Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Jan. 31, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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C- X ASVE3TISING IF YOU ARE HUSTLER viv: t.i :?: v k Business. i j- to L.f BUSINESS t. "- j .v , . ., ; -tram is to- r I Machinery, Democrat. S P. o r t- ? - 5 f -I I s 4 I 3 i 4 4 I z' rf-J'ii.Ai (Jiri.Ai- ri:Mi'i:i.!!N-; Rovvkk. f-;- -J - I,v :. :.dverPs -mf-llt ahOlit r-l THE DEMOCRAT ;t -h:i:jiO in business all t -r ft .1 ;::!. 3- ? PSOrSSSIOlTAL. l ? . M r J L '; , ,. ,,;!h corner New Hold, Main - t i'( .f-f , Hr oi l. AND X I :( K . X. 0. r7"Alwayj at liis office when not '7 jji: niANK WHITE I IK AD, f -'C'lVc .rth corner New Hotel, Main I T ......... Ml'H-t, TI.AND N 1 . K , N. C. -co r- f, .mid at his office when I ."not " j ,1 , f, ioiially engaged elsewhere. 7 l v l;. . c. UYKKMOX, 'i sat nMniPL .'I ri i h k Over J. J)- K.'iy'.s store. li.-.. hours from '. to 1 o'clock ; 2 to ! irk . . ni. 2 12 lv (, -f , I . X I ) N VA ' K , X. 0. S 3 f - IIAVII) r.r.i.h. D i . j Attorney at Law, E.N Fl KRR,-X. C. - , Practices m an in' von -is. oi n.m r J i v aii-l adjoininix counties and in the )-'i.r.'!Mc and Federal Courts. Claims I "J. !!c-!c-d in alT parts of the State. i :; s 1 v ? .. ii .i . ,.r h.,i; i I ! ! t r o n x ; r-j t-l a w m on. an i) Ni:ck, X. C Vf::-t'u-o wherever his services are I JjGseph Christian. P. St. Geo. Barraud. 1. i t ,!f judtre Supreme ?' : r if A 1 il KVlls .if Vir.uinia. ) gHKISTIAX HAlilLAl'I), j rrnnxi-jYS-A t-la w, 1 Will tra.-tice in all the Courts, State 5 . ., ; , - .. .-x.. . t i:..i.....i inn! l-cderal, m ine cii i mnuimiui. ' .';', . ,,,..,, ;. ('homhi o Cot)) iil:rc Jui!ilini, t :, h .RICHMOND, VA. I. J. Mercer & son., i ',20 Ivin Main Street., i;iciimoxi VA. LUMBER COMMISSION ERGHANTS, - ;iv j-.ersoiial and pronit attention I A o a!i on-ijrninonts of Lumber, Shin- t - lis. itc. l 17 J0 lr Extnhllshnl IS'.'l. I ('. M-VDDUKY i CO, roTTnN FACTORS AX'J) PRODUCE -I ; I (JI M I ss ION fFRCJIANTS, IT:. 9 Connerce St., j .NUKIUl.i'v, - - A. X'klkf.-vll' A4 V 'uiok Sales and Prompt Returns, i - fCorre-ponder.ce and Consignments 1 R'-fcrent-e : Purru.-, Son tt Co.. ank , t - : and others on application. 1 1 1. : m -N 1A wesrv 5tore Afit'i-ix years experience. I feel tlior ouhlN coi!'0!(Mit t: do all work that is expected f a U'ATciIMAk'RR and JEWELER. V.T ' 1 1 M A I ER ani JEWELER. I?iairini V Timmi; Fine Watches srKCiAirv 1 also cany a full line of WATCH E. f'L')C!CS. JEWELRY, MI'S!'' AL IXS'l'ilCMEXTS AND FANCY G-OODS. Spc;-f acles and - Eve Clares, Fioperly T Fi'-ic 1 to tii" Eve. THE REST ON EARTH. EWIXf; MACHINES CLEANED AND i:epairkd. SATISKA('TI ).N Gl'AKANT F. El) . w. u. JoirxsTox, -N' "j Until, nst iluor to entrance. 10 6 0m. he E. E. MILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XL NOW 8 1 tlio Oriental eaAntaticn, linowing that good health cam.'ot exist vithout a healthy Liver. AVhen tho Liver i:i torpid tho Bow els are e-hvhli and eon-ftipf-ted, the food lies in the stomaeli undi f xr ted, poisoning tho hlood; frequent headacho ensues; a. feeling of lassi tude, despondeney and nervousness indicate how the v.hole system is de range.:1. Simmons Liver liegulator has been tho i:ie:'S of restoring moro j-eoplo to health and happiness by giving them a heaiihy Liver tlian any rgency known on earth. It acts with extraor dinary power and elhcacy. ;t ' K. C Wn.nRK, Princeton, N. J.,says: Til i' itir!'i4 li' lps so mut.h to keep me in von ii.ion as Sirrmons Liver Kegulator. Sjc tiiitt fou jet the Ocnuint V.iliircii on front of wrapper. I'SHCAXta ONLY BY K..if: C: CO.. II;iIalelpliia. THE REWARD. Bind us a crown for our brows, O years, Rut not of flowers alone, Rind it of weeds and grass and thorns. The things that we most have known. Give us no passive joy, O years, Where our days pass sweetly by, Give us the joy of fiercely living, And let us as fiercely die. Give us no unearned iory, 0 year, No swift fading crown of a day, Rut bind from the dead leaves of our lives The victor's wreath of bay. The Path finder. Insanity Not on the Increase. Chiejt lie raid. Reoplo who worry themselves about their nerves may take heart of hope. Dr. Clifford Allbutt, regius professor of medicine at Cambridge University, England, says the reports of an increase in nervous diseases and Insanity are all nonsense. The hurry and bustle of modern life have no more effect on the nervous system than the alleged slow ness and dehberateness of the past. Probably increased know ledge sees dis ease for the first time which has always existed. Nerve specialists and machin ery for the toning oi nerves are mul tiplying daily, says the professor, but rich idle people are increasing in num bers, and they run, as they always did. after the fashionable fad of the day. What was '"liver" fifty years ago is "nerves" to-day. It is pretentious non sense to claim that people's nerves are too sensitive, too excitable. It is the virtue of nerves to be excitable, the more excitable they are, the more effi cient. He was glad that nature is stronger than the faddists, and that there is a fund of elasticity and insou ciance in healthy youth that blunder as we mav we can not crush. Dr. All- butt's position on this topic has led to much di.-cussion. A great many emi nent men agree with him, but the nerve specialists are up m arms against what they term his antiquated and destructive theories. Uses and Value of Charcoal. Xew York Ledger. Ch'arcoal is one of the most remark able articles in common use, and pos sessess many qualities not generally understood by the laity. As an absorb ent of had odors it has no equal. Placed around articles of food, it prevents decay and preserves them lor a time in all of their freshness. In fine powder it is one of the most perfect dressings for malignant wounds and those where proud flesh is present. As a cure for Headaches it is invaluable, a teaspoon ful in naif a glass of water often afford ing. immediate relief. The power of charcoal to absorb gases is not generally appreciated. It will take up and hold thirty volumes of ammonia, forty of nitrous oxide, sixty-five of sulphurous acid, and eighty-five of hydrochloric acid. Some of these gases may be withdrawn and used at will. The stor age value of charcoal, while it is just becoming known to practical workers, has already opened many avenues of future usefulness. nj i mi . OLD NEWSPAPAKS FOR SALE, 25 cts. per hundred SCOTLAND NECK, N. C THURSDAY. HE 77AS BATHER FP.ESIL Uo Did Everything Tw: Strangs Girls Asksd Him to D:. Xen- York II' raid, I Maided a Sixth-avenue l L" train at J2"th street, on a recent afternoon. At lRth two ery pretty girls, lnge ..uous looking entered the car I occu pied. After looking around In a sort of where-are-we-at way for a moment they came to the section where I was sitting riding backward. My vis-a-vis was an old lady. One ingenue sat be side me, the other beside the old lady. Refore I had tune to offer my seat the one beside the old lady asked : 'Won't you change seats with me sir?" '"Certainly. I was about to offer it to you." I said. "Oh, thank you !" After riding as far as 101th street she jumped up and exclaimed, with a peachblow pout : "Oh, I can't ride backward ! Won't you change again, sir?" "With pleasure," said I, although I had just commenced reading my paper. ".Sorry to trouble you, sir." "Don't mention it. I could keep this up all day." And I resumed my reading. "Have you the time?" she asked, in a few moments, leaning toward me, not half far enough. "My watch has stopped, but I'll just step off at Ninety-third-street station, tell the conductor to hold the train a moment, and look at the station clock," I said. And I did as I had promised. "Seven minues past three," I said, on my return. I was about to resume my reading when she asked : "Are you sure that clock is right?" "T prusume so, but to make suro I'll open the window and ask the ticket chopper," I said. This I did also. "Yes ; he says it's right." She nodded lier pretty little head, and smiled bewi tellingly. I wanted to finish a long story be fore reaching the office, so I again re sumed my reading. "How long does it take to go down to Forty-second street?" sweetly asked the ingenue in a moment. "About twentj--nve minutes." And again I began to read. "We want to catch a train at the Grand Central at 3 :10. Do you think we can do it?" "1 should think so, if you take a cab at the station." "Those horrid cabs ! I don't like 'em. Do you, Molhe?" No, Mollie didn't either. Glad of a little respite, looked in my paper to see where I had left off. Refore I could find the place Mollie asked in her ain't-he-a-nice-young-man-cattenish voice : "How much do they charge, do you know?" "About fifty cents apiece. Perhaps they'll take you both for 7"c." "How far do you go, sir?" "I go to Thirty-third street." I didn't dare resume reading now ; the questions were coming too fast. "You coulnt get off at Forty-second, I suppose, and help us with our traps into a cab ?" "Oh, certainly, I have all day to my self. I only work at night." "Well how's that? Are you an ac tor?" "No, I am a newspaper man." "A reporter?" "Copy-reader." "What's that?" came from both pret ty mouths simultaneously. I explained. "Forty second !" cried tho conductor. "Oh, here's where we get off, sir ! Will you kindly" I "kindly." I carried tl.eir iraps down stairs, hailed a cab. askM whst the fare was. Seventy-five cents. Both opened their pocket books. Neither had change. Jehu had none, either. I was asked if I had. I gave up the last three quarters I had, saluted, and started to walk to the office. Just then I heard one sweet ingenue say to the other indignantly : "Strikes me he's rather fresh on first acquaintance." EXCELSIOR- IS OUR MOTTO. Is "VThat Undo San Paid ::: Par: llrit't aniea . The territorial area of the Cnited States is ftliout .(XxhhiO square miles, the land surface l-eitrj: estimated at 3.rw;.fKH; square mile. In lvo the public domain consisted O) inj.q.v, p; .re mile-, or l'"'.17 .o7 acres. To this was added, by purcha.-f- from France, in Isoih tho colony of Lord si ana. Thi- purchase 'neludd por tions of the states of Alabama and Mississippi south of the thirty-first parallel, the entire area of Loiiissana, Arkansas, Misouri, Iowa. Nebraska ami Oregon, all of Minnesota west of the Missouri river, all f Kansas except a small portion west of the J0th mer idian and south of the Arkansas river, all of Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Wash ington and Indian Territory, with a part of Wyoming and Colorado. The cost, according to the stipula tions of the treaty, was oO.OOO.IHMI francs, or -f l.'t.COOpoo in money and stocks. The interest on stocks to t lie time of redemption was N. .":!, :i,")3. The United States assumed also the payment of certain claims of American citizens against France, amounting to $3,738,208, making a total expendi ture of .$27,207,521. For this sum the government aequiried a title to 1,182 752 square miles of territory, or 750, 1)01,280 acres at 3 3-5 cents per acre. The next acquisition was the purchase of Florida from Spain in 1M'. for $5, 000.000. This purchase added to the public domain 5!.), 207 square miles, or 37,t8,520 acres at 174 cents per acre. The next acquisition was by cession from Mexico in 1818 of the states of California and Nevada, a part of Col orado, and the territories of Utah, Ari zona and New Mexico. By this tran saction there were added to the pub lic domain 522,578 square miles, or 331,113,520 acres, at a cost of $15,000. 000, or 4 1 cents per acre. The area of the United States was still further in creased by the admission of Texas to the ugion in 1815. The territory thus acquired amounted to 107.805,000 acres. This increase of territory was consummated after a war with the sis ter republic of Mexico. This war, al though on the part of the union con ducted with signal success, was a subject of protest from a large minority of the ablest statesmen of the country, and, beyond a doubt, sowed the perni cious seeds that in many instances bore fruit in the secession struggle which afterward disrupted the union. The latest addition was that of Alas ka, containing 531,10t square miles purchased from Russia for $7,200,000, in 1807. It will be seen from the above state ment that the United States govern ment lias added to the public domain since 1802 nearly 3,500,000 s,lU;lre miles ot territory, most of which was acquired by purchase. Uses of Hot Water. The best methods of using hot water are as follows : For sprains of the an kle and wrist or any joint, the part should be thoroughly soaked for half an hour at a time, night and morning, in very hot water, writes A. Marcy, M. D., in a very valuable list of "Domestic Household Remedies" in the January Ladle's' Home Journal. Any one suf fering from a severe sprain will not re quire more than the first soaking to convince them of the advantage of hot over cold water. A flannel bandage should be applied firmly after each treatment. For bruises very much the same method should be loliowed, al though the application need not bo continued for so long a time. For wounds and sores the best method is to drip or pour lor a few minute.-. Fur styes and mliamed eyelids, and even for sere eyes, use water as hot as can be borne, by souping. To stop bleeding, very hot water applied to the raw sur face will be found el'icacious. For many forms of dyspepsia and bilious ness, particularly a catarrhal condition of stomach, a goblet f hot water, drunk after the night's fasting, will give re lief. For continued application, in the form of a poultice, as in catarrh of the breast, pleurisy, pneumonia, etc., a jack- ; et oi cotton batting wrung out in very J water by means of a towel, and covered I with oiled silk or waxed paper, should be u:ed. JANUARY 31, 1895. ' )H, !', Cft'ljXlHt I An Air.orie.m woman rn-tu, ":,". f New England after living f. a m-.i-s n in London, .md weariM L-r fncr.J- I with her affection- and !iii;i!.cr:-ii. he w:i- a-ljan.e- i of her n ii in! rv and iopi and did not he-it. ite to - sv so. She not only imitated English on toms. )res. exprs;. ,n-. .! Ihu; and ' ! pronunciation, but offered ofTen-ie t v- ! . ; uienee of her acute of Anglomania :n in contemptuou- references to every - thin'' American. One of her friends undeih.!: t- minister social di-cinline in a uimjne I ' ) wav. She sent out imitation- to a i lunch party in honor of the returns! j traveller, and collected a lari:e eompa- ! ny in her drsw Ing-n m. After th ' gue.-t had been cordially welcome!, the; doors of the dining room opened. '1 f.l. 1 .1 .1 l ne room nan neen decorated witn; bunting, and tlie flowers were ma-sed in effects of red, white and blue. There were liags everywhere, in the chandel ier, rn the mantel, and on f very 1 i' of plate or china displayed on the table. The chair reserved for the guest v-as draped with the national colors. Never, pernaps, was a broader lnnt conveyed at a social reception that it is ill-bred and in bad form to be ashamed of one's country. A silly and affected young man, who had been sent abroad to be educated at Oxford, re ceived a similar lesson before at a j New York dinner party. He had made several offensive references to Ameri can colleges, and had declared in the true cockney manner that there was no society outside of London that was lit for a gentleman. "The Edghsh mobs in tho streets," he exclaimed in a high key, "are better mannered and have more genuine po liteness than can be found in an Amer ican drawing room !" "They must have made great prog ress in thirty years," said a deep voice by the young man's side. "My ac quaintance with English mobs dates back to tho time when Mr. Beecher faced them in Manchester and Liver pool." Then the veteran, who had accom panied t lie orator to the platform, des cribed the turbulence and evil passion of the audiences. He told how ?dr, Beecher's voice was drowned by con tinuous uproar, how fie was hissed, hooted at and insulted from pit and gallery, and how every sentence was punctuated with screams and" yells of derision. He spoke of the tact and patience re quired for inducing those mobs to lis ten to reason and to allow an Ameri can fair play, and quoted Mr. Beecher's own remark : "It was like driving a team of runa way horses and making love to a young lady at the same time." "After that experience," said the vet eran, his face lighting up with a line glow of indignation, "1 never expected to hear English mobs held up at an American table for good manners and politeness. What a pity it was that your father sent you to Oxford to ideal ize mobs, instead of keeping you at home, where you might have learned good sen-e and not have leen ashamed of vour countrv !" Marvelous Result. l-'rom a letter written by Rev. J. Gunderman. of Dimondale, Mich., we are permitted to make this extract : "I have no hesitation in recommending Dr. Kings' Xew Discovery, as the re sults were almost marvelous in the case of my wife. While I wan pastor of the Baptist church at Rives Junction she was brought down with pneumonia succeeding La grippe. Terrible parox vsms of coughing would la-t hours with little interruption and it seined as if she could not survive them. A friend recommended Dr. King's New Discovery, it was quick in its work and highly satis factory in results." Trial) bottles tree at K. T. Whitehead A: Cos Drn Store. Regular size 50c. and ?1. i c i An important point to observe in the ieeaing oi an vtjung sk;k is -o ' give sufficient to keep up the lst thrift and growth. SUBSCRIPTION PRICK St w. NO. 8 '-- ' ' ' Tl.o ' man v . :.r TV th.it in " .. . CM! V. :. : . m i:T f.insf -I:-!.! it tr :i.t h p !! p ', ! . Si ; - j .-, .; ;i t : C'rrt--p .,.- . i fat .:r.o'.si i ! I.' !i",'.irv j- .' ., i-pial div.' -.b-cvt to J :, ! j annox mice. i . ' ; 1 he utdu .!! other- who ; xte!;-iiy written Mr. !.! i: e: V U..C.i I : : : h::n a nutnl-er of letter-. h;.h he .'A t read, much !-- an-uei , ; he .!,, v.i his entue t:u.r to tnem. 1 l.t ,.! all sort-. .tr.e are huh! ?! -t!er tu and otbeis denunciator v. 'I here are thou-and-of re-pa-:- J. .r tufo-.q.!,... and a great many application- f " ..1 vhT. Every new -p r.verv new -i-:i a pun.',. j calls from Mr. iiad-tora'-" , .j req- ; jeni- many request- for hi- opinion it. When new plav-are prod;,--d in the London th"aire-, jx .j-Ie write to Mr. Glad-tone to learn what he think of them ; and he i- continually impor tuned for hi- judgment of new I ks. Not long ago a oorre-pn-nlent re quested Mr. dad-tone to -end him hi opmion of the quality of a certain -oap which was advertised in a London pa per. Another wrote recently: "Will you please tell me what vou acluallv meant by thi sentence, which occur in your. -peech of the2'.'th of January. 1855 V" and then the sentence un quoted. One would think that, if the qustioner had gone from 155 to IVM without knowing what the sentence meant, he could have di-pen-ed with the information lor a still longer time. There are undoubtedly occa ion when a letter of inquiry from a private person, tiddressed to a public man to whom he is unknown, is perfectly prop er and would probably meet with a po lite respon-e : but no motive of mere curiosity miouM ju-t ify such an i nq u ii v . Any merely idle application, addicted to statesman, author or clergyman, from an' unknown per-un deserves to ho thrown promptly into a wa-to bas ket. The time of a busy person i- precious to him, and no stranger ha-a right to claim any part of it and hi.- own. The feet and legs of horses are at. tracting more attention among breed ers than formerly, a- all breeds h ive good and bad feet and leg-. r 15 WOMEX IX SOCIETY J, tv -often nwi tbe btn-n-jth- al tonic uu(l nervine. Ji I Thf-y'ro tirel nut or run - iiuwn. i ins ja rT" i ens, or ruling ? TLcn Dr. I licription brings you ' Bjtecial help. It's a remedv ircrit,i for delicate women, for all tho drangnicnt, disorders, nnrt di-ea-vs of tho box. For regulating and promoting all tho pnier functions, buiMiriK up and invifcoraV inft th entiro system, and rrstorinjf lKialth and btrength, this is tho nnly rrmly that can le gun ran U-nl to ler.-f.t or cure, or tbo money will lie refunded. w - It has stood the tst of a quarter of a century of aires Dr. S.igc'-i Catarrh ltemedy. That's why the proprietor take the risk; they izy : "If w can't cure your Catarrh, we will pay you $300 in cash ! " i vi ui rj e t fj - j I - H U? B- "s-S El ?i if a w ti fei fev K TASTELESS (Ml ILL IS JUST AS COOD FCJl ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE SO cts, Galatta. Ills., Not. 15, ?ari Medicine Co.. St. hjua, Mo. (;cntlemen:-vve jM lat year, fffi boUl of ;;u,VEs TASTKLK.-i CHILJ TONIC a-l bare jj-jfht Ure KTua lrelr it'" y-r. In H umr t-i-i-rience of 14 yen. in the drug t-niiiD--, bT e-er Btild an article tliftt g-.T uch uaiTereal uu Ai IT. CAXLM. & CO. ( frequently the result of ill "weakness " and it )l makes life miaeratle. -A iru '! V WUh )nur Airrti'iurut t! J OR. H. 0. HYATT'S SANATORIUM, 1 ... , :1 Norfolk Commission Co., . VI . v t ( V Wft v m mm W - Fit;:?-. Ye.-et.d V-. aod --the- ': A .. e. , ; . a i: :....... ;... ' Rmmin'I - I !. I'- ' ' '; meice. Norfo'k, V . i W I'--.-) Ca -liter , F.I I tl '" ' i : t M ' ' ' C ' 1 ' i ' . New Berne. N C I P. I F -Rank of W.,vne ..." !'... ... N 1 IJ 1 Itch on ho i' i a.i 1 ' i i .initi.a!- cisri-l in ' r i . r .' I W ford's .v.uitai v I 1 ! . cr n.M l-v i: T '.hi ti A I rn:--j;-t . ! N i N . C I I i .' iy. Kncli-h Sp.iv in I .O.i.i.ent o .,!! li.n. 1. -.ft ..i ' i-.-d I.wm i 1 n id i 'lemi -be- fi 'Mi !. - R I i.i 1 n mm L-. s pi n: -. i R worm title-, .-p;. ..' -u 'I'hroiivh. '..u.-h-. 1 ' iv .'.o . U-4' of one . ,.!! N ,i!M"'i'! il e most Wolidlfn! R'ml-!i o,c e.el known .v-.ld bo K I W 1 1 ! A Co., Diuggi-t-. .-,. tl.ii, -S N. !. N . lo 1 lv. All. ( w i.i I w ' i i i n i i v When dre d t.ot 1 I'.' 1 R.dm and thev ... few - ;,! T I ' f,.r a l.irue bottle, -i -h f ,t - -f t lis, and it will ! -e;, i ! y . f v M .. pa id . bv t he f !i' " -l I i ' M . ' " V ' , R, ., ,1, of u . ; ! . , I ., M '. n . , loll- eme- J !-! . t .. s,d ! m d . t --ent f ice. .-end f. .t i ' . i . I h A ..-...! t HMIil-ll! in ale! her column Hof; Choirra. The f.onon- Mai... lb. j, .', : , ('lire. W hleh cuie- .il, 1 j : e . !....i I n hoL'- a lid p" i ' r '. - H! ' '' .: R ,lo-ey'- al. 1 at I . I Win'. !,e ,1 1 e : - ! o! e. 1 I it II ,' 1 l ' ' ' 1 ' 1 ; - i . . I i ' ' ' mendcl bv In.i'i wctcii f.i)Iii r i -ine cine. Ti , a p c . .:.'. A ! I' ,loe '-and 1 .' Mg -'".e. foi: ovi:i: ni l v v i: i ,x inn - Mi Win ii mi hi" M r-. Win-!' w '- -ooi b 1 1. . - ' p UIl ll-ed for o'.e; !'.?! . e .-!i,,n- of ii.o'hei- fo. tl , ,; , ; w hl!e t4!hl!o'. w ;th pe; -H.the- the child. ? : - the 1 1 It ,dl,lV s ail ..illi !;;- . . i .. ' 1 I i l ., I i , . ( . J - ,!ea-ant to I l,e t i . 1 1 . !-!- in erv p.o ? ; (' c. ,. Twenty five . . I I . 1- incalculable. Re-nn- and a '.. ' c '-I-Win-low .-.H.tiiii,.' --a np. ..,( no other f.:r,d. Yow face Will e vrethe'1 with a mott fE,,''f rr, le,tft'.r ,'jJ I'KCl! in - iteiiediciiB n tr r u .a ,.? iti t pik:;: teh .m, TENSIUi! '?':iCAT0R AUTOMATIC TENSION RELEASER, i ev t added y a.: ' The AVI I IT 1 1 r, Durably ard Hzn-iaomely Boilf, Of Fine Finish end Perfect ArJjwiifrrent, Sewi ALL Sewctl2 Article. And will n-rve ar.d pi -- .: I. :l I Uaiit of your e ; Active I . a i j j W i ; ptcii territory, laiz- ri, :.. ... ,'v WHITE SEWING MAGHil.'E CO,, CLEVE-L1 i J. O. !il!OU - ' I I i !. : . !iM'-:o-ltfl-i"'. ' : - " :.. . - - - N n i r ? i n I
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 31, 1895, edition 1
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