Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / April 16, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
A TWIFPTTST rift IF YOU ARE HU31LER IS TO BUSINESS -WHAT STEAM IS TO- Macliinery, k !- Id. ;F Business. W isiviOGRATo "hat Gnr.k Propelling Power. Write up a nice ad verti somen t about - bu-ine'ss ana insert it in THE DEMOCRAT, v, ,u"il "see :i change in business all PROFESSIONAL. w. o. Mcdowell, D1 Ofhco North comer New Hotel, Main Street, SfoTi.ANi) Neck, N. C. jfrAhv:iV3 at his office when not . - ,f: iunailv engaged elsewhere. 9 2G lv 0 11. A. C. LIYFItMON, Oi-FicK-Over J. D. Ray's store. OMi.-e hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to 1 'clock, p. in. - IJ SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. x -1 f- "I D AVID P ELL, Attorney at Law, ENFIELD. N. C. Practices in all the Courts of Hali fax and adjoining counties and in the Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims collected in nil parts of the State. : s lv W, A. DUNN, J TT 0 RN E Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. T-.rt'ces wherever his service? are ,3 mi red. 2 13 lv D U. W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, N. C. Oilsce over Harrison's Drue- Store. 2 7 9o ly JTmVArJ) I-t TRAVIS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. jgTMo'!"' Loaned on Farm Lands. 2-21-ly JjOWARD ALSTON, Attorney-at-Law, ;; -20 ly HALIFAX, X. C STILL HERE e Jeweler. Uitha thorough knowledge of the business and a complete outfit of tool? arid material, I am better prepared than ever to do anything that is expected of a nr-t cla-s watch-maker and jeweler. A full line of "Watches, Clocks, Jewelry AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. Spectacles and eye glasses properly fi-re'.t to the eye. free of charge. All v rk guaranteed and as low as good work can be done ' ;, .lv;hine$ adjusted and re- ggTLook for my big watch sign at t:.e New Drug Store. W. H. JOHNSTON. S w and Neck. N. C. 10 6 tf HAVING INCREASED MY FACIL ITIES I AM NOW PREPARED TO FURNISH DOUBLE (QUANTITY OF BklCK. ff:2T"Also will take contract to furn:.-h lots irom 50,000 2Sor more anywhere within miles of Scotland Neck Can always furnish whutjgy you want. Correspond ence and orders solicited.jj d. a. siASBinr, ld-'j.Vly Scotland Neck, X. C. MENTION THIS PAVER. JSAAC EVANS, GENERAL CARPENTER. A sj-ecialty of Bracket and Scroll work of all kinds. Work done cheap and every piece guaranteed. Th i is BRICK ! 2 7 ly Scotland Xeok . N. C. E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XII. THE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOUR Points and Paragraphs of Thirst Present, Pait and Fntnre. The atory goe that a madman imag ined himself made of glass, and when sjme one threw him down he exclaim ed "Smash !", and died because he thought he was broken to pieces. And this illustrates the sum total of life for many persons. Not a few person in the land imagine thev are having a hard time in thli world, when really they are enjoying all th advant ages that their capacities can control if thev only knew it. But under the imagination of the hard time their burdens are about asgrieyous as if they were real. The Democrat believes in optimism. Count Tolstoi, in hn essay on "Life," wrote that men fear the death of the flesh became they expect to lose their personal "Ego" by the dissolution. But do not moit men fear death, if they fear it at all, became the feel quite uncertain about the future world? "What the future holds for me," is the most perplexing queation to most per sons as they contemplate death, we think. When all men shall come to Tolstoi 'a idea of what true life is, then perhaps they will be more concerned about losing their "Ego" than about the future of bliss Or misery. The Demrcrat has never seen the wisdom of the Government spending so much money every year in the free distribution of seeds. The seed con tract recently ghn out by Secretary Morton to D. Landreth A Sons, of Philadelphia, calls for aaventy thous and dollars' worth of vegetable seeds for free distribution. Also a contract was given a seed concern in St. Paul, Min nesota, for five thousand dollars' worth of flower seeds. It would be just at right for congress to appropriate one hundred thousand dollars to be expend ed in subscriptions to different newt papers to be eenttothe homes free that the people might find out what papers print the best literature. Freight rates and railroad schedules have become matters of great interest to truckers in Eastern Carolina. .Not ong ago the people of Washington ask ed for some better freight rates, and now the Clinton Democrat tells of a truckers' convention held in Clinton a few days ago, asking the railroad peo ple to jfive them, during the berry seas on, a schedule whereby they may con nect closely at Warsaw with express trains going North. This is what the people of the Clinton section ought to have. The railroad companies gener ally do what promises good business ; and as this would seem to be business for the railroad interests, they will doubtless do it. And then railroads are kind and obliging more than the get credit for anyway. It may not have occurred to you, but every single bill of money or piece of coin handled by you registers a point m your financial successs or fail ure in this world, as well as for your moral abligations. It is not always written on th bill or coin indeed sel dom is but the handling of each piece writes a registration somewhere which help3 to make the total footing up. A two-dollar-bill recently passed around in Boston with its record actually writ ten on it in red ink. Here is what was written, says the Northern Mesteng$r : "Wife, children and over $40,000 all gone ; I alone am responsible. All has gone down my throat. When I was twenty-one I had a fortune. I am not yet thirty-five years old. I have killed my beautiful wife, who died of a broken heart ; have murdered my children with neglect. When this bill is gone I do not know how I can get my next meal. I shall die a drunken pauper. This is my last money and my history. "If this bill comes into the hands of a man who drinks, let him take warn ing from my life's ruin." V,"hn Buoy waft hie, n gavo her Oaatorla Vhon she was a QUid, fcha criad lor OcstarUk Vhes h bome MiM, cuing to ejastoria. SCOTLAND NECK N. C, THURSDAY. Written for Tfli Democrat CHRISTIAN MISSIONS. HC!r!E AND F02EI5N. llissicnary Beards and Lletiicis cf "Wcrk BY REV. G. A. OGLEpBV, 6LLU, N. C III. The Bible makes it the duty of the christian church to give tne world the gospel. This being true, the question of methods is of prime importance. To carry out this command it is said that the apostles "went everywhere preach ing the gospel." Paul was the great missionary the chief apostle to the Gentiles." All through the christian era there have been great Sauls, and thee have always been missionry in spirit and practice. But for the work of such men and the poorly organized efforts of the Moravians, the church of England and others, there whs no distinctively missionary work until the latter part of the eighteenth century. The Wesleyan Missionary Society was formally organized in 1781 and missionaries sent to the Isle of Jersev. In 1785 to Newfoundland and Nova Scotia. In libs additional missiona ries were sent to the West Indies. Mis- ionaries had been sent to destitute sec tions of England and Ireland in I7o(i. and to America in 17G9. The foundation of the Baptist Mis sionary Society was laid in 1702 when Baptist ministers retired to the little parlor of the widow Betsey Wallace, and contributed 12Jt 2s. 0d., under the leadership of William Carey, who was their hrst and doubless greatest mis sionary. He went to India the follow ing year. The London Missionary Society was founded in 1705. This was composed ot the representatives of different churches and was the immediate friend of Carey Bengal Mission. Then followed the Glasgow Mission ary Society, the Chnrch Missionary Society, the Bible and Pure Literature Society all in 1700. These were fol lowing other Missionary Societies in England and Scotland. In the United States, "The Ameri can Board of Foreigh Mifsions" 1810, "American Baptist Union" in 1S1 4, "Methodist Episcopal Society" in 1810. The dates of organization of Mission Boards in Presbyterian, Protestant Episcopal and some of the other churches, I fail to find. They are, how ever, about the same age of the other Missionary Boards. It will be seen from above : (1) That all Missionary churches have Mission ary Boards who direct the Missionary work at home and abroad, that grew out of small beginning upon the part of a few Missionary Spirits. (2) That the distinctively Missionary Spirits of the christian church only dates from the last years of the eighteenth centu ry and is therefore about one hundred years old. In subsequent articles I shall give some accounts of the results of the faith and toil of these missiona ry heroes, and show that the last has been by far the most prosperous centu ry of the chrch's history. Jefferson's Ten Bules. 1. Take things always by the smooth handle. 2. Never spend your money before you have it. 3. We seldom repent of having eat en too little. 4. Tride cost more than hunger, thirst and cold. 5. Nothing is troublesome that we do willingly. 6. Never put off till to-morrow what you can do to-day. 7. Never trouble another for what you can do yourself. 8. Never buy what you do not want because it is cheap. 0. How much pain the evils have cost us that have never happened. 10. When angry, count ten before you speak ; if very angry count one hundred. Don't think because you are sick and nothing seems to give you relief that you can't be cured. There must he a cure for you some where. It your doctor can't cure you, perhaps he has mistaken the cause. Anvbodv is liable to make a mistake sometimes. One in three of us suffer from indi gestion, and one out of three dyspeptics doesn't know it. That is, he may know he is sick, but he blames it to something else. Indigestion is the cause of half of our dangerous diseases- Shaker Digestive Cordial, made from tonic medicinal roots and herbs, is the most natural cure for indogestion. It relieves the symptoms and cures the dis ease gently, naturally, officiently , giv ing fresh life, strength and health to sick dyspeptics. At druggists. A trial bottle for 10 cents. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. CONrESilON JF FAITH. Creed? and confe-.-ior.s ? Hign Ch or the Low ? 3 cannot say; but . ou wm!d v -t;v p'eae us If with some printed Scripture voi could .-how To which of these V-elongf-d the S i viour, Jfu. I think to all or ii-ne. Not curio;;. creeds j j t. ir i-t. i . i jr oraereu iorci: oi uurriiiy rule lit taiiL'ht, But sou! ol love thai, blossomed int'. d"ed'. t" With human good and human h!v.- fry ing fraught. i j ,f m me nor priesi, n"i pre-nyier, nor poje, Bishop, nor dean, niry stamp a party name ; But Jesus with hU If.rely human scope The .-ei vice of my human life may claim. Let prideful priests do battle about creeds, The Church is mhje that does most Christlike deeds. J oh u' Stuart JUacki . Will Manhattan Island Sink? AU' York Ditpatchl Manhattan Islam is composed of Gneiss rock. The reck lies at an angle or dip of 30 degrees. It is naturally a scaly rock, very poro'is and absorbs wa ter at times and places. It is noticea ble that the rock it gradually rotting ang crumbling and it can onlv be a question of time heLre the island will begin to sink. Guess rock Hakes easi ly and every jar on the island causes the structure to fall eff in places, which fact adds to the danger from rot. The marvelous inciease ot trie habitations of man adds annually to the enormous weight the Island his to sustain. Ev- i i l t erv Duiiaing wimn increases this weight and also the importance of the city, tends surely t- the future destruc tion of the metropelis. New York will not be the firat cit; to find a place in the bottom of the -ea. There are many historic cities now beneath the waves. One natural convtlsion by earthquake is liable to send us to the bottom with our marvelous wealth, great population and splendid civiliza tion. There is hope lor Chicago as the future metropolis cf America, after all. Some Don' ta. Greenville Jlcfector. Don't abuse a paper unless you pay for it. Borrowers are the greatest fault finders a newspaper has to contend with. Don't expect a paper to abuse the town government for your especial ben efit. Don't take a paper out of the post office for five years and then refuse to pay for it because you "never subscrib ed for it nohow." You could have re fused it four years and eleven months before. Don't get mad it your visitor's name does not appear in the personal columns. Perhaps you did not tell the editor; he's not a mind reader. Don't stop a paper if your three col umn contribution is condensed into eight lines. The condenser may hae done you a great favor. Don't cuss the editor because his opinions do not conform to yours. If they did he might be at variauce with some eight or ten thousand other per sons. Don't delay paying your subscription because it is a small matter. If all the subscribers did the same way it would kill the paper in dx months. Don't get mad if the editor holds up your communication a few days. He is the best judge when there is room for it. And don't get mad if he does not print it. He Knows or ought to know, whether It is best to publish it or not. Thsy Dscisve Bridss. Wm. E. Curtis in Chicago Record. The thousands of brides who have visited the Treasury on their wedding tours and have been allowed to hold in their hands for a lew moments the big bundle of money so carefully dune up in manilla paper, sealed with great blotches of red sealing-wax marked -.2,000,(00." wlil realize what a w icked and deceptive world this is when they 1 n..f thfl iriTltOTl Of tllA -0-ir.L"- T 1 1 1 1 111.11. llJllL.Lll.V.l.ll.liAL?.' ... age were siujpi lwo um cn.-u ici'uns. This innocent deception has been car ried on for a quarter of a century. When people go into the vaults thev always want to handle monoy. There is an irresistible tendency to leel of it. and the more valuable the package the greater the temptation. It wasn't con sidered good policy to allow a large amount of treasure to be passed around among strangers in such a way for fear some one might chloroform the guide and vault-keepers and make a break with the package. So curiosity was gratified and the goverment was protect ed from any possible loss by making up a dummy and giving it a proper appear ance. The secret was well kept until Saturday, when a spiteful employe, who had been discharged, gave It away. I 4 APRIL 16. 1896. Fi'.lKM TO ALL. i A'' r. A. I TliO v ver. :n t: !!.:. .1' Ir in i to ojj i!.u-;c, Hirricu try. t ?.( .'r.--v, p ' t ir-i : ure al. nv in.'c. M--i-iiiit. lei-i-'flt 1 1 1 Cf-. parliament, miionary tea, rhri-fn etilfj-tainmont. c:ird party, circu-. d.ui ai-t levee, ora'onal contet a:. a nervioe-'. ch .irei VV rhe newspaper man must be a libra- ry, the-atirus and en''yclop.dia. ?t utterances mu.-t met.-t the exact and sen sitive demand- d a world of specia'i-!-in everv ilooartment of thinkin'. '1 o sueccv-fu!ly manage a tir.-t-cla.- iow paper require- knowledge like the wide ness and deepnts.t of the sea. The lie :q-.er i inre-'i ! 1 1 (: erv- body. It was said of Noah Wel.ter. ! the man of the famous -blue back: spelling book," that he taught millions! to read aud none to .-m. As the trach- j er the newspaper has no; that golden hlarneles.-qies-j which was claimed foroM Aoah ebler ; out the newspaper hi . . , . I the mightiest educator on earth. It j teaches monarchs and presidents, .-en a-1 I ; tors and congressmen, farmers and mor- J chants, preachers and professors, me- j enaiiie- aiiu jnusiei:ui-, in-io. ians a-jn philosophers, millionaires and paupers, bankers and bootblacks, reformers and ! thieves, sailors and pirates, clowns and j gamblers, saints and sinners. It goes, everywhere. Newspapers speak and j rulers listen. It utters the wisdom of j all the people for nil the people. Nation hear- j'ro.ij nation. Friend hear.- from j friend. Kncmv hears from enemv ; Wickedic'ss l:sten to the wi-d?n o i i - I - .- ,1 goodne-s and goodness hears the voice he mercbaint. Udls bis price.--, i the j.i diet. . and ncs.--. '.'icue; Ins text, the nirv its ver- r r ieueai.ii orwrjrs us monruinir ;';;;! n go its wliite ami lior.ii gunl- j Fi-e and Hood and famine and i iiCica and war and panic there tell r s4. : v of -u'TerinurarnoiT,r m;Mi an i : pes th" beasts. Fo-t unc, wealth, fjmw relate tlieir triumph.- and their struggles, tin ir extravj? gar.ee and folly. TraL-rdy -, comedy ask h yotu- tear and yur laugh ier. He who ) ii a:e; n-l to hi - fello w men he who vvould know the hopes and fc-ar-of the human race, he who has knowl edge, hope and love beyond the shadow o.f himself cannot be complete without the in v. sp. i or. I think it was Thomas Je-fTer.-on who sari : ''If I had to clK-ose between a guvermenr without newspapers and newspaper. without a goverment. I would choose the newspapers without the goverment." It may be that the voice of Thomas JefIerion, the voice of freedom, the voice of our "Declaration of Independence," will awaken and re fresh its appreciation of newspapers. If religion has had its martyr-, so has the newspaper. Freedom of opinion and freedom to utter it may yet give us a book on martyrology. To the editors of France a French statesman once said ; ''Suffer yourselves to be blamed, impris oned, condemned, suffer yourselves to le hanged, but publish your opinion. It is not a right. It is a duty." In our editorial chairs are men as pa triotic as Patric Henry, who said in the face of frowning England : "Give me liberty or give me death." As true to their country's honor as Leonidas. who died in the pass of Thermopyl.-e ; a consecrated to all that philanthropy means as was John Howard ; a brave as the soldier wiie never lowered his crest to an enemv. Mich men cannot i ! escape me penalty oi .-emg sumenai .i . i . . r i : .. .. 1 . . if akin to the apostles. The newspaper is my friend. The earlier years of my manhood were snent m a newspaper otiice. For. -even venrs of mv mature manhood I wa on ! i the editorial staff f one of the best re- ' ligiotis newspapers in thecountry. The! newspaper is not the pulpit's rival, j It is the pulpit's ally. ; m-f, O-l" "TIT. t I . . There i a road to succe-s, and that is the road of hard work. Ail sorts of j K .-hort cuts have been devised an i tru-d by people, but they have all been -hort cuts to failure. Tiie long mad of hard work i. the onlv highway that lead- to success ; all by paths end in the? warn p. ! Activity is the necessity of every strong nature; a lazy bny is a sick boy or aj defective boy. There is little fear about the success ot the bov who works hard. "... Life is in 11 ol hard wort ; out the boy who is willing to work, who is honest and true is the boy who will ?tand the best chance oi becoming prosperous and influential. i SUBSCRIPTION PKICK St . NO. 18. DON'T WAIT! J . I- R H S U M A C I D E . Ji: FOSTER'S NTISEPTIC HEALING 0! ! M - v For Barh Wire Cuts, S.-ratt !. k'-.Hc .tti.1 c' liar Galls. frac!-:rd Ib-e; '. ;rus, ( !d Sores, C'ut, B 'ils, l'.ru-sr-.. I .s ami all kin! s f i nibwn ir.at :.t 11 : 1 f I T lli'ilvt. n C:t!. C-t cf Sera TU iTct Eitttr tfitf ti c r.c , hc vr" for cci.!rr,t,hT v,-inK it in ro. I -!! rn.l'ie. AM Druggists It cn a gursr!tc Curc- K? p,y- e ,! " .iigntd in nr.t krtp it IftiJ H 3 fi. In !" t ' ;e tamjs J we w ai md it t. ou .y na. I a:,i. Klin ,wii. i .. i"i. ii iip;. .-tiia-a i r;. JltrV ire t C. i! ir.VINF:. I.lTrrr cJ TreJ f-t1. r BAy BURNED. C '-'!. -m"-! I j)!cair 1 t .ifk ft w.ri f'.r Trrlr' t. ,i 'r a"..lt.1-J V" V t !. : I ft V . I . I ! 1 . ?i i r in l -. r f-n.l.c. I ; Si l von r " ' . !:.), t : fc- t. f , ft ri-l i u a f- w 1 t e . . i I ... . i. .r ( f l.r ( . ; n tn v " k i'! t! .. 1 " t V.-i... C. 1 I.LH I. Bill ! 1( Tl l;r li T PARIS MEDICINE CO.. ST. LOUIS, MO -For sale ana K'.cr.mteed -K. T. WHITFHFAI .V CO., r (J,n Scotlaml Neck, N. G 4 in lie of Valuable Laud 111 Wliereas on the ('aJi ,,ty of M;,rch. ls.'.ll, (' Bullock e.vectileu a deed of tru-t to Albert P. Shattuck upon t!ie tract of lanl hereinafler described to secure a lo.-ui of 1 ,400.fi made to i im on said day ny tti lrm-li aiai American Mortgaire Co. (limited) : and wliereas said K. C. Bullo-k has faiK'nl to pay his notes given for said loan and .-et out in .-aid deed of iru-t a' the times that be theiein crintra-ted to no. and the said British and American Mortgage Co. (limited) hve reipie-ted the said Albert K. Shattuck, tru!ee s aforesaid, to foreclose tiie said deed of trust ; and whereas the said A terL IJ. Shattuck declined and refu-cd to eve cute the said trust conferred upon h:m and the said British it American Mort gage Co., (limited; in pnr-uatieeof pto-vi-ion- rna'.ie in said deed f trn-t, lei'.e .".'ppomted the i;n'ler-ii;ned F. I. TraM trustee in t!ie place and tead of ;dd Albert U. S iattiick und reputtl him t execute t; id trust. Now, therefore, I, the said K. I.. Travis, substituted tru.-tee as afore-aid. by virtue of said deed of trust, will on Monday the L'Oth day of Aprd lS'.io at the court hou-e in Halifax town, soil to the highest bidder at pub lic auction for cash the tract of lata! convened by said deed of tiut. and therein described as follows, to wit : A certain tract of land adjoining the !.ui's of Andrew Gu titer, Win. K. Bil- lups, I). ('. Clark and other arid des cribed as follows, viz : I'.eijjiiitiiiiir at a idone on the road leading to F.i;fie!d in front of .lame? Biliup-' hou-e and run ning S. bl W. to the main run M Burnt Coal Swarnj. tbenee up -aid run to a howl gum on A ndrew Gt. nter's line, thence along aid "iuner's lit.e N. ol 1'. three hundred and forty-even ('All) pole-, to a ;jum in a branch, thence alonL: W. K. Bii'uji.-' liiie S. L'7 I'., one hundred and forty-eight (II; poles to four sweet gums, said Biliup-' corner, thejiee along said Biliup' line S. A V. one hti:;dred and revensy (iT'b po,e- to a stake on aid Fnt'eld road. .jPn.0 ;itiUZ ..tif road to the l-egmmt l! !!''. frin- ! eor.tainins in the aggregatf fh: j iie'd acres. rr.:9 or le-s J Thi" is tire agrietdtural land and i j located ir. a verv de-r-able eoinrnun:ty. ' Till- March jV,, -;;. K. I.. Ti:'.m-. I 2 1 Sid --r.it nte-d Trti-tee. Tin Shop ! , I have rnoe'd ir:v tin -!i"p .'iT'm i Main street opp'-re tf: ...--rn.j l.n- ' ,-y Co.. where I am prepared t- do al! i i r : fli Pin. lest Iron. Stove M. J J. j '-"-- 1 Kooflll-Z ami (iutterillir a fK.lialt.V. "- Prompt atu-htion jtvm th ' "r'J' r?- to : Sewmir Machines and Ft : all kinds reraired at short i Main i. -V 11 1 OA . f .4?'a4 tV Y . HfifvT ! V r, I'M VI ' " ; ) J K ! i t i-h )oiir Vthriiimrnt V M ! i ' . f 'Sal ; -j3'.', 4 r;.-fJr vC " : 7 j DR. H. 0. HYATT'S SANATORIUM, j k i N - 1 N ' I r.i!;o::: ) : i n -''.it '!. i Is... t. r: rr ,'. ;,.( . -, . f T- .,t ,m 1 ' I I - r . sri ':,)- .-. .id U i W ',:.! e , '. . "... 1 1 I lv. s 1 !!,!. e-.it : v . ' ! II : !. ! -,.t - i : i i ( Vm. f-. -r-". V- i .-!.. i in ; ; .e . M , . Ml '!ii", -,-:-, f -i' .V en Ti .,-,.)!. i, . -;.e :.o j y ; -e , f ( it i 're i. i ., 'e I Mr !;.--! -, i ; ! f : , ' 1 ' . : i . ! ! i I ' ; : I' .i t kf.o-.vn. ... b.. I 1 U f f e.d A ' i . I'll..:, i - -, i ! !.i i. 1 I. . N . ". b i :. 1 l,e f.,n-.'.. V 1! ' et eta -! no- ,e -:, 1,,,..:- :o d p. ail'rv 1- . - .V ..t N II. .h,-ry: ,1,! ,: I 1 Wb !.-!.. . i - I'tUfc". 'J I e t! : ' e 1" ! : .' ' : . .!!! Ilieud'-d l- r :: "e ' : f. ' ' ' '- -ure ':. Id p:e k c- ' N B -lo-ev .M.d I C -t.iif. l ( m: oyfi: iniv vi: I." As M p m Wii! ld.it' i: i i or Mi-. .; - "- : :l.:nr : '.p !'' bee i I : i ! f - ' e; t, ' : . ' - ' . Ill 1 1- ' i. a,- i d i: ! i - f 1 1 - en;' bet U h :'e tee! h i ! . :' I, p-'o-l - i, . - 1 -xitl.e- the .dr'.-i. - du-i - tie j. i 1 1 1 1 , i I ! 1 . 1 - ii ! I p l ! 't eti! W, id I ".I'- . I ' ' I 1 ; I.e be-' ten d v f . I ' l bo .( In plea- ,1.1 t-i l!.- Hin- L'i-t- in e!V p:.'t if the VY..rld. Tuentv fie . eut- .. b-atle It- v.duw !- ine deniable l'.e'iie and a-i. ! f Nil". 'in-l..u '- r..t',iiig P.p. it'-d take no other kind. ' b '.' 10 I s a VAi.r Bi.i-: riMt. A Iter e .r. of .-t ud and !'r. ll,er ha- at l ot i eeu di e'ed I and never f.nri fi n t. e d ;. I i b.. ' h -en t-t- fd oil p It .e',1 -. bo ! ,1 e .!- I . te 1 ( ever b( in cured, the re-'d !..:(" l-en III e erv ea -e. H, . '. I:'.. ' r dl' i; hell Mi it ie Cine ! - M re p, i ' d a" i J "' i 1 1 e re 1 1 ,e d V lit i i ! - of ' !i r oi, ic alld Acute ! i!IIU; itot b'f e Uli it i-m. Gout burnt ."s.-i.p-e.t. .Ne'.rilflii ; e-pe-i ,'; -. : i -: ii .Ne'itad'.e I ' -M.ftl-oltho-a ,,t,d .id lu do-d .,!'e.-r..i -. Il is al-o a .i!li af '" Bl i, j.'o Ita - . 1-111 f peei. ! ll-fp-1 11) I. '.en, a. I'.oj -ft ,fu ',, . :, , i i o d 'a I . r ':: " -nt at.d i - ' t ! e !.!! a - i U !!:.-. It i- ;ib-i.'u:el f .' i e f : o; , r IC". N'U. al ;,,e(... a!" ledioe.j .i !'!!, . to tb: a v - .' ' . f . : ' i e i 'O' i "cel. d m fp'Mi t'r -e t.. e .'bo i o i.-. For sale b . I . W'l.s !' h- ad , ,-eot-land Nee',., N. C. BFiivs I ' 1 1 , 1 : -I'l'ro-iidKv is guaranteed toei:'' I':'eMt,! '"on-tl-piitl'.n. r it otif.v , i T u i i i e 1 . .", ci'iiti per box. s,., j (I. f r 'r i Ur and fr e - ur p to M. i-jr. IJt p ,-. Ke-i-tered l'hatma'i-:, I n--.--'er. I'e N' po-t a ri r - .m I'd. I or - ' v a 1 ! t'u t- da -J d r ; e . ;--,.. ie; e. a , id it .-'?-lat.'i Ne.-K. -V '.. J '.. I. UioPd.ead .t Co. . TO t-'i" ' 'A' V I -w.1 Not; I -! m: mwm, V ! I at at IP. ,!, i I Nm:-!. ire.,; sJh-!, ,p ! : n. -d '.- .IoIL ! M.d:. -t:.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 16, 1896, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75