Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Feb. 13, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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t:t r. IF YOU ARE HUSTLEa Ti t mxt WiVi.ki w: tor & Business. is to BUSINESS if AT TKAM IS T Machinery, "TPs M 4 -L i J ThATCJRKU I'KOI KI MS I'OWF.K. Write up ii nice advert imont about your business and insert it in THE DEMOCRAT, ui'I you'll ".-ee a ch;nge in business H ai'O-.li-l. PROFESSIONAL. It. W. C. Mci)VKLL, D Odiee North corner New Hotel, Main Street, Sf'o'i LAN!) N'k'.k, N. C. r;7"Ah:.ys at hi- oilier w hen not prdes-ionahv engaged elsewhere. 1 " 0 '20 J v 0 It. A. C. LIVI.ItMON, Os-nri: Over J. I. Ray store. fl,. I.-.,,.-., from tl to 1 O'clock : 2 tO J o'clock, p. m. 2 12 ly SCOTLAND NKC.'C. N. O. D wii) pell, Attorney at Law, KX FIELD, N C. Practice in all the Courts of Hali fax: and adjoining counties and in the Supreme and Federal Courts Claims collected in idl parts of the State. s ly W. A "rNN- ,1 T T O f: X E Y-A T-L A W S OTI. VNO NlXK, X. C. Pr.-ir-f i ces wl erc voi re" lived. his service: are 2 i:j iv D IL W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfielu, X. C. Oilice over Harrison's Priu' Store. 2 7 )" ly ". pWAUD L. TRAVIS, Attorney ami Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, X. C. gj?J",' V Lon.ird ) ')! Lands. 2-2 1-ly STILL, HERE J0HHS02T it h a. thorough knowledge of the bu-ino--s and a complete outfit of tools and material, I am better prepared than ever to do anything that is expected oi a lirst class watch-maker and jeweler. A full line of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. Spectacles and eye glasses properly fitted to the eye. free of charge, All work guaranteed and as low as good work can be done. lit ! Oi' rijnsf'd and r r- "Look for my big watch sign at the New Drug Stoie. W. H. JOHNSTON. Scotland Xeck. X. C 1 r tf 1 1 A V I XI i I XC II K A S I : D MY F A G I L ITILS I AM XOW PREPARED TO FUKXISII DOUBLE OUAXTITY OF BkICK. jgrAlso will take contract to 5" furnish lots Irom 50,000 s?"or more anywhere within Mro0 miles of Scotland Xeck ("an always furnish what jgrj you want. Correspond ence and orders solicited. 3. il. BIADDlfSr, 1-10-u.j-ly Scotland Xeck, X. C. MKNTIOX THIS PAPER. ! -AAO E Y AXS, C.EXEBA L CARPENTER. A speeialtv of Bracket and Scroll work of all kinds. YVork done cheap and every piece guaranteed. 2 7 Iv Scotland Xeck, X. C. jPSQN'S ENGLISH KITCHEN, 187 Main St., NORFOLK, VA. Is the Leading Dining Room in the City for Ladies and Gentlemen. Strict ly a Temperance Place. All meals 25c. CHudson's Surpassing Coffee a Specialty. 116 ly -he Jew E. E. MILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XH. SIMM 6WS GOOD FOR EVERYBODY and everyone needs it at all times of the year. Malaria is always about, and the only preventive and relief Is to keep the Liver active. You must help the Liver a bit, and the best helper is the Old Friend, SIM MONS Liver Regulator, the red Z. Mr. C. Himrod, of Lancaster, Ohio, says: "SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR broke a case of Malarial Fever of three years' standing for me, and less than one bottle did the business. I shall use it when in need, and recommend it." Be sure that you get it. Always look for the RED Z on the package. And don'1 forget tiie word REGULATOR. It is SIM MONS LIVER REGULATOR, and there is only one, and every one who takes it is sure to be benefited. THE BENEFIT IS ALL IN THE REMEDY. Take it also fot Biliousness ;vA Sick Headache; both ar caused bv a sluggish Liver. tin i'i Co., Philadelphia. LIFE'S MISTAKES. Wo plant .sweet flowers above the spot Where rests our unforgotten dead, And while the roses bud and bloom We beautify their lonely bad. We rear the snowy marble shaft That every passer-by may leirn How sacred the memory keeps her trust In votive .gift and stoned" urn. Rut, oh ! the hearts that ache and break Through all the long, bright summer days For some sweet word of tenderness, Some generous and outspoken praise ; And, oh ! the bitter tears that fall O'er life's mistakes and cruel fate, That all things which the heart most craves Of love and glory come too late. Then take the rose that blooms to-day And la' it in some loving hand, And wait not till the ear grows dull To tell the .sweet thoughts that you planned. One kiss on warm and loving lips Ls worth a thousand funeral ilowers. And one glad day of tender love Outweighs an age of mourning hours. Moral Courage. Rnmr (Ga.) Tribune. The most pi til ul paradox in nature is physical bravery allied with moral cowardice. A man may be as brave as a lion when it comes to a personal en counter, where mere brute force is all that is required, but ii lie has not the moral courage to do right for the sake of right, he is a detestable travesty on manhood. Xo man need be afraid to do right. He may avoid the conse quences of a fisticuff and still be braver than Caesar. It takes a fine sense of courage and a pure heart to be able to acknowledge an error and endeavor to repair a wrong, and the man who can do it deserves all praise from his fellow men and God will not withhold from him his just re ward. H we were true to our nobler and better instincts temptations would not find us so vulnerable to every as sault, but too often we are led astray b our selfish motives. The thing to cultivate is not so much iron muscle, but a heart of steel, yet sufficient to resist every temptation. The least sin possible is the hope of mankind. Absence of sin is a dream of angels. Let us, therefore, among our resolutions for the new year, resolve over and above all, to try to be true to our own better instincts and to deal justly with our fellow men and to rev erence and serve God as becomes us, his creatures. Few "people know that all plants con tain digestive principles. They can not absorb their food until it is digest ed any more tharr animals can. The Mount Lebanon Shakers have leared the art of extracting and utilizing the?e digestive principles, and it is for this reason that their Shaker Digestive Cordial is meeting with-euch phenom enal success in the treatment ot dys pepsia. The Shaker Digestive Lordiai not onlv contains food already digested, but it also contains digestive principles winch aid the digestion of other foods that may be eaten with it. A single 10 nt sample bottle will ie sufficient to demonstrate its value,-and we sug ,rot that everv suffering dyspeptic niake a trial of it. Any druggist can supply it. T.nvni is the best medicine for chil dren. Doctors recommend it in place of Castor Oil. ',V h-n Jtioy was b-cc, we gave her Castorlsv WUcn she vas a Child., she cr ed ior Castoria. When tie becftnw II!sss --ho Ciang to Castoria. "t ' u iLo I i ii Jrca, Ph gave them Ce toria. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY. IP TO DATE. LIVE QUESTIONS. A Series of Articles Contributed to Then Column by Advanced Thinker. Numeep. I. Seek the Tp.util v.- occasions teach nw duties; Time makes ancient good uncouth; They must upward fctill and onward Who would kf.-p abreast of truth." All history teaches that the doctrine, "Whatever is, is right," is so far from being trne that in methods and opinion.- the direct contrary may be said to be ranch nearer the truth. Washington's life was shortened by faith in bleeding as a panacea. The generally accepted prejudice that denied water to the parched lips of a fever patient what un told suffering it brought upon onr fore fathers! All races in certain stages of their progress have peopled the invisi ble world with gods who were the magnified images of themselves, with ull tho vices and passions of primitive man intensified. Any one who question ed the exact trufch of this mass of imag ination and tradition was banished cr put to death. It was a very mild con travention of the accepted religious be liefs of his time that brought the cup of hemlocks to tho lips of the wisest and best of the heathen philosophers. The Christian martyrs were succeeded by martyrs to Christianity. St. Stephen and John Huss were alike victims to opinions that nobody now holds. So were Joan of Arc and the Salem witches. Prior to the time of Copernicus it was the general belief that the earth was flat and immovable, and numerous were the theories advanced by learned men to account for phenomena that every child now understands. The true expla nation announced by Copernicus and Galileo was condemned by the holy office as "absurd in philosophy and formally heretical because directly con trary to the Holy Scriptures. " Galileo was forced to recant, and the name of Copernicus remained anathema for three centuries. The divine right of kings was once universally accepted, and in our own time Lovejoy lost his life in Alton, and Garrison and Phillips risked theirs in Boston for daring to question the right of man to enslave his fellow man. The geological conclusions of Sir Charles Lyell in the nineteenth century were condemned by the church, as were the astronomical tbcoio nf Galileo in the seventeenth. Franklin's discovery of the identity of lightning and elec tricity was ridiculed by tho English sci entists of that day. Stephenson was laughed at when ho asserted that his locomotive could draw a train at the rate of 20 miles an hdur. We all know now that Galileo and Lyell, Franklin and Stephenson were right, and the rest of the world was wrong. But we go on just the same condemning or refusing a hearing to the Lyells and Galileos, the Lovejoys and Garrisons of today. Like all our forefathers, we are sure that our creeds and theories represent the abso lute and entire truth. As Bagehot says, "There is no pain so great as the pain of a new idea, " and therefore the world shrinks from a new idea as a child shrinks from the surgeon's knife. Every proposal to change the established order is now, as heretofore, condemned, often without a hearing, as fatal to the family, destruc tive of religion or subversive of society. We now accept the doctrine that all men, of whatever color, are born free and endowed with certain inalienable rights as expressed in our Declaration of Independence. But for the most part we are satisfied with the mere declara tion that all men are equally entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of happi ness and are impatient of any inquiry as to whether our present political and social organization really secures this right equally to.all men. In this country we have not since the Revolution doubt ed the truth of Jefferson's dictum that "a government derives its just powers from the consent of the governed," but in 1832 a proposal to grant to English men their plain political rights was re garded by the conservatives as threaten ing the safety of the kingdom and tho continuance of social order. Macaulay's arguments in favor of the reform bill apply with equal force to the conditions of today, and the following from the pen of the famous Dr. Arnold of Rugby embodies a truth of universal applica tion. Advocating the passage of the re form bill, he said: "One would think that people who talk against change were literally as well as metaphoricaily blind and really did not see that every thing in themselves and around them is changing every hour by the necessary laws of its being. There is noth ing so revolutionary, because there is nothing so unnatural and so convulsive to society, as the strain to keep things fixed, when all the world is, by the very law of its creation, in eternal prog ress, and the cause of all the evils of the world may be traced to that natural but most deadly error of human indo lence and corruption that our business is to preserve and not to improve. ' ' It does not by any means fellow that every new idea is a good one ; that every proposed change would be an improve ment. But as progress is the law of the universe, it rests with the old order to show why it should be continued. It is therefore the part of wise men to give careful consideration to new ideas, how ever contrary they may be to prevalent opinions, bearing in mind the lessons of history that "the stone which the build ers rejected the same is become the head of the corner. ' ' In- tho series of articles that will fill these columns for many weeks to come it is arranged to present to the reader the views of leaders of thought throughout the country on the vital questions of the day, th questions that bear in their solution the weal or woe of the present, the progress and prosperity of the future. Such produc tions should be read in the spirit of St. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. Paul's adview: "Prove all things. Hold fast that which is good." To this excelleLt principl-? thcuM I explicitly aided the caution vLkh ii is the main purp.ecf this intrf-ductory article to enf-.rc-' vi, th.tt th ynr can receive fair ireatmfnt only ly re moving i-ii far as possiblv (itcauootbe wholly removed the handicap that is j placed ujon it V' prejudice in favor of the existing ordor. Fm perick M. Cp.unden. St. Louis, IX comber, 1VJ3. NrMFEii II. The Man Oct of Employ ment. The uuf-mployed arc found in places where machinery s in use and in places where machinery is not in use; where gold is money, where silver is money and where paprr in id-jict; where there is free trade and where there is protec tion; where government is corrupt and where government is heme.it ; under monarchies and under republics. Neither the question of machinery, relied upon by Socialists, nor the question of money, relied upon by Populists, nor tho ques tion of good govcTLment, relied upon by political reformers generally, can solve the question of the unemployed. The most significant figure of our times is the man out of employment. Yesterday he was regarded so far as regarded at all with alternating contempt and pity. Today he i-, regarded with con cern. Tomorrow h ) may bo regarded with terror. On your way home tonight some of you will see, coming out from tho shad ow of an alley or building, a man ab ject and unkempt. Ho will not venture to stop you; he will walk along with you, and, in subdued voice and with cringing air, will ask you for the price of a night's cheap Iwdgiug or a cheap supper. Who is he? The man out of employment. Yen have seen him be fore. He has called at your office. Ho has been seen at your kitchen door. You have seen birr in crowds before tho bulletin of employment offices. You have een tho crowd .stream all day lon into some factory or office which had advertised "help wanted. " You have seen him wistfully watching more for tunate men who were at work ou some building or excavation. Ycu have seen him cn the country roadside. You have seen him crawlina from the trucks of a railway train. Ho is known to fame. You can read of him in tho newspapers, where he appears in tho column of crimes or in the column of suicides. This is the day cf "labor problems," and on evtry suci problem there falls the dark shadow cf tho man out of em ployment. Who keeps wages down? The man out of employment. vrno rodncsa wages of Pullman's employees? Not PullLnau himself, no greedy corporation, but tho man out of employment. Who ordered the great strike of 1891? Not the American Rail way union, ncr Debs, but tho man out of employment. Who is it that was feared by the strikers? Not the railway magnates nor the courts, not tho in junctions nor the troops, but the man out cf employment. Who broke the strike? The man out of employment. Who compels organized laborers to stand together shoulder to shoulder? Not tho labor agitator, not - the walking dele gate, but the man out of employment. Protean in shape, the man out of em ployment is hero a tramp, thcro a hero; hero spiritless, there proud ; here re vengeful, there patient ; hero a mendi cant, there a martyr. The man out of employment is the constant menaco to our civilization. Today the army of the unemployed lurks in the rear. Tomorrow it may bo at tho front, barring the way, more terrible than an army with ban ners. Onco mustered into that army, the man out of employment never mus ters cut unless ho furnishes a substitute Irom tho ranks of workingmen. Why are men unemployed ? Yesterday society answered, "Becauso they wish to bo. " Today society answers, "We do not know." What shall be done with the unemployed? Yesterday society answered, "We do not care." Today society merely echoes, "What can we do?" Clarence A. Miller. Los Angeles, December, IS 05. Change tho feeling in an individual, and his wholo method of thinking will be revolutionized ; change the axiom or primary sensation in a science, and the whole structure will have to be recreat ed. The current political economy is founded on the axiom of individual greed, but let a new axiomatic emotion spring up (as of justice or fair play, in stead cf individual greed), and the ba sis of the science will be altered and will necessitate a new construction. So when people argue (on politics, mor ality, art, etc. ) it will generally be found tnat thev differ at the base ; they go out perhaps quite unconsciously from different axioms, and hence they cannot agree. Occasionally, of course, a strict examination will show that, while agreeing at the base, one of them has made a false step in deduction. In that case his thought does not represent his primary feeling, and when this is point ed out he is forced to alter it. This is the commercial age, the oli garchy and plutocracy of Plato. Honor quite gives place to material wealth ; the rulers rule not by personal cr by hereditary but by property qualifica tions. Parliaments, constitutions and general "palaver" are the order of the day. Wage slavery, usury, mortgages and other abominations indicate the advance of the mortal process. In the individual man gain is the end of existence. Car penter's "Cause and Cure cf Civiliza tion. " Husbandry is the firstborn, but it is not the most favored, trade, because farmers cannot live in the towns, and consequently they have not much influ ence in making the laws. We must stand shoulder to shoulder against the drones who govern us and who produce nothing but laws. Bismarck. OLD NEWSPAPERS HERE 40 cents a. hundred. FEBRUARY 13, 1S9G. honor's ;rip Tell i: Araiz. . i v-l.:io -traiii In.; grip t "A e:;! v e.t . the;. ..f b t!:f I ! V Navy v tended ne w or:;; e ! t he -d -a-: i r.i ! e of bra lit ! .ti t he at 1 1 I ..f :he bii t. t!;e "mi l lie-" ., vi-it Par;,-. 1 ie ; ' - r 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 t- cuii.in.t'iu.u. .V-tal Ace: ...fin ir -i.i it.. i the visit, a he loan" I tl.c .!); gentlemen uoul.i and -pond their it; Uet in mi-ch ney i-u!i-h Th. then tf e:r f hi- lunsters put uer!i- ; f- !) honor, that they might pno ! Mtnni.uider the gro.'.md!e--:.e fears. Mi the arrival of the j-racii;-- hip ;ii the French naval port, t lu-y iio-patched j three f their number h I'.iri-. tt make i i arrangements for the viit of one hun-j died and twenty-nine young An.cri-! cans. j The voyage h:id been a -tnnv one.' and f-r the l.-ist eight day -careely any- j thing b.id been cooko'l. owin to th-; tremendous .-ens. The ;qpeiiu-s , of j these vigorous voting U-llows who were ; -;ent ahead were therefore keen. At j each of the throe stations on the rail-j way where refreshments could be pnr-j ch:i.-cd. the cadets astonished the gnard and porters by ordering three chickens, with bread and graphs. The Frenchmen's .'ttoni.-hinent va increased when thev hoard an orl iven at each station to provide one hundred and twenty-six chickens for their fellows who were to come the next day. 'Three hundred and povonty-oight chickes, wiih bread and grapes ;it dis cretion ! What appetites these Ameri cans have !" exclaimed the delighted re.-taurant-Keepers. But they were more astonished that not a bottle of wine was ordered. The youngsters were tm their honor, and as drinking and smoking were against reg ulations, not one ot them drank a gla-s of wine or smoked a cigar -while in Paris. They visited the tomb of Napoleon at the Invalided, where they arrived just before trates were opened. Stand ing at the entrance, as on dross parade, when the gates swung open, they fell into ranks and stepped oil as if march ing in review. The delighted sentries jne.-entcd arms, and an official saw their entrance, ordered rooms not open to onlinay vis itors to be shown to "the military gen tlemen' While crossing the court, they met an old, hobbling, mutilated veteran. Instantly the boys halted, wheeled to a 'front face,'' and lifted their caps as he passed before thorn. "Each one ha.- the rr.r ef a prince," said the officer who guided them. When the middies. left Paris, the Mayor wrote to their commander, ip tain Hudson, that, on bearing of their proposed visit, he had detailed an extia force of police to watch the young olf cers. Ho had, however, great pleasure m reporting that not one in-tancn of disturbance or infraction of the had occurred. The young Americans made a most favorable impression on the citizens of Paris, showing that they had acted on Burn's advice : "But w here ye feel yo'tr honor grip, Let that nve 1-e vonr border." Turn cf the Tido. Xorfoll- Yirijiriin ... Commenting on ti e activity d:-!-!av- ed bv the immigration societies of the ?oiuh, the Chicago I, if- -0 ,, -,ui d a note of warning to its friend-; in the Wet and ie! them that they have got to wake up or be left in ti.3 It nv that the immigrant .-ooii-t lurch. , I the South were never bef..re so alert as now, and that, -'if the rich acres of the W'f arp fi. V,P tilleo thft liCOiiie ( i it , West Will miU l' UO lllfl v.oin. ..J.i. I they have leen doing of Into. E:-ept-in- California rind Utah, the of the West, as far as regard- encourag ing immigration by the be-t meiho have lK?en taking a profound sleep. Mil lions of acres in tho Ii.ikotas, in I'tah Idaho. Washington and ,(:n are yet unbroken, and will remain so unle-s those States K-.-tir them-ee.-. This .-hows that the situation in the srreat West is not at all sati.-f.ictory to its friends, but whether the alarm sounded by the Int r-O'-ftu w:.'A doany "o ..I i-a otiP-ti. n ve'. to he determined. .... 4 - . , The tide of immigration has tur.:ed : southward, however, and romerhin g greater than the wall of our eontemj. j rarv is needed to stay its '.low. On January 1, li0. the law pa-.-ed by the last Legislature went into ef fect, rerpuiring a board three inches wide to be put on the top of all wire fences along public roads. SUBSCRIPTION PKICI i w. NO. 9 S ; .1 to If. :t t" .(.- ! t . . 1 ! s. If. th '( i!!. !. in ! i :!. ...O ' lb !t hi. I.-! a r-. thl' 1 lb I!, . t it!. ITS A U'AP IS 1UK IK4ICK, ilU.l!:, whi ti i'U X eOt t ifi " 'iiM t l.ii4 f -r i-ur t.l..f Ir Pi- re. ' J J. r M -J irjd l'ii-"VTy (.-1f . '!. It. mk'-r jv Ui'tt h n l punMrr, fiWi-i'tiiii.'-r. Ktrvtictti rtrt r, if it 1-n't tl in.'di'-in. t r V"tt, they'll nturn th mm in. ti.v. ' t It's (pttirntitfnl V t ftCS'l j or l-ii.-it. n ihr :ri J Hm- N;,lf a"1 s,r'1 ctirw int fal- .V-KjvtL .inrrJn Co.. X. 1et. IiK. 1L V. I'tv tiCE r 1 hnvf a to.r mhn u a Hi'l' I of mn ovrr li! Arm ni li't-'s (UiJ t i'"!i f tern Vr tini In- wa kIi uiwtiOji old until fit; h" 11 yr-Ht oi.1. I r' " fclm I'r. I'u-Tcfn M.di-n M"-1w-hI In-o i 1 Pi.-nsnnt IVM-t. Ilf ha Nfti w.-ll now for ovrr two Venn. Four tU)r of IT. I'irr-'i (lol.in MiUlcul Ii(.x.viry mnJc a Quit) our of. him. Jtoeix-H fully yourm. We h.e ju.-i recemd a fiijiment of Jolmson's Chill and IVver 'Ionic It wa l'oti-ht with a distinct under si and ing bet ween the ma nuf act in cr and ourselves t hat oa h and eer buttle 1 gunianteed to cure any of the fi ! ! . in y. diseases. : i-t-cniLL and it:vi:i:. 'nd-p.i uors fi; i:k. :;ri-TVPiioii fi:vi:i;. ph-in-.MoKKHAfiic j i:i:k. :)!h-ii:N(;i:i: kkviml Om-Mi: AsLKS. 7lh-N KI'ItA L il A. Mh-LAf.KII'PL. 3S"N'nw , w are willing to Mdl to v11 on tin same condition- ue buy it n. We will ginranfee on sinifle ."c !-.(-lie to core any of the dito;i-e aUoe ennrnera'.ed. Failing to do so e '.n l ! I cheerfully return your money. Yours truly, E. T. 77IIITSIISAD & CO., Scotland Ner-k, N. TASTELESS SrflQLL mm IS JUST A3 COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 50cts. 1 " Cf UIA, It W., ACT. K, lJ. r ri cS .r ln Cr.. I. Ijai.l. M'. - (,f-ni-m.Ti: Ws f--il l,-t )ear. 1f txil-a of 'UOVI:- TA-TKI.K.-S fJIIIJ. 1iM'" .ml Unvt Lii-ulil ihrr.; nr nlrea'Iy tt.. y-j.t. Ir. h l'r n- j t -rn-ri' i.i 14 y.-art. in utt '.rag buihh . iin ri-TT tela i ra artirm ttugT wit ufimrui -For - do aTi'j LM .Mti'f'ol by K. T. WlIITKIIKAh A- CO., 0 0 Cm Scotland Neck, X. 0 COPYRIGHTS. CA I OHTAIN A rATfNT? Vnr For a tT tO I N N A.-.. wno bv; nvi nAriy nftT i f rvr-ri.TT in trie I utont tu.tir. Coiuraur... I f.im rt-tiv i:r.:;-i-rjtiai. A 1 1 a n a bn.K oi in- , I -tr.i.J r-i f'oiiff raiDir r.ileni an 1 ti V tut- ! t :i r.i c.i.t tr -;. Aieoa rata lie fcX mtxMXC- j iinl ai.J ec.eiAitw tKjk eut free. i i';if. r.'i ktn iLrr.uch Mur.n & Co. , prrf-tiil i.ot.c-in th; Mifulilic ilnifrti-.m. ar 1 tr.n i.r...ii:Lt iri-ir btinret:.? i'i '.j .c a j out C'jjit to tUe inv.:i.t.ir. 'If.iii rw. l: l a(-r. i.-t:o-i Vf efclv. eieirant ;y i.lTJ-Trai'-.i. 1 far '. lari-f t circuiatiou of an ecier.t.nc or ta tU9 w.rfl. y.i a jr :. baii-t'W cot.;-s ant iree. i Cf.5ji.n. -ift cents. fc?erTt)umtrc.fitiu tu. t.ful platea, ta color, ai.4 tnotowrapti. r.f tier- houi. witd plaii. eiiabliog builder to .h w Ui latest flPBitrni. and Mrur eontrn. Art-I muss it Co- m voait. 3bl BitoAtwAT. Kuii(im' fcxatioa. tnontniT. t.-jua yeir. ciubiw i Miiiidf Remimed I i b "Wlfel Iff ! Win-low', ...ihw.g .-.tup. o : t..k fca HuffcrSi 1 fca K U C2fi! Zrtrrr! I A vai i pi.i; FlM 5-.;-r---'o - 1 Alter e,r- o . 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The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 13, 1896, edition 1
1
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