Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Aug. 31, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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'1 7 13 TO BUSINESS WJiAT STEAM IS TO Machinery, That Ckf.vt FRorr.Li.iyr. Power. o- Write up 11 1:5 ce -d vert i semen t about v ,nr uusii'fss and insert it in THE DEMOCRAT, vouTi '-see a change in ljusiness all I'llld-'' PROFESSIONAL. D k. w. o. Mcdowell, Oififf North comer N'ew Hotel, Main Htreet. Scotland Nixk, N. C. 2S2Alvvays at his office when not ..f-s-ionall' engaged elsewhere. 1 9 26 ly 0 U. 1 RANK WHITEHEAD, OHio North corner New Hotel, Main Street. Scotland Nkck, X. C. jgpr"Ahvays found at his office when not professionally engaged elsewhere. 7 C lv QK. a. c. LI verm on. 1111111 Offick Over J. D. Hay's store. mice hours from 0 to 1 o'clock : 2 to ." o'clock, p. m. 2 12 ly- SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. pVID BELL, Attorney at Law, ENFIELD, X. C. IYae'iees in all the Courts of Hali fax ;i':l adjoining counties and in the Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims c ? --fed i:i all parts: of the State. - 8 lv W. A. DUNN, A T T 0 I! X i: Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Nkck, X..C. Practices, wherever his services are required. 2 13 ly W l II. KITCHIN, Attorns? and Counselor at Law, Scotland Neck, N. C. fToilice : Corner Main and Elev enth Streets. 1 5 ly I. J. Mercer & son., VrHi East Main Street.. RICHMOND YA. LUMBER COMMISSION MERCHANTS. o- Cives personal and prompt attention to all consignments of Lumber, Shin gles, Laths, &l d 17 i0 ly -NEW ewelry Store A Her si wars exuerieuce. I feel thor-i ..uglily competent to do all work that is expected of a WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. Kcn-nrim-; Sc Timing Fine Watches A SPECIALTY. I also carry a full line of WATCHES. CLOCKS, JEWELRY. : II S1 C A L 1 XSTK I'M ENTS A N D FANCY GOODS. "XL Spectacles and Z 'X Eye Classes Projierly l Fitted to the Eye. l 1 Md bring Mm THE REST ON EARTH. SF.WINO MACHINES CLEANED AND REPAIRED. SATISFACTION gtauantked. if. if. joiixstox, X' j t b,ur to X. II. .'' . 10 G (im J. H. LAWRENCE, x Dealer in CRAfX. MILL FEED. HAY, CLO VER AND GRASS SEEDS. Improved Farm Im plements A SPECIALTY. Agent lor Clark's Cutaway Harrow mid the Deering Mower, A Model of Perfection. SCOTLAND LECK, X. C. 1 0 ly FITS. All tits stopjfed free by Dr. Kline' Great Nerve, Restorer. No fit after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise $2.00 trial boctle free to Fit eases. Send to Dr. Kine, 931 Arch St, Philadelphia, P. .nTx -vr-v- K. E. HILLIARD. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. IX. TAB DOTY OF A GOLLEMADDATE. ALUMNI ADDRESS. Delivered at Wake Forest College Commencement May 30, 1803. B7 W. E. Daniel, Esq., of Weldon, N. C. I confess to have been greatly troubl ed in the .selection of a theme upon which to address you this evening, and it has caused me much anxious thought. And t day after day and week after week I have considered the matter, I have liec-n profoundly impressed with the unwise selection that you made, for, and I speak meaningly, I approach the performance of this duty with an embarrassment that comes from my in ability to discuss a subject fit for the occasion and the audience. I had thought when I was so highly honored and, believe me, I do consid er it an honor as to be chosen your speaker for the evening, that I would present some subject new and interest ing, something out of the usual line, but in my searches and selections and conclusions I have never been more convinced than I am to-night, that,. so far as concerns me, there is nothing new. Do not understand me as being so presumptuous as to deny the exis tence of novelty ; I only mean that I cannot find it. Then I have looked, patiently and diligently, and even la boriously, in limited current literature, for some suggestion upon which to base my remarks, and after patience and diligence and labor has come the weariness that must have been King Solomon's when lie wrote : ' Of mak ing many liooks there is no end." It is impossible for me to deliver a literary address, for the reason that the calling to which I have given my time has almost ceased to be a profession and has become a business, and the rough contact with the rushing, busy, hurrying world has dimmed and effac ed whatever literary relish and finish I v.as supposed to have had when, sev eral years ago, I left my Alma mater. And who is there of us that can look over fifteen years, of such contact full of 'triumphs and disappointments w ith out a heart overllowing with pity and hope for him who is to make the be ginning and the race? And it has oc curred to me that something might be said from the ground of advantage upon which we are supposed to s-tund, to remove some of the difficulties from the ways of those who are to come after us ; or, in other words, as graduates to more cle-irly define and lay down our duties and relations to the masses of the people around us who are not so fortunate as to have re ceived the lienefits that Ave have re ceived I wih I could speak some word to night that would encourage the sympa thy that ought to be felt by everyone for his neighbor. It is a fact, and our system of education is partly respon sible for it, that we know too little, and care less, of that which is true of Fiose who are in the throw of a stone of our own doors. We are following our own enterprises, and we are not .allowing our souls to be burdened with the thought that we are our brothers' keepers. I mean that there is too great a distance, a distance which my experi ence shows is widening, between the educated classes and those who are uneducated. If this is true, then col lege trained and college benefited men ought to know it ; and knowing it, they ought to think upon it, and realizing its importance they ought to have the courage to grapple with the problem. It should be their duty to remove the gap if possible, to begin the work by lessening it, certainly. Let me give expression to the wish that it was in my power to bring some idea, some thought, some principle, fresh from the people, with the smell of the' fields upon it, clothed even in the garment of poverty, that would quicken your philanthropy for them, your patriotism for their country. I would consider ray task done to my SCOTLAND NECK, N. 0, THURSDAY i satisfaction, if I eouM kindle in vwr ! ( minds a resolve to know more of tlrnK? of whom I siek from the higher plane of thought and culttu-e in which you live. And I have heard them called by so many names : the masses by social writers and ilhical econo mists, lalor by capital, the producer by commerce, the people by yolitie ians and statesmen, and that which makes us all akin, immortals by religion. For the purposes of this hour, I will designate them bya name which, though given becait'x; of the fall, has the merit of antiquity : "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread." How little we know of them ! Their hoes, their aspirations, their conditions, their dittlculties, their hardships, their despair ! And yet here is the same world for us all ; the light that comes and blesses makes no distinction, and it is written that a dying Savior, with healing in His tender words, forgave and saved a thief. It is the duty of a college graduate to know the people, to understand their thoughts and to know their lives. . Do not understand me as taking the posi tion that he should know them after the manner of the average demagogue who makes frantic appeals at stated intervals for the apparent purpose of preventing the ruin of the country, but he should know them in order to benefit them, in order to do good to those with whom he comes in touch ; he .should know that he may make an effort to improve their con dition, to elevate their ideas, to give them the ttrue idea of an education which has failed in its object if it makes a man anything but a worker. Unfortunately for those who are called educated, they are regarded and judg ed by this class ai prepared and equip ped to make their living and build themselves upon their -brawn and their muscle and their lives worn out in ceaseless toil, and that, too, with out m an if esf exertion. There is a widespread distrust exis ting and we may as well face the ques tion. I will have to confess my in ability to explain the causes ; there are many plausible and ingenious reasons given and supported by strong argument. If you have ever attended a political discussion you have heard them set forth by all manners and kinds and measures of statesmen. But we may accept this fact as true, and these results have brought about this feeling of distrust that the people feel for each other, that those who have made a study of economic ques tions have satisfactorily proved that in the past ten or twenty years there have been great changes and distur bances. One portion of the people has become poorer, while another has become richer ; the purchashing power of one class, who, because of the sim plicity of their wants, ought to be in dependent, has become less and less, their economy more stinted and more stinted, until now it is not a question of economy, but it has reached the point where it becomes almost a strug gle for sustenance, for existence. This is true, and it is true in Xorth Caro lina, and I am not overdrawing the picture. I do not intend to detail to you the horrors of a tenement in some crowded city, where large families are huddled together and where children are growing in squalid vice, breathing a hatred for order, maturing at last in to a menace to our institutions, but I am telling you as to men who ought to know and who doubtless have of served, who, having received the ben efits of a more enlightened system, should prepare for these problems. And I do state that this feeling of dis trust and unrest is showing and mani festing itself right here in Xorth Caro lina where we boast of a native popu lation and of least outside influence. It is the duty of a college graduate to ztvdy the eavses that have brought about such conditions. As I have already suggested, those who have made a study of the supposed causes and questions differ. Some say, and I have heard eminent men take this position, that we are simply paying a debt placed upon us by the civil war EMOCRAT. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. i aid the sulequ?nt evil that followed in its horrible train. Others mv that it i the burden p'aeed upon all by the iniquities of a war tariff, which lias Uen increas el into a Chinese wall for the ?o3e and exclusive benefit of tho- who control the manufacturing power, that it has become a veritable Old Man of the Sea iqon the laok of the producer, pressing him down and down at every effort lie makes to relieve himself of his burden. Then, patriotism a.Kl politic have increased a iensioif list by extravagant legislation until no standing army in armed Europe costs so much. This character of legislation hy- indirectly, and in.-idious and dangerous' lecause indirect, drained from the pockets of our people a vast Niagara of money for which there is little or no return. On the other hand, the products of the fields have year after year been sold at less than the cost of production. And what is the. result? The New South which a few years ago was fore told by every one has not fulfilled the promises of its prophets. The fact that the great majority of our jieople are in debt and we are helpless. And what is debt ? Have you ever thought on the subject ? After making every effort to meet obligations, one is like the man caught by the sea with its tide surely, slowly, mercilessly rising to his death. Debt ! It bows the strong man like a reed and breaks his will like a straw. I heard an eminent lawyer once speak of this curse as a spectre at the elbow, a shadow at your side that walks when you walk and runs when you run, that follows you to your home, that comes between you and the wife of your bosom, and drives the little children from your knees, until at last hope leaves, and then with this condition as a compan ion the aimless struggle logins. It hampers genius, it curbs ambition, it blights and wrecks promises and pros pects. You who are before me have probably never been called upon to face this enemy, because I should say that when it is the result of economic changes and disturbances, it com mences with those who are nearest the earth first and comes to you last, but you have only to go through the homes and belong'ings of those of whom I speak to grant the truth of that to which I call you attention. Again, there are others who say that these changes have been caused by the financial system of the country by'ii contracl ion of a currency, which so many profess to understand and ex plain, and do not. To many holding this position the remedy is easy. It is only necessary to stamp the promise of the nation upon anything to make it money ; or that the government should lend its currency upon the pro ducts, of flic fields and the face of the earth as pledges ; or to coin the white metal which is dug in such wonderful quantities from the mines of the West and which is opposed so bitterly by that class who already have nearly all their strong boxes. In other words, in these latter days it has become the fashion to go to the State, the Govern ment, for everything, like a child to its father, and I am even told that higher education asks and receives large appropriations of taxes wrung from the pockets of poverty, and that in the face of the fact that the minds of thousands of children are starving for the elemental;.' principles. And the ignorant and deluded and helpless are knocked hither and thith er like shuttle-cocks, hoping and 1-e-lieving that there is legislation in the minds of their leaders which, if en acted, will bring to all cace and hap piness and wealth and pro.qerilv. So the" play goes on upon the credulity of those who ough. to be the objects of the tenderest care of those who are the most favored, the intelligent, until sometimes I fear there will come an awakening which by reason of their wretchedness will bring momentous results. I fear that I am transgressing thej i i: ... ..t ,i,iw.n(M ti tii.ii ljers of this Association, but I am epeakins to men who ought to be the1 AUGUST 31, 1893. ' leader f though: ar:d acts; a , !:! all : i-m ;n their (Hmn:i';!i:;, t ' tkr.x which tV y Lo!.f. ia Mirp,:! - with tho-e who !.iv.r njh their ,iaKfI- A !!evi.ue eduction .-uhi i.oi to remoe one man fnm another, but it ; is often the result. Primatily we its lenefits for our own pan!, but i's! divine object i-; the helping of other-. , There .-hould be a connttioTT U'tveen i all men, and the lifting of one ought! by this link to lift the other ; and ary svstem of education which, l-eoaiw of i that education, breaks the ehsin in my own humble judgment in .-ome j rne.i-ure. at Icf-t i :i ?.! -. When' rme is 1-enefited and the other not. when ; 6jramona Liver Kegulator you one grows and the other decrease j promote iligtio.i, Lrinj oil A rep then follows this separation and dis-j ular habit of body an.i prevent trust that have grown up 1-etweenj men, and which has lieeome n hurl-; ful in every branch of our social and ; jKditical life. What 3s needed is an education of mind and heart that will dgnify and uplift labor, that will ele vate a work-bench, and that will make a workshop as respectable a anotlue. I know that it is a favorite .-av- nig tnat ia.Kr is nonorame. ;m ...It abstract principle I am willing to ad mit that this is true but I charge that in practice it is not true, and the dif ference is Incoming more and more : apparent every day. For a number, of ! years this difference has leen gn.wing j in life, in thought and mi sympathy j between him who makes his living; "TiTs mind and him w ho makes h living with his hands. You may call the one the aristocracy of intellect, if you plea.e, but when the distance becomes too great the structure- will fall of its own weight and involve us all in a common ruin. Unfortunately, an educated man does not regard a ending of this char acter as commensurate with ihetaleut--ho is supposed to pos-ess. Kun oer in your minds the large numler of young men who leave our colleges and wdio crowd the professions. 1 low many of them are adding anything to the material wealth of the section, how many of them are producer-"? How many of them are even cauidng two blades of grass to grow where one grew before (1 believe that is the minimum of benefit to mankind according to Jonathan Swift)? And in the con-e-quent depletion of the productive class es by the withdrawal of the 1 est minds, carrying with them, too, an abhorrence of the station and labor from which they came, sympathy is lost, humanity and brotherhood are '.gotten, air1, those who are left regard themselves as the least favored of all ciase- ; they are certainly the ii!ei-t paid in the biesdngs of life. - Their toil is not sweetened by intelligence, but made bitter by pover ty : what they do has b .en done in the same wav with slight improvements for generations ; thev cannot Jiope to rise above their hd.r. I sometimes think that the poel had j a conception of this poverty of sympathy as well as necessity when he wrote. "Work, work, work. My labor never flags , And what are Us wages, a t -cu ot straw? A crust of bread, and rags? A shattered roof and naked door, A table, a broken chair, And a wail as blank, my hli!i'l'-.v- 1 thank For sometimes falling there." Society mtict look at theo tiling- be cause it creates such conditions. Ig norance is not always an evidence of weak-tnindedness, and such a c'a -s con stitute themselves conns, and they try yon. They consider the qne-iion- of difrercnee. whether Society. ' ti.-.- l-ioro, or ..nvt h-n" . i- knowieoge, 01 am ion. .ii.e State, or you nfay call Power, has the right 1(.,witJi ti.em. it you have n-.t -tone draw thee lines 1-etween the lggary j if ?" ,v 1:ot .v"" J!" ,5, of want and the lavMinc- of luxury. duty lo the principle- in..:, The-3 questions are aked and answer- Wu U :hi- iii.-t'fitio,. i. fomale.!. noi ed;they pass judgment ..a you ;tI1,l j C-the Im-of the m-, who have lo Ihev hold vim resn-ible for their si.f-, t-l J'l!1 'h.-rije.l . ferinj 1 whenever circumstauees am arise thev do not hesitate to hold the sm'.iMised causes x, a strict account. t a.. il. t.. ..i,ni.T.,vJi .uvod.l ica! in my views, but I am not prepar- letl to sav that they have not strong 1 reason on their side It me cite just lone illustration. I was reading some time since that a man who had acci.t SUBSCRIPTION PRICK St oo. NO. 40.: COUSTIPAIiOK la calk-d the 4 Father of lhi."S. ? jt j, by Torpid Uxtr, " tind is generally jwooinpsuiicvl with , LOSS OF APPETITE. SICK HEADACHE, BAD BREATH, Etc. T treat const ipaticn succt-s'sfuHj It U a mild laxative and a tonic 15 tl:;? d;rretiv ? c: crin. Tv t.!ci:-,. Biliousness and Indigestion. "My wife tttrrly i'i!tM 1 nS('wi ii;,. tion aixl coughing, fiui wol i:h j'mtin; I lira Aftrr fo-ir inumh ic of r i!.im a Ijvrt ki u!at- the i lmon -utirc!y rfhcvtJ, Jjimmj trrr.gih nd Hcih." W". H. I.rtrmi. 1 l..r-, OKia Ttthe out it the (i fuiiitr. Which hai on the Wrafipf'' ihe rr! Trad Bar it and Signature of J. II. ZI'lLIN CO, -- - . . , . , . , , mulatcvl a pi lceii fortune, and who. lived in all the iii.'ignitix-enee of La.- i i ,(.m llIvlirv ;!i,j tl;U t,.( ,n!) M.u,,,)n W'tweeii lal-or and capital wa the bf ference lietween a ni.in and a !oi!:;r. He said : "Lav the dollar nj.oii thi holf for j( 0;U. (.(i ,it ,.Ut ,lf , jt u.om!)1 st j) jK. ,tt,irt no ,. ; ,,llt (h(l ,., tl,.n.inl njtlllllt w,k k.(.OMU.s f.i(IlCI. ., u.)eton or a : ,...1 I It ouL-ht to be a source of th:mktu!-i i ness to us that ve have I -en span! j the extremes of iie!n-s and poverty . . 1 ! 1 1 .1 I tiiat are found side hv side.ni the more i ; thickly seitil poitions of our own! country; but apart from that the por tentiou omens a:-e guiieung like stfuin-elouds there is (cn where an unrest that is di-op-.n-atod. there come- r.. . 1 . . 1 . ... 1 1 1 1 We may not l able to unlerslan'i 01 control it, but it would le well for te that it be heeded. We are told that on one oeca.-ion there was a meeting of lingland's go ernment to consider some ip-esiioti of surpassing iinjHti ian-e. The had gath ered at their place of im-eling, and there were the chancellors and eotinril lors, mighty in wisdom aul skilled in government, the Lords of the Treasu ry, and so forth. Put one member was absent. The Prime Minister en. pared concerning his absence, w hen some one suggested that they wait no loje.er. that the absent memlier. as v.a- hi eu(ojr. . v.a I t , 7 - . w . i L i 1 : !. street of London listening to what th " . TV W 2QT comnu n jteojiie were saving, and ascer taining what they wanted. '.No," .-jd J " the Minister, "we will wait fa thai! I'lliM i IIS lU'W SIIhI Ui'll j 1 to know ju-t Wiiat tne common people 1 -.11 are saving atal want as to the : i iuestion bef';?' There is ia--l f.., nien wlio studv the jieople. iheje i ' i nr-ed for n.en who have then Ji;md upon I he art i:es of the Ciea! lna--e. when the conflict come-. Cn-.s! i.rii.-i cit ies anl great reforms have ofn n lUfii hiiMieie.1 and dejaved bv iiuhob I i combination, for ore-nt ooh;,,-., .d - 1 j vani.ire. and when enthuia-m Im:k o ignorance threaten- to u,-p eve: j ; trulh fr.-ri :t- f . 'enin.-. the only h-j- : j for the 'nub lif - in iiio . who. lifie above the v agaric v of an agitato, im el j.!: 1 o !;! : i d 11 il the t e,- mn! tuoi:.- jas.-iori- of the popuiaee. I How can ibis If do:-.e if ou are not i i in sympathy with tho-e v.lioui you siioidd meet e.nd ought to iniluence ; In your i-dm-aVon. in our patiiiti-m. ; in your f.-.iih in Jiim who leveled a ranks in Him-' if. vou ought to stand , ! 11'"- '( -op!e. it i- tie ! dm.v "i" a cohere graduau- to take an . . . . . lilt, ilt.'.ili a,ai.v. - m t a I i.iti. mi) iiiiMiv.! i il. fir There art manv ed ilea ted. eulttnol -M who think that it is not looming -heir ..ignity to take even a p..-:.,g i intert i th-- j-.liiic.ii maiie;- ar.-md j -- Ti:-y i::-b ;hat ;.!: lies i-,-or. (j0!,jc-J n Fourth Pa.r. IF YOU ARE A HUSTtEft advi:kti: Business. rt Yj ; ,tt t RTTriT s No TH AT I a- r pki; Tint WUli jour Adirrt lament I i th- rt t,-w h' n.! Tim D m - u tT. ! JOHN 0. GABAGB, Wi.. NoiHOLK. vu;c,im Lini", Plaster. Hrirk, I. ATM. -AM'- Chimney Pipe, hi: m tii i:. i i i: i:r' CJ .; ).! j car Jo i '.- .l i t i ?- . . I , I j "HoW C t I I Mi -US l!-l - ." '. eqK app? .'A ,iv e.-'- ii-'n. '.,.' I No i,t t tlil'.U !!! 0ii-ni , IflST, Vl'Ili,l, lt h. .lit I III !!..;, .: : the f.; e. Icuid-. li-- A.- . .. n k- -1 1 1 . ' u. W i.l.- ! i i: I u'" C h .oo t: .'ti-l i-i t iiivc j. . - , , ,i ..... t. v. hnggi-t fi .n - hntn.cnt. (vi:i: niTV v: i As (mo wo W i 1 1 -Tm o bi mi i- MlS WlMxlow'- . m , IllllV HII' !n U-4'M f.'l OMT tif( i O- b mil of niotbl l- f" 'n !f . -b:l-b M w hil- tiH-thii:. with l i n t u. i It mi ith-s tl,. i h:!d. - Jo n- il al!av - all p.iin coo- v. lnl m the !- li-n b l"i I'! s tii ' ! to tb t 1:1 i- p.. ; ..' ;!.. W....d , 'ueah ulab:.- Pm-mo- , -I A 1. - Me Window 's Six-thmu "!' "M ' ' ,,, , , j j,,, 1 - I'i 1 1 ii I i si S I i n liiniii'-nt o-?ii'.v-. ,. .. , , ,, 11 . 1 all M ud, .' f! "' ' o"' -s' Liuiip- ui. m," li'uiish''- (in IcH", l!!'-l pa Hi Ml: Worm title-. Spi.iui-. :in. 1.nlii'ii 1 Through, Cottgb-, l.o-. - v.- i. lle of o::e bottle. tl i .oitt-I tlie 1 t 1 t,i ... I mo-t woii'iinu i.i i'ii-m ' o- -i. i ; sMJi h T U hu.-b--:d '. . I i,u .-. ill oi.l e-l. . i ' lo 1 ly. J. B. White & Co.. (.i:r.KAL ;s:nt:i: L ' ' If a llaiiAfe 1 a im 1 a a I a r, ilCM iniltiUItll IIUUIIWIIM)) 1 1 mid Id Ib.u.ol... I. K . J ;m N'.-ci ,. k . . VINE ZIIZ.X. FEMALE ACADEIV1Y, Scot la. nt Su K. N. d in n' t S '--si oi 1 ol' I IScliool lioninsv AuirJs. I s'.b'i. iv-iti , p ljll enrps o f 'I'lMl lii'l . ( oiirs of stiuiv 'Xt iiK-o !..,.. 1 1,. .... ..... 1. , ..... ....... ... o . ! , ; S f't'lii I n 1 1 'l! t H l 1 jil 1 ' ! , ' . i 1 ii sic'ii tin m c. ( liiirtr- 1 1 h h I o p; 1 1 1 ' 1 ! For cii en!:! fs illiil 1 1 ! ft 1 1 I I I 1 1't 111 1; I I'M ;n!ii'- tlti' prill- I 1 i' - P' - - 1 Miss Li.na II . Smith Roanoke Poultry Yards f ! J. C. LASSI'l 1 : 1 1 m.. - - Prop... t i:i H . . I . Pi.v k Mi t " i TlloC' l.U :. ; . ,N -. i 1 J I : - Lavi ..v n v 1 ' V i I V . wi: ii.wj: pai-li) ?:' wmn n on im; a i;i: or lani ' , ,, , from f .;i i-n!i;-- : !.' ' eo-: . Aj,jf ,S'e. l.ughi tiv.- ... i- o M . ,i i I'bev !..- l:.o;e ;'g- 'b; : i'.'r . HI ;-co-i. - -;ia; le. ;dl p-!!';. n;!i W'f will carry m-M -e.(.o:t i j.ti!?-; -We will !-o h ive 1 '"-o " 'I of , The ehii ken- an- !,!. k. m!!-- c!.,f.-. r- ,.),.., ,,f f,.:1(.; ., l)uv.,- g!o-- . j very large wai tie,, n hie e oioi . .N'.. i . . . . i : II... . . Oil et- lor Tlie III!- -"l-oii ii- i . z- fL.Vlf. r L'5. C.i-h fnu-t a.c.o p.nv ail order-. Le-j-et fully . ii iv i. c. L.snT.i: v - fH'". Opinri xi.ftblt Will Vlf la V CUltJ bl -",u 4U UaMAVt K LI.EY.M.U. AiUai, OA. OiWvi lvMa WUu-WU. Sew Pine
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 31, 1893, edition 1
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