Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / July 16, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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DEMOCRAT. 1 1 1 1 1 1 yf E. E HILLIARIJ. Mitor and Proprietor. vol.. VII. P ji F K S S 1 ) N" A L. L - K C. C. CHRISTIAN. Scotland Neck, N. C Ps?' Can be found at his otliee New Hotel when not profes- in gionally engaged fdsewhere 2 i:J tr. J) k. w. u. Mcdowell, OFFICE North corner Niw Hotel Main street. Scotland Neck, N. C. J"t?' Always at bis office when not professionally engaged elsewhere. 9 2C tf. D n. A. C L 1 V K II M A N, Oi kick- Cor. Main and Tenth Streets 2 2 ly. Sco'iXANJi NixicN. C. rrilOMAS N. HILL, 'J ATTORNEY AT LAW, Halil'sx , N . C, Fra.'tK'es in Halifax and adjoining ci.iintit s. and the Federal and Supreme Courts. :JSly. D AVID UKLL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Enfield, N. C. Practices in all the Courts of Halifax and adjoining counties and in 'i n Su j.Tinie'and Federal Courts. Cla-is col lected in all parts of the State. 3 8 ly. A. DUNN, A T T ( ) 11 N K Y AT LA WT, Scotland Neck, N, C, Practices wherever his services are 'required. feb!3 ly. yy n. K i tch in, Attorney and Counselor at Law, Scotland Neck, N. 0. &y Olhce: Corner Main and Tenth Streets. 1 o ly. R. O. Li kton, -Ik. E. L, Travis, BURTON & TRAVIS. A'i TOUXi.VS AND CoCNSELOKS AT LAW, HALIFAX, N. C. nn y. M'.H.DAV, Wii-i'm. Ii. HANSOM, V.'eldon. DAY, k RANSOM. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Wr i.don, W. C- ;i S I s-. H ' Ml N K ! F. li T S O N ' S Shoe .S'op & 'restaurant. 'nPEN A ! ALL liOT J:..-S Sat is ricii in irnai :; 'iveed to p:;trous. n fi Nint'i uiul Mam Mice's. SC( T I A N D N LC K , - - N . C. jan 'i ly. I. J. MERCER;- No. 10 South !)ih St, (bet. Main Cary Sts. RICHMOND, VA. uinber Commission ercfyant, Ciivos personal and prompt attention to all consignments of Lumber, Shingles. Latiis, Etc. 4-17-00 ly. I. D. II I L L L E A 1) I N G IT T C II E R Has moved up town to his old stand on Main Street near the wrick mill. ' 1 J :. 1T M,, Fresh supplies always on hind. Oid customers in.vucd to call. 1-1-91 lr t A Household Remedy 1 FOR ALL ' S BLOOD AN'D DISEASES $ Botanic Eted Safe li Cjri scrofula, nicr-ns, salt it UJfCj RKEUM. ECZEMA, cvtry f jrm cf nufigrsant SKIN ERUPTION, be Gides being efficacious ir. to.-.inrj up the s-slm and restoring the censtitu'tion, "Aden impaired from ary cause. Its ?mosf suijernatkiral Keaiing properties juiiify m jr, qi-aranteeing a cure, if directions are followed. Ut,,i o iiCtl "n,k cf V. ..,u!.r. Bi.OOO 8MA CO.. A-lar.la. Ga. :-k. iv. or LOST or FAILING MANHOOI'l ft or f-1 fi ?m V P "VATIC "n Ttitt tt. f -.A; '.WU S'fe' VmrT,cn C""""-5"- Writ," hVi . ' eQA5 CO., BWFf Af.9, n. v t. 3 ? : J S ;' I W C ? I 'A'eafcurss of Body and ISind. JEffcrti T I .li T" T- . , , A Scene of Long Ago. Tlie lolIowiiiK clipped from the Minneapolis Tribune, is from the pen of a Union soldier of the Northwest. The armies they had ceased to fight, The night was still and dark. And Laany thousands on the lield Were lying stiff and sttrk. The strecther men had come along, And gathered all they could. A hundred surgeons worked that night Dehind the clump of wood. They flashed the lantern in my face, As they were hurrying by; The sergeant looked and said 'He's dead,' And I made n reply. The bullet had gone through my breast No wonder I was still; But once will 1 be nearer death Than when upon the hill. A gray clad picket came along Upon his midnight beat; He came so near me that 1 tried To move and touch his feet. At once he bent and felt my breast Where life still fought at bay; No one who loved me could have done More than this man in gray. O'er me all chilled with blood and dew, His blanket soft he spread; A crimson sheaf of wheat he brought, A pillow for my head. Then knelt beside me for an hour And bathed m' lips and brow; L5ut for the man who was my foe I'd not be liymg now. Then as the coming daylight shone, lie bent his lips to say, 'Cod spare you brother, though you wear The blue and 1 the gray?" The sounds of war are silent now; We call no man our foe, But soldier hearts cannot forget '1 he scenes of long ago. Dear are the ones who stood with us To struggle or to die; No one can oftener breathe their names Or love thcra more than I, But from my life I'd give a year That ray-clad man to sec; To clasp in love the foeman's hand Who saved my life to me. Abstain. (Youth's Companion.) Doctor Dash, a successful pby. sician in the West, returned to bis old home lately after a Ion; absence, anil visited t lie college in which he h(l been eaucat -d. "Twenty years aso,'' lie said to a uroup of students, ,1 graduated in this hall. There were eighteen men in my class. ,l'Jt the eighteen six drank hahit Uv while at, college. Not to ex- ees- hut regularly a glass or two e-eu day. Not one of these men las succeede i in attaining fortune, reputation, or e.veu a respectable position. Yet they were among the ablest men in the class. "While at college, 1 was in the habit of frequenting the daily news paper office here. There were ten men in it editors and reporters. I knew tbetn all a lot of bright, oily fellows. The work was hard, the hours late, the meals Irregular. "Every man in the flice drank nut o:e, a reporter, Ben 1 erry. One of the editors told me that he lad seen Ben come in from a fire at two o'clock in the. raorniDg, drench ed to the skin and tired out. He would look wistfully at the whiskey bottle but he never touched it. "I inquired for the boys to-day. Three had died from drinking; six were holding inferior positions in newspaper ollices, "Habits bad said my inGormant. They could not make their way, and so fell lower and lower. Perry's head was always clear, and he was regular at his work, lie is editor in chief of one of the principal news papers in a seaboard city.7 He had not half the natural ability of at least three of the others, "These are facts,'' said the doctor. 4 1 advise you who are beginning lite to consider tnem. 1 have not a word to eay about the moral qaes t on involved in drinking. But 1 k iow, a9 a physician, that no Ameri can, with his nervous organization, in this wearing climate, can habit ually take liquor without injury to his health, ard without In greater or less degree hindering his chance of success.' A schoolboy in Australia recently put the matttr tersely, thus: "I ab stain from liquor because if I wish to excel as a cricketer, Grace says 'abstain'; as a walker, Weston says 'abstain'; as an oarsman, Ilanlon says 'abstain'; as a swimmer, Webb says 'abstain'; as a missionary. Livingstone rhjs 'abstain'; as a preacher, Farrar says 4 abstain."' Asylum", prisons and work houses repeat the cry, "Abstain." Itch on human and horses and all animals cured in 30 minutes by Wool ford's Sanitary Lotion. This never faMs. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co's Drus store, Scotland Neck. U. P 8 21 ly THEN AND NOW. WHAT A QUARTER OF A CENTURY HAS BROUGHT ABOUT.. U e are ull one. (N. Y. Herald.) The death of Hannibal Hamlin ie another reminder that the old war times are gradually sinking below the horizon. We have talked a great deal about the New South as one result of the great struggle, bat we have a New North as well. Our whole outlook has changed since the days when slavery set our teeth on edge. W e have become, what at one time seem ed impossible, an entirely homoge neous people, with not a 6lngle sub ject for excited controyeraey within the ra8ge of debate. Before Appomattox North and South were two different nationals tie?, bound together by the force of circumstances but struggling to get apart andeeking some excuse for taking the first step toward a divorce. Wc were the political Siamese twlnp, united by a constitutional ligament which it might be fatal to cut, but with 6uch diverse temperaments and modes of thought that our life was passed in mutual criminations. The two sections were in a state of constant exasperation--they chal lenged and defied each other, nurs ed their animosities with such zeal the prophets tpembled for our future and predicted that the whole experi ment of popular govenment would be swallowed up in the vortex of hatred. Toombs boldly declared his desire to call a slave roll beDeath the shadow of Bunker Hill, or was so reported, and all New Eogland wa3 ablaze with horror. Wendell Puillipp, whose eloquence was as sharp as the sword of Saladio, and Garrison, who rhetorically swung the battle axe of Richard, retorted in language which was fire of guns powder. When Hamlin was in Lis prime and ooe of tli!t group or giants iu which Lincoln stoi.d head and &honlders afove the resf, the whole country, North well as South, suffered the pangs of measureless agony. Both armies fought with a desperate courage never before exhibited on the planet. Tae irresistible and the immovable apparently catnu into colli-ion. - What a magnificent spectacle that lonz t cries of battles presented I A tragedy big with the fate of this nation and of republicanism the wide world oyer. A million men, and brothers at that , digging trenches for the dead who fell by thousands until there was hardly a home in the laud that did not suffer bereavement. Five years of mortal terror, impov erishing one-half of the country and almost exhausting the material re sources of the other half. But all this seems ancient history now. Juost ot lue great generals who led the armies have passed over to the majority. The statesmen who won for themselves a place on the historic page lie in the dust where mortality rest in dreamless sleep. The ranks of the veterans are bemg rapidly thinned. They have left their riddled banners to their heirp, and a new generation have bent their shoulders to the burden of political responsibility. Less than thirty years have been counted off, and yet so rapid hag been our progress that the old wounds have healed and the roar of the cannon has become a distant eoho. Our hatreds have been wash ed away by the incoming tide of national prosperity. Once in a while the cry comes from some Northern stump speaker in search of office or from some unreconstruted and unre. generate Southerner , but it rouses no response. The people beyond the Potomac are diving into iron and coal mines, building factories and felling foretts. The people of the East and uWe&t are demanding a larger market for their product?, and are contented prosperous and happy. A3 one by one the great souls of ling syne take their departure, we recall the stirring bcncs In whicfi ihey were actorF, the hairbreadth escape of the nation during the perils of war and the hard earned victor' which at last crowned our efforts. Wc also congratulet1 ourselves that when the great issue was settled it was settled forever. It left no remnant behind which can breed discord in the years to come. 'LXCKI-SHU'.'" IS nCK MoTTi. SCOTLAND NECK. N. THURSDAY. .HIV Hi. IS1.)'.. PURE WATER. AN ABUNDANT J-UITLY MAT nr. ABTAINLI liV MEANS OF AUTEMAN WELLS. (Manufacturers' Record.) Pure water is essential to human health. If it is contaminated in any degree i4, by eo much , deranges the physical condition of those obliged to use It. In the uplands and broad plateau3 of the South there is au abundance of pure water in the river?, the spring and the wells, but near the coast of both the ocean and the golf most natural waters near the aarface of the ground are more or less impure, and consequently carry to their habitual consumers the germs of physical ills. Many eea coast and galf cities of the South have employed, at considerable cost, measures more or leas effective to secure a continuous and abnndant supply of pure water. It la qaes- tionable whether the people of any city in the Union have done as much inthis respect as tboseof New Orleans Many years ago, led. by some scien tist, tkey began tobuild large cisterns, to which the rain water collected by their roofs might be conducted, fil tered and stored, fnd there are now few, if any, modern residences in the Crescent City that are Lot amply provided with facilities for storing filtered rain water. Not content with this, the householders of New Or leans have recently been boring arte sian wells to make sure of a perma nent pure water supply. The pioneer well, says the Picayune, of this city, was sunk by Dr. Charles E. Kells, who, at a depth of 700 feet, obtained a flow of 41 gallons per minute. Another well is now producing 52 gallons of water a minute. The firet of these wells was bore.l some six years since. Now, according to the Picayune, there ore at least 50 arte sian wells in New Orleans that sre providing pure water for man)" of its citizens and for the use of some of its manufactories. Tha upland, plateaus and mount tin cities of the South can, as a rulp, obtain ample supplies of pure water from their spring, branches and rger streams, but r.ear tho coast this is not practicable, an 1 the ques tion arises, "What other sources of an adequate supply are within reach'r'' New Orleans has found that artesian wells will give the best conomic reply to tlr.s inquiry ; so also has Brunswick, Ga., and, if we mistake not, the time is near at hand when most Southcra low country cilies and towns will endeavor to draw their supplies of drinking and cooking water from artesian wells. The general principle upon which such efforts will be based U that large quantities of the rain that falls upon the great water sheds of the South do not find outlets to the sea by th rivers whose sources are among them. On the contrary, they are absorbed by the vegetabe mat that underlies the forest, and, gradually sinking into the earth , are filtered through the sand and grave4 oyerly mg the rock formations, and then , funding seams and crevices, tbey make their tortuous way far below the surface until they approach the coasts. An artesian well, sunk in side Fortress Monroe by the United States military authorities durmg the war, for the supply of its gar rison, finally, at an unusual depth struck pure freestone water and that undoubtedly fell from the clouds upon the eastern slope of the Blue Ridge mountains, and, following the underground courses nature had made for it, went so far below the surface that an extraordinary depth of bore was required to bring it asain to the surface. The waters pumped at New Orleans and Bruns wick had a somewhat similar origin, a9 is the case at the artesian well bored, at great cost, bv the Blsck well Tobacco Co., at Durham, N. C The question of aa adequate supply of pure water for the S )uth Atlantic and Gulf State coast cities would seem to depend largely upon the en terprise of their people in getting down to the subterranean waters which fell from the clouds npon the highlands of their several States. Bncklen's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts , Bruises, Sore?, Ulcers, Salt Rhpum, Fever Sore?, Tetter, Chapped Hands. Chilblains Corns, and all Sktn Eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guar antee to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 52. per box For Sale by E. T. Whitehead $ Co IF TOUR HACK AC It f.S Or you are all worn out. willy Rood f.r nothing it is general rieli:itv. Try IlKOWX'S Jftl.V ItlTTKRS. It wUl Cure you ftnl ci vo a roo apgetite, 5oW If ABOUT KINDNESS. WHAT IT CAN DO FOR EVEKT A CRIMINAL. A Pull'.E MATliON. Youth's Cctfupanioto Toe work that a good worn in can do for the fallen of her sex l well Illustrated by a story related by Mrs Birney in an address opoa the sub ject of police matrons. Sbe was once urging the necessity of such matrons upon the authorities of a certain city, when the chief of police said, "Well, if you could see one woman that comes iu here three or four times a year Old Sail''' It took four policemen, he s&ul. to briog her into the cell, and usually they get their faces scratched. One morning Mrs. Barney was told that tbi woman had been put in a cell the previous night. "We would like to see you bring her into court," the police said, "If you can do that, we shall believe iu police matrons." The clr.ef offered to send two men to protect me, but I declined their services. As I reached the ceil door rapped with the key, and then un locked the door and entered. There in the dark, narrow cell crouched the woman, looking more like a wild beast. She was just ready to spring, as she was expecting the police. She cried out : Who are you?" "I am your friend," I replied. "It's a lie!" she said. "I haven't got any friend." "But I am your friend," I reiterat ed, gently. The woman laughed mockingly. "Who are you, anyway!" "1 am a police woman." "Oh, I din't know they had any such things," she said . "I never saw one before. What do you think you're goin to aor Ik. 1 M 1 "Help you," I replied, simply; and as I stood there beside her , I drcp- ped my hands upon her shoulder, and calling her by her manied name, I said, "Yuu know you haye to go into the court in a minute, and you are not fit to go.' I bej;an to arrange her hair. I took a pin from my own hair; she hadu't a button or a pin or a fasten ing of any kind in her clothes; site sat there tugging to hobi them gcther, and as I tried to dress she said : to her fell 4 T ;I1 iwi what you're op t ; me what you mean. Looking in her eye, I asked, kindly, "Do you remember the first time yon were in a police station! "Don't I remember il?" "How old were you?" "I wasn't sixteen then , and I am more than sixty now." "How many times have yoa been in these places?' "Oh, I don't know; I guess God don't know it's so often." "Do you remember how joa felt the firts time?'' "I was almost scared to death. I cried all night." "Sally, if a good woman had been there and had wipe! the tears off your face, and had put up your hair and rested a motherly hand on your shoulder, as I u-ve done to day, what would it have meant to you?" Ob, 1 would never have gone back again; but nobody ever cared." "Now, Sally, I want you to do something for me. I want to get a woman to go into these places to care for the women in the way 1 have suggested Wouldn't you like to help me?" " I wouid do anything I could to help you.'' "Toe police think you will not go quietly into court with me tnis morning ; but I am sore you will.'' We talked together a little while longer , and then came the call for us to go' info court. As we rose from the bed where we had been sitting, I sid, "Will yo i tike my arm, or shall I take yours?" She looked me oyer and said, "Wa1, I am about three times a9 large you; I guess you'd better take mine.? So we went into court. The police men slid they would have cheered as if it had been proper, and one cf them said that I had "bewitched Sally." And so the poor creature was bewitched, but only with gentle treatment and kind words. Mr. C. D. P.iyne, publisher of th5 Union Signal, Chicago, 111., writes: I never saw anything that would care headache like tine. yoar Bradycro' OM papers for sale at his office. ...... "rl,,i..Urp,fW( Small Events of Great Lives. A grant baivpct ws oacc cITPn to Ir.l PiLoer wb-, it br aJinuevl, noted for im uopur.ct bty. After long wt f r tic tittingaitbe-1 Koet the bot wcrr at any lurce.: Iy stt banker to be gin the fet without t'jir uet. Somi fifteen iDioutea liter Lord Pa!tne-'.oc arrived, and in bis jua tiesi air evro.d Lis sthfctioa their not waiting for him. Henry Ciaj ' rare attempts to quote from classic verse were gener ally failurei", of which the following is a Kood illua.rstion. 1q attempt ing to use the expression, Ii the jide wince, out withern are unwrung,' be misquoted the last word, which be changed to oustrung. A pitculu neous prompting from each of the two genllemcu betide him proved rather confusing, and with i'jcrcacd emphasis he repeated, "unhung." During the lauh that followed Clay was Again promtped, and with one of his inimitable smiles said, "Ah, murder will out-'undonu's the word." While Clay-was on a visit to a cer tain summer resort a Iriend happen ed to mention as oco of the sojourn ers a young girl, whom Clay at once expressed a desire to meet. "Ren I will go and fetch her," said his friend. "B no means," returned Clay, 'T will go to her," and tte aged state man to whom all of Ue world was glad to come in homage was presented to almost a echooU girl on the same terms lha'w the moil obscure oung practitioner would have been. While traveling in Switzerland Gustave Dore once lott his Mssport and epplitd to the mayor of Lucerne for another. "You say you arc M. Gustave Dore," replied the iniyor, "and I believe you, but jou c:m easily prove it." and he passed over a pencil and paper. Giancing from the wijdow Dore rapidly produced on the sheet a tketch of some maiUct women pclling potatoes, and eingn mg his nKine to tho drawing passed it to the mayor, who replied, "Your passport is perfectly in order, but you must allow me to korp it as n souvenir anil to offer yoj in cx chanie one of the regular form," The comic Burton while sailing up the Hudson asked for a beefsteak at dinner and was furnished, with a morsel hardly large enough for a taste. Carefully exarrining it a he tnijht have done a sample of goods he finally laid it back on Lis plate and said : 1 Yes , that is to; now bring me some." Jo?eph IL, eraparor of Austria, while traveling in citizen's clothes one day drew up at a wayside inn, and while waiting for the rest of the company improved the time to shaye himself. The landlord, curiojs to know the rank of his guest, asked what position he held in the im pcror's retinue, to which bis majesty replied, "At present I an his barber-" Sir Issac Newton's abstraction ha been the subject of much comment, A waggish friend once called, and finding the great philosopher too much absorbed in his stndlee to even notice the dinner a servant brought himself sat down and ate the dinner asajoke. When Njwton came to himself be raised the coyer and, see ing the empty dishe?, remarked, 4T had forgotten that I had dined." Wilder Gkaiiame, Harmhop, Pcnn. Out of a Job. (Durham Sun.) Many young men in Durham a well as other towns are always out of a job. One reason why they can not hold a position any, length of time i3 because when they secure r job they do thei'- work poorly and are not careful ts to details. In stead ot attending to their employ er's business tbey allow him to get np in the morning aud beir. the day's work ahead of tbem, and they are always trying to manage eo a- to shirk as much work as possible and grumble if they are compelled to labor a little lorjger than the regular hoars. Any mm who relies upon his employer to plan his work and point out eycry little duty th&t must be performed will never make a good workman in any line of bus iness. No threw I business man wants such persons as -hat attens ding to his s'firs and he will not have them. When yoa eee great, strong and healthy young men loung ing arouud town with nothing to do you may spot tbem for there's some thing wroDg some where. i a c; M. D.r.'M (. c d ntchrr, Drift -.wv inrij'irit Uusi v t ii i.ir i , , i !ft,-j h'irri .r ; A lit to-, w;j. i7r x ,t Try tl;. won, i.f ;. J, j i . , b!ch i th? jr . G ;d n Mr i;c! (!cvrrv of r. I' cv wonder. ful tonic nd t,'.,.i pUf f. 2 j ' Didcorcry " tea . ,dr i remedy fur comump-.i brachim, ct.M ud Ut tr!it.!.; guaranteed t. ;nerU o: cure, if Uken u ue, nioney refuidt 1. RvcTotflG I'erfcrtly lt. x u t, I'ttj. jiPi, iv nj x. t ...!. , NtfT Iiw t .U. 1. . , N. , J,,. , 1 1.4 V . . la Srw M-. . U t y ..!; mr :u.C.r-i ffi ;l i i 1 ihf (, .. hn-r t ... f ri '(.,; u, 1 im !. r ' i I iv k : i. -.r. .u." ! a, - r ", 1 ' i - - i ifci 1.. Mi' ..I i Ik I. I 1! 'HIil '. Uk r r ni r t-a' ' . -u i .' . i Ui r j ill j. j. t . !. ; i :. . .. , r i . Nrr-,. ,.',:r . : ... ... tO Hit I.Kxtl 'l, FREE f:. linM T1oli .rrmii I.I ll- tli ill) 1 !'T.. nir.lt. I no lir f ItMittv l'ktor k .on, i t 1 ,,r( V.i,r. It) I , .in.- aj U Cow irr ijr- I uinif r .llrx U -u ! IU KOENIC MED. CO.. Chicago, III. Koll by Rrujfirlit l II lloMIv O for iirir ii, m.'.a. t iiuii !.. i..r j. V. Il ly 'HAKIM. VlvM'Ht.'iMt n li' I it 1 I I' iin 1.1 1. fit m I wrr fi.r Tilr. d ii . . I ( y 1 n ; i,' i ' 1 it imi il r 't-l' Trrr. A.l ln " t IMMs," ih. i4v b-yf V n. -51 n. . . n - -v i 1 1 T'r li Ur,n-''4H'V .1 . irTlfH m ft Sljrf J 1 mi Fors'ilo I r . I. ' Co, l)rug;i-ts J. C. WILLIAMS, I am prepared to fill all ordtn for anything in tt.e FURNITURE or COFFIN lice. Being a practical undertakfr mynelf you Cfn nlwiys rely on getting prompt what yo 1 order. After January Ut, I nhil! open full linn of all kind of KKRNLTURE CflKElNS in my house in Scotland Neek. Orders filled at any hour day or night. Address .. C. WILLIAM ILUAMSTOV, N. C. 7 21 lv. COTTON g I M BLOOM WITH LATEGT IMPROVEMENTS H.W. H U B HARD 7, 'iY; I P r Wectrrf . kturlii ii HouUirf. oHW for quick dwlivury upoa rf;:pt of ',f.rm f rsr .rrrsrrFA "OSGOOD" U. 3. Standard GALES M1 rw-nt nn i''.i' f"f-'fc' ' ; 1 I m n rrnn ( r1. 3 Ton35 If. V. fit I'.i: Kl. O.i t.n'.k.rm Mkr ATI IM A . ! ' ! I C-l-lm. Chill and Fever Tonic We will sell Johnson' Ci.ill and Fever Tonic under a guarantee that one bottle will rct a permanent cure in treating Chills and Fcvert Biiious Fever, Malarial Fever. Ty phoid, Swamp and Hemorrhagic Fever, also Neurals, and refund the reind cice, 50 j. if .1 fi'.-. K. T. Wun niiEAD & Co. Scotland Neck, N. C. Confederate Money. Wani-1 for eat,fin hrv; am )it- or.lv, and cod prices puJ, eperu'iy fr y 18C1 issues. Abo Scrip ami Uroktu Bank Notes of eytry description. (EORHE WINDHURSTA; SO Uealtr in War Relics. .Stamps, if., 103 Vuk ave., Ualtiuiore. id, MG-ain, P.: ..u-hf 0 0 1 lb". a 1 tit. wt- iJ clou"" : mm? L r. ly. mmmm
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 16, 1891, edition 1
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