Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / May 12, 1898, edition 1 / Page 1
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ADVERTISING aa to BUSINESS -WHAT STEAM IS Machinery, Tn t Gkeat Propelling Power. THAT CLASS Or READERS TH VT YOU Wish your Advertisement TO KKACH is the class who read this pnper. f W ELIOT) J fcss demonstrated ten thousand times that it is almost infallible FDR WOMAN'S PECULIAR WEAKNESSES. irregularities and derangements. I: hss become the leading remedy for class of troubles. It exerts a wonderfully healing, strengthening- and sootfcins? influence upon the menstrual organs. It cures whites" and fallinef the womb. It stops flooding and relieves sap- nr pressed and painful menstruation. Tor Change of Life it is the best medicine made, It is Oesancial during pregnancy, and helps to bring children into homes barren ior fears. It invigorates, stimu lates, strengthens the whole sys tem. This pr6at remedy is offered to all aSicted women. Why -will anv woman suffer another minute r-ith certain relief within reach? Wine of CaTdui only costs $1.00 pr bottle at your drug store. For advice, in eases recntiring special directions, addrest giving symptom, the ' Ladies' Adv-isory Department," The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chat tanooga, Tenn. Rev. J. VV. SMITH, Camden, S.C., says: nlfa used '.Vine of Cardui at home for failing ct the womb and it entirely cured her." fqfjiu-aPTMfeiMilli PROFESSIONAL. 0': A. C. LIVESMON, OiFiCE-Ovcr the Staton Building. QSice hour from 9 to 1 o'clock; to f ,-,V.T,- o clocK, p. in. SCOTLAND XECK, X. C. SIJ A. DUXX, ATT 0 Jl X E Y-A T-L A W. SCOTLAND XECK, X. C. Practices wherever his services are re-iuired. W. H. Day. David Bell. DAY & BELL, A TTORNE YS AT LA W, ENFIELD, X. C. Practice in all the Courts of Hali fax and adjoining counties and in the Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims collected in all parts of the State. I It. W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, X. C. Oiibe over Harrison's Druf Store. EDWARD L. TRAVIS, L Attorney and Cotmselor at Law, HALIFAX, X. C. CJm-Ioncy Loaned on Farm Lands. P HOWARD ALSTOX, 'il. Attorney-at-Law, LITTLETOX, X. C. -I. FURGERSOX. ATTORNEY-at-LAW, HALIFAX, N. C. 091y P LL V.' MATTHEWS, A TTORNE Y-A T-L A W. fSTColIection of Claims a specialty. ly ENFIELD, X. C C. A. WHITEHEAD, DENTAL Surgeon, Tarboro.N. C. SPRING PARK HOTEL, J. L. SHAW, Proprietor. Littleton, X. C. Good accommodations near Shaw's' All-Healing Springs at $1.50 per day uuaay Kates ?1.00. 1 w-m. E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XIV. New Series Vol. 2. THE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOURS. Points and Paragraphs of Things Present, Past and Future. In the new congressional library at Washington there is a readme; room ex clusively for the blind. It will eventn ally contain practically all the books and periodicals published in the blind alphabets ot every language. This is the only separate department for the blind in any library in the world. Miss Dora E. Parker has the honor oft 7ng the champion lady shot in Xc i Carolina, according to the follow ing taken from theXorlolk Landmark : "Mr- J. W. Parker, of XorfolK coun ty, who returned from a trip to Xorth Carolina yesterday, stopped in our of fice to say that Miss Dora E.' Parker, of Willeytown, X. C, killed a seven teen pound turkey while gunning through a piece of woods on Monday. Miss Parker is very expert with both the gun and rifle, and owns two beau tiful weapons. In the neighborhood Miss Parker is regarded as the cham pion lady shot of Xorth Carolina." There is to be a novel candidacy in Pennsylvania this year. Rev. Dr. Swallow will run as an independent for Governor on a very laconic but signif icant platform. His platform will be : "Thou shalt not steal." If Dr. Swallow can succeed in bring ing those whom he wishes to convert to his constituency en rapport with his own high ideal, he may make a show ing at least. But if he is not pretty well garrisoned by adamantine character he will be charged himself with steal ing before he finishes his campaign ; and what's worse, almost anything can be proved in a political campaign. The newspapers of the country will ba affected by the war with Spain per haps sooner and more directly than any single business in the country towns. The great demand for enlarged editions of the great dailies, extras of every kind and the like, has already put the paper milis to all they can do. They are not able, it is said, to fill half the orders that are sent. This, of course, will put up the price of paper and the country weekly will suffer first. It cannot get out extras, and so make the additional profit on the demands for news, but will have to pay the ad vance price on paper as much as the dailies that make big money out of it. MisHelen Gould has offered Presi dent McKinley $100,000 to be used as the Government sees proper and also another"$100,000 to be used in war ex penditures. The President has suggested that she build a warship, but the Xew York Dispatch says that inasmuch as $100, 000 is too small amount to build a war ship equal to Miss Gould's good inten- ions. she would better build an air- hip, and adds : "It will not be denied, that if this war is to last any time, all the material progresses and advances in warfare will be made in the Department of Military Aeronautics, already established at Sandy Hook. The captive balloon will rise to a proper altitude, attached - . -. . 1 A . A. 1 to a cable and connected wun me shore batteries by telephone and re port the operations of the enemy at ong distances. Such is one tunction ot the airship. In the line of free balloons there are vast possibilities of usefulness and de3tructiveness. Bal- oonsare made dirigible (directible). They will be made to sail directly over the enemy and report operations in fhpir camDS. the movement of troops and warships. If permitted in inter national rules of warfare, they will drop bombs, containing high explosives and create terrible destruction. Certainly, if the submarine boat is permitted to do its deadly functions under water, the airship will be likewise allowed to onerate above the enemy. Let Miss Gould apply her generous gm m ims - m. dimction. where it will achieve actual progresses and reflect on her good om the great credit it win surety deserve." BUCKLEN'S AENICA SALVE. The best salve in the world for Cuts a TTlrs. Salt Rheum SrSLT .r ohim-a Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all bkm Erup- a r.itivelv cures Piles, or no pay r" guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money redded. ok Mnta-rr hox. For sale by T2. T. WHTTWWTBA CO. f COMMONWEAL: SCOTLAND NOCReSINIT. ONLYTO-BELIEVE THE SUFFER ING. Present Day Thoughts, BY "NEMO." (Copyrighted by Daw Tabor.) We all pass through successive ex periences and cannot "possibly go back ta the time when those experiences were unmet ; the thing that Happens cannot be rendered non-existent. The whole life ot a child and afterwards o! the adult is one of sweeping onward ; away from innocence to knowledge ; away from peacefulness to trouble : away again perehance from trouble onward to quiet of heart ; each varied experi ence, however, leaving its impress. There is only one certain and sure rule to follow, make the best ofstheevil that befalls ; from mistakes learn wis dom ; from righteous deed3 gain strength for futher doing. Like man, like nation. The war IS ; and that is an end to all controversy. Many thousands, like discontented children would gladly travel backward on the pathway of Time to the days when Peace rested in the hamlets ol . m i our industrious nation, mere may even be some who regard the show of force as uncalled tor. But there is no way back to previous conditions. The only way is onward. Xeither is there time nor place for saying "I would have perferred this or that." The war being waged by the Xation that in cludes all of us, fighters or friends of fighters, men of peace or peace at any- price men all are part of the nation : so that anything short ot absolute uni ty of purpose is seriously wrong. Par ty feelings suppressed, party lines more invisible than ever; individual preju dices subordinated, individual desires molded into one great purpose : this is where we stand to-day. One great duty is before us ; to so vigorously en courage our government with our hands and our hearts ; to so cheerfully support it with our taxes direct and in direct that a war undertaken without frenzy for glory, without lust for con quest, shall be sharp and disastrous to the enemies of feeble women and child- . n i ren. mat none, we snau again snow the world how a nation that believes in peace, can by the devious path of war bring peace lasting and glorious to pass. Oar sons will then take up their home work again, and move on to the next dnty. But the war will not have passing without leaving an impress on our national life. Let us consider one remarkable di rection in which this war has served to show the progress the world is making. During the days and months and years that wo have bitterly felt the wrong that was being done to our poor neigh bors, there has never been any s3rioua intrusion of the religious aspect of the case, save for one or two sets of resolu tions by small bodies ot men. Xo question has been asked as to the belief of the poor creatures whose cruel suf ferings have forced us into the world's arena as champions of the defenceless. I seems as though we had reached the common sense attitude of mind when we believe that a wrong is a wrong, and a wound is a pang even though in flicted on a man that has no belief at all. It seems easy to say vv nat you believe, dear suffering one is nothing to me ; what you need Is my summons to your side." Yet easy though this is for us to say, it is not so many years ago, since the purse-strings of those who now subscribe to Cuban relief funds, or who surrender the darlings of their fire side for righteousness' sake would have felt the kindly effort misplaced, per haps wasted because the Cubans are staunch Catholics, lhese men, ior whom we pledge our wealth, our lives and our honor, cling to a faith that as far as possible unites church and state ; they honor the Virgin and they have plentiful calendar ol saints to appeal to -But Americans, wuai uavo ic iu do with condemning such things, freed as we are from tyranny and from super stition? Infinitely less than nothing. if we measure a man's need and our responsibility by the extent to which he agrees with us about hazy matters fiio ani Htnal realm, we live again U W-W WSJ'-- ' back in the centuries when Spain flourished to the full-, centuries of rap ine and of prejudice .wherein we our selves had a share. But it, as we have done, we clear our minds ot non-essent ials and .finicky differences, when poor wretch lies before us imploring bodily pity, then are we children of Thousands of sufferers from grippe have been restored to health bv One Minute Cough Cure, it quiCKiy cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, pneumonia, irriDpe, asthma, and all throat and lUDg diseases. E. T. Whitehead & Co. - "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. NECK, N. O., THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1898. the light, the great dear light that is coming to men's minds as the world rolls on. Verbal Creeds are passing ; righteous-doing is on the stage of hu man progress. OLD GLORY. BY FRANCIS H. TABOB. (Copyrighted.) There's a flag that is known through a wider domain Than the conquering eagle of Rome A dominion not severed by mountain or main ; But joined in one glorious home. And the sleepy sun watches it far in the north. Where winter its silent' court holds, And the silver set stars in tbej'ttgth iana snine ioriu' To lighten its lingering tolas, risr For our banner may blow in the bit- terest blast, Or wanton 'neath tropical sun ; But wherever its quivering shadow is cast, The speech and the spirit are one. And the stars and the stripes have been shredded and shot -On many a terrible field ; But have shown that their colors were rightly begot From a nation that knows not to yield. But though it may toss oyer conquer ing hosts, We fight but battles may cease, And we reckon our proudest and no blest boasts And the holier triumps of peace. For our flag is the flag of the fearless and free, To the teaching of liberty true ; So we'll honor and cherish where'er we may be, The glorious red, white and blue. Good Adyica to his Race. Booker T. Washington is perhaps the beat poised colored man on the American continent, and he is doing a great work for his race if they will hear him. Recently he addressed an audience of 3,000 colored people at Sumpter, S. C, Among other things he said : "The race is in too big a hurry. The preachers want the title of D. D. before they know divinity. Almost every graduate in the English course must be addressed as 'professor'. We want biography" before we lived.- Some want to take Latin and Greeir. who do not know a per sonal pronoun in Eng lish. Some want postoffices who do not know how many stamped envelopes to give for 11 cents. . Go . to the farm, stick to the farm, work on shares, rent or bay land. You should never come to town unless you have something to sell or exchange. Build better and arge houses. We shall never ba the equal of other races unless we cease to live in one room cabins and shanties. The home is the foun dation of society, morality and religion. We do not want to govern. the country until we learn to govern the home. The education of the negro race has been on the leap fiog style. The scholars want to make haste. Latin, Greek, French and German are taught at the expense of English. The masses should have industrial, mechan ical and literary training. As we are a laboring people, we must liye by the sweat of our brow. Let us give the masses industrial education. What does a negro or a poor white man want with a classical education unless there are opportunities where he can use it to advantage? Work, work, work ; take up the hatchet and saw, follow the plow, push the plane. I see no good for you in politics, but I see plenty of barm. The colored population gets excited every four years, and many leave the farm to sit around and wait for office. Some have not worked 6ince Mc Kinley was made president, and their families are approaching starvation. Politics has ruined us and put us back many years. Live on friendly terms with Southern white people. Help to run down and bring to speedy just ice every man who commits criminal assault. Proiect and defend all women with your life and we shall have man hood among our race that we shall be proud of. In this way we can stop lynching. Watch the uermans ana Jews and see how they toil to make money. They are not politicians, but workers and merchants. Hot heads and fools will bring upon us 6hame, trouble and poverty." State op Ohio, City of Toledo, 7 Lucas County. V ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toleto, county and State foresaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUXDKED DOL LARS for each and every case of Ca tarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarra Cure. FRANK J. CHEXEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed m my presence, this 6th day of Dec ember, A. D. 1886. SEAL ( A. W. GLEASOX. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern allv and acts directly on the blood and mncnua surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Communicated to The Commonwealth. ABODUOM TEE BEST LOVE HOMES. And All Need Them. BY LADY COOK (nee TEKNBSSE C. CLAFL1N). Our subject is a trite and well-worn one, yet it never wearies and never grows stale. In the hearts of one race, perhaps above all others, the word home, among those who have felt its real meaning, is associated with what ever is sweetest and purest in life. We think of home as the seat of all gentle influences : peace, love, happiness, and unselfish delights. The poets have never tired of singing its praises, and one of them has told us in homely but pathetic verse, that "Be it everso hum ble, there's no place like home." But clergymen, medical men, policemen. and district visitors, could possibly tell us another tale. Byron wrote : " 'Tis siveet to hear the watch-dog's honest bark Bay deep mouthed welcome as we draw near home ; 'Tis sweet to know thero is an eye . will msrk . Our coming, and look brighter when we come." This was a patrician poet's view. Burns gives the peasant's : "His wee bit ingle, blinkin bonnily, His clean hearth-stane, his thriftie wine's smile, The lisping infant prattling on his knee, Does a' his weary carking cares beguile, An' makes him quite forget his labor and his toil." To have one's home broken up, to lose or to he without a home, are each significant of the greatest misery that can happen. These extort the pi-o-foundest pity. When Longfellow writes of the burning ot Grand-Pre, he says of its people, "Friendless, homeless, hope less, they wandered from city to city." When however he pictures the innocent and happy Evangeline returning from Church, he says : "Homeward serenely she walked with God's benediction upon her, When she had passed it seemed like the ceaing ot exquisite music." The slave in his dreams thinks of home, and sees his "dark-eyed queen among her children stand." The exile from Erin asks : "Where is my cabin-door fast by the wild wood? Where is the mother that looked on my childhood?" The soldier sleeping on the battle field, flies to the "Pleasant fields trav ersed so oft in life's morning march, when his bosDm was young." Our late great Laureate makes the 'bold Sir Bedivere" eay to his dying Prince : Ah ! my Lord Arthur, whither shall I go? Where shall I hide my forehead and my eyes? For now I see the true old times are dead, When every morning brought a noble chance, And every chance brought out a noble knight. k But now the whole round table is dissolved, Which was an image of the mighty world ; - And I, the last, go forth companion Jess, And the days daruen round me, and the years, Among new men,- strange faces, other minds." A homo is tho place where those who love meet together in private com munion : the place where they can un bend ; nd be at ease' among those who are dearest to them. Home Tooke tells us that the word is the past participle of the Anglo-Saxon verb haeman, to come together. But as we have seen, we have invested it with a thousand tender associations, which make it the symbol of domestic felicity. Yet, in every social sphere we may find that there, are numberless houses which are only homes in name, all the elements of unity and harmony being absent. And when we consider how sacred and far-reaching in its conse quences is a well-conducted household, how vast the moral influence it exer cises from youth to age, we cannot doubt that the purity and weifare of the humblest home is a matter of na tional importance. Splendid or simple, each is a powerful unit for good or evil, a sound or rotten brick in the whole social edifice. It becomes neces sary, therefore, if we would be prosper ous as a nation, and have a waolesome future, that particular regard should be given to our own homes, and suitable measures provided to secure the homes of the poor. We may pity those who from recfc lessness or wilful misconduct destroy their own domestic peace, who ruin Children like it, it saves their lives. We mean One Minute Cough Cure, the infallible remedy for coughs, colds, croup, bronchitis, grippe, and all throat and tune troubles. E. T. Whitehead & Co. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE Sji.oo. NO. 20 their own lives and those of their chil dren, yet we cannot aive them our sym pathy. We may feel for them, but not with them. But we must both pity and sympathise with the children of misfortune, and with all who are de prived of the comforts of a home through the unavoidable accidents of life. What then should be our feelings for those who never knew one, wlo came into the world enveloped by mis ery and depravity, who were nurtured in crime, bred in ignorance, idleness, and filthy surroundings, and taught to live viciously as otiiers are virtuously H jw can words express the pity which should be felt for these? And what do we do ior them? Nothing, absolutely nothing unless it be to punish them for their environment. And, indeed, it is difficult to know what steps should be taken with the hopelessly destitute, and with hardened and irreclaimable offenders. Every town, and almost every village, has its quota of such. Great cities swarm with them, and their evil influ ence is felt in every corner of the king dom. In London, it is said, there are from one to two hundred tbousaud per sons who never know in the morning where they will lay them down at night. And this is not the whole of the evil. The honest working poor, whose two great difficulties are tho want of a suf ficiency of remunerative labor and decent home accommodation at a moderate rent, are ofteu thrown by the stress of poverty into unwilling contact with the criminal classes. The moral consequences are deplorable. Homes which should be clean, wholesome, and permanent, are squalid, fetid, and pre carious. The labor difficulty is in superable and must be left to the na- tural operation of economic laws. It is futile to attempt to create la! or by forced or artificial means, fur this would eventually intensify the evil. But one great work can bo done, and should be done without delay. Public authorities should be invested with ample powers to sweep away foul tene ments, to acquire necessary sites by compulsion, and to erect a sufficiency of healthy and suitable accommodation for the laboring classes at the lowest possible rates say, at a clear 3 per cent, on the total cost. We require far more stringent provisions than any that exist against the overcrowding and the cupidity of owners of insanitary tenements. Forfeiture of their pro perty after repeated offences would not be- too great a punishment lor these gentry. They have contaminated the community, morally and physically, long enough. The poor pass their lives in a stern school, and are as conscious of their faults as the rich are of theirs perhaps more so. They do not require to be praached to, or at, any more than others. District visitors, tracts, teetot al lectures, and charities, small or great, will not save them. They want dwellings where the decencies of lite can be observed, where domestic com fort Is possible, where cleanliness, cheer fulness, sobriety and morality may find a place in a word, they want homes. Raise Provisions. Durham San. The Southern newspapers are doing the farmers and all the people of this section good service when they urge the planting of large food crops end the raising of more hogs. The war catno upon us when it was not too late to provide at least partially, against the calamity of short food supplies in the South this year. Alreadv the prices of provisions have advanced and they will go higher as the war advances. It passes compre hension that the great majority of the farmers of the South have gone on year after year relying upon the West for their meat and bread when they could have raised it at home for less than its ordinary cost. Xow that the price of corn, the price of wheat, the price of meat, the price of everything to eat, is sure to go up and may remain unusnally high for a year or longer, it would be the height of folly to depend upon the Western supply instead of our own farms. We hope that the war cloud which has been lowering for some time has given our farmers a warning which they have heeded and that the South will have a larger product of hog and hominy than usual. For Oyer Fifty Years Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has hppn used for over fifty vears by mil lions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will the noor little sufferer immedi ately. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs W in slow's Soothing Svrun," and take no other kind. 4-21-ly. IF YOU ARE HUSTLER TOTT WILL ADVERTISE YOUB Business. 0 Send Your Advertisement in Now No. 083. Made In 64. 48. 42, 36 Inch widths. $3.25 buys this Brass-trimmed White Enameled Bedstead. In stock in all widths ; length, 75 inohes. It has one inch pillars, two-inch brass vases and caps. This bed retails at from 6 to 6 dollars. Buy of the maker and save the mid dleman's large profits. Our Catalogues are mailed for the asking. Complete lines of Furniture, Carpets, Draperies Crockery, Pictures, Mirrors, Stoves. Refrigerators, Baby Carriages, Lamps, Bedding, etc., are contained in these books. Our Lithographed Carpet Cata logue showing all goods in hand-painted colors is also free ; if Carpet Samples are wanted mail us 8c. in stamps. Drop postal at once to the money-savers and remrmber that w ssy frelajbt this month oh purchases) oC Carpets, Laee Curtains, JPor tlers and Bars amemnting; tm $9.00 and over. Julius nines Q Son HAITIBIORE, BID. Please mention this Paper. Starting the' Corn Crop. If. C. Thomac to Ohio farmsrs' Institute. Having had years of experience, I am convinced there is no other grain crop grown by the average farmer that will produce so much good,1? nutritious food from a given amount of seed and land as corn. The yield pei acre can be greatly increased and more acres be left in clover and grass. To do lis best, corn requires a rich soil, oither naturally or artificially underdrained. The ideal preparation is to plow under a clover sod and treat thin spots to a coat of stable or barnyard manure, so as to secure an even growth all over the field. Xext to a clover sod I pre fer a timothy sod, next wheat stubble, and last of all corn stubble. Ground well plowed is half harrowed. Use a good plow, supplied with wheel and jointer. The wheel makes the plow run steadier and regulates tho depth. The jointer throws all the rubbish and sod into the bottom of the furrow, where it will not bother in cultivation and more readily decay. By not mak ing furrows too wide and turning them at an angle of thirty or forty degrees, we shall have an ideiil place for the seed. Plow as soon as the soil is dry enough to crumble nicely from the mold board. Before planting the ground must be worked down into a fine, mellow seed bed. The spring tooth harrow is a splendid implement to cut the ground up with, and if it happens to be cloddy I prefer a plank drag to a roller. Just before planting use a fine-tooth smooth ing harrow which will leave Ihe sur face fine and level. In planting I use the wire check rower and plant in hills three and a half feet each w:iy. It is easier to cultivate, ground can be kept more level, it is much easier to harvest and I get just as large yields when it is planted begin cultivating by using a light, fine-toothed harrow, and again in three or four days use the same im plement and go cro-swise of the pre vious harrowing. As soon as we can see the corn along the row replant missing hills and start the two-horse cultivator. I use a cultivator with three small shovels on each eide ; the first plowing I plow very close to the the the the etch corn, and after this plowing if ground is inclined to be dry, use roller and follow this again with cultivator. After this cultivate week, each lime crosswise of the pre- t. ii .. .1 I C3dlli2 lime, suauower auu lariuur from the corn. Continue this culti vating until grain and hay harvest be gins. Alter tnis i oo noining more to it, except go through with a hoe in July and August and remove stray weeds. The Enot. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A knot is the nautical synonym for the geographical mile. The geograph ical mile is one-sixtieth of a mean de gree of a meridan on the earth, and is, therefore, one sixtieth of G9.09 English statute miles, or what is the Fame thing, the length of the geographical mile, or knot, or nautical mile, as it Is a'so called, is G0S0 Jeet. Hence, when a ship has gone one knot it has gone 1.1515 statute miles, or, what is nearly the same thing, a ship which is run ning thirteen knots an hour is traveling at the same speed as a railway train which is going fifteen miles an hour. The name is derived from the knots tied on the appendages of a ship's log line. A' torpid liver robs you of ambition and .ruins your health. De Witt's Little Earlv Risers cleanse the hvcr.cure con stipation and all stomach and liver troubles. E. T. Whitehead & uo. Subscribe to Thp commonweal tli.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 12, 1898, edition 1
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