7
ADVERTISING
IS TO
BUSINESS
-WHAT ST FA M IS TO-
Machinery,
IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER
ADvr.r.Ti-r
1 1't &
Business,
T IT
CRA
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KM
4
The
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That Ckkat Fkoi-klum; Power.
o - i o : o
Write up a nice :idvr-rti.-ement alxut
v ) ir business and insert it in
THE DEMOCRAT,
a id you'll "see a change in business all
around."
PROFESSIONAL.
D
n. w. o. Mcdowell,
Office North corner New Hotel, Main
Street,
Scoti.ano Xixic, X. C.
F"Always at his office when not
professionally engaged elsewhere.
1 ) 20 lv
D
11. FUAXK WHITEHEAD,
Ollice Xorth corner New Hotel, Main
' Street,
S' OTI.ANJ) XlX K, X. C.
ggAlway found at his office when
not professionally engaged elsewhere.
7 0 ly
pR. A. C. EIYKUMOX,
i On icK Over J. D. Kay'.-. tore.
3 Office hours from 0 to I o'clock ; 2 to
4 5 o'clock, p. in. 2 12 ly
" SCOTLA XI) X EC K , X. C.
DANIEL,
-Duxx, X. C.
Makes the dise.-.se of cancer a Specialty.
! 0 10 ly
JjAVID BELL,
Attorney at Law,
EXFIELD, X'. C.
Practices in all the Courts of Hali
fax and adjoining counties and in the
Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims
collected in all parts of the State.
3 8 lv
W.
A. DUNX,
.1 T T O R X K Y-A T-L A IF.
S( OTLANO Xkck, X'. C.
Practices wherever his services are
required. 2 13 ly
W. "
KITCHIX,
Attorney and Counselor at Law,
Scotland Xkck, X. C.
gEF'OlTicQ : Corner Main and Elev
enth Streets. 1 5 ly
I. J. Mercer & son.,
G2G East Main Street.,
RICHMOND VA.
LUMBER COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
-o-
Oives personal and prompt attention
to all consignments of Lumber, Shin
gles, Laths, &c. i 17 00 ly
NEW
Jewelry
After six years experience, I feel thor
oughly competent to do all work
that is expected of a
WATCHMAKER axo JEWELER.
WATCHMAKER a;td JEWELER.
Repairing: & Timing Fine Watches
A SPECIALTY.
1 also carry a full line of
WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY,
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND
FANCY GrOODS.
i Spectacles and
ItZ Eye Classes Properly
Fitted to the Eye.
Store
- ft Sii&y Sewiag Mm
i THE I1KST ON' EAIITII.
SEW1XO MACHINES CLEANED
AXD REPAIRED.
SATISFACTION- OFAIt AXTF.ED.
IF. . joiixstox,
X'.it. h,r to X. 11. Joxry. 10 G 0m
J. H. LAWRENCE,
-J Dealer in
IfGRAIN, MILL FEED, HAY, CLO
; VER AND CRASS SEEDS.
l Improved Farm Im
I plements
I A SPECIALTY.
fAgent for Clark's Cutaway Harrow
and the Dec-ring Mower,
A Model of Perfection.
SCOTLAND LECK. X. O.
16 1y
E. E. HILL.IARD, Editor and Proprietor.
VOL. X.
THE CYCLE OF TIME.
This lovely day
Rolls pwift away ;
The sun seeks rest
Deep in the west ;
He fades from fright
And comes the night.
II.
And now begins to rise
The moon in eastern skies
Queen of the night so pale
Flooding each hill and vale
With mild and lovely streams
Of gentle silver beams.
III.
The twinkling stars come one by one
And gaze at earth in playful fun ;
They shimmer forth a mist of light
And veil the earth all through the
night ;
Celestial jewels set in blue
Now dancing in, now out of view.
IV.
Silent the cities sleep ;
Still roars the restless deep ;
Far in the fields of space
The earth speeds in its race,
Steadily whirling on
To greet the welcome dawn.
V.
The night swift (lies,
The monlight dies,
The stars recede,
The fiery bteed
Drives them away :
All's wrapt in day.
Horace Greely and Jefferson
Davis' Bond.
The Southland.
In the year 1SG7, Horace Greeley
signed the bail bond of Jefferson Davis
in open court in Richmond, Ya. After
two years of the most brutal, inhuman
treatment the world ever saw, outside
of Siberia, Jefferson Davis stood at last
free and among his own jeople. The
burst of indignation that fell upon
Greeley's head poured down upon him
like an avalanche from the north and
west, and a weaker man would have
fallen beneath it. Amid it all he stood
erect. It was proposed at the time to
expel him from the Union League club,
of Xew York. From an old magazine,
we copy this letter one of the most
remarkable documents that remain to
us from that dark and gloomy period.
Greeley addressed it to the officers of
the League club, It was as follows :
"I shall not attend your meeting this
evening. I do not recognize you as
capable of judging, or even fully com
prehending me. You evidently regard
me as a weak sentimentalist, misled by
a maudlin philosophy. I arraign you
as narrow-minded block-heads, who
would like to be useful to a great and
good cause, but don't know how. Your
attempt to base a great, enduring party
on the heated wrath necessarily engen
dered by a bloody civil war, is as though
you should plant a colony on an iceberg
which lr d somehow drifted into a trop
ical ocean. I tell you here that out of
a life earnestly devoted to the good of
human kind, your children will recol
lect my going to Richmond and signing
the bail bond as the wisest act, and that
it did more for freedom and humanity
than all of you were competent to do,
though you had lived to the age of
Methusaleh. I ask nothing of you,
then, but that you proceed to your ends
in a brave, frank, manly way. Don't
sidle off into a mild resolution of censure,
but move the expulsion you proposed,
and which I deserve, if I deserve any
reproach whatever. I propose
to fight it out on the line that I have
held from the day of Lee's surrender.
So long as any man was seeking to
overthrow our government, he was my
enemy ; from the hour in winch he laid
down his arms, he was my formerly
erring countryman."
Mr. Greeley was not expelled. The
bail bond of Jefferson Davis was signed
by Mr. Greeley Map 13, 1867.
Keeps 'em Out.
Sum mar if.
A Kansas "woman who has been elect
ed police justice of her city lias adopted
a novel solution for the tramp problem.
The first tramp who was brought before
her for judgement was sentenced to two
baths a day for ten days and to hard
labor on the stone pile, with the order
that he be fed if he worked and starved
if he shirked. The prisoner survived
the ordeal, but now the first question a
tramp asks on approaching a Ksuisas
town is whether the nolice judge is a
man or a woman.
SCOTLAND NECK,
AT WHAT AGE
IS SUCCESS WON?
POINTS FOB YOUNG MEN.
The Opinions of Eminent Men.
Virginian.
The Xew York Press has started an
interesting question. It has interview
ed a number of pron " . men con
cerning the age when ess is likely
to come, and here a me of the
opinions on the subject :
C. P. Huntington thinks that "suc
cess may be won by any man, no mat
ter how old, who is honest, intelligent,
industrious and willing to live on less
than he earns. I have known men,"
said he, "who began to rise in life after
the age of fifty."
Senator Mills, of Texas, says that a
man must make his mark before he is
10, and he must get his hard work
done before he is 55. I do not mean
to be understood that all the world
must know he has made his mark
before he is 40, but he must have made
it by that time, and in order to do this
he must begin to make it when he is
young, say by the time he is 25. If
the idea of success be the accumulation
of money he must by the time he has
reached the lr.tter age have learned
how to lay up something all the time.
Dr. George F. Shrady told the Press
that the wisest men do not try to
achieve success while young, and the
same opinion was entertained by Gen.
James, who thinks good health, deter
mination and ability will bring success
to a man at any age. Gen. James
backs up his opinion by making the
following illustrations :
Abraham Lincoln was not a success
in the ordinary acceptation' of the term
until the memorable debate between
him and Douglas, and that was in 1858,
when Lincoln was 40 years of age.
Before that he was accounted a smart
Western lawyer, a shrewd politician
only, and yet all the world knows that
after that he became the great figure
of the country. The man whose name
has gone down in history .-us that of the
General who fought more battles and
won more victories than any other
soldier, Ulysses S. Grant, was practically
unheard of until after 1860, when he
was 38 years old, and it was not until
after 1860, when he was 38 years old,
and it was not until after he was 40
that he really began to make the wide
and deep mark which he has left on
the records of the civil war.
When Elihu Washburn called upon
Grant to'preside at a meeting held for
the purpose of raising recruits in Ga
lena, he chose Grant because he was
known as Captain Grant, and in spite
of the fact that Grant was then as con
spicuous because of failure as he after
ward became because of success. Charles
A. Dana was not successful in the
larger sense of the word until he got
The Sun in 1867 or 1868, and in '67
Mr. Dana was 18 years of age. He was
managing editor of The, Tribune before
the war at $20 a week ; during the
contest he was Assistant Secretary of
War, and after peace was declared he
essayed jonrnalism unsuccessfully in
Chicago. The secret of his success lay,
of course, in his magnificent mental
endowment, primarily, but he has al
ways had good health and no failure
ever caused him to lose heart.
Ex-Mayor Grace, of Xew York, gave
as his opinion that a man has a plenty
of time to be successful after the age of
45, and Judge Noah Davis is of the
opinion that a man must display ability
before he is 40, but his success may
come after that.
Xow this is the way Gen. Horace
Porter puts it :
"A vigorous man may win at 70 ;
most men ought to win at 40, if they
are going to win at all, though there
are those who hold that a man does not
attain his full powers until he has lived
two score years. You know the mili
thry adage, "Old men for counsel and
j-oung men for fighting," and this is
true of military life, because martial
success depends as much on physical
vigor as mental. . Gladstone's wonderful
vigor makes him a better fighter at
his advanced age than he ever was
EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO.
N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1894.
before, but Gladstone's mcce began
when he was young. I do not think
your question could !e answered to fit
every case. It c!ejends upon the man
and his conception of what success is.''
The Virginian agrees with the At
lanta Conntitution that, jerhais, the
views of Gen. Porter are the most satis
factory. Gen. Porter's idea is that "it
dej-ends upon the man and his concej
tion of what success is." However, the
question is one alout which there will
always be some difference of opinion.
HOPE FOB THE FABMEB.
A Bise In Land The South to the
Front Tariff Beform a
Certainty.
Chariot tr. Obxrrver.
The real cause of the almost world
wide business depression lies in the un
rest and the strained conditions of the
farming classes, their poverty and their
inability either to pa' debt, to get cred
it, or to buy the goods of the merchant
or the product of the mill. This logi
cally entails ruin on all ; but it falls
heaviest on the farmer and land owner,
who, in his strait, suffers in three dif
ferent ways :(1) Lack of means to oper
ate his lands ; (2) want of a market for
farm products, and (3) the fall in the
value of his lands. On these grounds
the agricultural South has always stood :
1, For free markets, home and foreign ;
2, against concentration of capital ; and
3, against protected industries..
Those were the issues practically set
tled by the great campaign of 1892.
But from that day to this, gigantic ef
forts have been made by the protected
and other capital interests to defeat the
results of the great popular victory. But
now truth and justice prevail ; the re
form tariff bill of a great Southern lead
er (W. L. Wilson) passes the House
amid shouts of victory, and by a major
ity so large (64) as to insure general as
sent alike in the Senate and in the
country. And strange to say, so mark
ed were its provisions in its blows
at concentrated wealth, that it received
even the Populist vote, and was carried
against the influence of Xew York,
Philadelphia, Boston aad Chicago !
Meantime the South has made enor
mous advances in her diversified farm
industries and all manufacturing and
farming interests ; and from far-off, un
crowded Texas even comes the word
that her available lands are rapidly ris
ing in value. This means restored
credit and increased power. Money,
too, is easy, and it only lacks fidelity to
principle, practical economy and gen
erous enterprise to bring hoie and con
fidence to all. And better still, there
is at last a broad and literal spirit of
political, sectional and sectarian pa
triotism pervading all parts of the coun
try and all classes of ieople. The Wil
son bill and the income tax had vtes
from even Xew England.
"Truth is mighty and will prevail."
Southern Farmer's Outlook.
'Obiter Dicta" in Charlotte Observer.
If we look a little ahead of actual
present conditions it begins to appear
that the Southern farmer's day is near
at hand. A reduction in the tariff, es
pecially on articles he has to buy, is im
minent. The burden of paying the ex
penses of the government is about t i
be transferred in part from his shoulder
to that of those who are letter able
to bear it than he is at present, through
the working of the income tax, and
when he gets able he will again come
in for his share. Already the depres
sion of the manufacturing and commer
cial interests, through causes which lie
so deep that neither he nor they could
discover them until their effects appear
ed, have brought prices down to a point
from which they will not recover for
years. Who can look into the future
to-day with any more confidence than
the Southern farmer?
The man who would have done so
and so if he had been there, never gets
there.
To be all the time feeling for feeling
is a poor way to promote religious life.
The man who repents on a sick bed
from which he recovers, generally back
slides before he pays his doctor's bill.
Some men are more afraid of criti
cism than a woman is of a shotgun.
FOR FARMERS.
KASTEB THE SXTTJATIO!?.
Hott to
Make Double Money zz Pea-
, few.
Judge Waihr Clark in "The HiJUHh."
Edw.ird AlUii-on, the veil knwn
economist. lm ircently written an ad
mirable article, io:nting out the ti
of the jeanut, epo-ialiy as a producer
of oil. He it w;is who, years ago, jx,int-c-d
out the value of cotton mxl for its
oil and it mammal and food qu.iiitio,
as cotton seed meal, and the ali:e of
the hulls. Prior to this, on many
farms cotton seed was di-poscd of n
waste. Xow Mr. Atkinson predicts the
future usefulness of t!.e jeanut as nn
oil producer and in other ways.
But before we go into its production
extcn.-ively attention should lc calltd
to the syndicate which controls the
sale of the nuts, making its meml-c-rs
millionaires and the producers paujTrs.
The number of peanut buyers is small.
These have formed a trustor syndicate.
By this combination it is decreed that
the "farmer's stock" is no( salable, a no
all peanuts before liecoming marketa
ble must go through what they aie
pleased to dignify with the name of
peanut "factory." By another of their
rules no factory will take the nuts on
toll, but they must le sold to the own
er of the factory. This delivers the
farmer alive into their hands.
The peanuts are sold on the market
at a price fixed by the syndicate, which
is at present about two cents per jK)iind.
They are run through the "factory" at
total cost of one-fifth of a cent er
pound, and are then sold to the retail
merchant by wholesale at f jur or sev
en cents per jound, according to locali
ty. The profits being iooled are pre
sumably divided. Xo wonder the far
mers find no profit in making jeanuts
and that the factory owners are Incom
ing millionaires. Farmers generally
raise small crops of peanuts, and each
not feeling largely interested, as a class
they are ignorant of the gross imposi
tion practiced upon them in this, as in
some other matters. Imposed ujon by
the word "factory," they are led to
think that there is some costly and
mysterious process in preparing the
peanuts for market. There is nothing
of the kind. The peanuts are joured
into a revolvingcylinder which jxjlishes
them and blows out the pops and dirt.
As they come out they fall upon n
broad, endless belt which carries them
along to le bagged. Negroes stand on
each side of this moving lelt and
with paddles deftly sort the peanuts.
They are then bagged and sold for
more than double the price oaid the
farmer. The process of thus preparing
them costs not more than one-fifth of a
cent.
It was also thought that the process
was not only mysterious and required
skill which we sec is not so but
that the machinery was exiensive.
But is is said by those who know, that
the machinery of one of these so-called
"factories" will not cost more than
$ 500 to $700, and that the whole plant
including machinery, building, en
gine everything should not cot over
$2,000 to -f 2,500. It was also urged
that there was a patent on the mach
inery. A party who was bold enough
to defy this claim and establish his
own factory demonstrated by a suit in
court that there was no patent, and
thereujon it is said the syndicate took
him in and he is now one of our oj
pressors and fast Incoming a million
aire. As a last resort, to discourage put
ting up factories it is given out tha'
large capital is required to establish a
brand and put it on the market. On
the contrary, the writer has recently
had correspondence with numerous
dealers from San Francisco to Boston,
and from Xew Orleans to Montreal,
and readily had offers varying from
four and one-half to seven cents for
nuts, without any question as to brand.
The only requirement was that they
should le sound and "factory" stock.
The syndicate have ed ated the pub
lic to require the latter, as it places the
trade in their hands.
If the farmers generally knew of the
above facts, thev could readily eman-
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE St.oo.
NO. 11.
cip3tt t hrm--! r- fnm rlhnc t to
cent pr pound auut h:ch. with
ihf addition of iivfifth of a cent !--
tory" Tio?k, rr mid nt fur to -ni
cent j. by each noii:hlrhl putting
up a fartry, or by r-ir ttM pottm; it ;
up to run for toll. But the- lact '
j have 1 t'n jrfiUnt!y i:;prfd '
When at very r.ir tTiUra! . hu to.-v
out of the M-njatrt Iomii. hx f i put;
up it i fvaid that it imfrioii.
iy ntid Maidenly f.toj. Tb wlo
know ay that lhi- l done by the u
dicate laying the outers of tlx itmw
factory a sum equal to the i-linitM
profit of the tolls which whold !
likely to rmtic in if the factory w.i
run. Fortunately, there i ! iiiteiti.nl
ivvcnue tax on f.u-torv peanuts :i on
manufactured tobjuvo. by which tin
syndicate can kep : monopoly.
This i.i one ot ti e many ) m
uhi-h the farming rhi is phxked.
Will not the fjirmet'i who me interest- j
ed in peanut racing look into the j
j
matter and each la-ighU i l.oiwl provide!
itself with a factorv for next w-mkoii t
which i-eanuts may U prepared for'
market for toll? "Who would U hcej
'heniM-hes must strike the blow."
Bsys, Bsad Thi:
F.xchn nge.
Chauncey I)ejew against whom no
one could think of charging a Puritanic
spirit, sjx.-aks as follows on the tcmjer
ance question :
"Twenty-five years ago I knew every
man woman and child in Peekskill.
And it has l,een a study with me to
mark 1ks who started in every grade
of life with myself, to see what has
become of them. I was up l.t-t fall,
and Igan to count them over, and it
was an instructive exhibit. Some of
them leeamc clerks, merchants, manu
facturers, lawyers and doctors. It is
remarkable that everyone that drank
is dead not one living of my age.
Barring a few who were taken by sick
ness every one who proved a wreck and
wrecked his family, did it from rum
and no other cause. Of those who were
church-going jn-ople, who were steady,
who were frugal and thrifty every single
one of them, without any exception,
owns the house in which he lives, and
has something laid by, the interest of
which, with his house would carry him
through many an rainy day. When a
man becomes debased in gambling, rum
or drink he does not care ; all his finer
feelings are crowded out. The women
at home are the ones who suffer suffer
in their tenderest emotions suffer in
their affections for those whom they
love letter than life."
It will Ikj a great blessing if I my will
not only read this, but will determine
that, with God's help, they will never
drink the first glass.
Whn Baby wu dek, we her CtstorU.
Whi-n ah wa a Child, the criod for Cartori.
Whn she bnctme Mi, he clung to CMtorla.
When she had ChlMrea, aha gava thaca Caatarift.
Terrapin Fame
Argonaut.
There are but two terrapin farms in
the United States one in Alabama
and the o' her in Maryland. Thisseern"
strange when the immense profit
realized by thec farm taken into
consideration. From the Alabama
farm from ten thousand to twelve thou
sand doen are armunlly sold at prices
ranging from six to ten dollar- i-r
dozen.
We wonder why some of our enter
prising people do not try raiding tin
diamond back terrapin somewhere
along our Eastern shores. When we
take oTir proximity to the great market
along with all our other advantages,
coupled with the fact that the demand
for terrapin never get slack it would
seem to us that the parties embarking
in this business at any of the many
advantageous oints along our coast
would hove a sure cinch on fortune if
he only gave the business projr atten
tion. There are plenty of avenues oten for
making big money in this State in
business enterprises, which have neyer
yet been even thought of.
MM Vim K .SUKT!OVrT Now,
TH.v r n.A.v- tr i;: u;i;
WUh jour Ahrrtlrntrnt
j i th c! h rv.i Tut
j
I v- - t: it.
The Old Friend
Anl the Kst fr;onJ, that never
f.ti!a you, is Simmons Liver li.ru
lalor, (thd KM 7.) that's vit
you hear at th mention cf thi
excellent Liver r.wdu-ir.e,
ooplo fhouM tiot U rru.ulol
that anything vUe i!l ! .
It is tho Kin of LiV-r M!i
cinea; is U tter than ) nr. !
takes tho j.hioo of Quiiat.o nn-i
Calomel. It nets ilinrtly on tho
Liver, Kiv.ln ys anl llowrl n?.l
gives new life to th- w h !e nvs
tcm. This U the ii,olirm you
want. M bv all J'rutviLi in
Litjuiil, or in Towih-r to 1j taken
lxy or nia lo into a tea.
. arKVKHV l'( K UK-
Blaa tha Z fclamp In r4 an wrtrm.
J.U. SKILl.1t A CO., ruU4a.t.ia, IV
"How id Cl Iil. I I. K 1 V 1 ! -1 11 - '"
Simply apply "Swan- iutm M '
No internal medicine icqum-d ('una
tetter, eeriii i, itch, a!) i iU ').i!i n
the f;ice, h iinU, Tiom. A , li.nl!ig the
skin dear, white and hi-ahhv. It- yieat
healing and uiatie .ah-h aie jm.
m-smini by no other reM.edv. k jour
druggict for Suatic' ( imlmei.t.
run ovr.i: fifty ye a us
AS Oil' ASH Wmj Ti.UM KlMJtiV
M r. Window V Smithing suiii ha
U-en Usel fnroi l'ift i .u by mil
lion of molhci for their chlldtett
while U-ethink', with -ifi t micii-m" It
soothes the fold, (-often the gutiin,
allaN all pain cine wind colic, i nd i
the bed remedy for Imotbo-s !
pleasant to the taMe. So!d by lnu'
tfist in every p.iit of the W'otld.
Twenty five cent a l!t!c It- valce
is incalculable. Be cine in, 1 ii-U f i Mi,
Window's Soothing Svtup. and tale
no other kind.
Enuli -h Spav ui Eminent ioi,ac
all Hard, Soft or ( ',tll..n e j J.:m,p- i'id
and ( "lem i-hi fr in h"!- lii'-nl
Spavin Slll., iilllt-. Sweei.ev, III! i-
worm title-. ,-pralu-. aie' Swollen
Through, Con-h-. I t. v .'ro f.y
IH! of one iM.ttje Wat i.i-'d tie
most wondtful J!!fT!,:-!ii Cue ever
known. Sold I-. F. I U hio hi .,1 .V
Co., Iruggite, Scotland .Neek. N c.
10 1 lv.
rit.is ! ft 1 1 p ' 1 1 1 1 1 titi".
SyvithM" Moj-t ure ; intcn-e itch
ing and ftinging; mo-t at ntgbt ,wor-i
by scratching. If allowed to contmi.o
tumors from which often l.,'i-d and ul
cerate Incoming very -ore ;,"'
OlNTMfcNT (-to, the itehing and bind
ing heaLt ulceration, m mot i-- re
move the tumor. At dru;'git or I y
mail for .V) cent. Ir. .-wavta- ,'. ,- ri
I'hiladelphia.
Itch on human iiiid lcr-- aim all
animal-cund in minute v ool
ford's Sanitarv I,.ti.n "I 11- M--r
fail-. Sold byE. T. Whitehead A Co.
Drugtri.-t. Seotland N--k N. C.
1 1 t !2 1 v.
NEW -
Central : H
I have jti-t oj,er.id nt my M f.md
and a-k the patronage of th" public.
I shall keep
Beef, Pork, Fresh Fish
And f ) -fer- in i-on.
I will pay high' -t c.t-h j-ri-e- f. ,r
NICE FAT STOCK.
Ke-Ieetfull V,
K. ALLSBilOOK,
H M :itn Scotl and Ne. k, N.
LAND SALE.
In pur-Ttaiice of an order of court,
to make a I i!l on tl e .'.r l c t of
March. Ih'.tl, -!! in the town of -., t
lalid Neck at public aU'-tiou hat tr; ct
of land in Halifax county on which
Mr. Elizabeth Fender n-idid at J.-r
death and known h the Fender tr -t.
lour-ded bv the hmd-t of Mr-. Whita
ker. W. H." Kitchin t a!-
Term: One-thirl ca-h. t !.c b ii, n e
on a credit of dx month-. ,: -.l'ii
approved Hecnrity. Uarin' n.!'.e-t
from day of -a!e." title retained t rail all
the purcha-e money i paid
Jan. .'JO, "Ji. Tip... I.. I'..'-1 i t:.
1 4t Adtnr. Elizald-th I endcr.
ami Orho Xlablta
CureU ai L iilt-
u 1 1 al a. iixik o f t. f
ticulara-rit I KLC
iaM.VOf)I.:.EY.M 1JL
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