Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Feb. 1, 1912, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The Largest Circulation OF ANY Halifax County Newspaper. The Largest Circulation 1 OF ANY 1 KWJtCAJLTH I Halifax County Newspaper. i fj. C. lAHJy, editor and Proprietor. 'Excelsior" i Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Yes r. VOL. XXVIII. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1912. NUMBER 5. 1 . ' ' r- ft (Cltsa TSio Kidneys Are I Weakened by Over-Work. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. f : Weak r.tul unhealthy kidneys are re- eponsibie for much sickness ami suffering, .j-t; .. therefore, it" kidney k It&fj," Ss trouble is permitted to li-'-JV' 'j 1' continue, r.erious re- I kvJi-U.v1' to follow. Your other f NV"Q -i organs i:;av need nt- fpr-jf tsrj, y tention. hut your kid neys mor.t, because they do most and should have attention first. Therefore, -vhen e v.wk or out of order, S.v-:i c-:u lar. L I how quickly your en- :r.i '.! i. ;. ' .'- c.l and how every organ I to do i'.s duty. j : : fir " feci badl'," begin, i ...t l.klncy remedy, Dr. A. A trial will coa 1 1 ;,.;r-.-:;t merit. 1 a:id immediate effect of ?, V - great kidney and : . soon realized. It ' ' : 'i . -cause- i-. ; remarkable - - rotten ie h.ive been the most distress i. -1 a "V'ilicine you "" 1'-''t- -3 fc;' 53- Gv :.:.! t i:: li: lvo-ar k'.l'-.evs , . t- . panr ::--t e. . howi 1 bla.l -r tr -lelicn v.-ril l: . 8i:iil!.-r.at-:n r, i. -.on h.-ve kidney o; riuUon this paper 7?r. Kilmer & Co. . i vn ' t in;! 1: e anv mi s- take, I--t msnem t!:2 mm?, Swamp Hoot, and dsi't let a d? -.l -r sell v " omcth::ig i:t 15lr.ee of Swr.mp-F.oot i' t you do vow v.i'l re dis:i-oinlad. A, Attmuxky at Law, Scotland Neck, N. C Jracti ts -Any wl-,eve. A.i5ifx Dunn Lawyer - ohal' be required. " & A. TMJN'N'. R. C PTTNN. s;,..,t':inrl XWV M. C. Pnfio'.l. N. f ; A , "S 11. C DUNN, Icotlp.n.-l Ne.-1--, Nrh Cerolirp P -si? ' 1 t '?-.'''' or in all matte' ic ,r)t f i-s- t) 'r'ainin to rai)ros " 11 I i.'.u .' ! 1 ; 1 1. ' 1 f I 1 (III I 1 : I - r i Atforn-:y ana LojRseior si lav - .1 Scotland Neck, N. C. '. ". . Pr ipt.'Pfs wherf-vev hi? services ar- "3i !. f: sr'-M. O Thurp'-.n D. KJtchin. M.D -s h in - :. i. phone No. 131. ULAUK Ci IITCIIIX V P w-ilra-H m l Saeeons 0;Ti".?3 in rtriek Hotel Om 23 Phone No. 21. f F. A. RIFF, OPTICIAN I Scotland Neck, N. C. I Eye examined FREE. Broker lenj3 nut -he 1 and frame? repaired 'AW '10 ; 3Ti?.tly cash. lfi. 3. L. SAVAGE I OF ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. WV; hi n r.Un-l Neck. N. C, or th- th:--l Vdne-day of eah montr f ti 1 h )'rj! to tr-at the disea-es t)i '-' ?3:ir. N se, Throat, and fit "Mv fD S (T RU 5COJJ , : 1 ! Vnck, N. ( 1 . i i on ' piir 1 ret I . L u. . F. Smith Mi'-n ui fia iters & bommercia Dank B'liidinii Scot!rri Neck. N. C. : v nsT. J ' i; ' 'U' -f air- in Wliit 'f I 'm! Hiiildinji. j i . h 1 m - fnnu v to 1 o'clock tal 2 t,o 5 o'clock. iMiil HAIR BALSAM . 'T- Cle and beantifles the hair. f- .-v .-5 p.-tc3 a luxuriant prowtli. : jfr..?n pa!l9 to Enuto'r Ora; fij;1"- '"i i li.r.-.:.- to its Yoatiiful Color. Kvi,yv;-.-A-j'a ! n-vi-ntn slp din jisi-sr.-il lu-h ! -T ' .ii'y r,n-. : ?1.-0i.t-. tut r:3T AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. Vinslov'S Soothing SVRt-p has been , ClVTV DC l.u H1I I ION'S Of .;r:;s f.r their children whilk wiVi I'KRKUCT SUCCESS. It i ie ;:ili, softens the-gums, ; '.: i Al ' ; CUIll.S WIND COLIC, and 1 - -Jy 1 r m.Kiuie.A. 11 is u " ... 73 sure ar'l 8-!i fcr "Mrs. a- ! ike 110 otlier 1 6tii;5'Uwt tQPcm'fSILf I ass m.vMmm imm&m t OR MONEY RErUADED. BATTLES WITH LOCUSTS, In 1780 an Army Was Arrayed Against the Ravaging Pests, Which Were Eaten In Some Localities. Since the days of the pharaohs the locust has been an unmitigated plague. I'liny relates that in many places in Greece a law obliged the inhabitants to wage war against the insects three times a year i. e., in their various states of egg, larvae and adult. In 1749 locusts stopped the army of Charles XII., kiDg of Sweden, as it was retreating from Bessarabia after its defeat at Toltava. The king at first imagined that he was being assailed by a terrific hailstorm. In Transylvania in 17S0 the ravages of the locusts assumed such disastrous proportions that the army had actually to be called out to deal with the pests, and whole regiments of soldiers, were employed gathering them tip and put ting them into sacks. A weird, uncanny looking customer is the locust. The general color scheme of his body is a kind of indefinite green, relieved by pink legs and wings of a whitish color. Two huge, blank, unmeaning ejes give an expression of utter imbecility to the insect's counte nance. To atone in a measure for their de structive proclivities the locusts are edi ble. The Arabs are particularly fond of them. Camels, to which they are given after being dried and roasted between two layers of ashes, look upon locusts as great delicacies. The flavor resembles that of crabs, and in Bagdad they are consumed so extensively as to affect the price of meat. Stray Stories. RIVERS OF ALASKA. The Waterway Wonders of This Im mense Territory. Were the rivers not navigable theiv would be little done in the interior of Alaska today. First used by the pros pector in his poling boat and the trad er with his little steamer, they have become the means of opening up every camp that has been struck in the in terior of Alaska. The Yukon is very shallow at its mouth. Avhich is about seventy miles in width across its delta. There are places 400 miles from the mouth of the river where the biggest Atlantic liners could navigate with ' ease, for there are soundings which show a nine ty foot channel in a mile wide river. The Yukon is navigable for 2,100 miles. The Kuskoquim, a sister stream, ha3 been navigated .only on the lower reaches, but with its" navigable branch es is believed to have 1,000 miles of navigable wR-ter. The Tanana has been ascended for o00 miles and the Koyukuk in excess of that figure. Scores of other streams can be used by small steamers for from twenty-five to 200 miles. Altogether it is safe to say there are 5,000 miles of navigable streams in Alaska. The Yukon opens for navigation the latter part of May and closes the latter part of October. . But with all its wealth of gold, its unheard call to toilers of the soil, Its mountains studded with gems of rich esthe lodes of veins of copper and other materials this empire starves for the one thing that would make it thrive. Collier's. The Name Noah. Not many persons are sufficiently ac quainted with the Bible to know that Xoah was the name of a woman as well as of the patriarch. At an inquest in England a female witness gave her Christian name as "Xoah." " The coro ner remarked that he had never before known a woman to bear the name, whereupon the witness, who was well posted in the origin of her singular prenomen, said: "It is a Bible name, sir; you'll find it in the last chapter of the book of Num bers." Reference was duly made, and ia the eleventh verse of the thirty-sixth chapter tha coroner found mention made of "Mahlah, Tirzah and Hoglah and Milcah and Xoah, the daughters of Zelophehad." A Hardy Tool. A combined fork and shovel has been invented by a Washington man, the scoop that forms the latter imple ment being removable. is the best anc quickest way to perfect health. Women and girls who suffer are simply weak weak all over. Opiates and alcoholic mixtures are worse than worthless, they aggra vate the trouble and lower the standard of health. Scott's Emulsion strengthens the whole body, invigorates and builds up. Be sure to get SCOTTS it' the Standard and always the beit. . ALL DRUGGISTS 4 TULIP MADNESS. The Craze Raged In Holland In the Last Century, and Some of the Flow ers Brought Incredible Prices. During the tulip craze in Holland in the last century in one year the sales aggregated 10,000,000 florins. Holland went tulip mad. The bulbs were quot ed on the Stock Exchange. Ownership in them was divided into shares. Spec ulators sold them short. At one time more tulips were sold than "existed. At Lille a brewer sold his trade and -good will in exchange for a bulb, w7hich was thereafter known as the Brewery tu lip. In Amsterdam a father gave one by way of dower with his child. There after the variety was known as--the Marriage of My Daughter. At Rotter dam a hungry sailor, happening on a few, mistook them for onions and ate them. The repast became as famous as Cleopatra's pearls and probably ex ceeded it in cost. At The IIagutfa poor fellow managed to raise a black tulip. The rumor of that vegetable marvel spread. Presently he was vis ited by a deputation from a syndicate. For that ewe lamb of his the deputa tion offered 1,000 florins, which he re fused. He was offered 10,000 florins. Still he refused. Cascades of gold were poured before his resisting eyes. Finally, tormented and tempted, he succumbed. There and then the depu tation trampled that tulip under their feet. Afterward it appeared that the syndicate had already grown a gem precisely similar and, unable to bear the idea that a rival existed, had au thorized the deputation if needful to offer ten times the amount which it paid. PICKED AN ODD NAME. An Author's Long Search and a Sub sequent Surprise. When Albion W. Tourgeo wrote "A Fool's Errand" he named one of his leading characters Theron Tardee. An early copy of the book fell into the hands of the Rev. Luther Pardee, an Episcopal clergyman of Chicago, whose father was named Thereon Pardee. The name is such an unusual combina tion that in amazement the rector showed the book to his father, and they were both puzzled by the coinci dence. They decided to write Judge Tourgee and ask him what had led him to use the name. lie replied, in equal amazement, that he had not supposed there was such a man living as a The ron Pardee. Then he stated that he had a prolonged search for a suitable name for the character of his story one that won Id oTiiros inst. wluit he imagined this character to be. In the course of the hunt an old copy of the curriculum of Union college had fallen into his hands. It Avas dated 1823, or something as far back, and among the iiarues of the students was one Thereon Pardee. The judge said it had im pressed him as being one of the rich est, most solid and most satisfying names he ever had heard, so he decid ed to adopt it for his character. The curriculum w as so old that he had no hesitation in using the name, and he was astonished to learn that the right ful owner of it was living. His expla nation was accepted and the resulting acquaintance was pleasing all around. Xew York Press. The Arab Plowman. To see an Arab steering a yoke of oxen, one hand pressed upon the sin gle stem of the- plow and the other holding the long, slim gpad, is to see a living illustration of how Elisha looked and moved when Elijah found him plowing and cast his cloak upon him in significant symbolism of his destiny. It has often been remarked that, while imperishable relics of Ro man stonework abound in northern Africa in the form of bridges, aque ducts and so forth, the impress left on the people themselves by the great est civilizing power that ever existed is extraordinarily slight. Only ia some such insignificant detals as the names of the months in the Kabyle dialect is the stamp of Rome still visible, and in the system of hiring labor in the Tell there survives a custom belong ing to the early days of the Roman republic Wide World Magazine. Ancient Spectacle Makers. The ancient Guild of Spectacle Mak ers is numerically one of the strongest London companies. Its charter dates from the year 1G29 and, though the ex act date of its origin is lost, there is ample evidence that the calliug of I spectacle maker was extensively fol- low ed at a very early date. An old ! book of 1503 mentions the spectacle J makers among other traders, and the j biography of Carlo Zeno, an illustrious Venetian, who died in 141S, mentions ! that even at the age of eighty-four he ' needed no artificial aids to his sight. So presumably spectacles were com mon in Italy five centuries ago. Lon don Telegraph. Different Altogether. Visitor (consolingly to Tommy, who has upset a bottle of ink on the new carpet) Tut, my boy, there is no use crying over spilt milk. Tommy Course not. Any duffer knows that. All you've got to do is call in the cat and she'll lick it up. But this don't happen to be milk, an' mamma will do the Uckin'. An Account to Settle. The Lawyer Madam, I find that your husband's will leaves you nothing j but what the law compelled him to , leave you. The Widow (angry and for getful) Just wait till I see him! " A Hard Job. Husband What are you looking for, dear? Wife I was looking for the in visible hairpin I Just dropped. Exchange. Do you take The Common ealth RUBBING UP THE ARMS. An Englishman Tells of Excellent Re sults In Restoring to Consciousness Those Who Have Fainted. When my wife faints,' which is mis erably often, says a writer in the Lon don medical journal, the Lancet, J do not apply friction in the usual ab surd way rubbing backward and for ward, which must alternately check and accelerate the p.'-ssage of the blood but, taking hold of one of hei hands with my left hatsd, I place the thumb and finger of ray right hand tight round her wrist and then pass them firmly up toward her elbow. Having brought them back loosely to the wrist. I pass them firmly again, and when I have repeated tht operation two or three times, some times on both arms, I have the pleas ure of hearing the ejaculation, "I feei better now." Wlien I first had recourse to this means of resusekating my lady she exclaimed instinctively on two dif ferent occasions, without being at al aware, that I had had any particulai intention, "Oh, that is what I seem t want!" From the invariable imd immediate effect of this mode of friction I flattci myself that it isfct unworthy the no tice of the modicaf practitioner in tin: friction of cholera path-nts, a process which should be much jnftener resort ed to and more energetically persisted in than it generally is. GERMAN RED TAPE. A Lesson In Picking Up Things In th: Streets of Berlin. Take care how you pick up a thine that is lost in Berlin. The other daj one of our deputies going through th( Prussian capital on his return from y convention tvt Frankfort noticed a kej at the edge of the sidewalk. He pick ed it up to hand it to a police agent The representative of the city polict refused to take it, saying, "You should take this kejr to the special bureau ol things that are lost." "Very well. Where is it?" The agent named the street. "Is it far from here?" "A half hour, three-quarters of ar hour if you don't walk rapidly." The deputy replaced the key on 'tin pavement. "Some one else will pic-lit up," he said. "X'ot at all," said the agent in a com manding tone. "You should have left it where it was, but now you art obliged to go to the b""-eau. If you tton t iii make a couipliTmi against yon and you'll be fined, perhaps giveu s day in prison. That's the law." The deputy was compelled to obej orders. . Since that day he carries his hand in his pockets. Cri de Pari. The Hangman's Stone. ' There is a large bowlder lying in s field near Foremark, England, whicl is known throughout Derbyshire as th "hangman's stone." The exposed por tion of the bowlder rises about sis feet above the surface of the surround ing field and has a narrow ditch or in dentation running across the top. Tht mark, so tradition says, was made ir this way: A sheep thief in the dead of night, while leaning against the bowl der to- rest, placed his booty above oe the flat surface of the stone. The mar had the sheep tied with a rope, and ir its effort to escape the creature slipped on the opposite side, and the rope, catching under the thief's chin, chokej him to death. The indentation in th rock was made by the friction of tht rope while the dying man was engaged in an effort to extricate himself. A Good Loser. Arthur's, Almack's, Bootle's and White's were the chief clubs of the young men of fashion. There was play at all, and decayed noblemen and broken down senators fleeced the unwary there: Charles Fox, a dread ful gambler, lost 200,000 at play. Gibbon tells of his playing twenty-two hours at a sitting and losing ."500 an hour. That indoniitable punster said that the greatest pleasure in life after winning was losing. What hours, what nights, what health did he waste over the devil's books! I was going to say what peace of mind, but he took his losses very philosophically. After an awful night's play he was found on a sofa tranquilly reading an eclogue of Virgil. From Thackeray's "The Four Georges." - NO REASON FOR DOUBT. A Statement of Facts Backed by a Strong Guarantee. We guarantee c implete relief to all sufferers from constipation, or, in every case where we full, we supply the medicine free. Rexall Orderlies are a gentle, ef fective, dependable, and safe bowel regulator, strengthener, and tonic. They aim to reestablish nature's functions in a quiet, c-aty way. They do not cause inconvenience, griping, or nausea. They are so pleasant to take and work so easily that they may be taken by any one at any time. They thoroughly tone up the whole system to healthy activity. Rexall Orderlies are unsurpassable and ideal for the use of children, old f.riks, and delicate persons. We can not too highly recommend them to all sefferers from any form of con stipation and its attendant evils. Three sizes, 10c, 25c, and 50e. Re member, you can obtain Rexall Rem edies in this community only at our store The Rexall Store. The E. T. Whitehead Co. THE COTTON CHOP OF 1912. Shall The Farmer Profit or Lose by its Production? To the Producers of Cotton in North Carolina: The present crop exceeds the re quirements of the commerce of the world, consequently the price means a loss to the farmer. To increase the price to remunerative figure there must be a reduction in amount p-oduced. There have been for the past six months many meetings and much resoluting on this subject. The time for action is at hand. To ef fect the price of cotton now on hand some reliable opinion must be given the men interested as to the proba ble amount of tho crop that will be produced this year. To this end, as relates to North Carolina, the Com missioner of Agriculture represent ing the farmers' department of the State government, the president of the North Carolina branch of the Farmers Educational and Co-operative Union of America, and the president of the North Carolina Farmers State AO'iance, issue this address inviting the farmers inter ested in the cotton crop to assemble at the court house in their respective counties at 12 o'clock neon on Satur day, February 17, 1912, and take action by enrolling the nanies of those who will agree to a reduction on their premises.. The p!an of the Farmers' Union is thought most feasible, namely: "That I promise to plant at least one acre in some food crop for each acre that I plant in cotton this year." B!arks will b? furnished by the Farmers Union and in counties where the Union is not organized upon application to the secretary, Mr. E. C. Faires, Aberdeen, N. C. Those present can arrange for a canvass of the county by apaointing persons or committees to cover I he territory. Every business and prc fessional man is interested in the price of cotton and contributions; to defray the expenses should be s'i- . The carriers on the free delivery routes can be used to great advant age in this work and would do it ;very economically. "The paper when i signed should be forwarded to the secretary of the Union or the Com missioner of Agriculture. The purchase of unnecessary coir. mercial fertilizing materia!, in amount or kind, which could er should be produced on the premises is a rroat drain on the farm and is as much a los as the purchase of food or other supplies which can be made at home. This subject should be given careful attention; it h poor policy to spend for unnecessary goods what has been saved upon a self-supporting farm so far as ic lates to rations. Let the farmer rroJuee at least his nitrogen by leguminous crops and the elements in barnyard manure, and many thousands of dollars that now go out will remain with him. The North Carolina farmer has surpassed his brother in almost eve ry line of farming in which the situ ation is such that he can compete. Out there is no place to rest, each year makes its peculiar demands. Lot us meet those of 1912 a they arise and with thanks to a beneficent Providence for the blessings of the past and a prayer for strength to meet the obligations oE the future with stout hearts and steady hands. Respectfully, A. W. Graham, Commissioner of Agriculture. II. Q. Alexander, Pres. N. C. Farmers Union. J. M. Mitchell, Pres. N. C. Far. Stale Alliance. Raleigh, N. C, January 25, 1912. CROUP ENDS LIFE. Many Children Die of Croup Eveiy Year Before a Doctor Can Be Summoned. Parents of children she.;.' 1 he pre pared at all times for a f-p-ism of croup. . Keep in the house a remedy that will give instant relief and keep the child from choking until the arrival of the physician. Get a 50 cent bottle of I1YOMEI to day and in case of an attack of croup pour 20 drops into a kitchen bowl of boiling water. Hold the child's head over the bowl so that it can breath the soothing, penetrating vapor that arises. In the meantime send for a physician. This treatment has saved the lives of many children and and is a pre caution that all parents should promptly lake. HYOMEI is sold bv E. T. Wnite- har Pnmaflnv and druersrists everv- ; where and is guaranteed for croup, 1 catarrh, asthma and bronchitis. -SAKDE3 Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder medc f rom Royal C rape C ream of Ta ?tav NO ALUM, NO LIME PHOSPHATE T.'cj Lifc-Prc-rcr-. er. ' A i.ew life pi t sfi-v t r, v. i;ic-li lias Inm successfully rni. may be unreduced into the Germs; ! navy, which t;e ' Atr.ei ki-n consul i j t; nru;:swle!t "flic ! epparatus. wlhh v.-i-ij-hs pounds.! cousi&ts cl two saunii.g c-ushioua bound legit her !.v snips The etirh- :o;;s lie :pv, i: : L : ; ; .1 ;u,d hack. The j appur.uus is- r.;3v:dtd with a email j U.n-11 f't: hy a l:;:i ry Italics. HsJics v.no lily; i,.-.i-J aiout A L) 1500 f y Man ;ti.:-. a Venetian printer, who d-.ii-ii.viej i;lt.;i to the Kailaii state:. Hcrt e Ui;.- ran e. I'hf lirst Loo!; t ? i i:p ;ii l;t, ;l.- un edition Ot VerRi! .'iin!ei! :;t Vo;ke ly Aldus in IZ'il A icrj.y wi ifcia rare Loot; 3 prcsei ved in i::...-h imiM-ut.i. Ccnf-jling Wcrld. That tilts is ii cuiiidii.t; woild t.-t sti;i I'lcved tj- t;e Ki'e ol ti,:ir roster- i atives !. v i.a'.ii iiv'i;dvd I-. i a. auJ ibo ' pt-dd!::.u t! l;.:.- en -iUov to l!u.' Hic-ir Ly . -1 i ; i ; 1 i v!iii( i woiMn i:t a day A LAZY LIVER SPOILS DAY'S ! WORK. j Don't let a Torpid Liver Knock You : Out of a Day's Work There is a Better Way Read About It. A man feels very little like work ing snl a child don't want to go to school when Hilious er constipated. If you try calomel to cure you the chanc?s are that you will be so weak ened by its after-effects that you will be laid up for two or three daj s more. So we say "Don't take calo mel." We have a perfect substitute for calomel right here in our store, that we can lutty guarantee to cure constipation r.n I liven up the liver just as quickly -as calomel, but with out any of the bad af ter-c-fl'ects of calomel. The name of this tonic L; Dodson's Liver-Tone. It is a pleas ant tasting vegetable tonic that mildly stimulates the liver t;rd causes it to work just right to c!an:e the body without any danger af sali vation. When you try it if you do not say that it is a perfect substi tute for calomel, come right in and get your money back. E. T. White head Cinpany's diug store. Sure To De Fcund. .'ct::i::s fcc-ci-.is so i,o: e'c. ly lost, I when it is !:-:. ;.: a heaii; .vct, nothing. v.J;eit it i:; lut. is by the ! experience of the centuries to abso- lately tertain of r-overy. Puck. I A.'moil Lest l!is Ltftr. i S. A. Stid. of Meson, Mich., will never ferget his tenible e.posure to a mere-less storm, "It gave hp- a dreadful cold," he writer, "flu-.t caused severe pains in my chest, to it was hard for me to breathe. A: neighbor gave ir,e several doses of Dr. King's New Di?coveiy Ahich! brought great relief. The doctor said Iwas on the verge af pneumo-! nia, but to continue with the Dis-; covery. I did s;o - and two hot ties j completely cured me." Use only j this quick, safe reliable medicine for j coughs, cold, or anv throat or lung! trouble. Price oUc p.nd SI. 00. Tri d bottle free. Guaranteed by E. T. Whitehead Co. ! EH mm Down on the rainless throng thousands of pelicans. These birds live on fish and their excrement is the richest guano in the world. It is Nature's own. plant-focd, made in her factory without acids and high-proof chemicals and contains plant-feeds that man hss never been able to imitate. And now we are balancing Peruvian Guano to suit varied soils and crcps with high-grade Ammoniates and Potash. We have joined Nature's skill in making to the skill of scientific main;. The 3,000 tons of Mixtures which we sold last year brought an avalanche of testimonials an insistent demand for more. Viite us now for our ''''' --1 m$ Til Htf.cj'.i Uitrr-Viclet. Prof. .1. ' ; ;.-I;i, in a l.ticr to Nature London i. describes lis :' servn liens t! il.e rjrctnt ,f ntnllpi i reflected by r?;jw.k!Js in S.vitzcrlaii.'. lie tin.' tl::M il.e ultra-violet lays a: rt.'lcctn! by sniv: almost In the ir f a t;r..:y This, t.iei helps to explain tli" trjiag :iVt. t of eik n lifi: t t:ppi 1 j - eye. ;:!:-! n.s i.--'. liie ;:dit-:sb;iiiy -- wcari::;.', d:;ii.i;; :vU:l of t suas:h:r.t. iriacs mv ! :.e:' t the u!t I tys. P.ariicri Su;;-,r::irii. A tit-w ; i'i 1.. i in .n ; is. i - u nil Ar.utic.iii t ;. i ! ie; (I - i:- id v. i:j, tie ors u in! U di;-?.--. !;ii! v.:.;u o:;r i,.tiiii;l right e! way ie.i!!y ikvi! is to i . lined v. tiij iv.rii-. bed Wlvt riv i v.osild it. da :!.! ( i in :.;:! (i-i a put. y whe n trains ol:M -v lie Von'l Limp Now. help till 1 used Huckl-.-n.; Arnica Salve." he writes, "but this vndt r ful healer soon fined me." Hea!: old, '.unnin' sue.-', ulcer.--, boi!.--, burns, cuts. Lru sis. i- zonin oi pi!o. Try it. Only 2- Ct ii;s at E. T. hite head Co. D.c'ti't C.irc ff.r Iciip. V.u.,;. i;-:!.t:-v: : in ui.'e loi.lei !.i i et; eii ;.i:.i I l.i i - ,n t- a nuti.ber el tiTetliod.i lor dpos-ln;; of soup. lu;l IM st ril es .i th i-r-t jet r.-c-c :. J bldtncd a Cood Worker. "I bhiimd my heart, for severe dis tress in my left side' for two years," writes W.Evans, Dunvilh, Va ."but I knv.v row it wai indigestion, ps Dr. Kind's New Life Pi!!.-! complete- liver M'.d kidney troubles, m-islopa-tion. In'adjiche or dibiiitv. 2oi. at E. T. Whitehead Co. A Crr.ct Truth. J-'liits i.iav bo t. il ll.Cigs. tint ijiiufct;. in which the rjaid'e boiisekceper tol.'s upstairs with a baby cm ouc ana and a bucket of coal on the other ar worse No bdiKaihc or Kidney Prins. If you have pa'ris in the back, urinary, bladder or kidney trouble, dizziness and lack of energy, try Mother Gray's Aromati '-l'af, the pleasant herb remedy. As a system regulator it has no -qua!. At drug gists, or by mail, .r0c. A;k to-day. Sample free. Addros, Tne Mother Gray Company, Le R-y, M. Y. O'.ic-.x Cc:t;al f.-k-.p The oMcsl n-;:p cl' tl.. hs avoti.j. c?i tainint; 1.1C. titats, way Made ia Ctbi tn i.'0 I!. ('.. and i. in the National library fit Paris .'Lotting Sounds in the eniiiiare wmetines heard be for a teni!i!e cartbtpuake, that war.) il' the (i.m'ng peril. Nature's warning :t are kind. That dull pain or a he in th I n -k warns you the kidneys t "d Ml- rtion if you would escape tl.o.-i? dar gerous maladie.-. Dropsy, Diabetes or Bright's disease. Take E'ectric Bitters at once and .-ee backache fly r.n I 11 your I test feel ings leturn. "My son received great benefit fro:n their use for kid ney and bladder tumble." writes Peter B.'iidy, South Rock wood, Mich., "It is certainly h great k;d ney meileoiiv." Trv it. o0 cnts at'E. T. Wl.ite!iead Co. coast of Peru and adjacent islands, booklet and full information. pmuviAn GUANO CORP. jCHARLESTON S.C mm
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 1, 1912, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75