . - tt . i f 1 ' 1 . Imr 7inr c 1 r. . . . ; - i Hop I. air woo ni-o tt'lT m-lttr-d msaa ! 1 j lUv f 9ched WlU! rp bit - inQr cold. She tried to pray. 'Dear. 59 , , .1 ' , , ! !Uoa ' 1a"f V, 'f ' , " j Bah' Vf llhu ! ihat waS a1 ehe uuerea. All at once she stumbled over something something scarlet in the snow. Eagerly she grasped it. Sbe dra2J?e(l UP i0 f:er hreast. Stic wrapped , as best her col i hands could, the shawl around it. Dead? Ob, no, no! he could f.el the shivering prc?cre of tie Utile '-ret? as she cLu lid them to ! .t. h, fur strength to reach he me ! Or would they both freeze, and die down here, nn,l be buried in the snow? A heavy burden for ber slight arms , for ter freezing hand", the stardy baby she carried ; a burden ma ic still Leai:r by his present' semi-stupor, he grqp . d her numb, angtrs around liin. he bent Ler head. Beaten, swayed, baiTVtel, she' made her way up the hill. She! reached the lecl. She could not 'o much fartLer. Her hold of Willie! was relaxing. He was slipping from tier, or so ghe fancied. The bitter. bitter col l I her very heart was pain- ing with it. Her whole slender, un-1 protected body was racked with its ; agony. VYas that the house? Directly be fore her something dark had loomed ul. She tottered against it. A haystack. As its base shi sat k ex hausted. One step farther would be simply a physical impossibility-. rihter she wrapped Willie in the . ' ' ' shawl, and held him to her. TLen, I Iier hack against the hsystack , I ljer head bowed forward, her face hidden, the crouched therein tort- j ure, which drifted into drowsiness drowsineas that wa3 deadly j.s de-' licious ! "Willi That was the first word she said, endeavored to say, when the long, wretched delirium of fever was over at last. Where was she? Not out on the prairie ! Not in that awful white whulwind 1 Not at the foot of the haystack! Surely this was her mother's room ! Surely ehewas in her mother's led. The brilliant patchwork quilt, she knew that. The fire of corncobs iu the tiny stove smclled familiar. And thi voice was j her mother's. Sae could not dreau a voice . 'He is well, darling, safe and well. Hush 1 you must not talk yet." Wben she woke again, Doctor Henderson was standing by the bed, and jti9t behind him was Willie's .vee, rosy, roguish face. "You will be better soon now,'? j the doctor said, "though it is a won-j der you lived. You were unconsci ous when your father found you on his return from town." Just then her father cance in. He said very little, but he stroked ten derly the thin hand on the gay cilico counterpane. 'And and Willie?" 'Tie was not much the worse, thanks to 'ou. You had him well protected. Come here, Willie.'' He lifted the little chap on the bed. She smiled as sbe felt the clasp of the small, strong arms. "Is it snowing .still?" The doctor laughed . "Dear child, it is May," he Eaid. She looked bewildered. Tt was an awful blizzard," the; doctor went on, 'the worst ever j known in the West. The paper. were full of it. Many perished. ; Some people wtre very brave and un- i selfish, anl saved the lives of others j Their deeds, at least those that cime ; to pablic knowledge, were praised j aI1 through the country. Yours was j as 8rana :iny- Yo arc a Lcro' I ine, Bessie." He was a young man, a good-look- ing man. 4,A powerful smart doc- tor," averred the Western people, among whom hn had elected to prac- tice. It had taken the exercise of ! " "9 10 I...r. j h Wt ecrrcfpon)inKi.v "On no"' aid Bessie verv dowlv ; wn' 11 ' 1,t9-lc ur JO"'J a ..;oi.. . ut M., ..,,.. could be a -heroine m Nebraska." "Gracious !"' exclaimed Doctor Henderson, and he IooKo.1 grave !v ; at the wan sweet face on the pillow. ' Besides,'7 she went on. meeting his glance v. ;th that quiet, direct convincing gaze she had, ar.d with jast a flicker of rose-bloom coming into her chefks, "heroines do some- j thing very wonderful, and I I only ; did my best!" That waa two years ago. Bessie is eighteen n w, and taller, heaitbicr and prettier than ever. Sae and her mother are busy sewiug; feir this i year there is to be a weddir.g m tlx i old furm-hoase. When it ; b ove-Be-eic r , , . ,. L-nard any more, bat Mrs. D.ctor i Henderson. If they were fashionv ; ble people Wrlde would be pressed into service as a page. as tasv are not anv thing of the sort, he will figure in the important ceremony merely as a boy, in a new cordaroy suit and blue silk nt-cktie ; a ho who po-secSfS a fond pride in ki.- sister, and a tremenduous apprecia tion of wedding-cake. i:n km fit THE oE Ml. I M . I N a :; l - r : v ; 1 n N. Y. Ufr' I. vu. n: aw.'- 1" .t i.:: : . Th' Bisir E lucath.n I ill do eem to t! rive in C'ogro. char, cos grow lfarr rr.d thi every dv, and f-.y ar.d by .1! core? 'he g1. t.f their fi.r i e. vf e. Mr. Blair ftr-tie 1 ..term 11 tM v favor of .; otf.nring. 1 ut the ::, ' he argues ti e wirc otf he N-ii a'nr Sj ooru r, of Wisconsin, binv.ner id its head yette:d;iy aften.o.Ki rti!!. out nit rev . He voted for the.th::-g once, but inie then his tys have beeti opeind a nil h; v.i'.l vote 't r. no mor'. The herd p-.n fact is thut tl e It': i an insult to the whole j ".: !e of the South. No o:.e, of course, re fjses iniuii'v, or h'-ks itnjx-rt : ihTi t o lie.-1 ion s it U t t? r. d. I? i j . . . . ,, 'human n at ill t to take all e csn kt I ami demand for more if we see a :;! I cing di-tribute I with lavish h:nd. Bat money inu-t come 1:1 the r;gh! way if it i- to pro luce any bi-ti;: good, and the outh is beginnn to set that the Blair way i the wro.i v ay. A Slate muV preserve i t - ."elf-rr pect fir.-t. and af;e' that g-t rvcry thing within lescl. This s '!' re-p.vt is the barrier bctwiei: Biair and the ber-t portion of the S mth. 1 1 v are not paupers, down yonder. On t ho contrary they are mtghtily nn ncrous and are bound to he a erv rich .-t'etioii of thid country in tic near future. The er.tt -rpri-rs n.tn-i -er;:b'e which have bt ( n begun nrt only seed corn and in twenty or 'thirty years from now the p"p!c will 1 reap a heavy c:o) ;f dollars. To olfer such muscular, ndventurou folk, settled on the bv.ks of th' O -t rivers In Lho world and on 1 ir: 1 rich as u;y to he found, a miserable dole cut of the public treasury to build school ho'ji:os wish is toques tion their fio'ior and their busine--cep.tcity. They cjti htlilf tb;dr own school iioiise- educate their own po pulation and r.et d ak n j odds of any one. The Blair bill is a very stupid af fair and shoul 1 hve be: 11 buru-.i under ttie snow banks if New II imp shire instead of introduced in ("on grcss. ytr. Eti L- :i :i I'ni ini r. One of Tim-: Dlmoi uai's hit ( ; 1 trons 13 Mr. II. II. Kicks, of N:ih county. The Wilson Mirror h.'i s the following of him : ' Mr. John Kobiinon, t!;e (hrr: missinner of Agriculture, ha-, vi-;' 1 the tine farm of II. H. K.cks , ii rar Iloeky Mount in Nash county, and ha3 the following to say about Ihd successful farmer: "Mr.IIicks had the l,ast season in to'jflc? , fortv-tive a"r(i The average productbr; p.-r acre was 72.1 pound, for wh e'i !.. wi!: r-vhzc -ii lca-t lorty-fiv: c-nls Pr pound. He sold half his crop. forty-five cents being that average. What fie has to sell U equally ra tine, if not better. Seven hundred and twenty-five pound" per icre, :.: forty dive crids per p-cvl, i- a r-.a!- cj.aaon ea-iwy rn-i .e, an I income which surpasses o w - r ; e ; UU iarK'ete i wnn farming t i .c !;s-rvat'on ia ' ''aio 11:1 b-r n y I lie ' Mate Mr I -k, .l,rm.-.l m ,!, . Lvl a -L.tc- -.nn , ,,!..y,.l i!j;nT,n,T?'! ,"" I that this tenant had eayed from i.i- , . r.srt o fne eroo dun:. 15 l.aaf tan'r j t ,')od in cr.sii, w.r a w na:a n- r.ow hes to i.uj- a plac; or tr, :). Mr. Kicks manure hU lar.a very heavily using from l-nty to th-r'.y dollars' v.or.b per aere. lie e n filers the u-?e of Gv? or two horse wsgor. laa ls 'jf stable inannrc ! ind;pQsibL to successful toba'-co ' growing which is iaclude lln the j above amaaat of con per acre' If you are sutT-.-ring frona Malari, a'-k j our druggist for Shala-nh-erg'-r"--Antulote for Malaria. If he d. have it, p.ra teils yo-i ne has eorne thing j -'-it as go ad, dan't belle Ve him. b .t sea l o.ae Shallenberjer. dollar fa Dr. A. Iio -."Lester, 1'er.r, and gft the Ariti b-te h mail. A few doses will res'ore ou t - perf'.-ct l.t-ii 1'he Me lie in a- n t r: ft:::. of .ilis , but is not a pe-rgdive. It not only destroys Malaria, hut is an escebeat tonic. If yoj fefl '-out of sorts" and pee vish take Dr. J. McLean's Sarsa panlla; cheerfulness will return an! life will acquire new zet. ior sale by E. T. Whitthcad i Co. SEED ( o j !.,:. Uv .' .! - ..',-, ::. t ' a ; ; s t , I 1 ' - i i . . t v. ;t it rr -.v ! , 4 N : '.?.. tc r n ; '-.(-. . :, . ' l-'CRte 1 '.;p - : S T ! , r :; 1 f. r f'ICf. A '. tl. 1 '! ' i f. , 1 .' i r. -.' ! l-,r r 'I , f, r. r c f y '-. . 1 . l:.,r- n,r. :t !. 1 .r. un:r- ' !v ; - r t ! 'i 1 ; ! .; i l , i " i 1 i i . . . :i i 1 . r " C-:i.:--.i'ig'.'. 1 . Co !:;..! r . : . 1 .!.. 1 ruit.!-' n-M ; ; '. p , At u 5 t w r- ' ' :,:;. ' : 1 ! 1 c i - ! Ii 1 p: 1 . i of . i ,;.:.( , r. 1 1 - iti." . 1 t ! 1 i t : . '.. Si'Uii i :u :' n :i i ' o . : ', 1 - :i v, t fie :h '. ! : "I r w.t-. ! .1 , . I h ! w.. i f v ; ; 1 i ! . r , v t 1 e d ' 1 1 . ? dr :. w : : , ."."' ! r 1 1. - r, i -i :, N ; t ' r 1 t ' t lire!-' 1 f d r i - vi h t r . 1 or. tl esrv U!:.f :! o! d th.- 1 w t r h I h t ?: e " 1, i ii ' '1 ! o s T 1 ; - fd-out ; n t ! h a . :. -. !.' ' ' . - -i ;!.f.. ! 'i.'htlv f hr ' the;,, t of it -:,'.!. Ted g-' r I . '.: e -i -,e; fere; (v of ' !n- e.: eV. 1 ! , 1 ,t .... -.!.!! u' t r 'ie ' I a lie 1 ' f : 1 o-, ! ; . : . 1 the crowd- ir: tow n ar.d it.-.-d t. in s e to w itt r tt'i'.r. ' .c '. V - dp; O -e t !i-if t h ' ! ' j ' ' i r : 1 ' e W 1 c , c r.e t i.n ! ; i . ', e :. ! ' - -i i v piilt oi t f . 1 - ! e. :. la .'ever f !o- i' : t " ' M; ' :c-.ce ! .! -circle (Tiis-eil t hV p. n; 1 t , ; : n other a brch' o -a w e -. t t , v I . i c ! i mi ;:'..ri: g ih.if it : eye- to h : i' an ! if v- . ; -, ly ;i j ieturc of : he i'ro'. d (nr.u f :' -'o-i 1 1 !e re v r- :. f .1 iji.ze:; of the-- -ol'ir t 1 1 . t ; I 1 1 1 : t f a-t t;-idf t!i" w!.o;.. I : ! sec-r.ci' rv d.t'i -ult t -i oh- t . 1 ' w a t ! o j-,; - m,,- M . 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' .1 C i A .j s . - i- o . .. i ,r .o . , o. . . .- 1 a . i'i',- ,r::i v- ' . a s'-.d-b'-rn coujh : a a p. a - ' 1 Mf d i rem-d in e; 1 f . ' la Dr. d. H. Mel.- t: T:.r V.'.::" l.'ii.g I; dm 1 i-r .i'.-hy ! . J. V. :.. . . Tl. a -'"-' '' li' ' : ; !' I y u t:; . c 1 1 upoa g'-o L - ' ' ' ' r : ,:i ar.d aa::i'i:'!at:a::. 'I ra..-' ' '. b t rich in life and stn r.gth-.-iv ag ."; stituents tl -e Dr. .1. li. Me- aa .s Sirsaparilla. U will n a; . . tie properties of the b'.ood. f.-.-.-u '.; a the elemeat.S of vitality are dr..wn. Tar sale by 11. T. Whlolea 1 .' ' e
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 13, 1890, edition 1
1
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