Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Sept. 1, 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 m rf IH ; ) M W ( 1 lHs A Y -g 'niLLlA-RV' Editor and Propiretor ,, I i. S I O N A L. D N.'-ir'Ji corner New Hote tfi S mtla.ni' Neck, N. C. t'u-v-. -it his office when not i , , , 'rtv-'f;(l cl-evhcre. I V H II M A N, D I . !- ,i - 'i i ) n i c mil uict la fljTU i- 12 IV- ;-' OTLAND Neck.'N. C. . . t 1 I I I T atk)KNi:y at law, Halifax, N. C, i Unlifax and adjoining ' v,.i'ii,e Federal and Supreme cour.iu- a.i.i 3 Sly. d AV1I 1 i l oUNKY AT LAW, Enkieli, N. C. ill the Courts of Halifax r.,i,ntits and in ii-e Su- t;n'- ' Yk-ial Courts. Claims col- r.nme a"'1 oi" the State. 3 h ly. ATTU1UKY A F LA VV, st iiTi.ANU Neck, jN, C, , ........ wlv.-rcvcr his services are feh!3 ly. . ..... v. ii. ki rcniN. 1 y .......... .... . Ol I IAT yM mini Neck, N. C , . r ,, 'urm-r Main and Tenth R.U. lU'KK'N, J.. E. L, TRAVIS, BURTON & TRAVIS. Ai iokm:v and Counselors at Law HALIFAX, N. C. 14 ly. U.K. HAY. Wildon. K. HANSOM, Weldoil. HAY, k RANSOM, A TTOUN KYS A V LAW, '.Vkldon, N. C 1..!. mi:kcer& SON- KliiS'-ut's St,(!);-t. Main Cary St. lil'JIIMDND, VA. Pumbep Commission Mercrjanf. ('t:vts foT-.-nal ami prompt attention to aI ii'l' 'isHifitts of Lumber, Shingles, Lv..-. r.- 4-17 no lv. Ji-IA'l K V LAN I). Ryland iano and No. 10 3ovenoi' St- Lowest re, 1 Ann Guaranteed. Kl- 11 iill. liftMrt H.f piihlic for '-rs. Ni tity I wo t i : 1 1 s a n 1 1 ' . 1 " t u. ado for the Monev. A;NEir .nailc for Ryhiod & Cin ,j, utoib-rate price li(M.;KR. !l ' tn S)iit,1: U Ul.rT - ''mi,-. 1 ... rfrl!lO t! HI US i' w Vote v . A no fV: " '.K. sWeet '. ''f;"- ! J .Vjle i!id Organ A LARGE STOCK OF Second-Hand Pianos and Organs ALWAYS ON HAND AND BARGAINS SOLD. .'.! us yoor order, lim.t as in price and we will meet yonr wishes. l: for ca:h, or on installroents. Catalogues and Prices furnished ' H'l'lication. 2 Cm. 'WIN CITY STENCIL WORKS. STENCILS, SEAL PRESSES AND GENERAL ENGRAVING KUUHEU STAMPS, BRASS CHECKS, &C, Manufactured to Order i f v p S'B- BURNER &UOM s?.thp.Roro& 7 21 6m- Norfolk, Va. SUIICIIME TO THE STATE CHRONICLE. Ii A L E I (J H, n, rj. DAILY AND WEEKLY- Latest Telegraphic news from all parts of the world. (By United Press and Special V ire.) Has the largest daily circulation in the State. Has snore State correspondents than any other daily in the State. Twelve Months. $G.OO Six Months $3!oO Three Months $l!sfj Weekly, $1 25 per year, in clubs of five or over $1 00 T. R. JERNINGAN, Editor, li. '.V. LitciifokD, Manager. ENGINES MILLS- Threshing Ma 3 Lines- Best .itichi.tery nt Lovjest Prices. A- i FARUUIIAK CO , YORK- VA 5 -2ij 13t. 5C !i-d hi .:t tm.it v! 1)0'T 7tII lar, Kratler. Tr.o majority cejdect their op-pnrtuniti.-s, and frum tlint cruise live in povrty and die in obscurity ! llrrcn nip ieipair is the i..t vf many, as they lock baok on lost, f.iruvcr l"t. ij.;ortnnity. I.il'e ia pans !i( ! lU-ach out. lie up and dniii'. I inprove your opporta nity. mid secure pro!iTit.v. proii.inpric.". pnaoe. It was said by a pliilosopli-r, tlist "liio i.o.Uk'-n nf Kortune offers a E"lloii oppoi tunity to ea.-li ).,: sou nt some peiiod of life; eiuliracF the cliance, aini !n- pnn out lier rirlies ; fail to do so and she departs. hi .1 to return." How rhiill you find the GOi.nLN I'vi'iirtunity? Investi'tte every chance that :.ppr:tra woi thy. and of fnir promi.e; that is what all anc ce.sful men do 1 1 i, an opportunity, sucii as is not often within the rc.n.-h o- ialn.rinjr po''!)le. I mproved. it will give, atlca-t, a in and staitip lift". Tb.o ghi.diis opportunity for many is hnre. Inry . he ma.io lapidly and iionorably hy any industrious person t-f eith-r fr-x. All aos. You can io the work and live at home. w!ht fvor vou are. Kren he ;;iniu'rs are oasily paruiiiij lrom to SIO per iiay. Yoo (.an Jo well if yo'i v. ill irork. m.t t, o hard, hut iii'iadtrl i nsly ; and 3-ou can i:irroase your income as you goon. Yoa can j;ive sparo tlmo only, or all your time to the work. Easy to learn, 'a.tal not rc inired. Wo r.t;.rt vou. AHiscom-r-arativoly new -aiol roai-ly voniiTul. 'e instruct and viow yon luiir. fi-e. l'ailuro unknown ninonp onr work rs. So room to explain ho;-". W'sito ami Irrun all fre. ny rot fit n iu::i. L'nwise to ilolay. A 'llri-?s at once. II. alullett Co., II 01 8SO, Ioi thinU, Muiue. 17 12 lv. .'nl ia t !,! oniv "afc.tntard. In . - .),..,., i'i:l cl. nr.ii r New from yntirdrnggi't r-a t- Amn'hT-''l'T bv mai 1 lor loo. .rir sac:.1? !'so?S!rrou mmaciv,n.v 12 18 lv K. 1? LEE. fe Lee, ealers Bichmond , Va- CWA -IMMENSE STOCK New and Second HAND SI" HUBERT. The best Low-Pnced 1'iario on trie market. Contains all the moriprn 1 raproy eruents BliADlUJRY PIANO, Rich and now erful in ii.nf. Honestly made. Reasonable in price- New mode of stringi g. Pipe Organs. Sample in ware'rootn. Will pay ex press to Richmond and return if church repersen ative buys aPipe Organ. A RYLAWD LEE, RICHMOND, VA.- SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. THURSDAY. t Wilson Mirror.) "When a man has been railroadm twenty lonf; years He gits kinder hardened an tough, An' scenes of affliction don't trouble him much, 'Cause his natur' is coarse like and tough. But a scene that took place on my train one cold night Would a' melted the heart of a stone. An' among the adventures which I have been through That night jist stands out all alone, 'Twas a bitter cold night, an' the train was jam full, Every berth in the sleeper was taken: The people had jist turned in for e night, An' the train for New Tork was a rnakin,' When jist as the people to a enoie had begun, An' I with satisfied sigh Had sat down on a chair for a short rest, I heard The sound of a young baby '6 cry. "It was one o' those loud, aggravatin' like yells. O' the pattern that makes you jist itch For a gun or an axe an' excites up your mind With mild thoughts o'murder 'an sich, It went through the car, and I need't rts mark That the snorin' stopped right there an' then, An' th sleeper was tilled with a bilm hot crowd O' mad women and wild, swearin' men. " The curtains jist then that concealed beith 16 Were open an' out come a man, A.s fine a young feller as ever I seen, IJut his face was all white like an' wan. He carried the kid that was raising the row, An commenced walkin' down through the ai:lc A tiyin' to stop its loud screechin but phsa w! It seemtd to get wuss every mil. "An idea seemed to stnko on oid feller jist thtn An' he said to the pale faced young man, 'It seeroes to me stranger, that kid could be stilled Ry a finiple an' feasible plan; Tee noise that its makin' betrays what it needs ' " " The child wants its mother, that's plain; An' why don't you call her Ten chances to one. She's sleepin' somewhere on the train.' "A look then came over that young fath er's face, A look full of anguish an' pa:n; A look that will haunt me as long as 1 live, As long as I work on a train; An he answered that man, m a hoarse stifled voice That sounr'ed as though lrom afar; Iler mother is sleeping on beard of this train In a box in the baggage car." Exum and the Negro. The following teleram from Goldsboro shows Exum's political inclination : Gold ."Boko, N C, Au 25. Sev ral prominent Democrats, when i-wing here this evening in the , rt sence or "Governor" Exum the .ood done in this Stnte nnder thi PHKt and present Democratic admin, istration and thn danger that thre tl i ns us in the eveDt of Harrison's election, which undoubtedly meaut t Torce bill and negro supremacy, ceived the following response fn rr ti e Wtaverite candidate : "I rotu r would prefer negro rule or any hing to the rule we have had here tofore." These are the exact words ut'ered by Dr. Exum, and will be sub atantiated by the editor of the Golds" boro Head Light, O. J. Rlyerbank, Gold8bor ; Jaf. M. Oliver, Prince ton; G. W. Pegram, Petersburg, Va. and others. Since it3 utterance the Doctor is sb:k. politically sick. Oiir Old I'ire Company. "That was a gay old company that we belonged to, Joe, away back in '63, when yoa and I 'rn with the machine. Do you remember that big fire in Hotel Row, one freezing night, when fifteen people were pulled out, of their burning rooms and came down the ladder in their night-clothes; and how Dick' Greene brought, down two 'kid9' at. once one in his arms, the other slung to his back? Poor 'Dick'! lie got the catarrD dreadfully, from so much exposure and suffeied from it five years or more. We thought once he was going in consumption, sure. But, finally, he heard of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and it cured him up as sound as a flint. I tell you, Joe, that catarrh remedy is a areat thine;. It saved as good a man and as brave a fircmaa as ever trod shoe leather." "rvnTLNiliR'' IS Ot.'li MUITO. :IT TELLS. WORK IS THE THING. N't Til I NO ELSE CAN DO IT. Selected. This world 19 rnn in a great meas ure by work. The farmer, mechan ic, lawyer, and all the other men who amount to something on this mundane sphere, have worked. It may be with the hands or with the head, that Is immaterial. The young man who starts out in life with the idea that father has done his share for him, will find out his mistake, especially after father dies. The young girl who Is continually idle will never amount to anything. It is a recoirnized fact that a girl has her place in the world as well as ber brother, where that place shall be is determined to some ex tent by herselt. All rich men's daughters are not idlers, many are trying to do something in some par ticular work for which they have ability. The student sometimes longs lor the bustle and activity ot outside life, yet ha is as truly a worker, if be atteuds to his studies, as any in life's crowded arena, he is prepare iug for a life of usefulness. There are so many kinds of work that we are olten in doubt as to what Is best adapted to our needs and means. Did yoa ever think of it? What a vast amount of work is going on in this world every day ? And the number of bller.s'sometimes fright ens me; many of them with strength and taleut enough to make them selves famous. This age might al most be called a lazy one 1 Per haps you aie not surprised, but look at the people who try to amass fortunes without work; who specu late iu ways ail more or less dis honorable; who scheme for power. It isn't work which wears such peo ple out, but excitement. The true worker is never satisfied with him self, but constantly sees something bjyoud which seems better than anything he is capable of doing. "Do the duty that lies nearest you," doesn't mean the first agreea ble duty, but is generally found to be a disagreeable one. I don't believe in overwork; "burn ing the candle at both ends," as It were, that isn't a duty, it isn't deal ing fairly by yourself. Life wasn't meant to be all work; no indeed ! we should grow old before our time if that were the case. Rest ami plriy me essential to keep brain and b ind quick and capable, if not. con stantly strained they will soon break and become worthless. Work for independence, lor pows er, tor fame, for the loved ones, no matter, so long as the object and the means taken to attain that end are fair and houorable. Who are the groat in the world? Great in litvratuie, musio, the arts, great diseouisere, reformers, philanthro pists! Those who have dug and delved in one way or another lor years and years. But you will say, "I may not see the results of my labor till my figure is bowed with age." It rs no such thing; you are reap.ng the results day ty day, if you will only notice them. "Rome wasn't built in a day,' but each day something new and beautitnl was added, till she feared her proud head in finished .grand eur. Thus m life, each day some thing is added, till, ere we know it time riies so swiftly, our part of the structure is completed, and the im plements of toil are laid down to be taken up by other hands. ir'im'M CaNfs, S. II. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., w.is troubled with Neuralgia and Rheumatism, bis Stomach was dis ordered, his Liver whs atTected to an al-irra'ng (!gree, appetite fell away, nnd he w is terribly reduced in flesh ;i! d strength. Thrfe bottles of Elec tric Bitters curid him Edward Shep herd, Harrisburg, 111., bai a running sure on his leg of eight years' stand ing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters anil seven boxes of Bucklen,s Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well, john Speaker, Catawba, O., had five large frVver Bores on nis leg. doctors said he was incurable. One bottie Electric Bitters ahd one box Buck!en,s Arnica Salv cured him entirely , Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co's Dru. Store VOMI S.VAYOHH pnoqs 'dn Sut saiuvi SEPTEMBER 1. 181)2. Whooping up Massacre Richmond Va.) Christian AdrocU. Albion W. Tourgee, known as tb writer of a number of book nhative of the South, and the ciginator of a magazine that was a miserable failare, consamiog in iu collapse all tbe money he had made by ITta vile writings, now prophfies that the negroes will rise ami butcher the Southern whites, justifies the matsa ere and joys In the prospect of the slaughter of men, women and cb.il dren. The negro ii not ?so snperla tire a brute and demon as ttiii white savage. Tourgee is an ex-convict, and drifted down to North Carolina with the carpet-big scorn of "Reconstruc tion Days" a period that makes an American blush at its mention, Thi penitentiary felon sets up fur a 'Jadge." If any person cares to canvass the career of tbe "Judge let him pass a day at Charlotte N. C. , and listen to any re spectable citizen. Tbe "Judge" was a thief on the bench, squeezing purses far and near, under pretense of fvrre8tint evil-doors. Whoever bad any ready money would s-Hn find himself in jail as a "KuKlux,'' and only to get out when his wallet was emptied. The "Judge" antagonized some other member of his band, who at once obtained all the "papers" In the Judge's trial, crime, conviction and service in the public work house of a Western State, and read them in the presence of the ' Judie," who never ottered a word, bnt sat with a hang-dog look to the end of tbe story. Such is Albion W. Tourgee. He is now out of pocket, out of a job. Why should he not crave another upheaval of society nt the Soutb? This cormorant, hungry and greedy, croaUs and clamors for shipwreck, slaughter ; prev that he mav gorge again on human woe. lie bos been found out at homp, ard is loathed by the pare and honorable. The exigencies of his decayed fort one have maddened, him, till, like the starving castaway, he seems to banquet on feasts that once deliebted his palate. Hence the ravening creature sees in his wild wishes, and shouts over "a massacre such as has not been paralleled since the French Revolution." The hideous crimes of tbe wretch have seized, him, torn off the veil from this "Prophet of Khorassan" and invited the world to spit on his forbidding nlceroue, stripped soul. Rather Late. Norfolk Virginian, Rather late in the day, Whitelaw Reid has taken Horace Greeley's advice and gone West. He will visit the old home down on the farm, and tlk over the stone bruises of boy hood days, but they were not a circumstance to what next Novem ber's frost bites will be to him. BEARS WATCHING. TNorfolk VirginanJ The Washington Post thinks there is abundant evidence that the Third partv In North Carolina is especially hostile to the Presidential nominees of the Democratic party, and tbe Post is right. The'State convention recently held at Raleigh manifested this hostility as well as an utter in difference to tbe risk of relegating the State to Republican rule. Whn Harry Skinner declined to accept the convention's nomination for Gov ernor except upon the condition that, "if the new movement should form a basis for a Republican conspiracy to get control of the State be should be left free to vote the straight Demo cratic tiket." a scene followed, the like of which has never been witness ed in the old North Stte, and as a result Col, Skmrer's nomination was withdrawn and another more wi! hnz than he to see his State disgrac ed was eelectad. The action of Colonel Skinner for the time being, was reassuring to the Democratic party, and be was applauded for the stand be assumed in the premises. But his subsequent action in accepting the nomination as an elector has greatly diminished Democratic confidence, as the Post says, and it goes without saying that Harry Skinner 6honld be watcned, It Is plainly evident that the Third party people in Carolina are hostile to the Presidential nominees of the Democratic party and that Skinner is with them to the end. 1 '''TT' ' TT,TT VOICES FROM HIS HOME. a rnoriiET is not without ho OH, ETC (lolliboro Aru. It is an old adage, we believe, and it so written, that " prophet la nv. er without merit save In his own county,''1 which is generally inter preted, that aocretimes a man tlaodt a Chanel wtiere b? is not kcown and this is why Dr. Hium icccvcJcd tu gettiog the Third Party nomlo tion for the Bret place on their Male ticket op al Raleigh. Bat bfott the Ides of Noveaibtr Dr. K.xora will be known throughout the length and bredth of North Carolina he will "tell It himself :" and then the peo ple will not want him for Goternoi and consequently will not vote fur him. He tas gone West now to be gin hi1 boom. Dr. Exum is a man of wealth: ac cordipK to his own statement he car ries around often as aoch as six thousand dollars on his per&on -mere pocket change, not to speak of his resources in re?ere such a twelve hundred bales of cotton brought over from other ycari, twenty-five hundred goats that he keeps purely for fertiliiiug purposes on bis farm, and among other tiling, too numerous to particolnriz, a fab ulous yoke of oxen that can pull 40,000 pounds on a wager. Dr. Exum, himself, is a man of srength a modern Milo, who wb just a little lews strong than Sim- son. He can lift a tbouan 1 pounds, with his own weight on top of U. With so much wealth and so much strength the Doctor can remlily meet all the (hjiiianrfis of his Third Party Constituency, and, therefor, the per plexlng queption of camoign fund, etc., etc., etc.. is at once settled : rhe Doctor 4 'he can pay the bills." But to come righl down to rea! serious consideration of tbe ThiM Party State Coontioc and the ticket they have put out, headed by Dr. Fxuin, it out-Radicila Rad icalism io its balmiest days of su preme sways over the destinies of North Carolina. It U made op this ticket is of some of tho very Radical thugs, that in those days. that "tried true men's souls." were in Ieagua with negroes and carpet bag harpies from the North for spoil? and for spoils only : and into thi- gang as a confrere and leader, whose purpose is to disrupt and destroy the Democratic party. Dr. Exum has gone, who then stood with us fur white supremacy and the untrmeled rights of Sontbern, men as ajr ntnt the encroachments and theivicgs ahd disfranchisements heaped upon ihern by the Republican party, with the power of its voracious greed ana sectional hate. Why Southern Farmers Should Vote Against Harrison. 3 Appeal-Avalanche. Because Benjamin Harrison is the father of che force bill. In his firf-t official communication with Congress he advocated the Federal control of elections and it was bis suzgestion that inspired Lodge, Reid and othpre to attempt the passage of the force bill. It means the minority control of elections in the .South. It means absolute minority rule from which the majority has no effective appeal. It means the appointment of republican chief supervisors atd republican canvassing board. It means two out of the three super visors at every polling place in the South will be republicans. It ruf-an even the appointment of non-resident supervisor?. It means that United States deputy marshal?, and even tbe United State army can be sum moned to uphold the authority of these non-resident sopt-rv hors ithe people should rebel against them. It means the enslavement of the South to a party having a minority In the Soutb. It would revive the outrages of reconstruction, Neithf-r by word nor cign has Benjamin Har r'son recanted his allegiance to the force bill. Where is the Southern farmer who thinks he can afford to make such a treasure possible by his vote? Proof Positive- (Roxboro Couerier) If any one doubts that Elias Carr is a ;;ood man. and one in all ways tittel to be Governor,Qe can have bis doubts removed by readiDg the Pro reasive Farmer, and th Clinton Caocasion just after the May Conven tion. Blessed and happy is tbe man who even meets the approval of his enemies. r is r . No II 'ii iomi i At tbe rrfcMi!4r Mmra io;r!i -i of lUvit IahIcp No. .;., a, V. A M at RotoU I, N.C, Fn Uv tbe Pifli divot Aan-t A. D. IVJJ. Hi in "'lut'on wpfc ntiinmuv It adptv1: To the M:cr, Nrd-u rd member of iUvse Iljjf Nv .ij A. F. M: Your committee to draft re..?t tbun of teect to our d"'.rd nn)!berj, s, (;iifiiti, ieve to v-lbnitt the following: Almighty God m Hi Infinite vu d ui Iu- seen giwx! to remote f 1011 oar midt our Ndoved brother John Sin'tiel Gri;lin, who after ati l!!new of a few w t,-e k, tiled at Im ieldem in Lewi-ton, Bertie Co.. N.C , i 1.'. fnincte p.W 2 o'clock, Saturday al ternono, Au;nt Idtb. A D., 1292, in tbe 17th 3 ear of hi age. The (t-rniinAtion of hl eiuthly exUtence was not unexpected to himself, and during hi lUne, he Hire hi bodily uitrrrlni with e iristUii p.itience and tolgnat inn, looking forward hiqefisK) to tie hour when the,,Uwir and merciful Fa her should c.11 bun Ipmuv, to t h it temple, wot made wi'b hand, eternal in the heacii. A 11 houet and useful cifien, A -.killlul pb vsicititi, a frne friend, over ready to do 11 reighttotly kliidne or deed of chanty, 11 devoted bun bind and kind and aUctMloiiate fn. ther, a worthy mason, an earnest md steadfait chrnti an. His ninny generous deeds of cbantv will J.me; live in the he.irts ai.d be cherished ill the tne'iioriex of tlmv who knew hm as be wa. Faithful to ewty t r 11 and worthy of every coufU lence reposed 111 him, hi sjutit has passed from aiming in and re- finned N tbe (lod who gave if. n I while we bow in htiniWlc sub- miis-ion to the will of an nil wise, jn-t md me ciful God, we can bu' dc- p!o e our loss o: so worthy a btotl. e-, so good and useful a man and cdi- izen. Ami white we gneve that. b . no longer with us. will ever chcfish in our heart the menorv of his many viitues as a man, . ma son and iim a chris'rin. Resolved, That Hi the death of brother !rl!lin this lodg loses one of its most worthv nieiijticiH, M. sonry a faithful votary, fheuied ell profession a zealous advocate, the State an honorable citizen, j,e poor a tru. and generous friend, bin f imdy a kind and affectionate pat ron and the christian church, a dc vote.! follower. Resolved, that we terob r to n fimily ur heart felt sympathies in this hcic.sTcmcut, and oiler for tneir c :isolat ior, t ii- n l! ct ion that 11 who wept at. the rjrave in l'.. Hi irn will not for;;''t them in the boor- of their anlictiou. Resolved, That these reKiliit'oti be spread upon ti e minutes of the L'l lge, .md a c.py be sent to I mk Uemo(iut f r publication, ami a copy be forwaided to the famdv of our deceased brother. Respect fully su limit ted. T. F. Lee, Committee. Bohemian Women's Club I The vornan of i 'iherma nv m.. t 10") diffrrnt c! ih -,nl aock-tie t,r t . nl.-'d for 1. he advanretnerit mi l aid of woui'in in di.T.-rt nt line of wurk. Oocofthe clubs or o'deti", num bering GOO xcai' cr. is for the pur poe of protecting youn,; girls. A home is provided for them and '((or. t miles for study in the i-ho'.U hT. forde 1 until tucy are ol I nouih to go out to servn-e Another club, the Mioerva, U devoted to ri"irig the "tar.dard of education for Women ry founding nvhoois and t.ecurlriif admission of women studtrds to the urii verltti and in four ear the University of Prague will e open to ' hern. Empty Spools VdcctH. I want to tell you notr.e use f r en;ptv pool-: For clon-t, try pn' - - z a sj ool on tt;e nail, and then 'r.ve it in the wall. Tni .!1 jr en- M.e nail from breaking dowo even wh-n quite heavy things are hung 00 it. Tney are nice to use uri u;ree n 'r when the goodman ha forgot' en to ztt the knob jou aked h ji to t in town. We all cannot have mariy convenience that w would .! , o these makeshifts m sust to others a way to jjet a'ong 'ill better days arrive. tr 1 n : i' 1 ' ': it 11 f s Or you ar- til ' I; .. "' t-t uoltlu (.-.- ' , : .: . 1 ry icot.- ir-t-, r.ijty.n. It will cure yon, :.-! . ! lyj tit. Mi Ly- ' atrrtan ll.nfl p
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1892, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75