Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / April 26, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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ADVERTISING IS TO BUSINESS -WHAT STEAM IS TO- Machinery, IP YOU ARE A HUSTLER MOCR - ! ;. ; : -: Business. 1HE AT. v 4 That Gkkat P!:oi':::.i.i.; I'uhkk. Write 1 1 1 a nice adverri orur-nt about i vniir business and in-ert it in THE DEMOCRAT, and you'll '.-ee a change in business all round." PROFESSIONAL. D R. W. O. M( DOWLLL, Oiiice Xorth corner New Hotel, Main: Street, ! i Scoti.ano Nfck, X. C. ; SS1-Always at his ollice when not orof'-.-ionall v engaged elsewhere. U 20 lv D ii. fraxk wnn ;: in: a i), Oilice Xm tii corner Xew Hotel, Main l ! St reel, 1 ! Scotland Xwk. X. C. r.rwy found at his office when P. not professionally engaged elsewhere 7 ; i v 0 R. A. C. LI YEEUOX, j Pvi$&3h n;T?T;-3' ! Sjfvj M rlM i'S Ufo I Omick Over.!. J). Ray's; s'ore. Odice hours from to 1 o'clock ; 2 to i o'clock. i. m. '1 'l ly SCOTLAND XECk, X. G Ii. .1. II. DAXI ML -Drx.v. X. C. Makes t ho disease of cancer a Specialty. 0 10 lv D YII P.ELL Attorney at Law, i:fi i-:u, x. c. Practices in .-til the Courts of Hali fax and adjoining counties and in the Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims collected in all parts of the State. :j s iv i S . hl'VV . v . i ' i . i . . a r r n j: x i: y-a t-l a ir. S oTt.AND Nl.'K, X. C. Practices wliercver his services are required. 2 L ly U II. KTTCIIIX, SIl Attorney and Counsels! at Law, Scotland X::ck, X. C. : Corner Main and Elev enth Sneers. 1 lv Joseph Christian. P. St. Geo. Barraud. hate judge Supreme i . , r 4 1 ' ourt oi Appeals of Virginia. n in: 1st i ax a.- raeracd. U a ttoj:xj:ys-a t-l a ir, Will practice in all the Courts. State an. I Federal, in the city of Richmond. i )rri, '')Di:i 1. Cli'Dnh, ; of Cumtui ret' Jill Hit i llU . 7, 1 IMCIIMOXD, VA. I. J . Mercer & son.. i2o iC i -t Main Street., i:;'HMOXI VA. LUMBER GQMMiSSIGH MbRGHANTS. per-ona! and ;romit attention to ; i!iii;iiriii; nts oi I.umher, Siiin- -. i.;,!hs. S:: I 17 :; Jv h g jeweirv More j After -ix year- experience, 1 feel thor oughly competent to do all work that i- expe,'-..fl (,f a WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. WATCHMAKER a::i JEWELER. PiojKiirinu; k Timin; Fine Vi atclies A s .;;( j !.T V. 1 also carry a full line of WATCHES. CLOCKS. JEWELRY, MI'SICAL IXSTREMEXTS A XI) :i Specie!,-and t Eye J!as -es I'n .perly l "1 Fitted to the Eve. IT h hM Sswia 1 1 Sit mm 'HI E 15 EST OX EARTH. -WIXG .MACHINES OLEAXEI) A ND R ERA IKED. i i-'i .-i jox ;i .ka.ntj:i:i. IF. . JOHXSTOX, V' l ,,,,,) (,, . II. Josnf. K b' Olll E. E. MILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. X. a3fs The Old Friend Ana. the "best friend, that never fails you, is Simmons Liver Regu lator, (the Red Z) that's what you hear at the mention of this j excellent Liver medicine, and people should not be persuaded it.: :n i tnuo nuy uiiing eioo win uo. Ti 1l t: f t It ia the King of Liver Medi cines; is better than pills, and takes the place of Quinine and Calomel. It acts directly on the Liver, Kidneys and Bowels and gives new life to the whole sys tem. This is the medicine you want, bold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made into a tea. A - - - - w ' w . . r,-mr . ., . -. . . Ubi the Z Stamp In red on wrapper. I J. H. & CO., rbiladeltfhia. v i TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF ZEBULON B. VANCE. What means this eager, anxious throng, That go and come again, And seem to speak with hreath, And faces sad? These groups. That stand apart, and pause, Amid life's restlessness? Another hero fallen ! And Carolina's ! nohle son. Who ever dared to firmly stand For right and truth, Throughout life's whirl and push, And struggle after greatness, Is no more ! It is hut meet and right to stop And pause with bared head, And thus reflect that man is mortal ! E'en the great lie low hefore Death's withering hreath. How soon the swift-winged messenger Will come again, to some Who now pau.-e here, and cut them sh rt Whatever he their career, we cannot tell. We only know that when God calls We all must go. Our souls, so long pent up Within our mortal frames, Return to Him who gave us life, Our Father and our Judge ! The name of Vance hath often caused A thrill within a patriot's heart. His aim was high and for His country's go.nl. and tears Will fall today, and statesmen Stand appalled hefore his bier. His widow weeps, and children mourn Their nohle sire, and justly claim Our tender sympathy ! His faults we see not now ; His greatness and his. virtues Stand in hold relief , Against the background, of this sorrow. And Carolina weeps today, The loss of that brave son Of whom she's now bereft. From mountain unto pebbly shore, From where the IJidge of Blue, Whoso azure tops oft seem to Touch the sky, and hold aloft The radiant sunset plow at eventide, To where the wild Atlantic laves The eastern shore, a throb Of sympathy will find in many hearts An echo '. ihit such is life ! His work is done. 1 1 is earthly labor wrought. And unto God we now commend his soul. And may it rest in peace, And all the good that he hath done Live on ! Mrs. .'. M. A H'L-xsnn. J!'r!"h, X. ('. rrsii"!diC3. Kxvhiiltijr . Prejudice is one of the worst obsta cles to the soul's progress a handicap upon the-runner in the race of life. Probably no person is free from prej udice. On the mmd or heart it rests like a dead weight yet too undefined to 1,0 perceived as a thing to be resolutely cast off. With some people prejudices are treated as though there were a mer it in them. One person takes a dislike to another of whom he knows little perhaps has never seen. Xo reason can be given lor this attitude; but rather than give up the prejudice he submits to it a -id so destroys any good influence that that person might have over him. Xor does it stop here. The prejudice is aired and advertised until the good influence that that same person might have over others is de stroyed. It is difficult to rid ourselves of a prejudice, even when we wish to; but to cling to and to value it, to fold it in our arms and pet it and show it off as one of our prized possessions, is this a fit proceeding for an honest man? It is general iT""" up" with a man when he begins to go down hill. Speak but little and well if you would be esteemed a man of merit. SCOTLAND NECK N. C. THURSDAY. THE NORTH CAROLINA COAST. Prof. ('. Cobb on Its Formation. THIS EASTERN SECTION OF THE STATE AN OLD SEA BOTTOM "ioncfthe State the Birth . of the First American Child. Prof. Collier Cobb in Gol'lthwaite's G oor:ph iral Mafjazin . The influence of environment upon all creatures is a fact of every day ob servation ; and yet, so familiar are we with the adaptation of creatures to their surroundings, that the shaping influ ence of these surroundings is apt to es cape our attention. Xot only is the lower life of the land shaped by geo graphic conditions, hut man himself is influenced more than any other animal by the circumstances that surround him. Each of us is the result of forces that have been in operation from the beginning, and our very occupations depend upon what has taken place in the geological past. In eastern North Carolina cotton is the (diief staple, because the soil of that region was once the sandy bottom of a shallow sea, extending well out to the trough of the ocean, where now flows a warm and moist-giving current. The up-country produces grain anil to bacco, for the nature of the rocks in land which are among the oldest on this continent is of such a sort that they haye rotted through the ages into a soil that is clayey in its character. The configuration of our coast not only brought the Raleigh voyagers here and gave to Xorth Carolina the first English parentage, but it has been the most po tent factor in determining the charac ter ol our civilization, and in making our history. Hence a study of the geographical development of our shore line, and of the coastal plain is well worth our consideration. The eastern section of the State is an old sea-bottom that received the waste of the land in an earlier age. This mass of debris, sand, clay and pebbles, this continental shelf, as it is called, was built out to within fifty miles of the margin of the deep Atlantic chan nel, and therefore near its limit. Much of the material for its building was worn from the land of what is now the hill country of Xorth Carolina, and was delivered to the sea by the Roa noke, Tar, Xeuse and Cape Fear rivers, near Weldon, Rocky Mount, Raleigh and Lillington. Since then this region has been lifted above the sea and sunk beneath its surface very many times. Just before its most recent uplift, which gave us our coastal-plain, it re ceived great accessions of material, per haps as great in amount as that derived from the rivers in the shape of sand brought down by the sub-glacial streams of the great Ice Age and pour ed into (he sea in the region some dis tance north, of Cape Haiteras. The trend of the shore being southwest and the prevailing winds from the east, the sands, driven by the waves, worked slowly down the continental shelf to the southward. The highlands of North Carolina being more elevated than any other portions of the Atlantic slope, and their distance from the sea being then relatively less than in the more northerly parts of the continent, the rivers had far greater wearing and car rving oower. and extended our portion of the continental shelf far beyond the njrmal trend. Thus the migrating sands were checked in their southward course, and many of them found lodg ment upon our already extended coastal shelf. Later this old sea bottom was gradu ally raised above the sea, and the rivers persevering in their courses, established their drainage areas on this newly-ac-cpuired land, and gradually widened out their lower valleys. The rise of the land was not uniform and continuous, there being several halts in the upward movement. The most important of these halts occurred when the surface of the country stood at something less than thirty feet below its present level. The old sea beach that indicates this EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. halt is ciearlv marked in Gate-. Chow- i ! an, Bertie, Martin, Beaufort, a part of Pitt, and can prohabiv he traced across ' ' other counties and into South Carolina' To the east of this oM -a-l-each lie- a line of low elevations, marking the ea.-t- i ,,ni;i:i:l ern boundary of the .-warnp district.'0" and presenting characters in a marked. decree like tno nne oi s.nuiv i- an,-i-i which we call The Banks, and evident ly similar to those islands in origin. The method of their formation I shall consider later. After the marking of this old shore ! line and the formation of the chain of j ,., ., , i iii, dune-like outlying islands, the land be- i gau to rise, and the upward movement continued until the countrv suod verv many feet above its present level, and our coast line was many miles east-j ward of the position that it now occu pies. While the country stood at this greater elevation the rivers worked with renewed energy, deepening their channels, widening their lower valleys, and transporting detritus into he sea. With the beginning of the uplift 1-e- gan, most probnbh , the formation of ; our greater swamps in the .-hallow, I quiet waters of the lagoons lying be tween the then exi.-ting coast-line and The Banks of that day ; for the lower deposits of these swamps contain the remains of creatures that lived near the shore, and there is a gradual passing upward through brackish to fresh wa ter forms. After this great uplift there came an other downward movement which is still going on. It, too, was halting in its character, as had been the uplift. The lower valleys were drowned out, making estuaries, and the rivers legan the work of filling uj the channels they had so recently cut. But the tide water tributaries of our larger streams found themselves powerless to either cut or 1111 to any considerable extent, and they remain today with sluggish waters in channels much below the beds of the adjoining sounds. The waves rolling in from the sea, plow along on this recently submerged land, lifting the sand and bearing it along until they break m the shallower water near the shore and deposit their burden. The inflowing tides have also set back the rivers, quieting their wa ters and causing them to deposit the detritus brought down from the land. In this way The Banks have been built. The sounds, or more properly la goons, behind this chain of islands, or dunes, are rapidly silted up and covered up and converted into marsh and dry land by the sands blown oyer the dune and the sediment brought down by the rivers. Though the movement of the sands landward is something near one foot per annum, their loss to our coast line is compensated by the sands brought down by the southward going shore current, which is halted by the Cuif stream and, made to drop its sands off Hatferas, where it rises to the sur face. The meeting place of tliese cur rents, on account or its tin oulent, ehop pv character, is much dreaded by sail ors, who have given to it the name of "Little .Hell." and as such it appears upon the pilot charts issued by the government. Hence it may be seen that our State is constantly acquiring new lands in spite of the gradual sub sidence of our continental shelf. The embayment of The R.u.k- i- a:. original feature with them, due to the form of the land and the po-hion of niv..- iw -. ... igin ; but it is being vear iy year a-- cent rated as the tides -cour out the , ,, t ,i l . , i l ... ,i hollows of the bavs and leave tne .-.iiul- upon the point- of land. Capes I latter - as. Lookout and Fear. The n of the waves opposes the v.ork of uhe tides by beating off the headhmas and ilrn - ing me detritus into the neiv'hbor-o:g bays. In the region-of harder rocks th ojpoing force-- of the tides and t?.... waves are retty evenly balanced ; but on our coast the packing of water be tween the grains of sand enables them to resist the blow of the waves, while the work of the tides is helped rather than hindered. The result is that sand bars extend out from our capes and are constantly added to, as the bays are scoured out deeper and deeper. Such has been the physical history of the coastal-plain and shore-line of Xorth Carolina. In a later chapter I shall consider the influence of this coastal region upon our civilization and our growth as a State. APRIL 26, 1894. ul""--"- 1 ..::.; i, I I i 1 11 rr:it'"- ' - ' ';n U;'r ' rl" U n i -: - Y .i . !;... !- :! e - : n. ;-.c.v iiii.i':. !!." ' ( iraham 1'-'LV P'-!t Tamp.i '::. i a!!u a steamer nut :-t t-etve':i tin- i rt and the Ho.-Mur.e- end -f theoM L-';:s- iana Lottery hu . the -tt;-y c tn p.u y ha kept aboard of th;- ew ;, 1 it of printing prev-e and mate: iah The object was to pn ide aa.n-t m;v Revolution that micht ati-e in Ho- du ! ras or lM.s-ihlv anv i:nfaor.i!'.e turn a i ' I 1 I .... r . ) , i viini- use icurai -t.iius . , men i up ies in this count r Thi- material pa. ed through the eu-'om house, on regular schedule for exp-rt. I Recently Sjwcial Age;:ts Paul and 1 . f .1 I . . lector John T. Lv-!ev rer.-:ved in IT tions fnm the department to le hu on these printing material-, and to make the lottery compam unlo.-d then,: here and re-load them in regular ooier for eaeii passage of the ve el, a- good- for import, and to lrvy duties accord - ingly. This ruling will hae the (.Te.-t of making the company either place its printing material here or leae it at Honduras. Then in case of emergency the company can ship, them in regular order. Another ruling is that the lot tery company shall pay ns duty an amount equal to the face value of all the tickets brought here from Honduras. It will he remembered the lottery company, to evade the laws of the United States, moved its plant to Hon - duras. In order to have an American connection 'hey bought jiroperty aixl established a big plant at Port Tampa City. To evade the laws of this coun try, they have claimed that all tickets sent out by expre.-s companies from this port were importations from Hon- i . . . i auras, ana inai no man can mi a; Louisiana Lottery ticket at Port Tampa City. Collector Lesley-says the lottery company does not import tickets from Honduras, hut disfrihtites them some point in the Tinted States. - 4. Hints About Driving. When driving you must watch the road. Turn out for stones, so thai the horse shall not stumble nor the wheels iolt over them ; avoid mudhole- and , places where the going is bad ; let thej horse slacken s!(eel who,, the road ' - comes heavy, and if you want to make up time do it where the ground ..light- ly uecenus, says a w riter in v a' en. v. It is a common mistake to 'hi k that a horse can haul a carriage ea-ily I on the level. n such a road he ha.- i to he pulling every moment : there !- , no rest whereas when the road now rises and now falls the weight is taken j oI him at times and he has , chance : t to recover his wind and to rest his j mu-clc. As between a level road in a j valley and an up-and-down road over ; the hills the latter is by far the ea-ier for a horse to travel. When you come to a long level stretch let your bor e walk a bit in the middle of it. Almost everybody knows that for the j first lew miles after comini: out of the i stable a horse should Ik driven -low ly ! and especially it j;e lias ui-t uen ted. ! )n a journey it is of the ;itmo-t imp..;-- ranee to observe this rule. Re careful i i ias -were iieiv ir m ine uepa'amem -uai j:e .inv.r . l in Wa -h ing ton, lool.ii ig into -u-tom t her- l n hi- r. i..! fairs. They reported to their chief t ne : hi- tall.- he s i;d thi condition of things and Sat uula v cl ia ' however., not to check a voting nagf o ! a-j aliv,.?" evcepting Tom." .-.;.- j quickly when he comes fresh from the ; ti1M ,f.r. - lb-'- ,,,;, 'in" ;,r..'i:,. the I taUe. Give him his head, talk t-rom.op- mo-t of the time." -Well j hm sfothinply ari1 .gently he will:,;)i(I !iti.M,,5) -h, w.'r de, -j . """" o ,i iii"......ii'. i " nil him up at once you vex him ex - tremely. so much so that he is not un - likelv to kick. Lincoln's Opinion. Watch a orJ. Abraham Lincoln was h feet 4j inches in height. Talking with s friends one day. the subject under di- cussioii was no iotig a mans ie- j ought to he. Mr. Lincoln said he had given much thought to the matter and had come to the conclu-ion that they j should le long enough to jrach from f the body to the ground. SUBSCRIPTION PRICK $: oo NO. 21. V M H" Mr 11 I.e3 ,.i'.vU. - .!-.. ti;.' ! re.i:c-t pl.-M' ! - ph;; . . refer t t he c r .i " . --: : . ; L : . ' i '. i i f .; . ; :: r.. f .. ;,.- . . ; ; . : . . - ie .: - -l.'pj-ed m n I.. !) ':-! lde a lu.iti and pr.iy f -r h :n tre He i i 're .! h-.'imc; Bo .k. and .s. t :.e i ' i 1 rt'.lL".. '. '.-- all pr. .p-r i't i Je . ' i t h a'.! appl 1 pn i!e .'ar:e' lb , . ' ' . !.:- d. : :i ".' ha ... , p-itiwrt- of : ober atice of th I h 1 . ! In . e - I 1 ., "1 lia-o hibo. ...e. i i,. h ah ii- e er:ta! an i .an liar 11. oe- p,W, i -t : e ; ! - .,,. Uitere-t f ! ! Ml! ' view, ! a t;. invnaaiof thi , . ai i i . ..' i i , mid et other higher je-pe. j m the . I ..... , . nothini: 1 n. a e a n ioii-l v .:.-. ri.. . that they -h-.i.id ir aid !:! ( hi:h- ly appreciate the Ohn-ti.Mi d.tv re-t. ; 'I he religious ob-erauce of ;!. dav is a mam prop of t he iel i L-e -n : diaraeter of the coiintry p:,,,, a moral, social and physical point of. j view the nl vaiin- of Sunday i- a1 duty of absolute coi:-.-pience. ' If a-ked what i- the lemcdy for the. ', deeper sorrow s of the human heart-! j hat a man -hould chiefly h. k to u, ; progress through life a- the pouet ' j t li.it is to -u-t.iin him under trial- ..nd ! j enable him manfully to confront hi-j atllictions.' I mti-t point him to ome- ' thing which, in a w ell k now 1 1 h n i n . i -called "The old. old story.' told of in an 1 ,,,. ..MPook, and tautdit w ith an old. j i old teaching, which i- the great. -t and i . . . . ... nest gilt efr L'ieu to niankinu. Tin- !- the te-tiinoi,; of a ery greit man. Ii ne hoi. ir, the mo-t dl-tili j j,,.,, JIM(1 kU.V( f lM,,,i(. M.M ,. f:lv,r.-.i with H-hf- :.it'l :i -tuden! of the Bible and the.log. Hi- wit nes- is worth much far more than the j ordinary mini-ter of the ;o-i.e or an 1 editor can bear. "I.Vincinh'r thi' Salt bath I av to keep it ho v." ! j She Znor:. j -'he other dav, -a-, s a Boston ce.utle jn).u , U;1 p.ui of a little ri. i who ,: j ,on(l(,, a (1i,.rih,,f ;, ,n of ,,rir. ,,,,,, , (ho s..iHy f(J. ,,. p,,n.I1?in of cr, elty to animal-. She had won. i must know, a book as a rew.e-d foj writing he be.-t es-ay on the ih"-' given, and, with the other -'i-. e-.f u idiildreu. was undergoing a ia -.o'--examination. "Well, my dear." -aid tie- gentlem..!, v. ho had given away the prize., -;in you ion me why it i- cru i, horse-' taib and trim dog-' e "Becmis'," an-wercd the ttle 111,! "w hat 'ml ha- joiiied toyetlir-r lc j,o man put a-.-under." A gentleman wdio wa- i-lt i r. ; place w here he i;,d f.,unerly !-!, rfl,1,n.,,t a- It.qtUiiiig a! i wii'.in n; nan once Known, anu j-i. . i . i : . . . i . ... . i i-f What ;il. out the bov- : a; ; tneii. i w 1-. came ::( ;e;.;-, . 1 .. jjt. , ., l,e..t." ! ... X "' York Jour mi' . Lemon juice, al-o l.r- ;t.ll-h. ! a !;.-: .set v. it I reccornmendef for tan. b st-cedy remf-.lv i- magne-ia. I r;tjn vat?r . ,tir to a thi,k M,... ' m tjf; f;;(.,. airl ;,t r(.n..l!n t,u, . . iX r three minute wa.-h off w ith c,t. ' r.ot. i r . rl fr,id -.ft w iti.r riti-irc ?hoi - . ' ' 1 oughly. During the -piing month- it i- alw.-y-- a lvi-abe to wear a close ';! ! of heavv silk ti ue. i ii I 1 ' v our et l i Mt lit r r I . . . . i - . : t ' . ' .' . , ft." . I . i ' t- ry a t !' r tt. A.u- t ..; - . ' T I !, i.f iir J , ; . ! I. ! . ;. ' ! In ) : - III lll'iilr . . .. 1 '1 l.'-v J ii! ii j ii. v. . . t , ,, v ' . r curt list in t v ' - t. In Ji, h.iui 1 1, i a. i . I !...!.. : . fil.Ji.itl 'I., I ..J.i 1: .11 !.... .- : t I : .O lIlK lip 'J Mi II fl- . L . f f !'!- 1 I iiltnniiiirt! r 'ii, I i -i ' I ' c : ' ; t All'l l it" thr in II. ! i. uiVn in tlii- i'in tl.i . i.- " '. ' '. r tin-) r ' i ' i . ''' c . . r j i mr rni iii-v i t p! .i ! I A e't'tiiri nn I .. .ii- J t '', . . ( 'u til rili III It . Ih i I , n- y u i n i - ! I . o. tuaki r ef It i c ! !.. .- . . I mi I: : i e i ; i ! i . I :e i : I i - l build ! ' 1 ; j i ' . faille P.' ! I'. !.: ! IllK-1 . ! ! . ; , , ., - , . puiih v..-,. !:....! b. .ttle " I"..- ' . I . I h vi:i; i i A .' i v -i W i M: . u. - been . ' Ii..,,- . f ,,..a! . hi'.. !.. hi' .' . . !, ' ! . ; ' all c- ,:: , . the I .i- ! !!': ' pVa-.il. to hi- 1 ' I -' - ill i f- TweU ',,' i- i. r... ! t Win-:..". - . no o' her hi! d i Er: ;!!-!! . 1 : all H . d. .of; ... . ' and ' . i i -; . - f , " : -p., Ml, - u-b-. .or:n ti!1..-. -p- . Thion.-h ( ...... i - I ' i - . : ,e I ,, a . !'-,! !;.-. kno ... b.. h l 1" 1 1 It''!. or. !.: . i ! .,n:r,:..!- .;,- u. .:o ... f.cd'- . I ' f.nh. -i lc f i V H.Mc-M-' o d . : . 1 1 I 1 III- '. ?C I.I..-- e l:- .-he: : 'jo. ' , f : , b . . ,-e.. : r i :; ... Phil., h :.:.. !'. flTTfTTT'-" ' ' U U J 1 i 4 . . i t f f f 1 f t ' T I i : : 1 ' ' - i : : n , i e. . . i I 1 .mi IN M. I.VMIi. I'ropneior I A VP I I I.V ! ! !.! ' We i, . M l .j-n, i : l: - l i.:,,, ... K.Mi h.i: ri;l' i 1.1- m : v. - Central : Market. I i. . " -' ..;-..e.; . : ! .-,:. a-;, ti-- i . I -'..ill i.e. p Beef. Pork. Fresli Fish A :. 1 . - . - I j. iy h. .'!,.-' c j . NICE FAT STOCK. I:m-v.',:.:, v mTODDnny 151 'Am ..-! ..;..! . ; . c. k t
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 26, 1894, edition 1
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