Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / March 9, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 . t I'll I 1-!M. i Pil M ni;T h,ss jod orncE Id - - ATT III. It. E h. IIILLIARD. Kiitor and Propiretor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. MalMrr laa ll.aa . at ' ! ." VOi, IX. SCOTLAND NECK, N.C., THURSDAY, MARCH h 189, THE DEMOCRAT ONLY OKS DDE, LAB. A YEAR. rASIi-IX-AI)YAXCE. BE MOCK AT J. B. WHITE & CO, General Produce COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 11 ic 13 Eoanoke Dock. 3 2 3m Norfolk, Va. I II O F ESSI O N A L. jqr. w. o. Mcdowell, OFFICE North? corner New Hote Main Street. Scotland Neck, N. C. lt Always at his office wheu not professionally engaged elsewhere. 9 26 tf. A. C. LIVE R M A N, Office- over J. : 12 ly. D. Ray's. Main Street Scotland Neck, N. C. rjHOMAS N. HILL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Halifax, N. C, Practices in Halifax and adjoining counties, aim uiu r uueiai inu ouuiciub Courts. 3 S ly. A .1.1. . I,' .1 . 1 1 t f" AVID li ELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Enfield, N. C. S'ractices m ail the Courts of Halifax counties and in me Su sn i adjoinin ore me and Federal Courts. Claims col lected in all parts of the State. 3 8 ly. yy A. DUNN, A T T O R N E Y AT LA W, Scotland Neck, N, C, I'xactices wherever his services are b. uedir. febl3 ly. KIT CHIN, Attorney and Counselor at Law, Scotland Neck, N. O. r Office: Corner Main and Tenth 1 5 ly. l.J.'MKliOER&SON. No. 1 0 South fdh St, (bet. Main A Cary Sts. RICHMOND, VAt tUTnOei1 OiniTllSSlOn JJJKePCQam Oives personal and prompt attention of all consignments of Lumber, Shingles, Laths. Etc. 4 17-00 lv. NEW Jewelry Store After sx veirs experience, I feel tborougbiy competent to do all work that is expected of a WATCHMAKER & JEWELER. WATCH-MAKER & JEWELER. ncyuuiiis aim aihuu l iuo ti aaiica I A specialty. I I also carry a full line of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. Musical (lOO'ls. Instruments and Fancy Spectaclesand Eye-glassesjproperly fittedjto the eye. Mlfl Sowing THE BEST ON EARTH. ;ew img-maciiines cleaned and R-ptnsi SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. W, H. Johnston, Next door to N. B. Josey. 10 6 6m I Pure! Brilliant 1 Perfect! USED EVERYWHERE, AND EN DORSED WHEREVER USED. hi: Most Popular Glasses in The I I-MUDMAIU. lhey are daily worn and are warmly Liaised bv the solid Kenresentative Men of this country, many of them being of National fame. The list embraces Bank f;r-i. Merchants, Lawyers, Governors, Senators, Foreinn Ministers, Mechanics, reichers, tnen eminent in all profession! nd trades. PHYSICIANS RECOfflMEHD THEM- BUY NONE r BUT TI1EGENUINE Tliese perfect Glasses ar accurately adjusted to all ey s. For sale by, K- T- Whitehead & Co. 3 2G lv- Scotlani Neck, N. C ' ' .' .in.: i, Vl.at l ii-'Ciau stive . ' "- liar:,..' v i- r. : t T.lyssf.-.gnarJ. 5n ... vcrfaiiM.:. Ilr.:. r . i; ;.. t:r d: " 'ri. 'i up. I'rxu. aic. A E iiupio ,..,-, i ov miiil !or 1a;. KE tS. SELCIfi rr.CPRIiTi" . JAMA'CA. H.Y. Mine 0 lovely women fair! divine! Abstaia, I pray, from crinoline! be etill a Grecian goddess girt, With graceful, clinging, trailing, skirt. Deign not to wear that horrid joop! A five-yard shirt but not the coop Of rattan, steel, and bone of whale That fly and scud with eyery gale. "Female persuasion," scorn a dress Which Fashion's foliy doth confess; Your brain, equal to that of man, Against this thing should raise the ban. O, woman, freed from many an ill, Do not to this yoke yield thy will; Unpack the shirt you wore last year, Let coat and vest once more appear Hut let hoop-skirts in exile stay, And banish crinoline for aye! Mrs. Francis S- Hooper. For Boys. Correspondence to The Democrat.. Aim at perfection in everything: they who him at it and persevere, will come much nearer to it than those whose laziness and deepon dencv make them give it op as unat a " i t rn lainaoie. mere are no rivals so formidable as those earnest, mined minds that reckon the Ueter- value nr everv hour, und that nohiovo omin. 1 J . . w . U . . .... I ence by persistent application. Do the beat you can, whatever you uiiucfiahe, 11 you are oniy a street sweeper, sweep yoar -'level ,1 I 1 ; e , beet." He who does his best, how evtsr little, ;a always to be distin gnished from him who does nothing. Persevering mediocrity is much more respectable, Bnd unspeakably more useful than talented inconstancv. j Activity is the law of life. Pa tience is power in a man. Faith in ou-own ability is half of every bat tle. -'A living dog is better than a dead lion." Character is a man's real worth) reputation is bis market pnee. A gnod character, good bab- its and iron industry are impregua- ble to the assaults of all the ill lack that fools dream of. Genius, after all, is only the power of making an effort. "Genius, un i exerien, is no more genius tnan a bushel of acorns is a forest of oaks.7 Do not croak against renins, or want of opportunity . If your opportuni ties are not good enough, batter enough, teem. It is cowardice to grumble at circumstances: the persevering r a. ww man rises above them. Opposition (TlvPA him hot.fpr nnwei' nT raaietnnno w. . ------ I " w-.- vuw... Kites iise above the wind. No roan ever worked bis voyage in a calm. A head wind is better than no wind at all. No man ever achieved renown who was too lazy to exert himself. It is more ooblo to make your-self great than to be born great. There is no genius In life the genius in life like the crenus in enewv and activity. We cannot go to sleep beggars and wake up millionaires: we cannot go to bed dunces and vrake np Solomons. We must woik ann wait. We must win if we want to wear. Every detection of what is false direrts us toward what is true ; everv failure is but a step to ward success; we should profit Ly the follies of vesterday. The young man who distances his competitors is he who masters his business, who preserves in in tegrity, who pays his debts, who lives within his Income, and who gains friends by deserving them. Stick to your aim; the will Klip, mongrel's hold But only crowbar's loose the bulldog's lip; Small as he looks, the jaw that never yields Llrags down the bellowms monarch of the fields." Telling the Worst Last. Chicago Tribune. "Yes, I dabbled in futures once said the man in tbe mackintosh, re flectivelv. "Wheat?" inquired the man who had his feet on the table. "No. And U wasn't corn, or oats. or barley, or mess pork, or potatoes, of chlp9t or whets;oaa8. It wag brcom corn. I thought there wa money in brooiH corn." 'Put much money in it?" asked the man with the shaggy ulster. ''More money than judgment," sighed the man in tbe mackintosh. gloomily. "How much did yon lose?7' 'I lost $50,000 I had hoped to make out of the deal," ''Was that all?" All? No. 1 lost f 18,000 I had borrowed from friends" "Have they got it yet 1" "And that wasn't all!'' groaned the man in tbe mackintosh, uubeed ing tbe interruption, and wiping bis eye with the corner of bis handker chief, "I lost $87.65 of my own money.' THE CANALS. PA. IV AM A AND NICARAGUA A COMPARISON. Scientific American. While tbe papers hare been pub isuiug ion account oi me ran am a Canal scandal, and friends at Lome have been suffering from the bitter cold weather, we have been visiting tbe PanamaCanal and also tbe Nica- ragoa uausi ana usve been uncom fortably warm. Landing at Aspinwall, or Colon as it is more frequently called, one hnds more activity than was to be expected under tbe present state of affairs. The son beats down with never-ending energy, and the frightful heat is only partially relieved by the coding effect of the northeast trade wind. The Influence of this wind is felt only in the northern end of the town, and is completely lost on arriving at the central and southern portions of ibe level plain on which the city is built. Work onthe canal being at standstill, the city derives little sup - port from it. Most of tbe inbab - itants get their living by handling the freight tbat arrives here for ship - ment across tbe isthmus to Panama and tbe return freight. The railroad connecting uoion and i'anama is running, but not with the energy it Dad ween worK on tne canal was in progress. mere is but one passenger train per day, and few are tbe freight trains. Colon hat been twice nearly destroyed bv Ore, and these fires uave nan a cieansioa aru improving effect. The city is cleaner, heal inier, oeiier ouiu, ana in every way 4 1 lJt .ll 1 more habitable than formerly, and a citizen remarked tbat be thought it would be a good thing if tbe city would burn down about once in five years, mere is no street-cleaning Commission and no hea th board. .. . .... and little is done to keep the health of the people. The arrangements for the care of the sick, however. seem to be very complete, i n? railroad company has a welKequipp ed, and well-managed hospital in the! healthiest and most salubrious place on the north bhore. All along the rout of the canal quiet reigns. A few years ago then was no Sunday there, but now every day seems a Sunday. It is not true, however, as some would have U3 be- leve, tuai everything nas oeen nei, ected and allowed to go to tbe doge. .la - B Allowances must be for the effects of climate and the peculiar condition of affairs, and when that is done it is surprising how successfully cared for rave heen tbe bouses, the ma chinery, the boats, and in fact the entire plant of the canal company. To be sure, one sees much rusty iron, but the important machinery is protected and preserved by careful keepets or watchmen in tne employ oi the canal company. Tbe tow boate , lauches, lighters, etc., are housed in and protected from the weather, their machinery white lead ed and oiled, and periodically over- t 1 1 A. J 1 1 uauieu, turned over ana Kepi, in sucm good order that I doubt not tbat ninety per cent of these boats could be put into service inside of a wtek. Tbe houses are in good condition, thongh-tbe hot and damp atmosphere bfts canspd the nsnal flpnav nf wftnd i . u, e , ... I work, notably of the canal are filling I in. but not to an extraordinv decree. The heavy fail of water darine the rainy season has washed down tbe banks and there have heen numernna I land slides, but not even to the ex tent that was expected by the pro- jecting engineers. The receiver in whose hands the canal nrnnert.v now I rests Is expending about thirly.five . .v..w, uv.. . thousand dollars a month in preserv- ing the plant. Much interest is manifested by all clases at Colon in th'i devevelopment of tbe Paris scandals. The Colombians believe in the ultimate success of the canal, and, as tbey derive a large revenue from the building of the canal and from those employed by tbe canal company, they are anxious to have work recommence, and it is safe to say tbat tbe government authorities of tbe republic of Colombia will do everything In their power to help be canal company to its feet." It will be some time before the fate of the Panama Canal is decided, la case work is resumed, it will be on tbe plan of a lock canal. The original plan was a failure because of inadequate knowledge of be country, incomplete surveys. wrong estimates and ruinous sub contracts, and last, but riot least corruption. The engineering difficulties of tb new plan may be meotiooed as the Colebra cut the Gamboa dam ind the control of the Cbagres Riftr. The most important one of the alK,re is the dam, which is to contain 3, 000,000 cubic yard of filling. Those In position to know, ami well-informed men generally, place the probable cost of completion at not less than $125,000,000 and the time at not lea than seven years. Leaving Coloo, a coaple of days ail put us at Greytowns, Nicaragua, the eastern terminus of tbt Nicara gua Canal. The advantages claimed for this canal over its its rival at Panama are, first, tne greater case of construction: secoo, its more north ern position; and and third, toe cli mate and prevailing winds are mor- favorable. Tr.e meucbanical details are simpler and its position make? a material saving in distance betweet New York nd San Francisco. A great deal has been said about tbe harbor of Grevtawn being netter than that of Colon or Panama. On visiting these places one fails to find it true. It is true, however, that ajtj - reytown has bart a due Urge bar fbor, but the sea has built a ridge of l sand which incioses the harbor. thu I forming a large lagoon. A pier or 1 break-water has been built, running out normal t o the coast, and to tbe westward a chan nel or entrance to the lagoon ha been (fredged. The breakwater i now about one inousana leei ion A and is composed of creosoted p'Jes. This, however, is only framework. temporary ou account of the destruc tive teredo, and is to he filled in with natural and artificial rock, part of whicb is already in plac9. To the eastward of the pier the shore line bas mude out about seven hundred feet. The channel to the westward does not get as such scouring out s was hoped for. The breakwater will probably have to be continually ex I lcuucui au wuol"u" .B.Ufe ..... I uc ucec"u" tu DrK I Ks n Abasia n f v IraAn (ha AnlPD tf. I06 harbor in passable shape I Work was commenced on the Nic I aragua route ubout five pears ago, I and tne progres nas oeen gooci. I Necessary buildings have been built i . . . in the irost economical style, stores I fr meterial established, machine I shops started, dredges, tow boa's, j and barges bought and put to work, and a short line of railroud construe ted. On a band car we took a run over the railroad, which is now nine mile long. One is strock with wonder while looking at this piece of work, and cannot help admiring: the pluck and perseverance of the builders. fhe road runs parallel and close t the can-il line. It runs through a swamp land, and when they started to build it, there was nothing but a denoe forestof trees and under growth, the ground being covered to a depth of four or five feet with stag nant water, saturated with d:cayed vegetation. Meu stood in this wa ter up.to their shoulders and labo riously chopped and felled the trees. Many of these trees wre of wood a- bard and unimpressionable as iron A strip of swamp land was cleare i to a width of about eighty feet and for a distance of six ruilei. The trees were trimmed and then formed into a eribwork alng the line of the road and on this cribwerk stringers, tie?, and rails were laid. Snd from the dredses was dumped on this, packing u,e & F 1 . hbu9 f,jrniiD an nbanknent Where the embankment sank down into the mt.'e of tte swamp, more timber and sand was added, Thus was ravie the road be 1 that many engineers said was impossible of constrnction. Tbe cost was forty per cent, less per mile than the orlg 1 B inal estimate, itiis road is to ds used in transmitting material, tools. equipments, etc., to different points along the line of the caoal. The two large dredges, tbe city oi Paris and the city of New York, have staited on the work of dredging and have cut since January, 1891, a channel 1,500 feet Ion?, 280 feet wide, and 20 feet deep. The track of the canal has been cleared of trees and underbrush far eleven miles. The manner ie which one of thse dredges eats into the earth is aston ishing, and perhaps the reader can forra an idea when I say that in each minute fourteen buckets full are scooped out, each bucket holding a cubic meter Imagine a block of earth nearly as large as tbe room in which you are sitting being remofed in a minute, and then imagine tbat operation being repeated e?ery mo ment of the day and night A telegrsp line has been construct- ed, so that tber ! commoulctlin j all along the line of tb cml, through to Hrito. on tt e IactCr cotti. Tbe oUl length of th ctnal roo'. is 169 5 roilo, of rhicb 142 ro:i-j are free river and lake navigation, j r t - a 1 'I iftKti Aicftr irsift icf o'iror-i is 110 feet above tide wttr Estimates made bv rfhaMe d.m teres ted men and engineers put tt cost of completing tbe Nlcaru- Canal at $100,000,000. Tbe root baa been very thoroughly serve) and ihe above estimst is thus be on comparatively reliable dti. The preset t outlook for tbe co r pletioo of tje Nicaragua Cn 1 i ftr better than for the 1'an ami, bat they both seem to he Mp, e 1 in tbr, same way. It i iniplj a question at to w:it?i cfnpi- ca flrat grt tbe necessary fond. F. R. ItKAINAUU, tJ. S. Xavi Llsard Skin Utilized Liaard skia has for the paat t' ea sons nr so Leeu u very pnpul material for card csscr, purecv, pocket books and tuca articles, anl a large business has spruDg up it meeting tbe demand for tbe ran material. Over 500.000 heard skins were 8importd from the Mexi can state .f Tabasco alone last year, an ! tbe local government's estimaU puts tbe number of lizirdi killed w that state during the same (nr a' full 5,000,000. Many or thr fekin Went to Europe, and large quautititi are maketed in Mexico. A Test uf Culture The New York TimeF. A distinguished man remarKd not long ago tbat there Is no sum test of culture than tbe way in which one handles a book. "All those who have anj' experience ol the deeper life," he aid, "think of books almost as hiimau being. Even a book which i ,uot worth much in itself is Mill treated l j them with respect, since it weaif tbe ontward guise of what tbt-j have learned to consider tueir bej-t friends. He went on to condemn tbe senseless and offensive uiaiiun in whicn choir singers often abutf their by oi book 8, bending them backward until tie covers uje 1 and holding tl em thus tluougliout an entire livmn. This vandalism is not, alas! confined to the ela.." mentioned. Married Sixty-Five Years Chatham Record It is a very rare aul remarkabh occuirence for a man and his wif to celebrate the sixty-Dfth annivtr sary of their marriage, and yet f couple :n this county did that oi last Tuesday. On the 28th day of February, 1828, Mr. William G. Harm was married to Mis Nancy A. Rives both of Chatham i o i .t . and on last Tuesiay they wre butl alive to observe The 65th anniver?ar of tbelr marriage . Jut to think 1 t, sixty-five years of wedded iif I VVhat womlerful changes hive Ukei place in ihoae lon year I W much regret to le .m that Mr. Harris is now in a very critic 1 con dition, Hithough until few mouth sgo he tnjoyed remarknb'v goo-' health for oi of his ad is. fc l ag. He is one tf Chatham's most n 8pectd citizens, and In 1860 s ekcled to the Senate from this coun ty. How ry Till. It wi l cost ou nothing ami will surely do ou ood, if yoj have a Cougb, Cold or any trouble wilb Throat. Chest or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery for Cooaumptioo, Cooghs and Cold Is gunrtnteed to ijive relief, or money will be paid back. Sufferers from La Grippe found it just the thins and u.:oer its use had a speady and perfect recov ery. Try a sample bottle at our ex pense and learn for yourself ju-t how good a thing it la. fri.l free at E. T. Whitehead fc (V Drug Store. Large size 50c. and $1.00. FITS. All Fits stopped free by; Or. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 5o Fits after fir. day'i use. Marvellous cum? Treatise 42.00 trial bottle fret, to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St. Philadelphia, Pa. English Spavin Liniment removes all Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and Clemishes from horses: Blood Spa? in Snrhr Snlints. Sweener. Bine-worm tifles. SDrains, and Swollen Through, Coughs, Ete. Save 50 by use or one Kotti. Wkrr&uted the most "wonderlul Rimici Piim ever known. Sold by E. T WhitjihAftd k. Co- Druggists scoiianu ck. N. g. w ANDERSON liAC'.I.KY X- C( COlton Factors al General Commissiou MUM WT"f 'c.il attention f:fi li tH an 'cnicr ment i lcitfJ. K'ftn- ratio on l'-n:pmirit. How's Your Liver? In the Oriental alntntic n, knowing t'rit gH.i health runnot clt without a healthy Liv r. When tha IJver i torpid the Hr.v r!s are flujzi-ili nixl con Et'"p:ittl, th' lies in the FUrnah undi prest!, oi son i n cj th hfvi; fnvpirnt Iieudaoho (nfUt-s; a lrolixi id loi tuJe, despuiidency n:il rcrvoufne indicate how tho Avhule pt in ranp'. Siinineiin l.ivor liCulatr.r lias ln-n thd means of restri:i iii'ri jeoj!o to h'-altli and hr.ppinops hy iriviti: tlirni fthealtiiv I.ivi r titan any agency lnovn in earth. It luls with extraor dinary power nii'l eiihwy. Rf-r R G Witiirn, I';m r- n, N ! , I I. i ! LHhir'g h-' tn ii h lu k'", f .otJi.'-i '-imii rn K ,-..:t .t St r. that ifm jt t thr Omuitf With ted 2 t Ocu.t i f vfyprt. . II. 7.III1.IN f., l'lultrlyhU. Cuvrit. n'-i Trf-MMltf oMttncil. 61 .i J':.t lit r.ni.!n i . i'u xe i for Moderaie Fttt Our Qr.t Ttt'l, U.S. Patent 0ffir. ni we mn .: j.ati-nt !ii icit tuuf t . .p remote from V -1: -tit n fci'ii-t i!i i. ;. -:r i anj ,r photo., w.tli :. r.; t'.on. M s.l . imtrntti .r li".. In - f d'arirf. l :r f.-f n-.t due till jiatetit n - i;n-! names of artunl t iient in your ht'e, county, cr town, cni fr-c. Addrto. C.A.SNOW&CO. Opposltt Patent Office. Wafchinstnn n r Ill, 113 and 113 Hank St.. Norlollr. ; Va -L A HQ K STOCK OF ''INIS1IKD- Monuments AND grave Stones Ready for Immediate deliver. Write f-jr prices and dcirm befor orleiin elsewhere. An inquiry mav save von dollr. 5 15 1?.' JN0.0. GAM AGE. Wood.tide Wharf. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. t ime, Plaster,1 JBncks, LATHS SEWER PIPE, DRAM T1LK. COAL,,T A R, &C. rrfpecial prices andlrates on cr load lots. " 1 1 y r LAND IN FLORIDA FOR SAL.TJ- Mne 140 acre tract of land in oraDge county. Fla.. c Jrniles Irotn Orlaado, 2 niiles from ore established railmad line and nvle from a newly graded railroad. An orange grove with abootJ(Kj trees just be ginning to ber r WILL SELL FOR MOSEY OR TRADE FOR LASD in Halifax or adjoining counties 2-l-tf. Apply to E. E. Hxlmakd. mil mil Hut Batita cured at htu.e witb oat r&iii. Hook of rr 11llticuUnMQt rarx 22B.M.wrMLLKY.M O. mm Toe Cooper HVDie won fmioinnnH u umvji . '. . r V' ' ;r. 1 . iu -TO BE SOLD- r ! Stan's ntiill & Fever Tonic j I'll 1 1 .! at. l 1 ki: r.t! lei - n t u. i M AI A 1 I KYI'S. I I'llul!" MN MIVA Mi Ml M-U!:i I 1 KYI I., Ml K I ' . I v . i 3 '.Kl i , Al.i U ll .fft !. . a A It i ..! ,, . tlic ii. f i r . BCr I rttr.f vri;' at" ! A ill ft nit ' i t it c . i t 'jT w ( . . . t T-'lt. liu- !. lloi its, ;; .4 t NAN A. NtUS't r;, Mil S' Mil, Enterprise Co u i 1 tt a. tak M ( r nl :.i I i HI ! t -ru ' i I f li'.' , I" 1' . I n l a i ' .J.. h ' I i i f 1 1 1 -Ik I . M vl . 1. U! hi lu: i I i( !',. , l 1 1 ; a u I I a I . 1 1 1 , ) ')'! i rf.-' , '', f i i - j' i h : luu lit arl. 1 - . tn u i:ii', ! t ' riti"ii. Scroll Work ot the lali n: ii-miih. atil ti-'ii. ii't it. atitri-"J. 1'rtrc- !u . tl.p r. i:. MI I !!, I'm - -i t m. II. .IO.N, M A N Alii . lv k' LA Ml l.i h . . r. Freeman fe White, Altll-is A I ' 1 1 ri ..i: t, rtll l KNI.AI'.fcMI I I. (Mi A YON, 1'.TM., "11.. . r. H: M IMIo'l D'iKA I'll. I IM VIM'.. !?. Main Mf n t. 't i i i . a. 7 21 )w. s. ii. ii a w i:s cvoo i AI Ku IN Lime, CEMENT, Richmond, Va, 4 2 1 v J. II. LAWRENCE, DhALKH I.N (atAl.N. ! H.IM'l.i;i. IIAV CIA) r.l: AMi IMVil'tYHt I A KM IMI'iJ.Mi A ! ' K . I 1.1 V. A-r.t :r.r 1'i.AHK; ( . HAKI!(M' nd Dill i.lN'. U iW Klf . A rnol! ! t-r . .SO7..-I.Y. ' Fry t . 1 r. i . A V CO For tTifinrjatton an-1 f rw . ML'NN a .. I Bh'.a Ol(lit bor-o t)T mfnmin Krwy vmltxx. Ia-n out b tbe public by a uiice irii fficnttfic rr. nmilatton of fcii k" world. H'ltlKiir llluairat mn ahould t without i. JMti llJjfit'.X mpntht Adli nuaaiaji. 3S1 Broa-laJ PLASTER iertiflc American JVTi DE
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 9, 1893, edition 1
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