Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / June 23, 1898, edition 1 / Page 1
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r ADVERTISING - its TO BUSINESS WHAT STEAM 18 TO- Machinery, That Gkeat Propelling Poweb. 1 jiAi CLASS OF READERS THAT YOU Wish your Advertisement TO BEACH is the class who read this paper. nil LI"! 1II I 1 .4 II II I "JI '13 III? 1 If 1 II I I II I THE riEU 17AY. Y70MEN used to think "fe male diseases " could only bo treated after "lo c a 1 examina tions" by physi cians. Dread of such treatment kept thousands of modest women silent about their suffering. The In troduction of Wine of Cardul has now demon strated that nine-tenths of all th cases of menstrual disorders do not require a physician's attention at all. The simple, purs taken In the privacy of a woman's own home insures quick relief and speedy cure. Women need not hesitate now. Wine of Cardul re quires no humiliating examina tions for its adoption. It cures any disease that comes under the head of "female troubles" disordered menses, falling of the womb, "whites," change of life. It makes women beautiful by making them well. It keeps them young by keeping them healthy. $1.00 at the drug store. For advice In eases requiring- special directions, address, giving: symptoms, ths "Ladies' Advisory Department,' The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chatta nooga, Tenn. 1ST. I. ADDISON, M.D., Cary, Miss., says: "I use Wine of Cardul extensively in my practice and find it a most excellent preparation for female troubles." PSOFESSIONAL. D E. A. C. LIVEEMOX, OFFiCE-Over the Staton Building. Office hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to i o'clock, p. in. SCOTLAND NECK, X. C. W.A DUNN, ATTORNE Y-A. T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services are required. W. II. Day. David Bell. DAY & BELL, A TTORXE YS A T LA W, ENFIELD, N. C. Practice in all the Courts of Hali fax and adjoining counties and in the Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims cted in all parts of the State. D It. W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, - Enfield, N. C. Office over Harrison's Dru? Store. E DWARD L. TRAVIS, Attorney ami Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. g?3Ioney Loaned on Farm Lands. HOWARD ALSTON, h Attorney-at-Law, LITTLETON, N. C. jo. M. FURGERSOX. ATTORNEY-at-LAW, HALIFAX, N. C. 9 9 ly P AUL V. MATTHEWS, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Collection of Claims a specialty. ly ENFIELD, X. C. R. C. A. WHITEHEAD, DENTAL Surgeon, Taeboeo, N. C. SPRING PARK HOTEL, J. L. SHAW, Proprietor. Littleton, X. C. (innH Accommodations near Sbaws All-Healing Springs at $1,50 per day. 1 V7-Gm. E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XIV. New Series Vol. 3. TEE EDITOR'S LEISUBE HOURS. Points and Paragraphs of Things Present. Past and Future. Two weeks ago we printed a sketch I of Joseph Leiter's wheat deals whereby he made his millions. Xow it has turned out that he loses all he has made and a big chunk besides. Doubtless his father's bank account suffers from the son's reckless dealing and manipu lating. Set it down as a safe rule that when a man gets something for noth ing he will sometime lose his grasp on the possession. ' - And now it comes to light, through Prof. Koch's investigation on the sub ject of malaria, that the bite of the mosquito-carries with it a danger much more serious than the bite itself. He says that the mosquito carries malaria from one person to another. Where there is malaria, he says, there is the mosquito, and the little blood-sucker while torturing you with, his biting may at the same time be inoculating you with malaria which he brings from his last victim. Speaking for the Democratic party, The Com mox wealth would urge that all candidates for the suffrage of the people this year be what the word im plies. It is derived from the Latin word candid-us, which means "white." The old Roman idea was that a man who came before the people for support must be a ''white" man in the truest sense of the word ichite in character, unspotted without blemish; and so tbe word "candidate" came into u?e. Let our candidates this year be men of spotless character against whom noth ing can be said. The Democratic party needs every possible support in order to win success this time. The Charlotte Xws recently made the following observation upon a pass ing event : "In the war excitement, we are about to overlook the fact that the capi tal of China is to be changed from Pekin to Sian Fu, the capital of the Province of Shen Si. The cyclopaedia informs us tbat the Province of ShenjSi (the "Wes tern frontier"), in which the new capi tal is located, ha3 'a population of about 10,800,000. The surface is mountain ous and less fertile than the more eas tern provinces, lhe products are mii- et, iron, porphyry, jasper, copper, gold, musk, ginseng, rhubarb and timber. The principal manufactures are agri cultural and military clothing. It is divided into seven departments, and the chief city is See Xgan. "Perhaps the Chinese thought Ger many or Russia or France might gob ble up their capital at any time, and they have placed it in the extreme Western province, where it it will be the last thing taken in the partition of the empire." Mr. John L. Williams, a banker of Richmond, Va., recently wrote a letter to the Manufacturers' Record in Bal timore concerning the dangers of con quest for our nation. J.ne closing paragraph printed was very significant and worthy to be made a motto on the lintel of every door-way throughout this broad land. He wrote : "I believe this country has a great work to xerform in the world's history, but what bitter experience may be needed to rid us of our follies and po litical vices remains to be seen. "Should we arm ourselves for ag gressive warfare, will we then be con tent, 'having done all things to stand?' Without the restraining and controll ing spirit and power of the Gospel, why should not we rlsfc and culminate and go down like other 'giant forms of empire' before us? "The farther I get on in life and the more I see of nations,communities and! individuals, the more I am satisfied that the only hope of the world is the worship of the Divine Ideal. Every thing else ia passing relief little better than quackery," Mr. John Bevins, editor of the Press, Anthon, Iowa, fcays : "I have used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Di arrhoea Remedy in my family for fit teen years, have recommended it to hundreds of others, and have never known it to fail in a single instance. For Bale by E. T. Whitehead fc Co. SCOTLAND OUR NATIONAL OPPORTUNITY. 'RIGHTEOUSNESS EXALTETH A NATION" Present-Day Thoughtr. BY "NEMO." (Copyrighted by Da we & Tabor.) Shall we continue along the line of the closing thought of last week's let ter l it was that the end ol the war will leave us with a very much extend ed horizon ot duty and opportunity and temptation. It is with us, as with the mountain climber, that the upward step shows us what we had not seen be fore. As I pointed out some weeks ago, the unselfish motive that impelled us to interfere with Spain, was in adyance of anything we had yet attempted in exemplifying the Golden Rule ; and it would have been strange indeed, if it had failed to return with interest to the great, kindly, national heart. V But we are hereafter to be more closely watched by t he great nations ot the earth ; and no longer with mere curiosity and idle surmisings as to the durability of our experiment in self-government. The future will have in it for them a lingering fear as to what the years to come conceal ot Impulsive act ion on our part, and ot real danger to the rations that have hitherto known us only in distant fashion. From being a remote and unarmed nation whose governmental vagaries could be smiled at, and whose boastful vaporings could be despised, we are transformed into an essential instrument in the great con cert of nations. V Our temptation will be to play our part in that concert, guided by the act ions of those to our right or to our left, instead of by the motions of the great c&iiuluc Lor before whom the greatest nations are merely, "Viliant dust that builds on dust." Our temptation will be to plume our selyes on fighting ability, and intrpret it into a guarantee of permanency ; measuring ourselves foolishly by the standards of other nations that have risen by material things, lived by them, and perished by them- Higher thought is needed now than for our beloved na tion to, "put her trust" "In reeking tube and iron-shard." Our temptation will be to lean on aimies and nayies and call them safety. Yet, guiding ourselves by our opponent we see that Spain shows these things to be of small moment unless backed by a high purpose. History is proof that the least of all things for a nation to trust in is force that is physical instead of moral and mental. To make na tional power as vanishing as a sand dam m a rising tide, lot us put our whole trust in rifles that repeat, and in iron castles that float. Our temptation will be to descend to the aggrandising methods of less com pact nation to take a hand Jn the game of grab and call it statesman ship ; unmindful that a "far-flung battle-line" thins out energy and makes wounding easy. This will be our strong est temptation ; but to yield to it will make us untrue to the motive which first impelled us, and will justify the doubts ot some of the European nations regarding tbe nobility of our aim. These are some of thy temptations ; O, nation that hast been led up into an exceedingly high place ! The world with all its glory lies beneath. If hun gry, thou hast it in thy power to stoop and eat the bread of pride that satis fieth not. Or thereis for. thee devotion to the subjime consciousness of being set for moral leadership in a world that is still too material and too selfish for full appreciation of the demands of the century yet to come. ' .. - Our new opportunities will be rever sals of our temptations. It is ours to refuse imitation of the untrue, trivial evil doings of neighbors whose moral education has been less than our own We are neither new England, nor new Germany, nor new Ireland, nor new Russia, nor new France, and none of these can expect to find counterpart in us. Though they all go to the making ot us, we are not copies of them any more than the child reproduces in his appearance the bread; the milk, the por tatoes, etc.,- that he has devoured. We are old-fashioned enough to believe that A tornid liver robs you of ambition and ruins your health. DeWitt's Little Early Risers cleanse the liver, cure con ctinntinn and alb stomach and liver troubles. E. T. Whitehead & Co. 1MON "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. NECK, N. C THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1898. we are what we are, by the grace of God, a nation with an individuality peculiar to itself, made so by the ex periences it has encountered. From the homes of our tollers, in field and in factory; from the patient hearts of mothers and the stron g efforts of our men, may go up a harmony that will be our contribution to the concert ol the Lord ot Hosts. "Righteousness exalteth a nation." Our opportunity is to show that we find no occasion tor boasting no matter how great our- contribution to the cause of human liberty. It is ours to show national belief in the greatness of humility. It is ours to live out this belief so effectually that others whose opportunities for a great unselfish act haye been rarer, may not from our mouthings grow either discouraged or disgusted. j ' Our opportunity is to show that we are not growing material ;ln our stand ards of value. It is ours to declare that the expediency of gain is less to be considered than propriety of action ; that what is morally wrong cannot be nationally right ; that it is better to be right than to be powerful ; but bet ter still to bepowerfal and right. Fur thermore it is ours to declare that our only fight is for - the clearing out of dark places of ignorance In order to let in a great light of a hew liberty ; that we shall not seek to extend our domain by any method that partakes ot trickery ; that we shall, only so f long as is necessary for their permanent independence, retain our hold upon the lands we free ; and finally that we shall not forget our national declaration regarding the consent of the governed as the base of government. These times are big with fate. Gen erations ot men yet unborn, will arise to praise or condemn us, according to whether we take actions that disinte grate or bind together. Next week let us in kindly spirit discuss the Anglo American alliance questibn. Two Ways of Looking at Things. It is a pity that more of us cannot cultivate the twofold way of looking at things," writes EdwotU W. Bok in the June Ladies' Home Journal. "There would be lesss friction in life if we did, and sweeter sympathy, kind er understanding, and broader and ful ler living. The fact is that we never reach the dignity of true living unless we do learn this all-important lesson. And that it may be cultivated admits of no doubt. It is simply a question of schooling ourselves not to condemn generally what individually does not happen to be to our taste. If, for exam ple we prefer brown as a color there is no reason on earth why we should con demn the taste ot any one who prefer ed to wear green. What tbe vast " ma jority of us need is to be a little more self-poised, more judicial, more willing, to see good in the tastes of others, al though thedo not please our own particular fancies. If we all thought alike, read the same booKs, saw the same plays, wore the same colors, this would be an exceedingly uninteresting world. We cannot see all things in the same way, but we can come near to justice and true respect by taking a twrofold view ot things while still re taining our strong individual views. Seeing a possible good or use for every thing does not necessarily mean a weak individuality. The most uncomfort able people in the world are those who assert their judgments in a hard, de cisive and final manner, as if they were courts of last resort. -On the o ther hand, the brightest and best minds are those that have most respect for the opinions of others." Great America. A Missouri orator is said by an ex change to haye gotten off the follow ing : "We live in a land of high mountains and high taxes, low valleys and low wages, big crooked rivers and big crooked statesmen, big lakes, big strikes, bis: drunks, big pumkin heads, silver streama that gambol in the mountains and pious politicians who eamble in the niebt, roaring: cataracts and roarine orators, fast horses and -ast young men and girls, fast, faster, fastest sharp lawyers, sharp financiers, and sharped shoes, noisy children, fertile plains that lie like sheets of water, and thousands of newspapers that lie lPie thunder !" - BUCELEN'S ARNICA SALVE. The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For .sale by Vi. T. WHTTKHTC AD CO. WEA FALLING OFTHE STARS. HURAT HALSTEAD RECALLS A GREAT EVENT OF HIS BOYHOOD. He Tells in Picturesque Language cf What he Saw on a Night in 1833, When he Was Only Four Tears Old. Marat Halste&d, in Cincinnati Commercial Tri bnae. t I am of the few who can speak as eyewitnesses of "the night of the fall ing of the stars," Xov. 1213, 1833, Those who beheld the wonders of that time were dazed by the awful splendors and long spoke of them as of some ma jestic, supernatural vision. My ae was four years and two months, my point of observation a valley in south western Ohio. One of the treasures of our house was an astronomical atlas, with mysterious maps of tbe constella tions, over which my parents pondered, and the strange animals drawn among the stars were figures the more incom prehensible the more they were ex plained. My parents were much given to studying the clouds by day and the stars by night, and one of my earliest recollections is that they would call each other's attention to celestial phenomena, so that I was something of a "star gazer" myself and knew at 4-years-old about Job's coffin and Orion's belt, the seven "stars, the dipper, the north star andtbe star of the morning and evening. My father the da y before the mem orable night had "killed a mess of young squirrels' and, out of the def erence to me, had not shot them as a marksman should -"through the head for my favorite diet was squirrels' brains. My passion for this dainty dish was indulged at supper, and dur ing the night I disturbed the house shouting for alleviation of sharp pains, resulting from too much brains in my inexperienced stomach. My mother, aroused, saw a strange light glaring at the windows and, lo, it was evident enough t the universe was afire ! My father seldom allowed anything to as tonish him, but that did. If he had not seen it, he would not have believed it, and yet did not think the last hours of the elobe we inhabit had come and "the judgment" was at hand. The hour was after midnight, and how long the stars had been railing could not be ascertained. It was very good of my parents to think it worth while to have me take part as a watch man oi tne tremenuous niuminaiion just to see whether I could remember it as long as I lived. I have so far, clearly, as if it had happened a few days ago, and it is 64 years ! My face was washed to clear my eyes from tears, perhapsrand, wrapped in a blanket, I was carried into the yard on the north side of the house. The yiew of the north side was somewhat obstructed by a wild cherry tree. Eastward was a low hill covered with hickory, maple, walnut and sassafras trees, and that was where the morning star peeped through the lofty . fringe of naked boughs and trunks of the trees in the winter. Special attention was given to point ing things out for me to fix in my memory, and the amazing scene is be fore me now, though that was long be fore photography. 1 do not recollect that I looked westward at all. Observ ation of the. east fascinated me, and I do not think I turned . my face in any other direction. There were innumera ble lines of light drawn as if by invisi ble pencils with points of fire ; strange ly straight lines sweeping from near the zenith to the horizon. My clear im pression is there were no cross lines; that there seemed to be a monstrous stream of fiery hair, a vivid blending of sun and moonlight, pouring from a stu pendous, exhaustless urn, some of the bright lines fading as they swept down, fainting into the serene depths of the sky. There was a certain majestic serenity about the exalted conflagra tion. My parents were not alarmed or greatly agitated, but enjoying every moment." I recall their low tones and some of their exclamations andadmira tion. All the boys and girls of the house were called, and they wanted to know whether it was really the stars that were falling and my father reassur ed them by the rather unsatisfactory statement : "Xo. It's nothing but meteors." How it happened there was n Hiinh a, flood of them was a matter not deenlv eone into. The idea that a M. L. Yocum, Cameron, Pa., says : "I was a sufferer for ten years, trym most all kinds of pile remedies, but without success. DeWitt's Witch la zel Salve was recommended to me. 1 used one box. It has affected a per manent cure." As a permanent cure for piles DeWkt's Witch Hazel Salve has no equal. E. T. "Whitehead & Co., JLTM. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $i.oo. NO. 26 comet had exploded and our world was whirling through the dust left floating In the abyss of space was not at once evolved, and it was sometime before our weekly papers mentioned that there had been ojther startling showers of meteors ; that this thing happened several times and might and probably would again. The silence that attended the daz zling display, the apparent flight of all the stars from their courses, the mighty movement, inexpressive save in the swift darting of celestial arrows that flashed into the space and made no sound, most impressed the beholders, and was always mentioned as some thing mystical an apparation of glory inconceivable. It was Insubstantial as the northern lighlaud yet what more could happen after one had seen the vault of heaven incandescent, with a thoupand streams of pale lightning all still as the frost that glistened on tbe grass. The commotion among some people in some country neighborhoods was as if warning had been given that the day of burning words was at band. It was a relief to the watchers my eyes were soon weary of the fireworks, and so I have only hearsay lor it when the first cold white, then rosy, light of morning came, and it was seen the-hills had not skipped, and that the brooks babbled on in their accustomed way, and the chickens that had cack led and crowed aud given stgua cf ap prehension on their roosts, came down and found the earth as they had left it the evening before, and the farmers set forth as usual to husk corn in the fields. When the evening shades feil once more, the yeil of the meteors had van ished, and there were gladness and gratitude that the majestieal. over hanging firmament was etill (here, fretted with the golden fires of the familiar stars. Justice Brewer Cited Bunyan. Washington Dispatch. Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress" was cited by Justice Brewer in the Supreme Court to-day. Mereen county, Ky., sought to repudiate a grant of $125,000 of bonds made to the Louisville S;ju'.h em Railroad Company ou the gr'oiuid that the railway had not' been com pleted "through" the" county, but came short two miles of reaching from one county line to the other. Discussing this point Justice Brewer said : "It is true the primary meaning of th8 word 'through' is from end to end or from sid3 to side, but it is used in narrower and different sen so. Its meaning is often qualified by the con text. Thus, it one should say that he had spent the summer travelling through Xew England it would not be understood as carrying an affirmation that be had been from one side clear lo the other, or from one end clear to the other, but that his travels had been within tbe limits ot Mew England. That book which is said to have had a wider circulation than any except the Bible, Bunyan's Tilgnm's Progress,' opens with this sentence : 'As I walk ed through the wilderness of this world I lighted on a certain place where there was a den, and laid down in that place to sleep.' Does the writer mean that he passed from one end of the wilderness to the other, and at tbe fur ther end found tbe den, or simply that as he traveled in the wildtrness he lighted on the den? Obviously the latter." Therefore tbe Courfdecided that the bonds should be paid. North Carolina Strawberries. Wilmington Messengsr. The strawberry beason along the At lantic Coast Line having closed several days ago, the record of the movement has been made up and it shows that shipment wag 265,615 crates, or 8,499, 680 quarts. The estimated average price nettaJ for berries was 8 cants per quart, and the money value of the crop 1697,974.40. The shipment this sea son has exceeded that of last season by oyer 100,000 crates. The greatest shi p- ment for any one day was on May 3rd, when 18,989 crates were moved. The one day's shipment on the 3rd required 05 cars, which would make a train a half mile long. I was seriously afflicted with a cough for several rears. anfl last tall had a more severe cough than ever before. I have used many remedies, without re ceiving much relief, and being recom mended to try a bottle of Chamber lain's Cough Remedy, by a friend, who, knowing me to be a poor widow, gave it to me, I tried it, and with the most gratifying results, lhe hrst Dot tle relieved me very much and the second bottle has absolutely cured me, I hare not had as good health for twenty rears. I give this certificate without solicitation, simply in appreci ation of tbe gratitude felt for tbe cure effected. Respectfully, Mrs. 3Iaby A Beard. Claremore, Ark. .. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co. IF YOU ARE HUSTLER YOU WO.I ADVERTISE YOUB Business. Send Your Advertisement in Now. From FACTORY to CONSUMER. Q) $1,39 buy 8 this (exact) ' Hattiiti ftocUer, , the largest size ' ever made ; per Our new 113- ( page catalogue ' containing Fur- i niiuiu, Drape- ries, t. rocnery. Baby Carriages, Kef litre ratora. , Stoves, Lamps, ' Pictures. Mir- , rors. Beddlnir. etc.. is yours for the I asking. Spi-cial supplements just is sued are also free. Write to-day. , C A It PET CATALOGUE in litbo irrsphed colors i also mailed free. i Write for it. If you wish samples, send 8c. stamp. Mattinur samples also mailed for 8o. All CnrpetM ftewetl free tit is month mi'l freiarht paid on $9 imrcbasea audover, $7.45 buys made-to-vour-nieas Cr Ulfl A!l-Vr)l Cheviot-. Suit Ql expressajre prepaid to you r ai. m-ioii. w rue lor iiuo cun loguo and earapic!?. Aiiuross ( Dept. COO. BALTlViOHE, M0. Q) Pa7ne's Grave ia Tunis. London Sk.tcli. One of tbe strangest sights in the strange town of Tunis is the old Chris tian cemetery. Few American tourists fail to visit it, and nor3 leave it with out a loo!.- at the grave of the author of "Home, Sweet Home." Just off a busy thoroughfare, under an ancient archway, is a heavy wooden gate, much worn by the lapse of time, thickly studded with fan'atic nails, and provided with a prodigious knock er. The latter, however, is not needed, for the gate yields to an energetic push, and you find yourself in a large, ii:- closure, half garden, half graveyard, where an Italian wornanMs hanging out clothes among the guanf. white (ombF. It is twelve years since any one was buried here, and the place Is beginning to look neglected. The modern cem etery is now outside the walls, and its guardian told me that many people came to him to inquire for the mon ument of "an American poet" or "an American consul," und ho had to. send them to the old graveyard. The mon ument in question is that of the author of "Home, Sweet Home," and it bears the following inscription upon its side3 : , ."In memory of John Howard Payne, author of 'Home, Sweet Home.' Born' June 9, 1791 ; died April 9, 1852. Erected A. D., 1855. "American arms CMgle surmounted by motto, 'E Pluribus Unum.' Died at the American Consulate in Tunif, Aged sixty years and ten months." In the tomb beneath this stone the poet's remains lay buried for thirty years. Un January o, it06, iney were disinterred and taken a'vay to bis na tive land, where tiiey receive! the hon or and final burial in the city of Wash- ngton, June 9, 1883. "Then be content, poor heart." Sure when thy gentle epiiit lied To realms beyond the azuere dome, With arms outstretched God's angel said ; "Welcome to Heaven's Home, Sweet Home." There is a c3i tain appropriateness about the lact that the author of the exile's most pathetic anthem should have died eo many thousand miles away lrom home, xnerc arc oiner graves in the cemetery, sorro of them with quaint inscriptions. James Dodge, an American cflarge d'affaires, who died at Tunis in 1S0C, has this piece of doggerel on his slab : A wit's a feather, aud a chief's a rod ; An honest man's the noblest work of God. John Howard Payne's birthplace w.h Eastahmpton, L. I., and the house m which he first saw the light and pas?'.id his early years was a pretentious build ing, two stories high and shingled. A noble monument now -marks Payne's grave in OaK Hill Cemeteiy, Washington. Bewars of Ointments for Catarrh that contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering u ihrnrifh the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable pny sicians, as the damage they will do is ten lold to the good yon can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting airecuy upon the blood and mucous suriaces oi v.o ovujpm. Tn huvincr Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the. genuine. It is taken internally and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. jpySold by Druggiste, price ioc. per bottle. Persons who purchase anything ad vertised in this paper will do a furor to both the advertiser and the editor by mentioning tlie fact that they saw the. advertisement in The Commonwealth. (b Q) (D . irr M Sunday Rates
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 23, 1898, edition 1
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