Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / March 8, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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ADVERTISING IS TO WHAT STEAM IS TO MACHINERY That Graat Propelling Power. If Yon Are a Hustler YOU WILL Advertise .... YOUR .... Business Semi in Your Ad. Now. W mm XT TTT n " IH K E. E.HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE Si oo VOL. XXII. New Series--Vol. 9. (6-18) SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1906. NO. 101 Commonweal 0 E I Pale, Thin, ervous ? Then your blood must be in a very bad condition. You certainly know what to take, then take it -Ayer's Sarsa parilla. If you doubt, then consult your doctor. We know what he will say about this grand old family medicine. This is the first qnestion your doctor would nk : "Are your bowels regular?" He knows that daily action of the bowel) i absolutely essential to recovery. Keep your liver active ami your bowels regular by taking laxative doses of Ayer's Tills. Msds by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Xmb. aiso manuiaoturers or HAIR VIGOR. yers AGUE CURE. CHERRY PECTORAL. We have no secrots ! We publish the formulas of all our medicines. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clean&et and beau title th hair. Promote a luxuriant growth. er?r Tall a to Beatore Gray Hai. to its YouthXul Color. Cures tcalp diwtwi St hair failing. gQc,andl.uoat Drupgif , PROFESSIONAL. W ILL H. JOSEY, CENERAL INSURAN AND AC E N T, Scotland Neck, N. C. R. J. P. WIMBERLKk, OFFICE BRICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. WA. & ALBION DUNN, I ATTORN EYS-AT-LAW, Scotland Neck, N. C. Practice wherever their services are required. 'Jb W. MIXON, Refracting Optician, Watch-Makek, Jewelek, Ekgbavee Scotland Neck, N. C. I A gK.A. C. LIVERMON, Dentist. JFFICE-Over New Whlthead Building ii.;e hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to 5 j't'ock, p. in. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. DWARD L. TRAVIb, A ttorney and Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. lr" Money Loaned on Farm Lands. Grasp of Grip Pros trated Me. Dr. Miles' Nervine Built Up My Shattered Nerves and Gave Me an Appetite. Of the millions of people, who today suffer from nervous or heart weakness, a large per centage trace the cause directly to deadly LaGrippe. It is a germ disease, and makes a direct attack upon the nerves, putting an extra strain upon them at the time their vital ity is at the lowest ebb. If LaGrippe has left you with a shattered nervous system, with Iocs of appetite, lack of enerry, insomnia, frequent headaches and morbid tendencies, you should strengthen the weakened nerves with Dr. Miles' Nervine. It will undo all that grip has done, brinj back appetite, rest and restore the nerves to their normal activity. "I want to write this testimonial for the benefit of those who have suffered from that dreaded disease LaGrippe. I suffered sev eral weeks with it, and nothing I tried seemed to benefit me in any way, shape or form (I suffered almost death) and finally my daughter recommended Dr. Miles' Nervine to me and I can truthfully say from the first day I felt better than in weeks. It gave me relief, built up my shattered nerves and gave me a splendid eppetite. I cannot speak too highly of it and want to say, each and every one who has suffered from LaGrippe will find instant relief by getting a bottle of Dr. Miles' Nervine. Insist on having it and take no other. It is simply splendid. Hopine this will benefitsome poor sufferer I remain, Mrs. George B. Hall, Jackson, Term. All druggists sell and guarantee first bot tle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart, lad. DO YOU WANT A. POSITION? 3C ( f Young Men and Women j3"v nave been educated at this School since its establishment nine yera ago, and we offer $1,000 to any graduate who has not received a position. Whit we have done for others we can do for you ! Write to- day for our catalogue and for particu lars regarding first Five Scholarships issued in each county. .southern 3k -AND J. M. REfSLER, -; TSV r pDITOr'S jEISURE OBSERVATIONS OF Perhaps there have been no outbreaks against negroes in all the land quite so pronounced as those in Springfield, Ohio, last week. It seemed that there mob which All in Ohio part of the citv, because of the ill deeds ot one or two. It took the com bined force of the police and several military corupanies to control the mob and then it was not done before there was. considerable burning and other violence. t t t t The system of institutes for farmers' wiyes in connection with the farmers' movement in North Carolina calls forth the following by the Rich Excellent Idea the farmers' wives show practical sympathy with the movement, they will not only profit by it themselves, but be the means ol rendering the farmers' institutes more popular with, and profitable to, the larmers. In this day of domestic labor when so much work falls upon the wives and daughters of the farmers, there is a broad field for study of the problems of economy of time and labor-saving alone." int "Where there's so much smoke there must be some fire," we have all heard from our earliest days. On this principle, then, it certainly looks like the town of Gastonia has some aldermen who Where There's so Jiucn are recreant Editor W. F. Smuke,"E c has charged the aldermen, all of them, or some of them, with a failure to discbarge their duties as public officers, and has employed lawyers to prose cute them for negligence of duty. Mr. Marshall set forth his grounde of complaint in a three column article in his paper, and did it with clearness and force. It was a plucky paper and showed that determination which interprets a conviction behind it. To persons who know Mr. Marshall well, it is clear that there is something wrong in Lis town, or that he is badly mistaken ; for be would not assume such an attitude unless he thought it right and that he ought to do it. He has made it quite clear that no one is responsible for tha proceeding but himself and that whatever o! blame attaches is to be laid on him. We know nothing of the merits of the case except as Mr. Marshall has stated it ; but when it gets into court the results will be watched with interest. WW Mr. Wilcox, a temperance lecturer from Kansas, recently gave a ser ies ot lectures in Rocky Mount, and on Sunday night all the preachers in flow it Worts in Krtiisas ton, pastor of the Presbyterian churcn, asked Mr. Wilcox to answer the statement made by some that prohibition does not prohibit. The lecturer answered that it does not absolutely prohibit in every case, but greatly les sens the evils of strong drink. We quote the Record as to Mr. Wilcox's statements : "He stated that in his home town of Kansas where prohibition prevailed, that though the town was not vsry much larger than Rocky Mount, without meaning to boast.it was so far ahead of Rocky Mount that, there was no comparison. He stated that while Rocky Mount had about 600 students in the graded school, his home town had 2200. That two of the churches in his town could either one seat as many persons as all of the churches in Rocky Mount combined. That theie was hardly any such thing as lawlessness in his town, and though the town was larger than Rocky Mount.it only required two policeman and that they were not called policemen, but watchmen, and that their main duties consisted of keeping a lookout for fires and things of that nature, one of the watchmen being on at night end one in the day." WW "Birds o! a feather flock together," runs the adage ; and it is not truer with any class of persons than with trayeling men. When they meet on . the cars, in waiting rooms at railway stations, in They Discuss Hotels hotel ,obbiea and at the diniDg tabIflf they enter freely into discussion about their various experiences in drummer life ; and about nothing do they talk with each other more freely than about the hotels of the country. One will tell the other how he fares at a certain hotel In a certain town, and then the others all have some stories to relate about their experience with the hotel-keepers. It one paid for the privi lege of sleeping on a clean bed but found nothing palatable on the table, another found his steak, hash, rolls and coffee all right, but found no com fort in his bed room. And so it is avery feature of hotel experience is freely discussed by these "knights of the grip"; and who can blame them? If they find a good hotel which measures up to good ideals they feel like they are doing a good deed to Inform their tellow drummers of it ; and, on the other hand, if they find what they are sometimes pleased to call a "bum hotel," they think that they are likewise doing a good deed by informing their fellow drummers of their experience. However, we are not saying thatdrummeis,or traveling men, are always correct in their opinions of men and places ; but generally when every one gives the opinion that a cer tain hotel is "bum" there is pretty apt to be some ground for such conclus ion. Hotel keepers are a much talked-about people, but if we could hear their side ot the matter, no doubt they would relate unpleasint experiences with some traveling men. Two sides, you know. t - .i,..n hut Thfiv never gripe or sicken, dui xney nover ri" ' h c eanse ana al yerarctTthe many thousands who use DeWitt's Little Early Risers. Th JumoiTutu! ! pi relieve head- ache, constipation, biliousness,, jaun- dice, torpid liver, sallow complexion, etc Try Little Early Risers. E. T. Whitehead & Co. y Blind, bleeding, itching arid ,pro truaing puea are iD8nuv r - , collapsible tubes with nozzle attach- ment, so that the medicine may pe ap- neve inaigestion, ana correct mi oiuui plied ioside directly where the trouble 8Ch disorders. E. T. . Whitehead & originates ManZan relieves ltaot.y. . C(. Scotland Neck Leggett'a Drug Pag Store, Hobgood. - Jtoufs, PASSING EVENTS. would be no chance to quiet the set upon the negroes in almost every mond News-Leader : "The idea strikes us as a most excellent one, and we are satisfied that it to their duty as public officers. Marshall, of the Gastonia Gazette, the town closed their churches for the people to bear Mr. Wilcox in the opera house. The Rocky Mount Record says that Dr. W. D. Mor All old-time Cough Syrups bind the hnwula. This is wrong. A new idea 1 advanced two years ago in Ken nedy's Laxative Honey and Tar This Remedy acts on mucous membranes of.be """"SXm bowels at the same "me. It "Pel all cold from the 7tem. It clears the throat, strengthens the mucous mem- Cranes, relieves coughs, co ds croup, wbooDine cough, etc. bold Dv Xi. i. Whitehead & Co. Tfae of IndigeBtlon is now at hand. Ring's Dyspepsia Tablets re I St re, Hobgool THE NEED OF MOISTURE. Laok of Proper Amount of Humidity Causes Discomfort in Winter How to Ventilate. Humidity, not heat, causes most of the discomfort during the tummer and the lack of the proper amount of it causes considerable of the illness and discomfort of winter. Humidity is one of the most important elements affect-1 Ing health, yet it receives little or no attention. We are regulated to a largo extent, both in winter and summer by the thermometer. Any degree of humidity between 40 and 80 is healthful; anything helow the rormer degree is too dry; anything above the latter is too moist. Of course, one cannot regulate the amount of humidity out of doors either in summer or winter, but indoors, in win ter certainly, it can and should be reg ulated. In summer the moisture is never above a healthy degree for any length of time; therefore, one need not worry regarding it; but during the winter months, when steam heaters and furnaces are in full blast, the humidity often goes below 40 degrees, and as a result one of more members of the family suffer with a cold or sore throat. The best means of venti lating a room is by opening the win dow and the door and thus creating a draft. Living rooms should have the windows open as long as the weather permits, and in inclement or very cold weather they should be opened fre quently for 10 or 15 minutes at a time. Sleeping rooms should have the win dows open a little from the top all the time, and especially during the night. In the morning the windows of bedrooms should be thrown open and allowed to remain so for an hour or two before the room is put in order. There is nothing so detrimental to the health, the complexion and the enjoy ment of life as poor ventilation. American Queen. MODISH DRESS MATERIALS. Smooth Cloths Are the Most Fashion able arid There Is a Large Va riety of Plaid Waistings. Fashion in dress materials thi3 sea son incline largely to smooth goods, including broadcloth, henrietta and drap d'ete, broadcloth being the most popular. Mohair is being considerably used for fall wear and for tailored suits worsteds are used with quite a number of plaids and checks. Light weight broadcloth is fashionable fot garments of almost al; descriptions; many of the handsomest street suits, carriage costumes and evening cloaks and wraps are made of this material the adaptability for the occasion de pending largely on the color. For even ing wear there is, of course, white with all of the exquisite pastel shades; foi afternoon wear there are the medium shades, while for general purposes there are the darker tints of the col ors on the modish list. The great de mand for broadcloth has caused ar. increased demand for less expensive goods that are similar to it in appear ance, and henrietta and drap d'ete while not suitable for tailored suits are being much used for house cos tumes. A new material on this same order that seems to be gaining popu larity is satin cloth, so called on ac count of the weave of the cloth and not on account of its finish. From the large variety of plaids thai one sees in the shops just now it is safe to say that they will be extreme ly popular this winter; hardly for suits as they are too conspicuous, but foi separate waists there is nothing pret tier or more appropriate. The mosi beautiful designs are shown in bril liant reds and blues and greens, witt stripes of yellow and other contrasting colors in the soft qualities of wooler materials, as well as silk. Brooklyi Eagle. Serge Costume. Plain, simple lines characterize serge costumes. The trimming on bodica coat, or bolero, as the case may be, give the requisite touch of smartness. A navy blue serge may have lapels 01 waistcoat of embroidery worked out it the Russian colors, red and blue, or ar admirable contrast is afforded by lapels faced with white serge braided anr. fixed in place by tiny gilt buttons. It is greater economy to buy a good and re liable serge in the first place, as ther neither rain nor shine will affect it. anc the gown will look well to the end, how ever much wear is demanded of it. Ar important fact that the home dress maker should not overlook is the press ing of the seams. This requires a heavj iron. Frozen Custard. Take one pint of milk and cream one cupful of sugar and two eggt (whole), two tablespoonfuls of corn starch this is preferable to flour. Mb the cornstarch and sugar first and stii into the milk and cream when boilinj 'and stir until smooth. Keep stirring iabout 20 minutes. Beat the yolks and add a cupful of sugar; weaken with ;a spoonful or two of the hot mixture Then stir it in and allow it to cooi for a minute. Freeze. Escalloped Potatoes, i Arrange the peeled and sliced pota itoes in layers in an earthen or gran jite dish. Sprinkle each layer with pepper and salt and a little chopped ! parsley. Add an occasional layer ol 'finely sliced onion; add two cups ol 'milk; place on top one slice of sail pork; bake until well browned. To Homovo Bust Stains. Soak all night in sour buttermilk; next day wash in pure water, dry and iwet the spots with lemon juice and hay in the sun all day. Throw into pure water at night and soak 12 hours i i Wash, then, in the usual way. FOLEYSKONEYTAR turn covxa CAUGHT BY Tf RELEA I AV XHWB &fM$W J "The World feSM I of Medicine MMW'm iRecosnizesQnp pffif J as Epidemic Mfe5fefeJ f fj i A Southern Judge Benefited. j Judge Horatio J. Ciof , Ilartwcl!, CJ:i., writes : "Some five or six years ago I had a very severe spell of grip which left me. with systemic catarrh. "A friend advised me to try 7-owr Peruna, which I (lid, and was imme diately benefited. The third bottle com pleted the cure." For Catarrh and La Grippe. Mr. Edgar L. I'.enn, San Antonio, Tex., member of the Crescent Comedy Co., writes : 'I take pleasure in recommending Peruna for catarrh and the la grippe. Three bottles have iixed me up until I feel like a new man. "In fact, it has become the statutists remedy of our company, which lias been j bothered with sickness mo.-t all winter, j until we cot hold of your valuable remedy. "You can always find a bottle in one of the members' room. W'j cheerfully iecommen;l it to the public." Tho Kindly Word. A kindly wcrd is n little thing a j breath that gees- aud a sound timt j dies. But the heat that gives ar.d .Un n u . , V. 1 . . . . ... 1........ tL . , LUG UKUll liJtlL 111-J; hUWW llirtbj it sings and sings till at last it bends with the wild biid'j song and the coo of babes in what men call the celestial thoir. KILLS LIRE LICHIKIXG. How Deadly Khfxmatism ck Heart Cojjess Ox. The : Those pains you feel when you Cr-t arise In the rncraing aching pains in theioints, shooting pains in the muscles are 6igns of warning. They are dan ger signals, evidences of a deep-seated trouble that it not removed may affect the entire system and cause chronic dissase, or it ih3 cause is not removed,! they may develop suddenly into tLe deadly Rheumatism of the Hear', which kMis like J:ehlr.injr. i Better get rid ot the came at o ce. Rheumatism aud its kindred dis3-os are caussd by the accumulation of poisonous Hcias of the blood, itubbiog witn oils or liniments will not cure il ; it is an interna! disease, r.Ld can I e cocquered ou'y by an interim! remedy. There is jut.t one complete cute R H E U il A i : I D B . 11 H E U M A I D K neutralizes tbe poisonous acids, sweeps all the dangerous germs out of the blood aud makes vou well nil ovir. RliEUMACIDE CUKES because it is the only remedy that "gets at the joints from the inside." Mr. V. R. Hughes, cf Atki.-.s, Va., writes : "Four bot'JfB of RHEUM AC IDE ha-.e entirely cured me of a longstand ing case of P.heumatism, and greatly improved my geueral health. 1 was a total wreck, having had iheumat.ism for twenty ye.irs. I ppent several weeks aud much money trying rpecbil lsts in New York, but RHEUM AClDrS is the only cure I h ive found. Wntn I began to use it 1 wei;.h:d llQp'junds. ow I weij;h ISO pounds, my normal weight." Forsile in Scotland Neck by E. T. Whitehead & Oo. IN MAD CHASE. Millions rush in mad cha.-e af.er health, irom one extreme ol faddiin to another, when, if they would only eat good focd, and keep th?ir bowels regular with Dr. King's New Life Pilis, their troubles would all pass away- Prompt relief and quick cure for liver I and stomach trouble. 25a at E. T. Whitehead & Co.'s drug store ; guarat teed. ; For PiSssi JBamSj Sose SED BY i-. s 'J a Crip Resisted in Catena. Miss Alice P.ielke, Treasurer Yoiu-s Women's Society of (lie Lutheran Church, Menasha, Wis., write: : 'I L-ratcfully acknowledge the .rood that Peruna did mo after I had been sick with hi grippe which left me in a very weak and emaciated condition, with catarrhal trouble of the head and ear.--. "My mother suggested that I take it to buildup my strength and rid myself of liie troul)k6ome catarrh, and it acted with wonderful ppecd. "I was able to resume my work inside of two months aud I ain in splendid health now." One reason why Peruna ha.- found permanent tise in so many homes is i r,ij, u r-nniMins no narcotics of any kind. Peruna is perfocUy harmless. It can be used any length of time ' J without acquiring a drujr, habit, ' J Peruna does not produeo temporary J rcv-ilts. it relieves permanently, C5 !y Cabbage Plants Guaranteed to Satisfy Purchaser 2 b.s-9!SJfist. 5 &2&3 . UJ J EARLY JERSEY WAKEFIELD Q Tno Earlit?::ti t r-;,l .tiai7A ftr.iwn CHARLESTON SUCCESSION AUGUSTA SHOR;STEMMED g i.prr TVPE TRUCKER FLAT DUTCH W" WAKEFIELD The Earliest Plat A little later Lai-rc-t ami Latest H Cciul ParliPtt Head Variety than Succenaion CabbaKO th ,1 P-JCE: inici. ot ! to 4b. at S1.60 per m., D to 9m. at $1.25 per m.. 10 m. a-el over. atSI.CO per m. 3 J m.. c.i.1 D.t nn P Hits ta Verv Low. Q ,i F. O. B. YOUNG'S ISLAND, S. C y i m.f. rmrr - I Guarantee Xw cm ''ttLZt i. jusV'.S ! "i t r prown in the open iic-l.l, on Heacoart of South C arol n. I m H ma ttwt I just u ... a i c i.r rnstoners are th Varlrot Onrrlonrrn noartho interior trwn a n 1 Ht en nt n ThwV prV.Til8 utwu them having Early CabbUKe; lor that reason thy pur- , O M y Larp . .nth 'I " , ha.. n.v il:. ts tur tb'lr cro;s. 5 TnnaM Tret-!, Vis Busies, and Grape Vines. torma tn niTsnrts who make club , ' ' - ' - i v i-ji. orders. Write for illus'.rircd caulozuc. NORTH CAROLINA FARMERS Need a North Carolina Farm Paper One adapted to North Carolina cli mate, soils and conditions, m.'ie by ; Tar Heels aud for Tar HecU .tud nt the same time as wide awake aa any in Kentucky or Kamchatka. Such n paper is The Progressive Farmer RALEIGH, V. C. Edited bv Clarence H. Toe, with rr f!. W. RmkbLt. of the A. A M. College, ana Dirt-tor B. V. Kilgorc, ol the Agricultural Experiment StatUm (vou know them), as assistant editor (Jfl. a year). If you aie H.'reHdy taKing th paper, we can make no reduc tion, bAH if you arc ne t taking it, YOO CAH SAVE 50 GENTS BY tsESDISU YOLK ORDEK TO I S. That is to say, to the new Procres sive Farmer subscribers we will send that paper with The Commonwealth both one jear for $1.50. Regular price 2 00 Address all orders to THE COMMONWEALTH, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. - 1 Bear, the A Th9 m VU HaVB AlTO'S BOJghi SB US PE-RU-NA. La Grippe is Epidemic Catarrli- IT spares no las or nationality. Tho cultured ami the ignorant, the aris tocrat and the pauper, the masse ant t he classes are alike t- uhjoet to la grippe. None are exempt all :ire liable. Grip is well named. The original French term, la grippe, has teen short ened by the busy American to read "grip." Without inlcnding to do o, a new word has been coined that exactly describes the case. As if some hidcoii giant with awful grip had clutched us in lis fatal clasp. Men, women, children, whole towns and cities are caught in the baneful grip of a terrible monster. Have you the grip? Or, rather, ha the grip got you? If so, read the fol lowing letter.-. These testimonials speak for them- i selves as to tho cllieaey of Peruna in cases of hi grippe or its after-effects: A Preventive Tor Colds isn-J La Grippe. Mis. M. V. oodruiT, L'H iti Central Ave., Minneapolis. Minn., vriios: I cannot praise your remedy ton highly. I tir.-t tried it after having la, grippe and b:' the lasi i wo years I lian used i ;is a preventive for cold and la lirii'pe. "Asa tonic ! also believe it to bo ex cellent. I never fail to recommend Peruna to my fri' tius. all of w hom httT used it with U-m-'h-bil results." A tch live of Abraham Lincoln. Mr. 'ilas S. Lincoln, who resides at '::; 1 : :-.-eet, N. V., Wa-hiugton, I. C. 1. 1. the honor if lM'ing third cousin t AbraluMii l.iucoMi. lit" writes: "I had la grippe live times NTorn using your medicine. Four years :ig 1 Ix'an t !ie it so of Peruna, sinee which time i have not been troubled with that disease. I can now b as much work at my disk a. I ever could in my life. X have gained moro than ten pound hi weight." Entlrc'y Relieved by Peruiu. Mrs. Jane. Cift, 1 lebbardiiville, Ohio, writes : "I think 1 would have Ix-cn dead long: a-'-olf it had ;:ol been for Peruna. Six years ago 1 had la grippe very nail. "The doctor eamo to see me every day, but 1 gradually grew worse. 1 told my husband I wauled to try Peruna. He went directly to tho drugstore and got A bottle of i!. "I eoi;hl s: o improvement in a vcrv short time and was soon able tc ! do my own work. I continued using il I until I was entire iy cured." ! Address 1.-. S. li. Hart man. President of The liartman SanlUuium, Columt; . Ohio. n o I ji.-i - --- - .",,. 9 hnspr RBI Fraction, orwi.l reiuiiu ' .. , i ... s... nnurn S n , - 1 & a a v n I i . lan.i. a. i. nr. i,- ..;-: ,fj Correct Di The "Modern MclKcJ" tyJrr. ' high-grade tailorlns itroc!iu-f :) h L. E. Hays & Co of Cir.r;in';c il, '?, satisfies good drKscrc cvntyw) .vc All Garm;r.'.o Mcs Zl.l- 'j to Yo ir Mra-.'i; at moderate pri.-cs. 5fS0 it: c( vr and dor.-.cttx lisbra trota un.-1- .3 Ask your dsaler to sho- vri ':ir 1:- -.- not reprosontoJ, w;;.o r u. -r .1-. . ciKcni;:.vi. '. RIDDICK & HOOKKIt, Maxlfacti kkrs' Agents, SCOTLAND NECK, - X. C. FOR OVEK. SIXTY YEARS. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup has been used for sixty yenrs by milli'.n of, mothers for their children while tefth ing, with perfect success. It 8n..ib8 the child, softens the gums, allay nil pain, cures wind colic, and Is the lt remedy for Diarrhoea. It will rtline the poor litt'e sufferer immedi -to' ' Sold bv druggists in eyery part ot "11 e world. Twenty-fh'e cents a bottlr. Pe sure and ask for Mrs. Wlns!owj Shill ing Sjrup. 'ft M i n
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 8, 1906, edition 1
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