Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Aug. 31, 1899, edition 1 / Page 1
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A' If IF YOU ARE HUSTLER - a he Commonwealth. --a lc. -:-7:,M-!A-;:;'i:-:1' CIOR-aouinioTTO.- SUBSCK.PT.ONPB.CE,,,.,, ', jf" " OP J.h,DE US XIIAT YOU ;.'i.-ur Ailrertli.ei.ient wli-" road fhi pp.psr. ?4 -S.TS T jfv jg the fcmnr; of the hair talis t'1-- arrroaeh cf sge and o :--.:.:t;r how barren the tree jjj r ho:-; leai'Iess it may seem, I .! evidently exnect leaves And why? rnue there is life ct the you need not worry about Jiang or your nair, tne - - -3 I iejuty. Ana why? " jrsuse ir there is a soark nf remaining ia the roots, of na:r a r- t;' Ir I : V Oi,s XV. New Series Vol. 4, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, ATJQUST 31, 1899. NO. 35 TH3 EDITOR'S LEISURE . HOvJES. and ParagraTis cf Thiers Present, Fast and Futtire. .i -i.e. OlA m r V.4 i..3 WJ ki 3 b?4 114 j57 :.:se it into healthy activ- p' hdr cecses to come d i ": :r-3 to grcv: and the ,' ;-:;v3 a book on the Hair Diseases. It is free. !-ti'O 'iirort ' : v.-r'i roar l'' 3 may le easily A I-OTre!!, JIass. f : i - y tl-o Sfatoa Building. - "o:a 0 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to : AXDNECi:, X. C. ""'n HOTEL LAVrREXCE, ;"i 'TL4XD NECK, X. C. The race troubles in. Georgia arc greatly to t9 deplored ; and from th signs oi uie times in these things it begins to look like separation of th races, as advocated by JUr.: Foard else where in this issue, is about the only sure and safe solution of the problem ri-.. .n ii i -vuyr an me men wno make most money for the time are not always th men wiio leave the largest estate. Bob Insersoll thought it buta trifle to rp- ccive ?riUO a nisst for a sin?i lpotm-o and yet he died a comparatively poor man for one who was so well known 1 I s m was so aoie to mate money and who itui.jr uiu liiaivc uiucn. xiis real es, ts!e was notning and his personal es tato was worth only ten thousand dol Iars. His widow says she has not been able to find any will of Col. Ingersoll He died intestate, and comparatively poor. Perhaps the most wonderful person on earth is Helen Keller. A clipping from the Boston Transcript, printed in another column, gives account of u jr..i i - ucr uuuenui wcrx in passing ngia examinations for entrance into college Being deaf, dumb and blind, she la bors at every imaginable disadvantage, and yet her persistence in study and her achievements in scholarly attain ments, put to shame the indolence of .t .i n ii t . i uu nonius auu monsancs wno crone 'through the world in ignorance not withstanding they have every oppor tunity that could be wished. Georgia and Alabama are trying the experiment of race lines in somewhat emphatic manner. In CJeorsia G. A. n-.cn frcna northern slates " have bniit the town of Darien, and allow no colored persons to live within the cor poration. There has been no com plaint on the part of the negroes that they are excluded, and thus far ii has worked well. - LikewisIIohson City, in Alabama, is strictly a negro city. Xo white per son is allowed to live in it. The gov ernment is accordingly entirely by ne groes. The world will, watch these two expeiiments with considerable interest. iBOOT AEEIGA. What Its Futurs Is to Bo. MANY CHANGES PE2SICT3D. BY G. GEOSVENOR DA WE. At Deiagoa Written for The Commonwealth. A glance over Africa : At a minor port of the Go!d Coast, a small but thoroughly equipped railroad is in ex istence, solely desigued for bringing mahogany logs from ths upper Assin ie river to the coast, instead of per mitting them to float to the coast aa heretofore. This fact is cited as a type of the influences that will re-make Af rica in the next twenty-five yeare. Railroads nd electric lines, designed for purposes of pure commercialism, wui inevitably open the way for all tnat is modern and energizing in the colonizing nations of the world. . The knell is sounding for tho Dark Conli nent, and in its stead will appear a continent whose readiness and capacity tor dGvelopment-are almost limilless. Twenty-five years ago the map of Africa was mainly guess work. Larsre spaces were set down as desert that have since proved to be productive, and the boundaries of th9 different in terior territories were enryed in sus picious beauty and regularity. The Xile, notwithstanding Speke's efforts, was still regarded as a mvsterv. The traveler who chose to let his imagina tion run riot regarding things he had seen, either asleep or awake, could do so with impunity ; beyond which point the yellow iournals haye scarcely pro gressed whenever they refer to Africa, even now. The bravery and devotion of Livingston were then a new story and Henry M. Stanley had just started for the expedition dminsr whoo murw le partially surveyed Late Victoria ranza and which ended in his re-ap pearance yia the Congo, to pen his great story of "Ac33 the Dark Con- inent." Of course partial exploration h;id preceded all this in many dircc- ions. in Dr. Earth crossed the Grant Desert and added to our know- edge of the Xiger, only howeyer fo leave the impression that this vpt iver of tha west coast was a feeder cf the Xile. On this same river also. lungo Park in 179G experienced a umber of dubious adventures and ex plored the rivnr for 1G0 miles from its mouth. This same region also and ,1 r 7 0 12 X E Y-J. T-L A W. co7LAyr Xj!ce, X. C. ?:.: -.i-c.-i wherever hi services are T. " J. WAKD, Sa:g3 3ii. Dentist, EXFIELD, X. C. 0"fo o -.?r iran ison's DruP1 Store. D L. TRAVIb, Attorney and Counselor : at Lair, HALIFAX, X. C. 3'';?y Loaned on Farm Lands. pU L V. MATTHEWS, i TTORXEY-A T-LA W. t?Col!ection of Claims a specialty. WHITAKEKS, X. C. fcmpara cur Work with that ' of oar Competitors. ESTABLISHED ix 18C5. CHAS I WALSH . 1 In Mai ii M PS - WORKS, ."mmre St., Peteeseubg, Va. II. V-fHur.f;-!, Tombs, Cemetery Curb- All work s4rlct!y nrst ' and at Lowest Trice3. ?'xtsir iron' -?A . ' " J' 'Jl -&& '.':':'-1H "or t to any address free. In 'r'r,t'!f rn please give age of de iUnit as to pric9. 1 fropay Freight on all Work. MENTION THIS PAPES. 3 I lv en - ; DESIGNS Ha a ?. TRADE-MARKS 4 CIl H p AND COPYRIGHTS 4 OUIAiNtU 4 fc&TO PATENTABILITY W,.r,I? Inventive Ar k '".rTfo iwi . .t .. . . . - j 11 patent is secored. l mm l moderate. Tin f n Dayid Brenner Henderson, of Iowa, is to le the next Speaker of the House of I'enresentatiyes: He will have great power in omce; next to President Mc Km!ey. A paragraph in the Saturday Even-ins: Pest says of his power, his work and his salary : "Apart from his absolute control oyer legislation, he will enjoy enor mous influence and many advantages. He will draw a salary of $8,000 a year $3,000 more than an ordinary Con gressman gets and a large and hand somely furnished office sdjoiniDgthe chamber of the House will be provid ed for bis exclusive occupancy. At the door, to inspect visitors and keep out cranks, will sit a messenger, an ex sailor, who has performed the same duty under seven previous Speakers, and this man, paid out of the Treasury, will be his own personal servant. Be neath the office, on the first floor below, is a private dining room, which Mr. Henderson wilEEave all to himself, no body else, save such guests as he may choose to invite, being permitted to enter it at any time. There he will eat his luncheon, brought from the House cafe close by. It may be taken for granted that the meals will be ex cellent, for the Speaker can deprive the restaurant-keeper of his privilege if be chooses." Stateof Oi'iio, City op Toledo, S m Lucas County. Frank J. Chkxey makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F J. Chenev & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of OXE HUNDRED DOL L IRS for each and every case oi Ca tarrh that cannot be cured by use of Hail's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CIIEEV. . Sworn to before me aud subscribed In my presence, this 6th day of Dec cember, A. D. 188G. i , A. W. GLEASOX, seal Notary Public. HrfpTcatarrh Cure is internally and acts directly on the blood and Qu erns surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pil's are the best. Subscribe to The COMMJ.OWEAUH. much other of (he African coast, was known and traded with bv the Phoe nicians of old, whose beads are even now dug up occasionally by the inhab itants ot the Guinea coast and used as ornaments by native royalty. In the South as early as 1G52 the Dutch had possession of the Cane of Good Hope, having themselves ousted the Portu gese and themsslyes being ousted by the British. Yet after all is said re garding efforts made, territory subdued, and knowledge gained of Africa prior to the middle of the present cenTury, it may be summed up safely as trifling and ineffective. The present day map of Africa is an altogether different thing. The re gions to the north and their control, remain practically unchanged except, of course, Esypt. That is English in all the elements that make for progress aad quiet development, unthreatened by southern foes. But South, East and West the map has been re made. Based upon Stanley's explorations that vast Congo Free State that pet plan of the King ot the Belgians now stretches from the Atlantic ocean to the great equatorial lakes. On the south northward Star of Empire has taken its way till even Transvaal, once thought of by its founders as safe from all dis turbance and surpassing has already been left behind and Rhodesia stretches out the hand - nf its rule toward the Zambesi and onward again to the equatorial lakes. On the east the ter ritory ha3 all been amicably divided among the great European nations, though not yet settled. Now that the partition has been effected, the inter national race l:r commeicial deyelop ment and political supremacy has def initely started. If the British are (rue to their genius and alive to their op portunities, there can be but little doubt as to the victor. Militarism in ! the north under General Kitchener and commercialism in the south under Cecil Rhodes, have already given the British a control through the centre of the continent, from the Mediteranean to the Antartic ocean with the excep-j tion of 700 miles belonging to German j East Africa. The sale - of Italy's port ! of Erithrea on the Red Sea together! with the region called British East Africa, almost surround Abyssinia with British influence Bay, still owned by Portugal, the British ftfluence is supreme and thus largely cuts off the Transvaal from ocean communication. Then from toe mouth of the Xiger to Cape Verde, British influence is almobt uninter rupted. It is not really difficult to glance ahead and say what is to be, ; for given human nature as it is, human enter prise as it has shown itself, and racial differences as the exist, cm can give even more than a shrewd guess regard ing the future. Twenty-five 'years will see as vast changes in Africa as seventy-five years have seen in Hie United States ; for the powers of (be railroad, of electricity, and of modern machinery will be brought to bear upon the Afri can problem immediately, while Amer ican effort went forward bv the slow stages of the canal, the prairie schoon er, the flat-boat, forward to the rail road, only now reaching electric power. From all sides the attack upon the undeveloped continent will go forward. In each case the commer cial impulse will iuicouscio.;sly work out for the land the broader purposes of destiny, just as the individual ex ertions of all our own workers have, without direct intention, set forward our country in one hundred years un til its influence is world-wide in every sense. In less (ban ten years, and possibly in less thau fiye, telegrams for Cape Town can be sent via Cairo. In fif teen years, possibly eyen ten, men can take train in the North of Africa and ride to its southernmost point. In twenty-five years the Transvaal will exist no more as a Republic, It will have been swallowed np by the su premacy of theBriti3h Interests around it and in it. Deiagoa Bay will no longer be Portugese; in fact, it is doubtful if Portugal will then retain a single one of her possessions on Afri can soil. She will have sold them out right or have been embroiled; in the disputes of her more poveriu neigh bors and thug have' lost her initory altogether. The Coao Free State will be less Belgian and more -English, i The Coast settlements of (ho Gulf of Gainsa will have poread back into the THE AMERICAN NEGRO. GETHER. 1W What Shall fcs "Done With Elm ? Progressive Farmer. in .ma wisaom uoa nas seen proper to divide the human family, since th creation, into different races, colors and many languages, arising from sins committed by man in different ages and countries, the history of which is now yery imperfectly known. When this continent wa3 discovered 400 vears ago human seryitude had then been in existence in some shape in every known country in the world ; and the most barbarous and cruel forms of slavery practiced by many educated races of the human family. The Western Hemisphere was then the home of the Aborigines or Indian tribes, who made slaves ot their wives ; and the numer ous tribes of Africans did the same, and also of both sexes oi their race captured in their tribal wars. The Indians be ing savage, war-like, "and not an agricul tural population, were not fit subjects lor the slave vender ; but the African being more docile, submissive and al ready accustomed to the eyil3 of the slave trade, very naturally became easy victims of avaricious and debased slave traders of their own and other coun tries. Consequently great numbers. first from the valley of the Xiger river, (the waters of that river being black, and he meaning of the word niger be ing black and .the peop'le very black, they 'were called negroes by the Span ish traders, hence the name) then from other sections, were bought and stolen and transferred to the most cruel man ner to the Xew World for the money that wa3 in the business. Spam, Eng land and Portugal claimed territory, and forming colonies on this continent i : - J i i . . . , , suou eujpiieu uieoi wun siave labor moralized freedmen fed by the govern ment, and both races guarded and pro tected by General Palmer and 4,000 troops, and knowing of the murders, rapes and robberies committed on the the highways in the country, and the loss of the remnant of a large fortune in trying to reclaim his lands, make a crop and cutting lumber with said de moralized labor, saw and was the first man to conclude and publish his views predicting the two races would never live together as they had done prior to and during the war in peace, safety and prolkably, but would drift farther and farther from each other. My predic tions have come true to the letter, and will never be otherwise lor the follow ing reasons: The Anglo-Saxon race has proven itself in some respects supe rior to all colored races; and G$ seemed to haye ordained their seperatc and distinct calling and fields of opera tion, especially as to the white and African races, as the mixing of the blood of the two races produces an en feebled, delicate and short-lived off pring, and not adapted to the very cold or tropical climates as its respec tive ancestors are; consequently, the commingling of the blood oi the two races was forbidden by the Creator. The history of the world does not give case where two races so dissimilar ever lived together in peace without compulsion or slavery, or social ecjiali ty and amalgamation. Ona must pre dominate and the other migrate, or extermination is inevitable, and God docs not favor either amalgamation or extermination, as these two races seem to have their especial work of e van sei zing their own respective races in other countries. Hence the mission ary movement. Send Your Advertisement is Now. evils can be lemedied by drawing the social line3 more tightly and the dis franchising of the negro voters. Nay. verily. The evil feeds haye produced thdr harvest ! The disfrauchislng and even the emasculation nf nvorv- un earned or ignorant negro voter in the rfouth will not stop or prevent rapea an 1 lynching ! Only the gradual and oi :.-c2ful. separation of the races will accomplish what both races are now in ne-d or. These ouestions have been in our j olitics for ons hundred years, md can only bo eeitled by a judicious ?p.ir;:t:on of the races. The Republi cs, i pariy give (he negro his freedom ;ml hi.-' vole, ai d now ought to finish th? philanthropic work while in power, !y prsi.ig a l.uv and appropriating Lh3 i-vK oy nece.'.ry to convoy him iu 1 hi si posterity to Liberia, or else 'vhere, as hist as they ere willing to go. ff.Mer.c 3 has become a menace to cood sat icy in (Lo South, especially in our town and cities, and both races will be greatly benefited by the passage of such a law, and the expense thus in curred would be returned to the gov ernment by the increased commerce, peace, happiness and usefulness and development of both race3 and conti nents. As our colored population would diminish their places would be filled from the old countries by white voters and laborers and be' adapted to our mutual wants. The exodus of the African race is a necessity for the good of both races and continents. Pharoah may say no, but God will say, go ! The sea may not divide for (heir passage over on foot and dry shod, but it will be bridge, for their exodus sooner or later. This may be done as the Indians have been moved from place to place or by a Tjiikts whin am Best CW Synip. "f?- Use in time, pimu ".?",rViFy Soudan and the different little princi palities been brought under civilizing influences. The Mohammedsn terri tories on the north coast will still re tain their form but will have lost much oi thsir vigor, sinco the only hope of Mohammedanism is the existence of just that sort of fanaticism to which Lord Kitchener has administered such a crushing blow. American capital and American ef fort will have aided in the work. The supremacy of the English-speaker will not alarm us nor raise protests, for while all his doing are not ideal, yet we know no race that is better. We know, futhermore, and ha'ye learned much in that direction in two years, that as the world moves on. its needs will demand that the leadership of the world shall rest upon character, upon enterpise, upon ability. A Colored Frsals, Amertcus (Ga.) Recorder. Aaron Glover, a negro man living near Americus, would be a star attrac tion in a museum. The peculiar feat ure in the make up of this modern Aaron is that the right side of his body, from head to heel, is of a light or mu latto shade, while the left side is black African, pure and simple. A well-de fined line divides the two distinct shades. But the strangest feature yet is the fact this negro perspires only on one side of his face and body. While the right side of his face is beaded with perspiration the left side is "bone dry" and has always been so. From his shoulders down this is exactly reversed, the left side perspiring freely while the right ever remains perfectly dry. Glover says it has been this way all his life, and no one can account for it. MILLIONS GIVEN AWAY. It is certainly gratifying to the pub lic to know of one concern in the laud who are not afraid to be generous to the needy and suffering. The propri etors of Dr. King's Xew Discovery lor Consumption, Coughs and Colds, have given away over ten million irial bot tles of this great medicine and have the satisfaction of knowing it has ab solutely cured thousands of hopeless cases. Asthma, Bronchitis, Hoarse ness and all diseases of the Throat, Chest and Lungs arc surely cured by by it. Call on E. T. Whitehead & Co., & Co., Druggists, and get a free trial bottle. Regular size 50c. and $1. Ev ery bottle guaranteed, or price refund ed. . , . ' " ' " i" 'Hi'" " The girl who can speak seven lan guages is less soughE after than the girl who can hold her tongue in one. Eaara the Signature H.9 Ki&i You HavaAiftays Bought from Africa. The English colonies or our forefathers protested against the traffic, but the mother country forced it upon her subjects to create com merce and revenue ; and later, citizens oi other nations, and the New Eogland States increased the business or slave trade to great proportions and to the injury of the purchasers or white race of this country. Several of the most Northern States seeing the institution or slave labor did not ray, soon sold most of their slaves to their South ern brethren and emancipated the re mainder ; and the doctrine of emanci pation was discussed until about 1825 when the American Colonization Soci ety was formed, chartered, lands bought in Africa, and a Republic established, called Liberia, fashioned alter ours, for a home ior ail freedmen of the United States who would and could go to.it ; and a law was passed by Congress,- for our navy to capture all slave ships on the high seas, confiscate the ships and send their negro slave passengers to Liberia at government expense. Said society was formed and managed by such men as Daniel Webster, Thomas Jefferson, Bushrod Washington, Henry and Cassius M. Clay and others who created such a sentiment in the South as to cause several Southern legisla tures to come very near or within a few yotes of passing gradual emancipa tion lawTs, which many slave holders favored, and would have been produc tive of great good to both races and continents, and prevented the civil war But politicians (many of whom had no financial interest in the institution; de feated the humane and philanthropic movement. The two great political parlies, as such, were divided on the issue the Whigs favoring emancipation and col onization while the Democrats favor ed the perpetuation of the institution and extending it South and West into all newly acquired territory. Henry Clay was beaten for the presidency ot the United States because he had been the first president of the American Col onization Society and was called an ab olitionist; which campaign built up the Free Soil party and fixed or settled the matter until the civil war decided forever t he vexed question at yery great loss of life and propert', and the de moralization of both races ; and from then till now the two races in the Southland have gradually drifted from each other until a race war is upon us. The writer, having been born a slave owner, was reared on a plantation among the negroes and worked them on farms, plantations, lujiber yards, railroads, in mills, etc., for half a cen tury, knew the life, character, educa tion and habits of the Southern negroes ; and having lived in the city of New Berne, X. C, the first year after the civil war, where there were 40,000 de- A MOTHER TELLS HOW SHE SAVED HER LITTLE DAUGH TER'S LIFE. I am the mother of eight children and have had a gieat deal cf experience with medicines. Last summer my little dauhgter had the dysentery in it3 worst form. We thonght she would die. I tried everything I could thiulc of, but nothing seemed to do her any good. I saw by an advertisment In our paper that Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was highly re commended and sent and got a bottle at once. It proved to he one of the very beet medicines we ever had in the house. It saved my little daughter's life. I am anxious for every mother to know what an excellent medicine it is. Had I known it at first it would have saved me a great deal of anxiety and my little daughter much suffering. Yours truly, Mrs. Geo. F. Burdick, Li ber ty , R. I. For eale by E. T. Whi te head & Co. The soothing and healing properties of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, its pleasant taste and prompt and perma nent cure3, have made it a great favor ite with the people everywhere For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Gov ingly and grudgingly, and is unsatis- factory to th-D whites, more especially m towns and cities, to which all are tending, and political demagogues are riding into offices upon the backs of the negro voters, and the disgust of the white voter is being increase! ad in finitum. Many of our educated and honest citizens argue that all tl'oe . 'OASi?ORIA. - . Bears the 1 A 3 Kind T33 m AiwaS Eotigfit Signature or" The best remedy tor an Injury is for- getfulness. For wise purpos23 God has overruled fireat company of private stockholders the covetousness of the superior to en- 11 Prorer safeguards are thrown around slave the inferior race for a time only, j " lu fluieLUUU oi a.. P"es; nat the latter might learn civilization . Iredell county. X. C. ana Cnnstianity and go back to en lighten and Christianize their own hun dred million biethren in the Dark .Con tinent; they being better adapted to that great missionary work than any other people. "The wrath of man shall praise him, and the remainder will be Disfranchised. " Besides, man 13 his brother's keeper, and the duty of every man is to keep another. The kind feel ing that existed between the former slave-holders of the South and their old slaves was destroyed by the sudden emancipation, enfranchisement and bad adyice given the negroes by incom petent end wicked teachers of both race3 after the war closed. Seeing this I advocated the gradual transportation of the negroes to Liberia, at govern ment expense, in a pamphlet, and sent copies to the President, and each mem ber of both houses of Congress 23 years ago. Ana now, 11 philanthropic indi viduals aud churches wish to help to elevate the negrce?, let them do so by sending the best teachers and workers to be had and orphans with them to Liberia to establish manual, laboring homes aud schools, and mo:iey to sup port them and the natiya children while being prepared for future useful ness. Had this course been adopted and faithfully executed thousands of murdeis, rapea and other outrages would haye been prevented ; hundreds of millions of dollars worth of property saved from the hands of the burglar and torch of the incendiary, and other hundreds of millions saved that have been spent in restraining and punish ing offenders, as the South had only a few empty jails and penitentiaries, which haye been greatly incieased in numbers and all filled to overflowing for a third of a century, and our State courts, officials and their expenses in creased a thousand per cent. Besides all this and more the former friend ship that existed between the two races, and so proven by the peacefulness, con tentment Qnd faithfulness of the slaves during a most destructive and merci less Avar of four years' duration, has been gradually giving away to discord and hatred as is now proven by the race riots in every Southern State, and when all the former slave and their forme? owners are all dead, which wilJ bo very soon, the new if sue ot both races will haye drifted so lar from each other as to make peaceful living im possible. In compatibility will then be written upon all our institutions, occupations, pontics ana social cus tom?. Already these questions are in the most deplorable condition. The labor of the freed men and women, the latter especially, is given more spar- The Gomsng of Bsiby brinEr3 joy or pain. It's for the mother lo decide. With irood health nd a 6tronjf womanly organism. i motherhood but adds to a woman's : attractiveness. takesawoy all terrors by strengthening the vital organs. It fits a mother for baby's coining. By revitalizing the nerve centres it has brought chubby, crowing ywsngsters to thousands of weaic women wlio leared they were barren. It purifies, heals, reerulates and strengthens, and is good for all women at all times. No druggist would be without it. 5i 00. For advice in cases requirine special directions, address, giving symptoms, " The Ladies' Advisory DeDartment. " The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chat tanooga, Tenn. f? MRS. LOUISA HALK.of .Tefferson, Ga.. Gays: "When 1 first took Wine nf CotTTi we had been married three years, but could I nut have anv children. Xine month. In. -1 I had a fine pirl baby." i Vins Kill Female Academy. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 5, 1899, With a full corps of Teachers. Literary Course, Art, Music, both Instrumental and Vocal. Expenses Moderate. Write to L. W. BAGLEY, A. B., Prln. S-I0-2ra Scotland Neck. N. C. DROPSY! CTRZXDwlth regttMm Kmedjo. Have cured many thousand him day at least two-third of nil irmptotns mwr A TuHnif.nl. 1-- .l-W..Wii. j. . - ' BX. H. B. GtUI'2 0. Box KAtSSboT .2 ... i A 3 J . . 1 L-- , . wcni Lawyer, mn Jr'i AUM. haul -'.'.ji
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 31, 1899, edition 1
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