Newspapers / The commonwealth. / Feb. 27, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
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i' ... .. .. JMJLML-JUU. ADVERTISING BUSINESS . . vV II AT STEAM 13 TO Machinery, ll VI O-EAT PROPELLING FOWER. IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER rou WILL ADVERTISE YOCB Business. o Sesl fouR Advertisemert ik Now COMMONWEAI E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $t.oo. VOL.. XVIII. Sew Series Vol. 5. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1902. NO.9 IE Colds P " I had a terrible cold and could j hardly breathe. I then tried Ayer's 3 I Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im- jj g W. C. Layton, Sidell, 111. j How will your cough he tonight? worse, nrnh- ably. For it's first a cold, I then a cough, then bron- I chitis or pneumonia, and at last consumption. Coughs always tend 1 gj downward, stop tnis downward tendency by jg taking Ayer's Cherry Pec- toraS." 5 Three sizes: 25c, 50c,"$1. All druggists. g Consult your doctor. If he says take it, g t!ien ilo as lie s:iys. If he tells you not g tot.ike U. then don't take it. He knows. 3 Leave it with him. WV are willing, g .'. C. AY Eli CO.. Lowell, Mass. 85 "-'?a3 TOBACCO SPIT 1 1 1 1 Your Lif eawayl Yor. can be cured of any form of tobacco using ciiliy. be made well, stroagr, itincriirtic, full of new life and vigor by taking MO -TO -i AG, that mates weak: men strong. Many Rain, ten pounds in ten days. Over EDOrBOO cared. All druggists. Cure guaranteed. Book let and advice i-RKi;. Address STERLING ilKSIEDY CO.. Cfcicazo or Kew York. 437 PK0FESSI03AL. J R. A?0 T lIYEKm6x7 si gfe Dentist. OrFiOE-Over New Whithead Building Dl'Ice hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to L o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, X. C. TL J. P. WIMBERLifix, f OFFICE HOTEL LAWRENCE, i SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. OIL II. I. Offic II. I. CLAP.! Office lorm, ?e formerly occupied by :de Kitchin. Ulauae Kitchm. M:t'n Street, Scotland Neck, N. C. J A. DUNN, 1 A TTORK E Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Fractions wherever his services are required K. li. .-MITII. STUART II. SMITH. milTII & SMITH, A TT')IIXE VS-A T-L A W. Staten IVA'z, ovar Tyler it Outtcrbridge, Scotland Neck, N. C. E !VAED L. TRAVIS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. Honey Loaned on Farm Lands. tl.iI'I'K KITCI.'IN'. A, P. KITCHIN. K ITCH IN & KITCHIN, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Practice wherever services are required Office : Futrell Building. Scotland Neck, X. C. Buy Your BUGGIES, UNDERTAKINGS AXD PICTURE FRAMES from JOHN B. HYATT. R C. Brown's old stand, Tarboro. Firt-cluss goods at low prices. Compart car Work with tlmi o' onr Ctrnpeiitora. ESTABLISHED IN 1805. GHAS M' WALSH Stam Mi d Gmto irAii jr-cs it. ;g Sycamore St., Petersburg, A, Monuments, Tombs, Cemetery Curb ing, &c. Ail work strictly first class and .it Lowest Price3. FENOIHO, VASES, &c. jgmm Deiris sent to any address free. In writing for thtvi) i:!ca.;0 ghs age of de r?.n3d an t limit as to price, I Prepay Freight on all Work. oO YEARS' EXPERIENCE . 1 9 Traos Marks Designs rfyff Copyrights ic. Anrone sendlnd a slt;toh and description may quickly ascertain onr opinion free whether an i'lveiition is probably patentable, f'onimunica tior;sRtrictlyconudential. Handbook on Patents sent, free. Oldest asremry for securiiiK patents. Pati-nts taken throuph Munn & Co. receive sperini notice, without cbaote, ia the Scientific JUncrfcan. A handsomely illnslTted weekly. I.nrsest cir cuiai ion of any scientific Journal. 1 ernis, J a year: four months, fl. gold by all newsdealers. MUNN tCn--r; Hew York All IlriMbU Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Beware of tne dealer who tries to sell "something just as good." THE EEIT0?.S?S LEISUSE HOUES. Points and Paragraphs of Things Fresent, Past and Future. The Schley controversy seems lo be at an end. Schley appealed to the Pres ident and the President has answered. Ha agrees with the court of inquiry, and even goss further and says less for Schley than the court said. He says th3 battle at Santiago was a battle of captains and not of ship commanders. The enthusiasm fur good roads has become g&nerai, so much so that it might almost be called a fad. It has bee a engaging the attention of the Gjvemor cf Virginia of lale. But if it is a fad, "goodness knows," as the o'd-timers would say, it is one fad that has not struck too soon. If there is anything tiuhpaople of North Carolina need now next to what it takes to keep soal and body together, it is some im provement in roads. Agitation is a raat thing when it is property done, and we hope some good may come o! it, for wc need good roads. "One of the most salient features of to-day's Southern progress in manufact uring, mining, railroading and com merce," writes Edward Ingle in the Twentieth Anniversay Number of the Manufacturers' Record, of Baltimore, 'is its realiza'.ion of dreams of South 3rn men of fifty and more years ago. When the strivings of the fathers are recalled, when their records still sur viving are scanned, when the lines ol present achievements are followed back to their origins, the con miction is clear that the spirit of the South of 1902 is identically the spirit jf the South of 1850 and earlier. Cir cumstances have changed. A great load has been lifted. Obstacles of many kinds which that load made almost in surmountable have disappeared. Am bitions and energies, no whit leduced in force, have been permitted-to follow channels leading most directly to all that m ikes a country substantial and progressive. The South is well on its vvay to settlement in the Promised Land, viewed longingly, though vainly, from alar by the elders, who, unable to forward, in spite cf their courage, .vere given visions of the route and the inspiivtion to rnap them accurately for these that were to follow. Reading after them, appreciating their hopes as revealed in speeches and writing, and sludging their efforts and their accom plishment, one cannot fail to recognize in the far-sightedness of their imagina tion, without which no notable advance may be made in any field, in their in stinct to make their section mighty dustry ana traae, ana in meir uroau minded desire to place the South in the relation to the whole country and the "civilized world justified by its won derful stores of natural wealth, the un changed characteristics 'pi Southern worker?, who are now winning success and bringing the attainments of their seition into due proportion with those of other parts of the country." CATARRH CANNOT BE CURED with local applications, as they can not reach the seat of the disease. Ca tarrh is a blood or const ltutional dis ease, and in order to cure it you must ir.tarnnl rompflipi TTall's Catarrh mitiuai .-wv. Cure is taken internally and acts di rectly on the blood and mucous sur faces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this coun try for years, and is a regular prescrip tion. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mu cous surfaces. The perfect combina tion of the two ingredients is what m-oduces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, Ohio. Sold bv druggists, price 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. How to Find And Copyricght 1900, Pearl Expert of 41 and 43 SECTION II. HOAV TO OI'EN A SHELL. ' Introduce blade at point shown in ill astration. Press down. This cuts one ligament. With large shells it is necessary to introduce the blade in the other end of the shell near the hinge and cut the other ligament before the shell can be opened. Keep the knife blade away from the point "P" as far as possible, by keeping it near the hinge of the shell. Usually the pearls are seen as soon sis the inside of the shell fish is examined with the eves. They appear either perfectly plain in view or partly shining through a small watery blister. Generally they are in the outside transparent part or mantle of the flesh near the shell. If no pearl is seen, examine the i ilesh thoroughly with your thumb, ae The best pearls are found in the point of the shell near the part marked P in tne illustrations. Pearls found In the flesh between this part of the two halves of the shell ate usually of better shape and brighter lustre than those found in any other part of the shell. Many pearls which have little or no lustre and of numberless queer shapes, but almost no yalue are found near the hinge. Oc casionally somewhat better ones are found under the ligament where it is fastened to the shell. Sometimes fine ones are found attached to the shell. Do not break such off, but send the wLole shell with pearl attached. The bet ter shaped ones are found in the flesh near the outer edge or lip of the shell. As before stated, those which are found nearest the point are most apt to be brightest. For this reason you should use care in opening the shell so that the edge of the knife-blade may not touch a pearl, should one be found at this spot, (See illustrations.) You should also use great care in opening the shells so that the best pearls may not be lost. Pearls are often loot when opened while you are standing in the water, or when the shells are carelessly examined and thrown aside. Do not let a email fortune slip through your fingers because of a little carelessness. Alter the flesh is examined as directed, the shell is thrown aside and a new one cut open and examined in the same manner. This is continued with patience, remembering, that while every ten to fifty shells contain some sort of worthless pearl, that on'y about one in every thousand contains a salable pearl, and only one in ten salable pearls is of much value. But as a man can open lrom 1,500 to 5,000 per day it is readily to be 6een that the work is quite re munerative. Remember that the yalue Is not in the trash found every few minutes, but is in the occasional fine pearl, which it takes a few days to find, but which brings money enough to pay for weeks or months of labor. Remember, also, that while a man may work for several days and obtain no reward, the next shell may bring him from five to one thousand dollars. I knew a boy whose find of many small pearls amounted lo $680,00 in three weeKs. The next three weeks he worked in the same spot and had only one 50-cent pearl. Many $1,000.00 pearls are found each year, and yast numbers of $100.00 olcs. I lately paid $1,125.00 for a pearl. Perseverence wins in all things. Nothing is obtained without labor. You will find that pearl search will pay you an average of fully three times as much as any other form of labor, while the season lasts. It is well to get several others to go to the river with you en or more go at once some one of la The sight of this pearl will encourage their first pearl. After that they are dav and season will return to the river Remember, also that the work csu be and even when no other work offers. It just the least bit of patience. For this fishermen. In many localities women send valuable pearls to the market. If vou favor n:e at any time by a visit to my office (and I shall welcome you) I will show you among many othr interesting things some photographs of a stream in Arkansas. Theec were taken just after several thousand dollar pearls had been discovered m a few days. In these photographs there are oyer five hundred people searching in the shallow water, which varies from a few inches to three feet in depth. Standing in this water, you will see people from a small black negro boy to the best dressed and wealthiest men and women of the community. They include the president of the local band, and the wife aud daughter of the Circuit Judge of that Judicial Circuit. I daily receive many, many dollars' worth oi pearls from that spot, and its output has been increasing year by year. Your locality may proye as good. Give it a good trial (To be A Certain Care for Chilblains. Shake into your shoes Allen'a Foot Ease, a powder. It cures Chilblains, Frostbites, Damp, Sweating, Swollen feet. All druggists and shoo stores, 25c. How to Value Them. by HERMAN MYER, Maiden Lane, New YorkCity. before directed. at the same time, because when a doz- sure to find a good pearl in a few hours the others to keep at it until they get sure that good ones are there, and each to win a rich reward. done in odd days and at odd hours requires no tools and no experience- reason the gentler sex make excellent constantly search the streams and daily continued ) McDcffie's Tasteless Chill Cuke will build up broken systems and makn the blood rich and "healthy, certain cure fnr chills, cuaranteed or your money re funded. 50 cents. For sale by E. T. I Whitehead & Co. The Bed Says Far Exceed the Black. AMELIA E. BAKE. This poem was a favorite ot the late James W. Tufts, at whose funeral it was read. I said one day a year ago, I wonder if I truly kept A list of days when life burn' low, Of days I smiled and days I wept If good or bad would highest mount, When I made up the Year's ac count. I took a ledger fair and fine, And now, I said, when days are glad, I'll write with bright red ink the line : And write with black ink when they are bad. So they will stand before my sight As clean apart as day and night. I will not mind the changing skies, Nor if it shine, nor if it rain ; But it there come some sweet surprise Of friendship, love, or honest gain, Why, theu, is shall be understood, That day is written down as good. And if to one I love A blessing meets them on the way, That will a double pleasure prove, So shall it be a happy day ; And if some day I've come to dread, Pass harmless by I'll write it red. When hands and brain stand labor's test, And I can do the thing I would, Those days when I am at my best, Shall all be traced as yery good. And in red letters, too, I'll write Those rare strong hours when right is might. When first I meet in some grand book, A noble soul that touches mine, And with his yision I can look Through some "Gat3 Beautiful" of time ; That day such happiness will shed, That golden-lined will seem the red. And when pure thoughts have power To touch my heart and dim my eyes, And I, in some diviner heur, Can hold sweet converse with the skies, Oh, then my soul may eoftly write, "This day hath been most good and bright." What do I see on looking back? A red-lined book before me lies, With here and there a thread of black, That like a passing shadow flies ; A shadow, it must be confessed, That often rose in my own breast. And I have found 'tis good to note The blessings that are mine each day, For happiness is vainly sought In some dim future far away. Just try my ledger for a year ; Then look with grateful wonder back, And you will find there is no fear The red days far exceed the black. One Woman's Work. Kingston (N. Y.) Leader. Mrs. Fanuy Carpenter of New York city has shown it is a good thing for a woman to study a prolesssion. Sev enty-five thousand dollars for winning a single case is what she received re cently. It is the largest fee ever paid to a woman lawyer. Mrs. Carpenter took up the study of law in 1896. She entered the law school of New York university, and was admitted to the bar in 1897, since which she has prac ticed more or less assiduously. MR. WHEELER GOT RID OF HIS RHEUMATISM. "During the winter cf 1898 I was so lame in my joints, in fact all over my body, that I could hardly hobble aroutd when I bought a bottle ot Uiiamber lain's Pain Balm. From the first ap Dhcation I began to get well, and was cured and have worked steadily all the year. R. Wheeler, Northwood, N. Y. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co. A WINNING HOLD. Philadelphia Press. We all may learn to hold a pen When we are very young, But he's the cleverest of men Who learns to bold his tongue. BUCKLEN'S ARNICA SALVE. The best and most famous compound in the world to conquer ashes and kill pains. Cures Cuts, heals Burns and Bruises, subdues Inflammation, mas ters Piles. Millions of Boxes sold yearly. Works wonders in Boils, Ul cers, Felons, Skin Eruptions. It cures or no pay. 25c at E. T. White head & Co'a drug store. FOR TWENTY-ONE YEARS o o Catarrh Remedies and Doctors Failed -Pe-ru-na Cured. MR. A. K KIDD. ELGIN, ILL. In a very recent com munication from this placo cornea the news that Mr. Arthur Ernest. K;d;l, a well-known architect of that city, has made complete recovery from eatarrli of the head from which he had suffered for nearly a quarter of a century. Ilo writes from 18 Hamilton ave. : " I am 42 years of ago, and hero had catarrh of the head for over half of my J 1 i na n .n.nU S T A M r , 1 , 1 .ul, u uun ui ov ni-L lever, ioiiowea by typhoid fever. I got so bad thr.t I was almost coastantly coughing end clearing my throat. Tho cctr.rrh greatly impaired my eyesight, and the hearing in one ear, and reduced ny weight to 110 pounds. " I tried nearly every catarrh remedy advertised, besides a great many differ ent physicians' treatments, all of which failed. " I had heard and read of Peruna, and finally decided to trj' it two months a.o. I have now taken seven bottles, and weigh 172 pounds. Never felt happier or merrier. Feel tip top." -A. E. KIDD. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Teruna, write at once to Dr. Ilartman, giving a full statement of your case and lie will be pleased to g .ve you his valuable ad vice gratis. ( Address Dr. Ilartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. WAS NOTSUSPENDED. A GOOD DONATION LiTSB. Fmdent Hsnrco's "Progress." In Dr, Edward Everett Hale's "Memories ol a Hundred Ye;ii now appeariug as a serial iu The Outlook, he tells an amusing story about Mon roe's visit to Harvard in 1817 : The President, as soon as he was President, the same man who "never was in trade and knew nothing about it," arrayed himself to eee the com mercial States, and even to cress the new-born West and show himself to the people who were creating a nation there. In my boyhood, this journey of his, which begun on the 31st daj of May, 1817 and did not end until October of the same 3 car, was called "The Presidtnl's Progress." Washing ton's simlliar journey in 1791 was al ways called "Washington's Progress." There is a little touch of burlesque when one reads that President Monrce arrayed himself iu the old buff and blue ot the Revolution with an old fashioned three-cornered soldier's hat. There is just a touch of absurdity about this, because his military ex ploits were, of his whole life, the enter prises which his friends would have most gladly forgotten. There is a good Harvard tradition which I may put in print without hurting anybody. At a meeting of the little college faculty in the year 1817, it was announced that Blank a spirited senior, must be "suspended." I suppose his marks were not high enough, or his attendance at chapel had been irregular. Daar, courteous, kindly Dr. Kirkland, who was the 'resident, wes supposed to be dozing in his chair as the march of college government went forward ; but at this proposal to suspend Blank he roused to life and activity. "Send away Blank, when Monroe is coming? Who will command my Harvard Washington Corps when the' President visits the College?" The' Harvard Washington Corps was the military establishment of the college boys at that time. Dr. Kirkland could put his foot down when be chose. And so it chanced that BlaiK was retained in college and that the Harvard Washington Corps, which he commanded, presented arms at the proper time and in the proper way to the President of the United States. And so it happened that, fifty years after, Harvard University receiv ed a very important and very expen sive new building from an alumnus who on that day commanded the Har vard Washington Corps. am Stops QeTioklUu. NORFOLK & CAROLINA R. P. CONDILNSED SCHEDULE. Dated Jan. 19th, 1S93. No. H0:i No. J No. No. 19 Stations j 18 IH02 A. M. P.'m. I A. M. P. AL 2 20 9 00 Lv Norfolk Ar. 5 55 10 05 2 40 9 20 Pinners Point 5 39 9 50 3 03 9 10 Drivers 5 05 9 5J :l 17 10 OJ Suffolk 4 50 la 3 50 10 :14 Gules 4 20 8 39 4 15 10 50 Tunis 4 00 8 21 IKtillOG Ahot-'kcy 3 41 8 Ot 1&12L21 Aulauder 327 7 48 " 35 12 21 Ar. Tarboro Lo 2 31 6 45 Ar. Lv. 6 35 12 50 Rocky Mount 1 55 I fi 17 l. M. P. M. P. M. A. M. Daily. f Daily except Sunday. Trains No. 49 and 18 solid trains be tween Piimei V IYint and Wilmington. Train No. 49 connects at Iiocky Ml. with tr;iin 23 for all points South mid NTo. 78 train for all points South and No. 73 (mm fcr all points North. G. M. SLR TELL, J. It. KENLY Geur'l Man. Kup't Tains. T. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pa3. Agent WILMINGTON &WELDQNR.R. AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. condensed schedule. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. DATED 8 S Jan. 15. V.m-2. o o 0-go c- ita: ' A. M. P. M. p. M. A. Mi P. M. Leave WoMon 11 50 9 :ts Ar.llocky I.lt. 1 (Mi lo :( Leave Tarboro 12 22 7 22 TjV. Kocky Mt. ...1 i5 10 0J 7 "f2 5 45 vJ'hi l.nre WilBon 1 r,i 11 10 s :n i ij 3411 Leave Sel in a i' rr 11 1V.1 Lv. Fn.yt'ttuvillo 4 :sn 1 L'o Ar. Florence 7 :t.ri :i 20 P. M. A. M. Ar. OolilHlxiro 0 20 "" Lv. Ooliluboro 7 m 3 It Lv. MuRiiolia, s ;i; 4 L'S Ar. Wilmington 10 W 0 P. M. A. M. P. M. TRA1NSGOI NO NO R'l'H. " 6 a Z a 0 a 'A A. M P. M. Lv. Florence HI i H Oft Lv. rn.vetteville 12 4(i 10 ("J Lenvu Sclirnt 2 10 II 25 Arrive Wilson 2 7 12 07 A. M.' P.'m! A.' jif" Lv. W .nfnorton 7 00 80 Lv. Magnolia 8 30 II 4'6 Lv. GoMsboro 7 35 U :;7 12 2 p. m. IaV m" p.'m" i"m". Leave Wilr.on 2 :i5 S 20 j II 10 45 1 IK Ar. Kouky Mt, 3 ::) U Oil 12 10 11 TA 1 6S Arrive Tarboro ll :l Leave Tarboro 2 3) Lv.'RoVk'y''Mt 3 50 ISt'i:! " Ar. Weldou 4 53 1 ::7 P. M. A. M. P.M. fDaily except Monday. , Daily ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and Weldon Kail road, Yadkin i)iyi.sion Main Line Train leaves AVilmingfon, 9 10 a. m., arrives Fayetteville 12 20 p. in., leaves Fayetle- ville 12 42 p. m., arrives San ford 1 5S n. m. Returning leaves San ford o V-t p. m., arriyes Fayetteville 4 20 p. m., leaves Fayetteville 4-30 p. m., arrives Wilmington 7 In p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennettsvillo Branch Train leayrs Sennettsville 8 10 a. ni., Maxton 9 05 a. m., Red Springs 9 32 a. in., Hope SUV 10 h.t a. m., arrives Fayetteville 11 10 a. m. Returning leaves Fayette ville 4 45 p. m., Hope Mills 5 00 : in.. Red Spnng3 o 4.J p. m., ftlaxton 1 p. m., arrives Bennettsvillo 7 15 p. m. Connections at I'ayettevii.'e wun train No. 78, at Maxton with the Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with the Red Springs and Bow more Railroad, at Sanford with the Seaboard Air Line and Southern Railway, t Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Scotland Neck Branco Road leaves Weldon 3 :15 p in., Halifax 3: 29 n. nr., arrives Scotland Neck at 4 :10 p. m-, Greenville 5 :47 p. m., KIiih- ton 6.45 p. m. Keiurning leaves Kinston 7 :30 a. m., Grcenyille 8 :30 a. m., arriving Halifax at 11:05 a.m. Weldon 11 :20a. m., da! y except Sun-, day. . . Trains on Washirgn Branch leave Washington 8 :00 in. and 2 :45 o.m arrive Parmele 8 :55 a. m. and 4 :I0 p. m.. returning leave Parmelell :10 ... m. and 5:22 p.m., arrive Washington 12 :30 a. m. and b :L p. m., daily ex cept Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro, ss. i;., aauy except Sunday 4 :35 p. m., Sunday, 4 :35 p. m., arrives Plymouth 6 :35 p. m., G :30 p. m., Returning, leaves l'ly. mo ih dally except Sunday, 7 :30 a. in. and Sunday 9 :00 a. in., arrives Tarboro 9 :55 a. m., 11 :00 a. m. Train on Midland N. C. Branch leaves Goldsbo.o daily, except Sunday. 5 .00 a. m., an.vi.ig Smithheld 0 :10 a . in. Returning leaves Smithfield 7:00 a. m. ; arriyes at Goldsboro 8 :25 a. n . Trains on Nashville Branch leae Rockv Mount at 9 :30a. in., 4 :00 p. m.. arrive Nashville 10 :20 a.m.,4 :23 p.m , Spring Hope 11 :00 a. m., 4 :45 p. w. Returning leave Spring tlope 11 :20 a, m., 5 :15 p. m., Nashyill 11:45 s. tn, 5 :45 p. m., arrive at rtocky JMuuiit 12 :10 p. m., U :zv p. m., aauy except Sunday. Train on Clinton ur icn leaves war- saw for Clinton daily, cept Sunday 11 :40 a. m. and 4 :lu . m. Return ing leaves Clinton at 6 :45 a. m. and 2 :50 a. m. Train No. 7fr nakes cl e connection at Weldon for 1 points North daily, all rai' via Ricr mond. H. M. EMERSON, ( ieu'l Pass. A cent. J. R. KENLTl Gen I t aniger. T. M. EMERSON, Traflio Mammr.
Feb. 27, 1902, edition 1
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