Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Feb. 8, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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; v.... 4 ... -A if 4? : 1 ADVERTISING IS TO BUSINESS -WHAT STEAM IS TO- Machinery, I That Great Pkopelusc Power. Write up a nice advertisement atxnit yrir business and insert it in THE DEMOCRAT, and you'll "pee a change in business all around." PROFESSIONAL. D ii. w. o. Mcdowell, Office North corner New Hotel, Main Street, Scotland Neck, N. C. '..'. "Always at his office when not ..foaainnnllv encraeed elsewhere. -f l'l J"' - . - 9 2G ly D R. F Jl AT 1C VT flTE ii EAT),- Office North corner New Hotel, Main Street, Scotland Neck, N. C. Alwayi found at his office when not professionally engaged elsewhere. 7 0 lv D R. A. C. HVEKMON, mm f Okficb Over J. D. Ray's store. Office hours from 0 to 1 o'clock ; 2 t,. I .r o'clock, p. in. 2 12 lv SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. J. H. DANIEL, Dunn, N. C. Makes the disease of cancer a Specialty. 9 10 ly JjAVID BELL, Attorney at Law, ENFIELD, N. C. I Practices in all the Courts of Hali ' fax and adjoining counties and in the ' Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims 1 collected in all parts of the State, j 3 8 ly W. A DUNN, A T TOR X E Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services are required. 2 13 ly IT. KITCHIN, Attorney and Counselor at Law, Scotland Neck, N. C. 'Office : Corner Main and Elev- enth Streets. 1 5 ly I. J. Mercer & son., 626 East Main Street., RICHMOND VA. LUMBER COMMISSION MERCHANTS. Gives personal and prompt attention to all consignments of Lumber, Shin i gles, Laths, &c. 4 17 90 ly NEW Jewelry Store -o- - After six year.s experience, I feel thor- oughly competent to do all work that is expected of a : WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. . WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. 4 Impairing & Timing Fine Watches A SPECIALTY, i 1 also carrv a full line of WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, ; MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND FANCY GOODS. ; Spectacles and Eye ( lasses Properly " T. Fitted to the Eve. The Mki Imi Machine THE BEST ON EARTH. SEWING MACHINES CLEANED AND REPAIRED. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. ir. . J0HXST0X, 'Xext door to X. Ii. Joxeii. 10 6 6m J. H. LAWRENCE, Dealer in GRAIN, MILL FEED, HAY, CLO YER AND GRASS SEEDS. Improved Farm Im plements A SPECIALTY. Agent for Clark's Cutaway Harrow and the Deering Mower, A Model of Perfection. 16 1y "TP" A HE E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. X THE WOLF AT THE DOOR. 'The Lord loveth a cheerful giver." The cold, hitter winds of a merciless winter Are chasing the snow-flakes about on the air, While poverty walks through the streets of the air, And knocks at the doors of the homes of despair. The curtains of sorrow, like mantles of mourning, Are lazily hanging o'er homes of the ;--poar, vs '? While many A shivering oul and listens. ' "-;' In sadness and tears to the wolL at tbe door. Who knrfSr'Irat the light of flickering; AMfVflH' ii- ii - Reveals the pale face of some sick child And the shivering form of a poor mother watching Its honntifn face throucrn me team she may shed ? She thinks not of hunger, nor sad desolation, Nor the pleasures of life she may see nevermore, Rut she looks in that face, as she weeps, sighs and listens With sorrowful heart to the wolf at the door. An old man is starving, his aged form trembles, The widow and orphan now suffer from cold, The poor and the needy, the sick and the hungry, All over the city the young and the old. The husband is willing, but can't find nim-mont Such times as we're having were ne'er AA i tKi. o-oar Piv nf onr hundreds Who listen in grief to the wolf at the Ah ! You are bleesed with good nomes and are happv, Be liberal, kind, to your poor fellow- "Remember the poor whom ye have in Mil : i with ye always, And no matter how little, but give what you can. You may gladden some heart, you may make some home uappy By giving some part of your bountiful store, And frnrl !ind tbe nncels in Heaven will bless vou So help drive the merciless wolf, from tne aoor. rWZ S. Hays in Louisville limes. 'Woman's Purity a Nation's Greatness." Exchange. The purity of woman is a nation's greatness. Look to the United States and to England and see the cause of their power and greatness, and it can oe auriDuiea w uie pur., ux women. Then on the other hand look to France, where marriage vows are considered as little, and where the . - i purity of woman is hardly demanded, where a wine cellar in which to stow i awnj lue.rmCTloulluu,w.u. than the virtue of their wives and daughters. Wherever a Nation, State, county, town or neighborhood fail to respect the virtue of the women, and look down to it instead of revering it, then that Nation or State Or county or town or neighborhood is on the down urade and it is only a question of time when it reaches the bottom, where it will be abhorred by all good women and men It i n hard, hard thine: to build up .1 irood remibitioii : it takes a life of . , , i devotion to principle, yet the lowest whelp in all Christendom can by h:s foul mouth slander, soil the character of the purest woman or the noblest man. The man who would say any thing that could m anyway injure a woman's character, is lower than the cur dogs, as they will defend each other from assaults Lord help the man who would stoop so o tnsnv hnrm against the sex that gave him birth. Hold woman's purity as high as you do vonr religion. Wise Words. Ram's Horn. It is better to suffer than to sin. Keep your heart full of sunshine. Sin is most fascinating when it hides it fnce There can be no real life where there is no love. All sins are big, no matter how small they look. Those who would lead others should always look up. It lightens a duty to resolve to per- form it cheerfully. A civil tongue is a better weapon than a bowie knife. Love is the greatest of all things, fc becauee it gives all things. SCOTLAND NECK, VANDERBILT'S NEW RESIDENCE. MANY MILES OP THE ESTATE. The Magnificent Mansion in Course of Erection ITear Asheville. New Yard Herald. The?- but few Vanderbilts in the ytfs-'-i.p- so it is not surprising that onoi tl)n sbottli.,build the finest, the most expensive ' and , the biggeet mansion fceioundinour,hemisphere. George Vanderbilt returned in his pecial car from a trip to his estate in North Carolina. He had been gone about two weeks. Mr. Vanderbilt has found that tne climate in the highlands of the Caro linas is the most pleasant and the most heatnfui to him G anv jn the world, and so near Asheville several years ago he purchased a very large estate and began ;o lay out lines for such a resi- A ,..t. jujoa in ti,o country can boast 01. In the vlcinity 0f Asheville there are a great many very fine residences, but none of them so bespeak the prosperity . . of their owners as the one which is now being erected by Mr. George W. Van ueruill, WgeiUW Willi UJOiiiiiuuvcmcin of the vast estates surrounding it, not lly surpassing anvthing in Western Nortli Corolina. hut America as well Much lias already been written re garding lt hnt it wm of interest to many to know that Mr. Vanderbilt HWtpd this narticular location because. . alter having iraveiea me worm over, jie found the climate of the Asheville i j " the most attractive I .1 1 1 1 . A lle tnereiore purcnaseu a large iraci- Gf beautifully located land, and has , , ... . & acquired title to nearly one hundred thousand acres (more than one hun dred and eighty square miles), one portion of which touches the city limits Of Asheville, from which it stretches over mountain and valley for such a distance that it will be possible for him, after the purchase of a small in tervening section, to ride for thirty-five miIes in a slraightiine from his chateau .Si. 4 , . ia aQccla g, over three yeaf9 ag0 Mr. - Vanderbilt began his magnificent pal ace, which, although several hundred killed workmen have been daily at work upon it, is yet so far from com oletion that it will not be ready for occupancy for more than three years FAR FROM FINISHED. For several years the world has been I i ,. I, ; ,vn ti-Vi n i ATr VondArKilt, - would do with his magnificent property. The curious will have to wait a few Y nger ere they can see in reality- to just what an elaborate extent iur. Vanderbilt's idea of an ideal home runs The chateau itself is as jet I 1 ,11.. Tf Viaa tot-on 71 0 And of toil and money to make a place for it lU11 J on the rugged ridges of the southern mountains Mr. Presbery thus describes it in an article to be published in 1 ublic Opinion : THE LOCATION 'It stands upon an esplanade, 700 by 3UU teet, artihciaiiy maae uv cuiu6 I - . - 1 1 1 - A , , 4- - i -v down the summit of the hill upon which the building are being erected and filling surrounding depressions until a pertect level was aua.neu. nugc retaining walls of solid masonry six teen feet in thickness at the base, and at some points forty feet high, crowned with a coping of finely dressed stone surround the esplanade. Here at pres ent are the great sheds for the stone- cutters and builders, and the tracks o the railroad which Mr. Vanderbilt built from Asheville. "The outside walls of the palace are 375 feet by 192, and when completed it will be four stories in height.. From its windows the views are of surpassing loveliness. Just below and stretching Hway in either direction is the valley of the French Broad, luxuriantly green, in which the stream discloses itself in sparkling lakelets here and there,-while beyond rises hill after hill and moun . Itam after mountain, wun many DEMOCRAT "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. N. O, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1894. heaven aspiring peak, chief among them being Pi.-gah, with it fharp, symmetrical cone ; and leyond, in long" extended vistas, the linos that cke in the lofty Mimmits of the Ba!-am Mountains, more than MX thousand ftet in height. Down to the right, tow.ird the r.orth, the eye follows the valley, backed by it never absent mountain.;, until far away they blend in misty distance with the Smoky Range. "Then sweeping to th northeast, the valley of the Swannar.'M spreads itself in all its placid beauty at the foot of its ever present guardian mountains stooping along the margin in gentle reverence: then receding in lofty majesty until they erect themselves in j all the grandeur of the unrivalled Black j .Mountain chain. To the right the valley is flanked with the high and graceful Swannanoa Mountain, and in the far distance the Swannanoa gap, through which the railroad has invaded Western North Carolina. Toward the south, where all is gentle, eaceful and in charming color, the mountains withdraw to a distance, leaving an ojen country dotted with farms, until far away, the hazy curtain made by the indistinct forms of the Blue Ridge, along the South Carolina border, is drawn upon the scene. NO LACK OF INSPIRATION. "It is little wonder that upon viewing such a scene the inspiration should have come, to Mr. Vanderbilt to here erect a palace which should emphasize the work of man as this beautiful sec tion does the work of God. "The extensiveness and the elaborate ness of the castle which Mr. Vanderbilt is building are way and beyond any thing which Americans have yet in their own country. IMAGINE IT ALL. "The imagination of the reader may run riot and he will not be far out of the way. Let him, as a basis, take into consideration the ideal location, then the vast wealth of the owner, and his unquestioned taste, a - house of such dimensions that it is possible to have in it a banquet hall with ceilings sixty-five feet high, and a library as arge as an ordinary church, a reception lall into which a city house could easily be put, stone stairways so broad and massive that a regiment could march down them, loggias with their score of richly carved pillars and grace- ul arches, and all surrounded by a private park of nearly a hundred thou sand acres. 'This large area is to be treated as a whole, and never was presented to andecape artist a finer field for the display of genius. It a a broad canvas, with the groundwork, the outlines and the coloring all ready at hand ; all that remains for art to do is to blend, har monize, soften and polish. "The canvas is spread and the artist is found, for Frederick Law Olmstead, who handled the brush with such exquisite skill and judgment in the subjugation and adornment of the World's Fair grounds at Chicago, and earlier at Central Park, has been in trusted by Mr. Vanderbilt with the vast undertaking of laying out this great domain into suitable divisions. PLENTY OF GAME. "Macadamized roads are being built. and from the private nurseries of Mr. Vanderbilt at Asheville (said to be the largest in the world) more than a million shrubs and ornamental trees have been transplanted into the parks the past season. The game preserves will be extensive, and several hundred deer will run at random through the forests. When this great enterprise of Mr. Vanderbilt shall have been completed it will, as a whole, undoubtedly be the finest estate in the world." 'CRACKERS" AND "MOONSHINEKS. It is right in the heart of the abode of the primitive North Carolinian, where the "cracker" and "moonshiner" flourish in all their glory. During his trios to his estate Mr. Vanderbilt lives entirely m his car d it is needTess to say that when it leaves New York that car is stocked as it would be for a prince. In France sixty-seven rer cent of 1 . i i; Viwv.id rf-vilm - tne people f ' thirtv-three ner cent, on wheat bread. Kcst Intcrestisff to Ahnr This Hirer. Pafn.n mid f7f mr. When thM -hifr- of Sir WV.'or J:.:-t eigh ner the con. man 1 f Aiii;uh! and Harlow o, first touched ih cwt of' North Carolina, the Kn:nike rmT called bv the natives "Mor.it." it. 1 ..: ? .1 when it wa channel to Ro.u . ve fof hf1imi . f(MY huhhrm t f air th. have im authentic hUtor;. 1 : . Jf..k,. j m, h tho p,!tfn( f .lt. .or i, r in his history ot North Carolina, " toI,i !u.rv th-r. n ha 1 .unk torwro there was- omew here within the prc-jm,w Tlu. cllit.f hy Hinj-ing to tie ent limits of IVrtie county an In- j (,vor han):in nwh of tl - ml. rtif diiin town ca!lel "01;:noak.- ai;d h-rf, j t. in mu.,,ins; ,jie,jKW, dJM t)li: we -Tvcgest. we have probacy the "H-i ..j , of hU oin!,unl:i gin of the !v;me row applied to the' Afu r nr,ny d.,x . the chief ietnn td river, which lK)n!o:i:i IUrtie on the We?-t and South, enpties into .1N- marle. We call it IioanoKe, an casv corruption from "Okanoak." Put there is till existing an ol.l In dian legend handed down tons, through the mists of many generations, long since passed away, in which another version of its change of name is given. Once upon a time," so .says the le gend, "there was a chieftain of the Tns carora Indians, who by some means, came in possession of a beautiful roan horse, noted for its strength, docility and wonderful rower of endurance, one that had never failed to respond to any call made upon him, however difficult. In fact, he was a cormterpart of old Mazeppa's noble steed, that after "dread Pultowa's day" bore the old chief in safetv from the field. "But he was hardy as his lord. And little cared for bed and ltoard ; Whate'er was to be done, would do, Obeyed his voice and came to call, And knew him in the midst of all, Though thousands were around, and night, Without a star pursued her flight, That steed from sunset until dawn His chief would follow like a fawn " Byron. Having occasion to crorfs the Mora toe on business connected with the welfare of his tribe, the chief chose the roan to bear him on his journey. Arriving at the bank of the river, he wa surprised to find it a raging torrent, full to over flowing from the recent heavy rains above. He calmly surveyed the rush ing waters, unmoved by the dangerous outlook belore him and without an atom of fear, to which his .heart was a stranger, made preparation to "ross. Gathering the reins of his bridle with a firm hand he gently preyed the. t! oiks j of his noble roan with his mxc:isii.ed heel ; the horse, which had never yet flinched from any ta.-k, however dan gerous and difficult it might le, with a heart as fearless as his rider, did not hesitate a moment, but boldly made the desperate plunge in the mass of seething waters, l or an instant or so, it seemed as if both horse and rider had been engulfed, never to rise again, but soon coming to the surface, with ex panded chest and dilated nostrils, lie calmly breasted the foaming waves and made for the optosite shore. Inch by inch he gallantly f Might his fearful way, and seemed to exult that he had at last found an oportunity of show ing his chief the matchless jower of his indomitable courage. Alter mam a sturdy stroke he drew near the shore, only to meet a deeper and swifter cur rent, one that would call forth all his strength, and try to the uttermost that power of endurance which had never yet leen equaled. The chief seeing that he was being slowly lorne down the stream by the strong force of the current patted his mane and spoke gen tle words of cheer to encourage him in thU hour of trial. The noble animal in the agony of his desperate struggles for life, understood the kind intentions of its rider, and realizing at last his ier ilous condition he redoubled his efforts 1 .1.. , V. r,nK- t1 Vi hiittlrd ro reacn ui pjwiu, '. - by the treacherous current. On and on, despite his strength and all the energies of his nature, he was carried down, until drifting with lhe current, he was lorne near the shore and caught in the limbs of an oak, that grew on the bank then the die was cast-. Becoming entangled in the branches that extended in the water, 0 dpwnpmte Blunges availed ill." iio. - j - x nothing only to exhaust what little of life was left. The contest was not long : al.eady SUBSCRIPTION PRICE tt.oo. NO. 10. weaken! by the Varfi:! pj: t.f tJ c rivr and hi draie fifht with tic werft:I cunrnt. hr lim! tsrl, a it were, by th branches of th ak. n?urr could do no mr. The rhiff. with l e Uci.i indifTt-rcncc of hi ruiv ti!ctl;. . . . , . !Mnir, rr.d fr a. lo!c it -- ! u if l'.h j hop and Pi'.-r. thai !md Umi incj rab'e in hf would c U-w 11 in d-ih t. grthrr, bu? it w.-i not t 1 Tit ! r.t-uv and we.o v to th hi ire of peopii' and a einMmg hi t:iU. : - ; cotinteu to u.em ii.e tragic oeani ot j,;- ! beautiful roan in the treacherous u..- ! ! ters of the Monitor. I Thev. s mpnthitMg md I lamenting I with bin the gnat !ov of their !riU ever aft'r, in speaking of the tiver. coupled the color of their ItM favorite with the oak, as the rau-e of hi death, called it Koanoak. Thus the legend runs, and the fad rx'coming known to all the Tucarora living in that region, the name wan ac cepted, to commemorate the loss of the companion of their chief, whose 1m1v lay entomlrfxi leneath llslurbid waters. Bakt MooKt. (Jhah Town. Quarantino Fcr Consumptives. Durham Glohe. Science has demonstrated that all contagious dsseases are cans! by the feeding of baccilli on the tissue of the lody. Yellow fever, small-pox, cholera and all these so-called contagious dis eases are understood to le prevented to a great extent by the complete isolation of the diseased jtersons. In-teado! ing the awful plagues that they once were, they have come to play a com paratively small part in the death roll of civilized countries. This chance has leen accomplished almost exclu sively y strict quarantine. That dread disease, c nsumption, sweeps away more persons every year than any other malady in the catalogue of ills. It is more uniformly fatal than cholera itself. In fact if it is under- stood ttiat a person ha consumption the relatives and friends of the poor un fortunate give up all hope. The doc tors and nurses, devote all their effort. not so much to exjel the disease, . to prolong the life of the patient. All work on the idea that the ultimateout come of the disease is death. Htatii-t- ! :. . . 1 .1. .. 't .Il.i f., t ic snow mat -,-0,,. this disease in the United States every year. This enormous lom of life could in a large degree le prevented by a rigid quarantine. It is universally conceded that consumption is the eating away of the tissues of the body by a voraciou varietv of bacilli. Then if the disease is caused by bacilli, those bacilli may be transmitted from one eron to an other, thus constituting cmtagion Contagious diseases, when of an e-j-e-cially violent nature, are subject to quar antine. Consumption H probably the most fatal of all diseases. Why is there not a rigid quarantine against consumption a there i against cholera or yellow fever? Consumption is transmitted from one person to another in two ways : 1, by herelity ; 2, by contagion. The first can le gotten rid of by prohibiting the marriage of consumptives. The second can 1 obviate! by a strict quarantine of consumptive-1. lioth these will be opposed by senti ment. Sentiment would ki the pu trid lips of small j-ox and cla.-p the lej- er in the arms of love. Uut the matter must!? viewed from the stand jolnt of common K-nse. The welfare of the whole is greater than the welfare of any part. The good of humanity demands a rigid quarantine against the eon-urn j- tive. Wheu vou bid vour sin good by, don't shake hands with it. The lst remedy for self cone it is to be introduced to yourself. IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER tor win. wyh:tik Tf'tR Business. MM" Y' 1 K Ali 1 kt : Now. TH AT Cl."oK r.KAPKKS T(UT 1V Wih 3 our .dtrrtiMM'nt to KI . It t!.o w h ?rd Ttr l'i v. ht. The Old Friend Anl tlie I . friend, tl.ut never f.ub vou, i Simmon Liver Kvu htor, (1L0 K4 7. tlv.' v. h it you luir uX the i:.. r.tion f thu exivlleiit I.ivt r m.-.hr.e, at; I io!e fhouli ii. le etu iio,i that anyth;j elso w.Il !. It i t0 Ktli c f I.;Ver Jd'-vil- cir.es; U Utter than j'll!., atxl Uik-A the j !.i.o of Qninh'je and Cal'tnel. It n:V lirvtly on th Liver, Kidnevi and I v. 1 urA givs new life to th wholo sys tem. Thin i the iuedu-iie you uant. Sold ly .all lrui:.iUi in Litiuid, or in I'owder to lj taken dry or mado into ;i tea. ITKVKHY I'KKO.r vi hlmm the X ntmtmn tm r4 mm m rmpft. J. II. XJClLia CO., MiUfl i. I . "nl in Cl I.I All SKIS I i K-t ' ." Simplv wpply ". a m-' 'into miI.' No internal 11. -li-iie 'ih tetter, iM'fllia. I! h. iiH.!iu!i. .11 the f.ni', h.Ui'i. Mo-. Ac. i. ivii g the -kin clear, while and health). It giet healing and eiit.itl powet- aie h'm1 bv no oth r m iih-I Ak jour lruggit for waiie' 1 iiitin ut. 101: ovF.k ni iv vi:m:s An (Md ami Win Ti. no Pimiov Mrs. Wiiiflow's SH'thiiii." "'p haw Ik-ii uhmI for over fifty year b mil lions of mother- fr (heir children while teething, with feet -iiceew. It h iot he the child. ften- the gutim, allays all pain uie-i wind In, and if the U-t remodv f-r I'laithoa 1 1 p!ea.-aiit to the ta-te S.ld by lrug gits ill eerv J'ait of the World. Twenty live cent a Im-ULv, It value i incalculable. I'.e me ;tnd ak fot Mr-. Win-low V Sootliing Sy nip. and t il e no other kind. F.licli-h Hpavm l.lnunent remove ill Hi.nl. Soft or 'nllou-ed Lump- an I md (lemi-he- from !.. e- P.I.h.1 pavm .-nil.-. Splint-. Sweenev , King- ' . .. . ; .. ... .....! !..,. worm lllie-. .-noon-. .! I'hrough, rough-. Ki. .-r- -'O by u.' 01 on' ...ii. ... IllO.-t VVoi:lllU! I;enil-lll mr e.-r known. Sold 1. 10 T. Whitehead A Co.. Iruggi-t.-, -ot!.in.l Nee, . . 10 11-. rti.i ' I'll ! - " I'M HIM. I II I - (ivui'iim. Moi-Tllte ll'O.n. ! h- . , ..ii ...... - ing iiii'i flinging, mi 0-1 .0 o. bv M-ratchim,'. If allowe-l to cut noo tumor from whn-h often bleed and oh erate looming erv 'ie ."w vm m . . 1 ti. OIMMJ 1 flop- tl.e itenilig ano ojeo- iug heai o!-er.it)' :i, in u; -l a-'- '- ni' ives the turnor-. At liuggi-t or l-y mail for eent. lr. swao;'' "Oil rhih-.deh.hi 1. ifoti on l.urri.in ami iior-e- :in all 1 I . W. I. animai ciimi in .o nuiooe- i. ford's Sanitary Lotion. I hi- never fail-. Sold by'l". I . Intel,, ad A "o. Iruggit. Seotlaiid Ne.-k N . 11 t lv. ni;u - Central : Market. I have j u-t opened at my old ct.ind and a-k the patronage of the pubh-. I shall ke-ji Beef, Pork, Fresh Fish And Oyster- in I will pay highe-t ca-h pne. for NICE FAT STOCK. Ke-jn-etfu'lv , L ALLSBROOK H M :im .-eoti.a. l .Seek. N. C. LAND SALE. In pur-uanee of an order of curt, to make i,!-, I will on the .Ird d iv of March. "11 m the town of -., t- iand Neck at public ;niet:oti tha trm-t of land in Halifax eoiu.tv on whi-h Mrs. i:ii..ibeth iV-nder r-idi at her death and known u. tl.e Tender tract, l,un.lel by the lau 1- of Mr- Whita krr, W. II . Ki tcli in et a). Term-'- One-third ea-h, the balance on f.rlit of six month-. I.rd with aiprol s- urity. -.iring i;.'eje-t until JI (r,.rr, d .v of -ale. title re! I! e the purch..-' n.orey i- -a:'. Jan. :;. Tho-. 1.. I'c t i,:. 2 1 Jt Adfnr. U'ia1 e; coder. nn! Dplutr Habits Curt-4 a: .uo. vIU out la.lio"k of j.r t.mii.:(.trRt:K. uM.wo-n.iry.Mt. 1 0CTCaR)L W iaij(g(!oaQge) f -SCOTLAND LECK. N. C. Ii
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 8, 1894, edition 1
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