Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / May 5, 1892, 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
! I! TJEL BEMOGEAT si t E. E- HILLIARD, Editor and Propiretor. "EXCELSIOK" IS OCR MOTTO. ""i rlin ll.oo pr r ymr. VOL-VI I!. SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. THURSDAY. MAY 5,1892. Ml. L'7 I K o F E S S I O N A L. 7: vv o. Mcdowell, I) ',-J'FICK North corner Now Hotel S( il'LAND NKCIC, N. C. . A Uvjiys at his oliic when not ,;,i;n:illy engaged ebev-hcre. .1 ;V. tf. j . C. LIVE R M A N, (ifHct Cor. Main and Tenth Streets 2 12 ly. Scotland Neck,N. C. T rpHOMAS N. HILL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Halifax, N. C, Practices in Halifax and adjoining (Miniums and the Federal and Supreme Courts. 3 8 ly. j AVID 15 ELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Enfield, X. C. I'i iii'tices m all the Courts of Halifax a:. a Ij-.in'ng counties and in a.e Su .m !hf ;i.ri'l Federal Courts. Claims col- tci in all parts of the State. 3 8 ly. w. A. DUNN, A T T O K N E Y A 1 LA W, Scotland Neck, N, C, practices wherever his services are 'o ; Hired. febl3 ly. 'y 11. K ITCH IN, ArioiiNEY anl Counselor at Law, Scotland Neck, N. (J. PZ Otiice: Corner Main and Tenth 1 5 ly. l:.o. 1U kton, Jk. E. L, Travis, BURTON & TRAVIS. A i'ltiKNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW, HALIFAX, N. C. '.V.lLOAV, Weld'Mi. R. ransom, weldon. DAY, & RAiNSOM. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Weldon, N. C. ;- S ly. I.J. MERCER & SON. No. 1 u South 'Jth St. (bet. Main & Cary Sts. RICHMOND, VA. umber Commission erciiarit, - .ernal n.nd prompt attention i c;.::-.:jTjiHn;nts of Lumber, Shingles, K:.- 4-17-90 I v. A NAruHAL KEMEDY FOR Epilt j t;c Fits, Tailing Sickness, Hyster ic SL Vitus Dance, Nervousness, Hypochondria, Melancholia, In-e-hrity, Sleeplessness, Diz ziness, Brain and Spi nal Weakness. T tri tii . Of ! i- medicine has direct action upon i" cantors, allaying all irritabili- ii i increasing the tlow and power ' IV-.- tluid. It is perfectly harmless Laves no unpleasant effects. FREL A Valuable roofc Nervous Diseases sent tree to any adnrews, aril iiiMir patients car. also obtain this medicine free of charge. Tj.; I'l. t. I MM 5 r mr- iy has been prepared by the lleverend r ruruii. ot Tori Wayne, Ind., since 1ST8, and rr p-irt.-d Uiulcrhis direction by the XGENSC friED. CO.. Chicago, III. Sold by Dniffstf sts at 8 i per Dottle. 6 for 83, l--ire Size, S1.75. G Hottles for S9. a Chirleston. S. C, by C. F. Iledrich. King and George St. 6-11-ly. "Tas. h. bell .1 EWE LEU AND RAILROAD -WfiTCH INSPECTOR. o f 3 lh,M (3 O O S c 'C c ea a. s a 1l"'-s I'anes, Kubber Stamps, Seals, 1'iiEssns, &c, ciiEAr.-v Nudity of d00(s guaranteed. Work guaranteed. Repairing promptly 'one. Try us. Bible De pository Kibles and Testaments at cost. "Mv 2 ARB OHO, A'. 6. VET -1 wmm m nonii;a .s iivmjs. Such beautiful, beautiful hands! They're neither white nor Email. And you, I know, would scarcely think mat they were fair at all I've looked on hands whose lorm and hue A sculptor's dream might be; Yet are those aged, wrinkled hands Most beautiful to me. Such beatiful, beautiful hands! Though heart were weary and sad, These patient hands kept toiling on, That the children might be glad. The tears well forth, as, looking back To childhood's distant day, I think how these hands rested not While mine were at their play. Such beautiful, beautiful hands! They are growing feeble now, For time and pain hare left their work On hand and heart and brow. Alas', alas: how near the time Of pain and loss to me, When 'neath the daises out of eight, Those hands will folded bo. Dut, oh! beyond the shadow land, Where all is bright and fair, I know full well tlu ,e dear old hands Will palm3 of victory bear. Where crystal streams through ecdless years Flow over golden sands, And where the old grow young again, I'll clasp my mother's hands. Well, Yes, Sometimes so. (Exchange.) That was an eidtor of viried ex perience versed in all the 'Tubs" and vicissitudes of the profession who wrote the follovmg with a "heart that knowelh its own bitter ness :" Most, editors are well acquainted with the man who takes more papers than be read.-i, and consequently has no use fY.r his local pap--r. lie taken a pnper ,u Wished i:. Portland, Maine. It eoata ns ail the i.ew the "Sinnggier's Lst Cruise," " Th Adventures of Moose the B-itidit King,' etc., and while he is storing his mind with such information hi wife reads back-number almanacs. But let him get into trouble, he rushes to the local pnuer to help him out, and wants it bad. If his babj or wife dies he wants a colnrrn obit uary, yet be cannot help his local paper by fubgcribing. This is also the man who wants a fifteen-line local i-uiT in your paper just to fill up, ; on know . Cost of Growing Corn. (N. Y. World.) A Kansas farmer has figcred out the co?t of ticre. of corn as fol lows: To plant and cultivate an acre of corn with the implements now in ase requires jnst three-quarters of a day, To mature an acre of corn now, at $2.50 a day for & man and team, you have $1.81$. It will cost $1.50 to put it In a crib, so you see to mature and crib an acre of corn it costs $3.37. Now add to this $2.50 for interest on $25 in vested in land, aod you have $5.87. Now take your crop of this year, which ?ill average forty bushels, at 30 cents a bushel, aod yoa have $12, a net profit of oyer $cj per acre left. LEMON ELIXIR. Pleasant, Elegent, Reliable. For biliousness and constipation, take Lemon Elixir. For fevers, chills and malaria, take Lemon Elixir. For sleeplessness, nerysusDess and palpitation of the heart, take Lemon Elixir. For indigestion and foul stomach, take Lemon Elixir. For all sick nd nervous headaches, take Lemon Elixir. Ladies, lor natural and thorough or ganic regulation, take Lemon Elixor. Dr. Mozley s lemon Elixir win noi fail you in any of the above named dis eiiKes. all of which arise from a torpid or diseased liver, stomach, kidneys or bowels. Prepared only by Dr. II. MozLEY, Atlanta, Ga. 50c. and $1.00 per bottle, at druggists. LEMON HOT DROPS Cures all Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Hemorrhage and all throat and lung diseases. le g.int, reliable. 25 cents at druggists. Prepared only by Dr. FI. Vozlev, Attanta. Ga. 4-30-91 FITS. All Fits stopped free by Dr Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Ho Fits after fit day's use. Marvellous cures Treatise $2,00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St. Philadelphia, Pa The Democrat Free! To every person who sends ns a club of five sub scribers we -will give THE DEMOCRAT Free. Cash must accompany the list of names. If the subscrp tioiis are to run a Year the free copy will be sent a Yearior for anytime the subsriptions run- THE GREAT SALT LAKE. THE LEAD SEA OF AMERICA. BY F. DON AN, The most wonderfai feature of all this tonr, the mightiest marvel of aIlmarvellon8 Utah, and ocean of majestic mystery clad in beauty divine, Is Great Salt Lake, the American Dead Sea. Think of a lake from twenty-five hundred to three-thousand square miles in area, lying a thousand miles inland, at an altitude of four thousand, two hundred and fifty feet above the seA level, whose waters are six times as salt as those of the ocean; and, while it has no outlet, four large rivers pouring their ceaseless floods of fresh water into it without raising its mysterious surface a fraction of an inch, or even dimin ishing, so far as chemical analysis can determine, its indiscnbable saltness. Where does all the water go ? Where does all the salt, that no streams can freshen, come from? here are the vast saline maga zines from which it draws its ever lasting supplies ? One may stand upon its shores and ask a thousand ouch questions, but no answer comes from its mysterious dephts, in which nothing lives bnt death and silence. When, in February, 1846, twenty thousand Mormons, under the leadership of Brigham Young, start ed from Nauvoo, Illinois, on their two thousand-mile pilgrimage through the trackless wilderns of the American West, they pioclaim ed themselves the modern Israel in search of the prooiu-ed land. It was a strange fate, or destiny, or Providence, that led them to a region so similar to the "Land of Promise" of Israel of old. There, the lake of Gennesaret, or sea of Galilee, was fresh water and full of fish. The Jordon River flowed out of it and emptied into the Dead Sea, which is so salt and acrid that no liviug thing is found in Its waters. Here, Provo or Utah Lake is fresh and sweet, and its limpid waters swarm with speckled trout and other fish as .savory as any that tramed the nets of Peter, James and John. Out of it flows the Mormon River Jordan, and after rambling for forty or titty miles through orchards and meadows grain fields and gardens, pours its t-ilvery tide into Great ISalt Lake, the saltiest body of water on the globe, surpassing even its Judean counterpart by one and a half per cent. In the Holy Land the Jordan flows from north to the south, while the Utah Jordau flows fioui south to north. Mount Nebo stood like a giant sentinel overlooking the ancient "land flowing with milk and honey," and here Mount iNebo, lifting its crown of eternal snow twelve thousand feet heavenward, stands guard forever over a fairer Canaan than Moses viewed, but never entered. Salt Lake was once as large as Lake Huron, and was over a thou sand feet deep. Its lormer benches and the marks of its olden wave plashing are as plain upon the mountain-benches as though traced but yesterday. It is now about a hundred miles long, with an aver age width of from twenty-five to thirty miles. It is from fifty to sixty miles wide in some places, aud its greatest depth is about sixty feet. Its waters contain eighteen per cent, of solid matter, mostly salt and soda, with small proportions of sulphur, magnesia, calcium, chlorine, bromine, potas sium, lithia and boracic acid. The Asiatic Dead Sea water coutains! twenty.turee per cent, of solids,! including less salt and soda and much more magnesia, calcium and potassium than Salt Lake. Atlantic ocean water holds but 3 .5 per cent, of solid material, of which salt con stitutes 2.7 per cent. Hundreds of thousands of tons of salt are made by natural evaporation along the shores of the lake, and at one place near Salt Lake City a wiudy night never fails to pile up many tons of soda, eliminated by the movement of the waves . Salt Lake is a hundred miles long, and has an average width of 27 miles; that gives an area of 2, 700 square miles. There are 27, 87S,400 square feet in a mile; so the lake has an area of 75,271,680.000 souarefeet. Take 20 feet as its .A average depth; then 20 times 75,- 271,G690,0O? will give us 1,605,433, 600,000 cubic feet as the contents or the lake. Now 10? per cent., or one sixth of this, according to the analysis of eminent chemitp, is salt and sulphate of sod. That is, the lake courainine, 230,905,6 O.fiOO cubic feet of salt and sulphate of soda. Ot this vast mass one tigbth 18 sulphate of soda and seven eightu common salt. A cubic foot ot sulphate of soda weighs 50 pounds, and a cubic foot of common salt, 80 pouuds; po we bave, as the contents, in part, of this unparalleled reservoir of wealth, 1,568,160.000,000 pouund, or 784,080,000 tons of sulphate of soda, at1 18,570,339,200.000 pound.-, or 8,780,178,600 tons of salt. AN owing ten tons to a car-load, that would be 78,408,000 cars of sodn. and 878,016,969 cars of salt. Taking 30 feet as the total length of a freight car and its couplings, we would have a train of soda 445,500 miles long, or nearly to the moon and bacK; and a train of salt 4, 988,730 miles in length, or long enough to reach 196 times around the earth, and leave an 8,000 mil- string of cars over on a side track Running 20 miles an hour and never stopping night or day. it would take the salt-laden train 28 years, 5 months and 23 days to pass a station. The sea bathing in Great Salt Lake infinitely surpasses anything of the kind on either the Atlantic or Pacific coasts. A first bath ii it is always as good as a circus, thij bather being his or her own trick mule. The specific gravity is hut a trifle less than that of the Iloh Land Dead Sea, the actual hguu- with distilled water as unity being, for the ocan 1.027, for Salt Lak I 107, and lor the Dead Sea 1.116 The human body will not and can not sink in it. Yon can walk ont in It where it is fifty feet deep, and your body will stick up out of it like a fishing cork from the sbonlders upward. You can sit down in it perfectly secure where it is fathoms deep. Meu lie on top of it with their arms crossed under their beads and smoke their cigars. Its buoyancy is indescribable aud nnimagiaable. Any one can float npon it at the first, trial ; there is nothing to do but lie down geutly upon it and float. lint swimming is an entirely different matter. The moment you begin to "paddle your own canoe" lively and to the lookers on mirth-provoking exer cises ensue. When you stick our hands under to uinlte a stroke your feet decline to stay anywhere bnt on top; and when, after an exciting tussle with your refractory ped:.l extremitios, yon again get them beneath the surface, your hands fly out with the splash and splutter of a half-dozen flatter wheels. If, on accountof your brains being heavier than your heels, you chance to turn a somerset and your head goes under, your heels will pop up like a pair of frisky did ipper ducks. You can not keep more than one end ol yourself under water at once, but you soon learn how to wrestle with its novelties and then it becomes "a thing of beauty," aud a joy for any summer day. The water does uot freeze until the thermometric mercury tumbles down to eighteen degrees above zero, or fourteen be low the ordinary freezing point. It is as clear as crystal, with a bot tom of snow-white sand, and small objects can be distinctly seen at a depth of twenty feet. There is not a fish or any other living thing In all the twenty-five hundred or three thousand square miles of beautiful and mysterious waters, except ti e yearly increasing swarms of sum mer bathers. Nor a shark or a stlngaree to scare the timid swim mer or floater, not a crab or a craw fish to nip the toe of the neivous wader, uot a minnow or a frog, tadpole or a pollywog nothing that lives, moves, swims, crawls or wiggles. It is the ideal sea-bathing place of the world. (jood Looks. Good looks ure more than ekin deep, depending upon a healthy con dition of all the vital organs. If the Liver be inactive, you h.ve a Bilous Li k, if your stomach be dis ordered you have a Dyspeptic look n:d if yoar kidneys be affected you have a PiDched Look Secore good health and you will have good looks Eitctric Bitters is tbe great altera tivt- and Touic a.ts directly on these vital organs. Cures Pimples, Blotches. Boils and gives a sood coB,.ixiun. Sold at F. T. White head & Co'8 Drugstore, oCo. per buttle. AN OPEN LETTER TO THE BOYS SOME POINTED REMARKS. READ AND PROMT (N C. Baptist. I have heeri noticing yoi latflv. mr borf sod I think a word or tro in regard to yoar enndact will not e ont of place. And you need r.nt cry "old fogy" rithpr, as you are c enstomert to do when advi?ed b those of mature rears, and wboe minds are stored by years of ex perience, for if yoa huppeo to know me you will remember that I'm nut out of the twenties myself. Fir6t, mv bey, you are sadly de ficient in your mnaners. Yoa may know etiquette well eoooeb to laugh at the blunder? of others, but r nl genuine politeness is but little un derstood by the youDg folks of to day. When jou spoke o that plain old farmer the other day about the weather, you did it with a patroniz ing air that wuld have been offen sive to any one but a gentleman like him. You looked exactly like you thought that wau all that be knew t- talk ahoo. Why bless you, my boy, you'll never find a man in this world but who knows sorrething you don't, and because you have borrowed a few ideas of uooie :rent authors, you need not think your self b'-tter than other folks on that account. For a boy to think wi ll of himself, in self respect; bat for him to think better than be ought to id self-conceit. Don't think your self better than others just beeuusu you happen to know whnt it took some one eurs o! toil : nd labor u (i"d out and rnkv plain enoagh for hiotikheads to l-arn. Don't do it. If jou are not t,shsmeO ol yourself for it, other people are; and I would rather have a less opinion of myseif than any one else would have of in. Young people are getting very wise in their own conceit now-a-days, which is only a pclite way of calling one a fool. Another thing I don't like to sei aht.ut joa is the want of respeet 30U show to the aged. I noticed Uu other tlay when you were in eompan that you ignored them altogether. I don't suppose they would have en joyed your comptn v any more than you would theirs, unless yoa hav iu roved in to:r conversation of late. They are not up to the latest slang, and ) our fruall talk is too d tianutive for their failing sense?. "Birds of a feather will flock to gether,', bat I would advise you to flock by yourself awhile till you learn to pay due respect to the o!d. Their ways may be old-rashioned, b'it not any more so than yours will be to the coming generation. You may happen to think about all of tMi- in years if come, and if you do y u can just remember that I told you so. I have noticed too that you hav acquired a yocahulary that is a sort of first cousin to profanity. Ami you sreni to taKe a natural frer-horn American prido in using it on any osca-don. OT course it feels might b . in you to emphasize jour state mnts hv such expletives, ani I don't deny but that ihey may need some tort of emphasis either. But, mi b , rem' mber that, besides heiDg sinful, (and yoa know it is as wt-il a I do.) it shows that you think that a simple statement of yours is not snfliuent of itseli to be believed without being emphasized and sworn to, and thereby ou ackuowledg yourself a liar, or that you belive otLer people thiok you are. Per Qp3 you have never thought ahout it in that way. Again, I fear you have lost some or our revfcrerce for religion if you fcv r had much. You remember how you aeted at church the other Sun day. I was heartily ashamed of y'!. You looked and acted as if i were an attair gotten up for yoor own amusement. I don't believe you remembered any of the sermon. tint vou did look relieved when the preacher got through. I don't know where you went or what you did after services, but it is reasonable to suppose ou did cot behave ati better than you did at church if as well, and if you didn't I don't war.t to know anything about yoa the rest oT the diy. I would say something to you about tobacco and whiskey, but yoar teacher is dow required to do that, and 1 hope will do bis dut In that respect. 1 doubt very much if you ever read Highest of all in Leavening Porr. 1 v.. &v2sm AESCUUTELY PURE this letter anywny, for such an ex cellent paper as the Biitist t tul at all yoar style of literature. Per baps yoar parents will Iboagb, ani if they do and recogDiz you, soar good may come of it. I must close now and wntc to yoar sister, for to tell thr truth. there is room for improvement id her behavior. Your truf fru-nd, 1). P. M c Don a i d Swann's Station, N. C, Improving Land With Peas. (Southern Cultivator.) W know of no plan of ininrov- ing land that is bltrr tnan tb'it hich involves the culli vnimu of Iht- cow pea as a principal factor. Com mencing at this tluie of the e?r, there is no crop that tan he nir.de on the land before the time to eas . We would break the Ui.d well, flash, and sow in p as about the 15th to last of May, at the rtic of oue bushel of clean hound i e;s er acre, broadcast, applying at the same time about 200 pounds of ac-nl ihosphate per acre. 'I he poas .m d acid phosphate may bt sown and covered in with a cut-a-wny hnrrow, followed by a smoothing harrow, ro s to leave the burface in j-r j t r coudition to use a mower. We think the whippoorwill or common speck It d M0n ftliniit HQ fTil oq a n v ami Iia. ing a buuch pes the vines are more easily harvested. When the pess are Dioommg ireeiy is tne prop r a i . . time to mow for hay. You n.uy then 6ow the land in oats in Septra- )er, or very early in October, using a litcrnl application of aid plu.a. phate, cotton seed meal and kaiit, say one thiid each the oats to te harvested next May to .June, and followed again with peas. Or you may sow to rye in September, u ing half bushel of eeid per acre, and covering not too deep. Tbc rjc may be grazed during the winter wLen the grojtid ii not too wet, ami turn ed under in Marc'i. and the land planted in corn in April. This metuo 1 will reaovite the land rap idly, and at the Mine time econo mically. What, is lacking is truth and conOdence. If there were absolute truth on the one hand absolute con fidence on the other it woaldn't he necessary for the makis of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy to back op a iilain i.ttitiimpnt tf fort Ii 17 a .ri('f) ( Hull oik-I IUT ink 1'.-. l.- guarantee. They say "If we caf.' t u,,MiM r.-..c ir it I en! p,p. r (m -cure you (make it personal rdet.se) ,,;r ,,l3t- ;t '""M " ' -t of catarrh in the head, in any foi m or stage, we'll pay you $."00 for your irouuie id tuahirg u;e ui. ''An advertising fake you say. Fun uy, isn't it, how some people prefer sickness to health when the remedy is positive and the guarantee abso lute. Wise men don't put money back of "fakes." And "faking" doesn't pay. Magical little granules tl one t'n, sugar coated Pellets of Dr.j Pierce scarcely larger than mui-j tard seeds, j et powerful to c-jrt---! actne yet mild in operation. The, best Liver Pill oyer invented. Cutej sick headache, dizziness, constipa-j tion One a dose. ; 1'ioiioiint'fil lloi-l Hir 'I. Vr I From a letter written by Airs. Ada K. Hurd, of G rotor), S. D., wp quote:; "Was t..koi with a bad cold, whiti. i settleo on my Luugn, cough set in and fir allv terminated in l, neom j pt'on. Foar doctors e-ve tne op' saying I could live but "hort t;:ne- I gave myself up to my Saviour, de. termined Sf I c;nll not stay with my, friends on earth, I would meet my absert ones aboe. My husband vr .3 u vised to pf. Dr. Kir, New Ui-jtoverj for Con-orr ption, Coaghs 3i; t Colds.? gave it a trial, took in all, tight bott'len; it has cund me and thank Gd I am now a well a'd hearty wotuan." Trial Ultles free at E T. Whitehead & Go's Drug store, regalar sire, 50c. $1.00 Aug. 1 7. 1D A Ln rowdier 0NEWuRD. I romp to y0 wiih m!l fi T 1 r lLt )ou tiny nrn1. In Kn-Un I, t! Cor.llrm! ard many forta v-oon Im-, mystif and ware tc !! kt... . NNnv Anu rtri?i f, ;, .r tl.tir return from lrt.vi tint. my nrtu-!.'- w i'h the in. tot Ui" know lh ni j re ! y -1 V, t'-.it ou tr. ;.,. t.- mu 1.' j hi e . Coeh ler.t b-t nr.Mi m a rt hi I tnr Is alow of c rowt I , t wl.t-u :,.un I. its rarity uinke- it vsljabip. your contidi'nce to thi Joun.nl to endorse that cr,Jld-ni o. I ,,( think It mil br tniitj .I. I ti.tikc the fret for m of a curr r absolute onr for tl!:Ut!.r arid hradacta that cti fojnd in (tita year. Tti ii;;f ! no n;n!l . iri-!f atid yd Uh comfort t on ii .r, t, 20 minute Leing lU hrim n !.,:, relief tomctt thnt it ;U. btcoti... n,,. marvel of time. ()i,e r,d a tn!f gr.tlnit of medicn.r, iom, 1 i;h ug!.r, h ui remedy, in the of one mi all pill, know n to ,,-,unn r. , ba I)::. H.w Do- k' Ni; I. J pj.I.. It is ol 1 in the mrirki 1 1 of K.uo. but i t-.ew to North America I he price is as !owmhii honrat Uiittuji.e ran bo pold nt. c. m. S,Ml ) a poital c-rd for a viu to fy them, before you purcb f . Kach vitt roiilaiu Uu.iv Imi. . ,Vncc lWCUtl-fivi- Ct ei. I x. , hy (,ru.,,.ul. Send a foHtfil Car. r f a if poatal card for k- of pamphlet ''The liv r rm I it ma. tery." It tut niahft valuable mfor tiiU'lo!) to all. IIAYI Of'K CO., !V.tmi !., 1 7 l r. i w Vork. DO YOC RlvU7 assets srarraBsrcMcca rr-xzsen-M C IF SO, I HIS ( l .K l.s i ' INTKNDI:!) I ol; r ii' ( voi: v W have made special arranp'-riir.ti' nl 1 1 1 ) Weekly Constitut ion, The (ireat Southern WY kl. : Piihli-he-i at Atlanta, bv -vh enabled to i.flcr it wifh mt pj YKAK for only til ..- I I n only a short whilr. Nm i. v. 'i or i.si; '.'br It it I luliri' tO Brit r1 IlfW llf uil tl..- w your horn paper Pir the j tin- ! in paprr. Krery rluhhir.g fcub-cr ipi i u t th:n Tlr ! entit!' 'I to a ' banc m l it i ( on m n l'tion'k eio,oi.:j p,,.,. p, t , ,,, ,,, for lKfrJ, dettil- of which v.. i ,ur.l clso w hero. 'I'hi- is th- mM n n.arkal U ii.b'nii- iiin hi - :n r II e i'h ll,r- . t u , f i r r. w ; - f iIm- wo, ;') ai'l i r I I ' hnir. -t t ). ci j i '-u ' rj rr - t I" L- 1 I V ( 'o I -I I I It . J i ,i,,n,1( (-aj at!,j i'J.O'io. $150 Gets Both P).n r:; H. G. JO? ffnitra'-uir anl HuiMer, C ir.trai'! tikr n for ALf. ''.' oijildint, Huif'K or Wi.ori, . .-tiperin'end. bv the i.t'. v Oi c ' i a !- -fd t: male I'lati at'! - i n- r r.-fijiiv iua ) an! ; : 1 otlC" I'ruci made u:t 'Ve t . Pr'-k-1-of ! ; v; . Far : toll ii' r. o 1 m 1 1 (l h r I j ' 1 U : rl'i'i, ; -!r rt notice a '- l i-v. i t .-. I dVf n.pl.-. .. .i 1 ! .'..VP 'LA S tii.ner and wh'-n in I i hi rig ir, that line I woul t ri.d 'o gltej yu jiriCeM. II. ;. JONKS. I'. O. lr,X r7. SUOTLAMi NKCK. N '. 10 24 tf Executor's Notice- ir,lT-L'rir"l haviri? tliis'!v pn!i- ;ir 1 a . xt. utor ol -J l. Wtfit-. r., -!e- CC-a '- i. I" f T- f cl'T: of th? .-up M t C-ostof Halifax rour.tv. hereby u .ufiea , all rs s havifi unit ajrio t u : raid j, p w r ent t'itta to '.he lit Js-r-ipn..-'! on. v a V i.'-.cal- i ou! V a ,t-- ! '! on or b f' re th- H. t 'lav of M . . !-'.J : n,-. nut c ili be pi in i -ir of rt' ov-ry. a:i 1 j . . . i at r per -or. , iii. !: m t !'!t-teI t" !.i- ' ariy pa v. t :.t. I I' IV i-L i.- - V ., .-r, t if Halifax. N. C. i -V I' '' a-K. -r April Cth. ''Si. ( O ''t- el!n? a toni'', or ch.r. n v-Kowaxit t-'il- V II.' lip. '!'' '1 tf BltOH'.VH IIIO- HUTKHa. It U rieuuirit ; cure. Mai.in. lifli,.-.i.n. UUiuJaie. Uver U'U-Il l ifl ni-'l W-Xi S I
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 5, 1892, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75