Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Sept. 26, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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mnigatia Good Advertising I,. t Thidness what Steam is to Machinery, that great propelling power. This paper gives results. Gocd Advertisers wis IVe tV.-v columns for results. An n'!vc;t;.-Mr.nt i:i 1 1 1 i pn?r 'vi!! r c-ij of "vnV l. Si. SSiLLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. '01, XXiU. New Series Vol. 11.-6-1S 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. SCOTLAND NECK, H. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2C-, ISS7. 1 '''''""w A IT IT 0. j:i i s. v; ' -I i i'. k'3 It-. . - ft 0 YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK ? . v:i.:y TroWe MrI;es You Miserable. v-'- ".-cryloJy v.-bo reads the rtc-.vc-.:. is cure to know of the venderfu! ---rfv ? .''"'"r'iGwamp-Raot ;-,..Sv-- IM the ersit hi Tnf- u, ' 1 1 ' na --a-ider lemedy. It is the great mcdi- ! TH fc. EDITOR'S LEISURE HOURS. Observations of Passing Events. v-7 ;c nms- t.'cnth century; . covered after years cf IV J sci-.:ifr; rcaroh l.v ' ! ; ' Qrr"b f'r- Kilmer, the err -fLc-- -. " wi'ty and bM ;r. -racialist, and i; j ,y rucccsstui vi promptly curin" !-; h:ry. bladder, uric acid trou- : : ' "s L'-i-eacc, v:hich 13 the wort i : : !; .vr S Swat p-Root iz not rec ' ' : r everything but if ycu have kid i r bidder h cubic it vill be found ; -uie.'.y you nc-sd. It hr.o been tested ''r-y;, io. hospital work, . jrivsl-j - . :.:v:c:-. the helpless too poor to pur f -:?s proved so successful in . v. ih.-.l a. sr-ecial arianp.-?n:. .V ims tight season for money is a good time for every one to be helpful to others by paying debts. When money is plentiful it is not so hard for Help 0.18 Another. ne l disdiar-!?e obligations, but when money is scarce, it is very imuortant that e-c ... m ue ueocs, and big- ones too, if he can. A dollar paid out in settlement of a little debt may pay a dozen debts in a day and so ease the siuianon w.th as many persons. The truth is, no one has amoral to hold on to money if he owes it to some one else. JOSH HARRISON'S SUGDL COMMITTED THE ACT LM ?0KF0LK. A Sad Esdhig. right v'h:'h H readers of this paper :ro! already tried it, may have a i-v.i' ne? oy man, also a b rap-Root and hew The Great Book says thaf'a good name is rather to he oWr, rntwth5 urcat riches;" and we' frequently have it illustrated in human experience. A Good Earac. Sorne years a?0 a man was trifid his life in a certain county in North Carolina under the charge of murder. The evidence was all circumstantial, but seemed con clusive. However, all the tact and skill and power of trained lawyers could not convict him, for he was girt about by all the power of a good name. Until the char ire was hmiKrU omm,t i.. , ..6"wv linn ui me murcier oi a kinsman for monpv if,,ivoiiari v, n i- , wvi,iuu uie sugntest snaae of question : J" :::r.?r! ! COnCCrWng ,us good cllaracto- And when the charge was made and ai a ' .u'.?."sro'ii, most., proved he was so inrronMiari t-i i paper and erxCo.,I!'ar- ent and Ho.-no of S-Svamp.Tioot. by a!i good druggists. ; ;!;!!:- ;tny mi-take,- but re : i'.w Swijmp h.ot, Dr. - 'up KtMif. and the siddrt-ss m: h X. Y.. on ovor hottlo. V. SXYTti, tl D. " 'ii vor vN and Surgeon, Sc.tlaiul Xeck; N. 0. : i:.- v iki:,k r.uiMintr. -.'.,,-.1, v ri so intrenched behind the bulwark of a good nam? it- was impossible to get a jury of twelve men to say he was guilty His good name saved him. Elsewhere in this paper is told the story of the suicide of Joshua Harrison who was under sentenced twenty years in th state s prison for the kidnapping of Kenneth Beasley two years ago last February. With him the case was quite different. Pnrh V1 mv. Viviv-llUt; against the man charged with murder was just as strong as that a-ain-t Harrison charged with kidnapping, but Harrison did not have all theood name that the other man had. Young men can do nothing that will be of so much value to them in the future as the making of a good name. It is an investment that will yield greater dividends than anything else for this life. Next to a saving faith in God through Jesus Christ, a good name is the greatest thing that one can possess. ION, J'iJ-; 1 lOl , ( ' up t:iirs in White h'-i-.d JUiiklii!-. id '.-:-. to J i!) -) O CLOCK. 'V !'.:n: u-tinyj (Optician. .A.;ik"r, Jeweler, En graver, 'mh ! Neck, X, ft r:v axi Counselor at J, AAV, '.U!ii(; Trust Building X.-. rf.dk, Va. 1'uMic. Phone 371 ! :v an:) Counselor at Law, IMifax, X. 0. .'Ki.tiod on Farm Lands With many young men who do not expect to follow a special literary vocation the question cf studying the classics seems to be a trouble. They ClaSSlCS for TraCtleal Life. sometimes tbiit inasmuch as they do not - expect to follow any literary persuit they do not think it necessary to study Greek and Latin. And some young men who do follow a literary course leave off Greek. There seems to boa feeling amongst young students that Greek is so hard the retults of a course in it do not pay for the effort it takes to learn it. The weight of evidence by the best thinkers and most practical men is against this conclusion, tlie Norfolk Landmark of the jttn printed arf interesting editorial in which strong claim was made for the classics as the best preparation for practical life. It referred to the testimony that thp Info Spnr.tnr- u,.,. gave in favor of Latin and Greek as the finest preparation for men in any public life, and especially in favor of Greek as a great developer of ora torical powers. Also the testimony of eminent lawyers was given in favor of classics in preparation for the practice of law, and also the authority of an eminent physician that at least two years should be spent in the study of -Greek as the best preparation for the practice of medicine. Strong authority was given also that the study of Greek is the best foun dation for engineering except, of course, mathematics. It is to be feared that too many young men get in a hurry about going out into the world to make money and thus leave off the study of the classics to find when it is almost too late that they made a great and sez-ious mistake. A young man cannot make better preparation than in the study of the classics. The same applies in a measure to young women also. (Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Sept. 19th.) Rather than to serve twenty years in the penitentiary for kidnapping Kenneth Beasley, the seven year old son of State Senator Beasley, of Cur rituck county, N., C, Joshua Harri son placed a pistol to his temple and blew out his brains yesterday after noon about 5 o'clock in his room at the Gladstome hotel, while officers were- waiting in the lobby to arrest him for the North Carolina author ities for being a fugitive from jus tice. The injured man was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital, where he died at 5:10 o'clock this morning. The Supreme Court denied Harri son a new trial Tuesday. He was out on $3,000 bail. local police after accused. Five minutes after Chief Boush re ceived a telegram from Solicitor Ward, of Williamston, N. C, to ar rest Harrison for being a fugitive from justice, detectives were detail ed to find him. Detective Wright went to the Gladstone hotel, when he soon learned that Harrison was there. Acting under instructions frpm the solicitor to be careful and disarm Harrison, as he had, threatened to commit suicide, the detective sent a bell boy up to his room to tell him he was wanted at the telephone. Harrison told the bell boy that he would not talk to anyone over the 'phone. He swore he would not leave his room and no one could make him. HOW ME ESCAPED ARREST. Before the bell boy got to the top of the stairs on his way to the lobby a pistol shot rang out, and the lad with one of the clerks, rushed down to tell the officer. Detective Wright, who had been joined by Detective Dozier, ran up to the room. Burst ing in the door they found Harrison lying full length on the bed with an ugly -bullet wound in the head, while his brains were oozing out on the lied chothing. He was half clad as if he had been sleeping. The detectives searched for some note or document that might throw light on where the Beasley boy was. Not a line was found. No word to his relatives was left. If Harrison did kidnap and do away with the little Beasley boy the world will nev er know of it from his lips. The secret is buried with the dead man. against Senator Beasley, whether for some fancied or real wrong. It is claimed that at one time Senator Beasley had arrested Harrison for operating a "blind tiger." REVENGE ALLEGED MOTIVE. Later, Harrison and Beasley were political opponents for the Legisla ture. Senator Beasley won. This is said to have added to the humilia tion of Harrison. From that day, it is said, Harrison swore vengeance. After a lengthy trial, in which some of the best legal talents in North Carolina was engaged, Harrison was convicted and sentenced to twenty years in the penitentiary. Ex-Governor Aycock represented Harrison. j The evidence was purely circumstan tial. An appeal was taken to the! bupreme Court, but a new trial was denied. Nothing has ever been seen or heard of Kenneth Beasley since that night he was stolen from his father's home. There was a report that Harrison was seen in Norfolk with the lad, but no-witness could testifiy to this, however. REFUSED NEW TRIAL. A dispatch from Raleigh, N. C, states that a big fight was put up for Joshua Harrison, who was refus ed a new trial by the Supreme Court. His counsel claim that the easel against their client was purely circumstantial and that he was the victim of prejudice. Harrison was nearly 70 years old. Forty years ago he was charged with killing his father and then his brother-in-law. Governor Jarvis, by the boldest sort of a stroke, saved the life of Harrison. The leading witness against him swore that Harrison had shot his father and that the witness had felt the bullet hole in the back of his head. Years after -the murder, when Har rison was tried, Governor Jarvi.3 had the body exhumed, and then it was shown there was no bullet wound at all. Senator Beasley was in Norfolk Tuesday and late yesic-rdny aft erne ..; i oil business8. Kan Sent to Stats Pfisoa Escnd in 1SS7, Kecardin-zd ia UTas!32-S lea After 20 Years. v. it (Lexington rupati-h.) Calvin Westmoreland was arrested in Winston-Salem last week, as an es caped convict after he had been at liberty for a score of years. He was sentenced from Danbury, Stokes county, Feb. 2, 1SS7, for larceny, and served two years of his three-year sentence. In 1S87, while the con victs were working on the old Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley railroad, Westmoreland escaped, Jan. 17, 1887. He went to Winston-Salem more than ten years ago and has resided there ever since. He has a wife and several children. He has worked at the carpenter's trade since his es cape. A few days ago the jailor at Winston-Salem received a note from the penitentiary officials, stating that Westmoreland was wanted there and $10 would be paid for his arrest and delivery. The jailor arrested him in the Farmers' warehouse. He de nied that he had ever been in 'the penitentiary, but when his wife was informed of his arrest, she exclaim ed, "Why he served over half his sentence before he escaped." Later Westmoreland himself ad mitted that he was the right man, but claimed that he had been par doned. It is true that the papers asking for pardon had been prepar ed but never acted upon. West moreland says that when he escaped he went to his home inStokescounty and remained there ten years, mov ing to Winston-Salem, where lie has s"nce resided. "They say I have one year and fif teen days of my sentence yet to s-jrve," said Westmoreland, who stat ed that lie war? competed arid .sent enced to the penitentiary from Stoker. i .. Ti 1 1.1 i 't cji:iy. u v.;.; leumeu ium vv cs i ,. ..id - i i i ? t i' w ;i:a ct ery man ttii.t v.'i.r,:;;:, in the United State; to know what v.i are dm'r.g - Ve are curing Cantvir. lu mors and Cr.romc Svnts without the use of the knife or by X-rav. and are endorsed by the Senate and Leg islature of Virginia. WE GUARANTEE OUR CURES. KELLAM HOSPITAL, No. 1615 Wet Main Street, Richmond, Virginia. 5-?3-'i'7-iy Undertakers' Supplies. Full and Complete Line. ( ft ' ';yKHll Coffins and Casket s Bmi.il Robes, Etc. Hearse Service any Time N. B. Josey Company, Scotland Neck, North Carolina Administrator's Notice. Having qualified as the adminis trator upon the estate of Mr:;. l'atii V. Hamlet, deceased, late of Halifax county, N. C. 1 hereby notify ad poiv-iitj. having chinus agair.vt th; estate of ud deceased to present them for naym. nl. to me on ,r 1,( fmv !'' "ith d:-v d' A ni;i.f p.wiy (li i ',!: Ti',t,:-o v II !,,. ..' thvir recovorv del of steal- ''t!:-:!'-!' '. Insurance Agent, 'fck, X. C. , dl:ind Xi 3 KM'tl SALS AM JKom. lj ft lti';ri-T.t growth. f -.v-t F?i!." to Iti-rtoro rsyf to iis youttm.1 Cotci-. k Tl-'o tl .T-.r h?:r li'Iiujg. I '''Ti ' .jivery Harness Whips "Robes Tzrbro, Nor& Carolina :.i Ten Niseis :-r-;;:s ix People. Evc'tU fsi liouewcd Vigor, if ;";). lii-lu'C-stion. I.i-fl J -i.-r .-; Iv-; f..r.-i. I.i. f"!"'' fi Tto'.fU, Ifwio'-Ji- i - ..;;y ri-i;it.--in T-vi ia ts .. t. :t. t ji.iiiiiu'j mado by : 'NY, i:.-.:l:sj-i, Wia '1Z r-ZW SALLOW PZGP' F Price. I K 1 P . I -- 1 S .. wan m WITH BS9 si 31 a Tiff' lltr' - Joe & i.co. r.wr... uvn.v .... ("'J nil fPfS'r ! iniriTnnilQt CI! The quotation below is longer than we usually print in thi3 column, but we make, no apology for it. The Manufacturers' Record of Baltimore of Sept. 19lh said? "The cotton growers of the South stand firm for good prices, unmoved by the bear tactics of the speculators. The world can take every bale of their cotton, even if prices of the staple were high er than at present. The English papers are full of the tremendous boom in Britian's coal trade, many of the large producers having sold their en tire expected output of 1908. Miners' wages are at the maximum, and the operators are struggling to find more men. England's iron and steel trade is in the same condition, with steel rails selling at more than $3 a ton above the price which our steel makers are gotting. On the Continent somewhat similar conditions prevail, and in Asia there is widespread awakening, with reports of advancing prices of building materials and of labor. The splendid prices which the grain growers of the West and the cattle raisers of the country are getting assure their ability to be better consumers than ever before. Under such conditions the South should re ceive the very highest prices for its cotton. It holds a world monopoly, and it would be false to its own prosperity, to its best educational devel opment, to the betterment of all its people, if ft did not unitedly struggle to secure the highest possible price for its cotton. If the people of this section would see it blossom as a rose, if they would see every farmhouse improved and made more attractive, if they would see tens of thousands of new dwellings on the farms and in the cities with every modern con venience for lessening the labor of the housekeepars, if they would see an era of good road construction, if they would see schools and churches everywhere, then let them realize that good prices, high prices as compar ed with the'lO years of starvation prices ending in 1902, would mean all thns'e tilings, and that properly handled the South has this situation abso lutely within its own control. Ten years ago the cotton crop, seed inciud- Last year ic was worm over for means us- i3 life and bring forth a harvest of abounding prosperity nhr.nf. S2n0.000.000 a year. 000 000. and this year it should command $900,000,000. Consider ' ' . , ... ,7 ,i,vtv,.ot-. nf jRnno.OOO.OOO or more a year . ! .i:i:: rr,r,v w'nifh w enrich the soil of Southern b It is a migniy iertm.u.K . - mess Consumption is less ueaaiy 8 eS9 Certain reher and usiiauy cuuipicic w ... . e C.Vrvnxct trm? merit: will result rrorea Hope, rest, fresh air, and Scott jr Emuteion. ALL DRUCGSSTS: BOO. AND Ol.OO. V . a ia a. A.f. IIAHRISON out on bail. Shortly after Harrison was dis covered lying on the bed dying, De tective Wright notified Captain Ford at the Central station, and he res ponded promptly with the patrol wa gon. Dr. Schenck was summoned, and after a hurried examination or dered the injured man rushed to the hospital. The weapon used was a 38 calibre pistol. Harrison has been out of jail on bail several weeks pending a decision of the Supreme Court for new trial. He came to Norfolk yesterday and had evidently been in the hotel but a short time as his name appeared on the register the last one. MRS. HARRISON DECLARES HUSBAND WAS MARTYR It was a sad scene enacted when Detective Wright broke the news as gently as possible to Mrs. Maggie Gallop, 192 Duke street, a daughter of Mr. Harrrison. The officer told Mrs. Gallop and Mr. Harrison's wife that he had met with an accident. The woman in a trembling voice in quired what the trouble was. When told that Mr. Harrison had shot himself, she almost fainted, but gasped that she had expected some thing would happen .when a new trial was denied by the courts. Mrs. Gollop was then joined by her moth er, the wife of the dead man, who declared between her daughter's and her own tears and sobs, that Mr. Harrison was innocent. TRIES TO COMFORT DAUGHTER. Mrs. Harrison declared that her husband was asleep the night in Feb ruary, 1905, that Kenneth Beasley was kidnapped and carried away. She tried to comfort her daughter with the assurance that her father was a martyr, having been innocent of the crime for which he was con victed. When Kenneth Beasley was kid napped that night in February, 1 905, suspicion pointed to Joshua Harri" son time Harrison had borne a grudge tC'iali-ttf ( ;ri f.) "I have always heard th:d a pump kin vine grows faster than almost any other sort of plant." said a Charlotte man, "but J hail no idea how they grow until now. There is a vine in my back yard and it has gone to the alley on the west and half way under my house on the east and is still growing." "Yes, yes, "said a farmer, "I heard of a pumpkin vine that grew so fast that it wore the little pumpkins out dragging them around. The pumpkin vine is very luxuriant in its growth." "Well, mine measures close to 1C0 yards and is putting out pumpkins all along the way." "Of course you have heard of the pumpkin and the pig?" asked the farmer. "Nope." "A farmer on the Catawba river kept missing his corn and he noticed pig tracks in the bottoms, but he could not catch the pig in the act. All tracks led to the river and he knew that an ordinary hog could not swim such a stream. The mystery thickened until an old darky camped in the field, got sight of the pig and followed it to the river and watched it cross on a pumpkin vine which had sent a shoot over and grown a pumpkin on the other side. The pumpkin was so large that the hog had made a den and went there to hide when pursued." "That will do. You may have my vine," said the reporter. Making Molasses. mo j -eland was cm- iing a second-hand still. Parties have known for .some tune lh:d Wetinorolaud was livii.g in Winston, and that ho was an cvvped convict, but ihey s.tid nothing about ir, feel ing that he h:-.d ;dreud' served eieiit si r. re; t!!i. for :-te:i;iii-- Oi'.t e t'leailed m .;ir m i ' ' ' iO ' . I i V i I .1 pit Tt-e ;i;;'.,.e i;m- 111 I ! . 'P. "'. li.'.V-.KT, A t t ! Tit - f i III, L.evh; n t ;e e qu; ad r.iih .i ratoi Mark iHaiu ii'lvKi Jislra. (''Cl't) Mark Twain says: "When I was editor of the Virginia City Enter prise, writing copy one day and min ing the next, a superstitious subscri ber once wrote and said he had found a spider in his paper. Was this good or bad luck? I replied to him in our 'Answers to Correspondents' column as follows: "Old Subscriber -The finding of a spider in your copy of the Enterprise was neither good luck nor bad. The spider was merely looking over our pages to find out what merchant was not advertising, so that it could spin its web across his: door, and lead a free and undsiturbed existence for ever after." Your skin slioii'il be e!e;irnnd hritdit if your liver is in uorneil eoixlit ion. Kind's Little Liver Pills net o:i ths liver; i id headiteho, contipjitioii and hilotH nesf ili.ri;i ju-. Price ci-nts. Sold hv K. T. Whitehead tt o. I.ttt of ie'ev. i ! . ;;; v:-n, i!e- e oi -i'it'.;v eotiiUy, N. (' 'Oi! I, cere: tins to not iiy ;; el-en-: :'.;;-.;ifi t :-:; t'H'IM to the lil.o'e fore i he 22e.d : :v of Aui'iisi . 190S. or this notice v. :ii to pleaded hi bar of their ieoverv. All T rsons in' tavieg staio t oxhd.ii iunod on t he- p:c;u; dented to raid estate will mi:e nume'eat'1 set 'ie.'e.ent. Thi:; Augu. tli:;, PK)7. G. V. BllVAN, Adniin;.-;lrator.' 8-22-C.t Yv'e Keep on Hand 1 9 ounai i,as8s: .' 3- ? :i All Kinds all the Time. Also Confide Uncrhifiers' Guiflf. For drainage and irrigation Hol land has the astonishing total of $1, 900.000 miles of canals nnd dilcho. t lsj Hearse Ibervice any lime l)a.y or uio-l.t wo an? rc.'uly to aeoo7imionU? our friiirls and the Public (iiH'ially. M. Hoffman & Bro. Women have de id"d that in they e:ii;not vytf, they will , ut out tli Stork" roj)0:-it ion. l'crfeetly pi-o r to take Ioli.ter's jloeky lountain Tea. It's good for even tliini'. ."" eonts, Tea or Tablets. K. T. Wliiter.ead A Co. It cynics put up in a eollap.-ible tnl.e nozzle, easy to apply to the ore-1 (Rich Square Times.) Some of the farmers in the vicfn ity of Rich Square are now making! -,i ' 4.' ..-i. -t -i I Wit. I a une veiy iii&t quality oi rnoiasses from cane grown in waste corners about their farms. It requires only averv small lot of land to makp n; Homey. Price rt cents, (iuaranteed. , , t , , 7; Sold hv T. Whitehoa-! -v Co. ! hundred gallons of molasses equal to the highest grade that can be j A great many marriages arj me e-1 bought. It is surprising that every ! ly blind bridal affairs. farmer does not plant cane. fi AVfrrQi i .rv!o!i1i! or ri'or thinff.8ufncientfornothiii.--AmieKlScotland X"k Nrth (-'Jirolina " j witii a nozzie, easy to apply to tne ore- f s sses j ness and inlhuniiiation, for any form lers ; of J'iles; it soothes and rejieves iain, y nly I itching and burning. Man Zan Pi!.-! Cr Wood's Seeds. Seed Wheat, ! I Oats, Rye and Barley. A Some - farmers Cairn that the seed from an Z i ! acre of cane is equal in value for !r-.,;.,i, i;,...,. i.,v,ti-. (..,..1, CT 1,1 V;1 ( ,r-,;" 1:1 v-f :"'"r' feeding hogs to an acre of coin. . It 4 . ' ,i , ! ? " !! ,!" v.'-r "I a,, Cane requires but little cuitivatkn t,ir ,v .,7lh V,.-; "j. :'' o '"'"'""i ."" ,r " J,r!fSftr;' and will gmw upon mo.t any kmrl ; , j,., ,,,n,,. Vm. ,'u. 7,L V i 0C1,,, c,,Ut,u .., lor land. Now is the tune to procure ! ,-:., ..f,. .! v,.-ir.. . , . -l n,. iti, n.,. ii-he;.d Co. I seed for another year. If real coffee ili.-tmbs your Sejm.ioh, your Heart or Ki.lneys, tbn try tin clever Cofli-e iniitati n lr. Shoop"s Ilenllh Coir..,.. In-. Shoop has f ,-.);: matched old Java ami Moiha Cotf'.e in It was known that for a long I tlavor and taste, jet it has not a idtijde i-.l hv i:. T. Wl. The more some men talk the they know. anil i:i;:-t i.'uproved I'l'iehitierv for , j e'eaiiin-j-. li' you '-tid t-yperior lers' l cr,T,s Do Witt's Little Early IUsers are pood for anyone who needs a pill. They are small, safe, sure little pills that do no gripe or sicken. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co. Lo-t, h'ftween -:::;') i. int. ve.-ei., v uruhi of n-al CeHeo in it. Pr. Hioop's. and eooii to-day, a i.eliou-att.e !:, i ifii Health Coffee Imitation is niado from jiure toa.steT grains or cereals, with Malt, Nuts, etc. Made in one minute. No tedious long wait. You will surely like it. (Jet a free sample at our store. W.T.Tyler.. nausea arid .-iclc headache. This was occasioned by findingnt K.T. While- i head t Co. 's drug store a lo.- of I).-.' King's New Life PU!.-?, the guaranteed ! cure for Li!t:ou. n ?s, nialaria and j tun- iincc. jc. I'-VJ' S :tiot.'l on iv)i;e:-t PD3c.istiv5 Fall C-.rj'cSHe i ., ivnur f-ill i:ilr:iiip.t'' n abeel a! fri-c-d',, r.-;..e i free. T, WSOO & SOHS, Seedsmen, Richmond, Va. Hi 1 !' 1 is i 1 I Id d ;, 't i 1 . 1 1 5. IP If ft
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1907, edition 1
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