Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Nov. 23, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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e ADVERTISING ' . .-T I i I. t f t IS TO BUSINESS -WHAT STEAM IS TO- Macliinery, T.T fJKEAT PKOI-KIXINC l'OWER. o - I THTR Demo cr AT. IF YCU ARE A HUSTLER AlT.r.Tl-K Business. E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. niliriHij-tnoilt idiOllt. Write up a V().n- i.usiness and insert it in THE DEMOCRAT, .,,1 you'll "see a change in business all VOL. IX. A COPPER PRODUCER. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER. 23. 1893. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $l oo NO. 52. id. NORTH CAROLINA THIS AS WELL AS A GOLD FIELD. 0 PROFESSIONAL. j w. o. Mcdowell Also a Silver-Bearing Region, Not to Mention Iron-Ores, Nickel, Mica, etc. Mining Suggestions. Olhce North corner ew Hotel, Main Street, Scotland Neck, X. C. rT Always sit his office when r,. .ill v- onca trod elsewhere. i .rniessi"i. o-'o (. D (Corrsspondence Richmond Dispatch.') Salisbury, N. C, November 7. Followi n 2 nr the sui'f chain of thought expressed in m .-uer to you 9 2C lof the 9th ulto, and published in the Dispatch of the 15th ulto, on the gold fields of North Carolina, it would prob ably be well to state some of the rea- O t'lice North comer New Hotel, Main Lon8 why the large value of this field ($247,500,000,000) is unprofitable, and how it can be made available. But rtyAlways found at his office when let me go further than I did before. The above figures only had reference to the gold values. Assuming that the same reasonings that obtained and were adduced by the mining engineer who reported on the Witwatersraiid field of Africa to be admissible here, as regards not only gold but other min- this State is R. FKANK WHITEHEAD. Street, Scotland Neck, N. C. Take the largest and deepest mine in bluctone, and the other sulphide g :ld not professionally engaged elsewhere. 7 C lv LIVERMON, nn. a. c. Offick Over J. D. Kay's More Otiiee hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to erals, I contend that ; o'clock, p. m. 2 12 lv SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. D R. J. II. DANIEL, D AVID BELL, Attorney at Law, ENFIELD, N. C. worth as much as a copper-producing field as it is for gold, and that it is worth half as much as a silver-produc ing field, i. e., that the deposits of cop- Dunx, N. C. and 8iiver in this same field, in ad- Makes the disease of cancer a Specialty, dition to the gold, can be made to 9 10 ly yield the relative sums each. This is independent and apart from the num erous immense deposits of Bessemer iron ores, nickel, mica and the 180 other minerals to be found and produc ed in North Carolina, the most impor tant of which will be treated in letters to follow this. I know that I have already laid my self liable to ridicule and disgust, and possibly that lots of it has already been heaoed on me for my first letter by those who do not know, by those who have invested and lost, and by those who are trying to solve the problem of how to mate these mines a source o nrofit. But that does not deter me from stating facts. WHY NOT PRODUCTIVE? The values have been asserted ; then not productive? In the last twenty-five years thousands of peo Practices in all the Courts of Hali fax and adjoining counties and in the Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims collected in all parts of the State. 3 S ly W, A. DUNN, A T TO 11 X E Y-A T-L A IF. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services are required. 2 l.i ly w, H. KITCHIN, Attorney and Cwtmselor at Law, Scotland Neck, N. C. Office: Corner Main ana iev- 1 O lv enth Streets. I. J. Mercer & son., 020 East Main Street., RICHMOND VA. LUMBER COMMISSION MERCHANTS. this (Rowan) county and it is also the deepest in the State as a criterion. Gold Hill. This mine is 850 feet deep and ha a book record of $3,000,000, and it is admitted that it has produced $3,000,000 more not accounted for. Yet four companies have failed on this mine in the last twenty-five years and it is now idle. The ores at first were free milling, and the gold was saved at a profit by simple amalgamation. The veins now are just as large and larger. Ihe average contents in gold are about the same as in former days, but the gold cannot be saved profitably from the undecom posed pyrite ores by amal gamation. Hence the failure. So with hundreds of mines all over the State, or in this tier of ten counties heretofore named as especially so with the mines in this district, such as the Union, Hunnicutt, Trout man, Dutch Creek, Relmer, Dunn's Mount, etal. MANY DIFFERENT PROCESSES. A thousand and one different kinds of processes, one after another, have been tried, but they are all failures ; either because they could not save the gold any better than by amalgamation, or that it cost more to work the ores by the process than the sum the ores yielded, and hence other failures. All the processes, whether chlorination, cyanide, concentration, or amalgama tion, have only attempted to save the gold, losing all the other contents of the ores, some of which were more val uable than the gold itself, the sulphur in the pyrite ores invariably being the cause of the failure. It has been clearly demonstrated that the gold is mechanically, not chemical ly, combined with the pyrites ; yet me chanical separation has failed. One would think then that the wits of gen uises would be at an end to make this a success, when the simplest, surest most effective,! profitable mode has not been tried at all. The gold ores contain gold, copper, silver, and sulphur; the copper ores contain copper, gold, silver and sulphur, and the silver ores contain silver, gold, copper, lead, zinc, and sulphur. Why, then should any of these ores be treat ed for one metal and lose all the others? Yes, and when treated as now, at a ores have their pyrites turned into cop peras, all at a profit. The acid agricul tural fertilizers, for chlorate of lime and generating chlorine. By building a missing link of rail road twenty miles from Norwood to Wadesloro the South Carolina bone phosphate, that is the base of all fertii- VTOBLD'S FAX?.. S-.A .!? .7J ..r "! T Whitoville 'i.ic W rrgrt-t : lo.mi that - sJi.c Jil South' r ,t.".f'i'n'-"f l'r. Pnir :. ()ct..UT M. With tie ! the grand total of il. 117.212 paid admission-, the World's Fair was oi'.ieia!- t;rv t. -o s- V, um ruv. msn ' -': ' T.iK-in t.-us.'i-bip. al--;;t thr' ' on SuiidiH- t.ubt. Wt h ue !!: U- n ... K t I TH T rl, r kk in: AVUh jour AdertiM'niont ;!1Mflh.i ! - Tni' l?v-. r.T. i J i w' BONSTiPftfliifi izers,can i put uon 511 1,1 I ,v-1;lt 1:i?ht. Though these Hill, Salisbury, or convenient works. for. less than a dollar a ton freight, and no point can comicte in the manufac ture of fertilizers. In connection with the works erect cotton-seed oil-mils, right here in the centre of the cot tow belt, and make oil at a profit. The oil cake is a source of ammonia, a plant food, besides being a splendid stock food, or a fertilizer in itself; then steam can be generated for the works by what is left of the oil-cake, and that then turned into potash, another avail able plant food. What else? The tailings horn the ores have all been going to waste. Treat them with the sulphuric acid obtained at a profit from the refractory ores, and soda, lime, potash, phosphorus, c, all available plant food when obtained and rendered soluble by the sulphuric acid. In oth er words, utitize all of the dormant raw- material at a profit. Most of the sulphuric acid that goes into fertilizers is made from Sicilian sulphur that has to pay an important duty. Our cotton is shipped to England and manufactured there. The reduc tion works of Swansea and other places make sulphuric acid, from which chlo rine is generated to bleach our cotton, -o- Gives personal and prompt attention to all consignments of Lumber, Shin gles, Lathsc. 4 17 90 1y -NEW- Jewelry Store Why work it for one of its contents, After six years experience, I feel thor oughly competent to do all work that is expected of a WATCHMAKER and JEYv'ELER. WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. Kepairiii!? & Timing Fine Watches A SPECIALTY. 1 also carry a full line of WYiCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND FANCY GOODS. Spectacles and X Eye Glasses Properly Z Fitted to the Eye. Ills StuM Sowing THE BEST ON EARTH. SEWING MACHINES CLEANED AND REPAIRED. S ATI? FA CTJON OUA RANTEED. ir. jr. joiixstox, Xst door to X. B. Joty. 10 6 6m ilfi have invested in North Carolina. ,... f ,lftl,,ra iv1VP i)OPn loss for the extraction of the onecon-,-inra Amlim-is or dollars nae ucen in mi. ' snpnt. nn them, and in many yes, ' ' . f t1lo invPtmpllt an ore is not worth what it contains, nonv 1- nverv mstnnce tne imesimt.m u'a w tntl failure. No one knows but what one gets out of it J J tVO V . ' this hot tor than I do, for I am one of the same kind. Then, the wonder is and that at a loss, when all can oo i t .. . t ,i t ia ,w. Wnnse ived at a profit? They are complex Wliy x nnie ;ia 1 . ... . ..( f..J nms. but when oroperly treated they of ulterior sinister motives, uui ox liaia - - adduced by experience. One reason of can be made to yield profit . .. . ... AN ILLUSTRATION. loss, is tnat in man' iubui.w -" mines have been wcrked and the mill run by incompetent manager is the case everywhere but more so i,o Twwihlv than anywhere else A, , w,io vein is 14 feet wide and 850 feet deep. Thi reason covers the worthless rela- ,C1U ...i .i (lold. ner ton - the of a rich stockiioiaer, r . , mm t 70c. L75 ,rQf nut of the Avav, as well as nnnM01. no,- ton. 109, : 200 lbs at lu h; v' " ' I v 1 I w x ' ' the scoundrel whope cupidity kept him Itc ----- - - - Snlnhur. ner ton. pvnte o) , f.. -ron.lfviny tliorelore unto uaesai aMinKr 5.0 HOO lbs. Jc o.UU 4viv--. 1? 1 uiui-"" --i; 7 n. ,,1,1,.! o Caesar's." Anoth- uie . t ,; , Total value per ton - . . FnrfOtrn. mOStiV Ij1i"HM1 Take a ton of ore from the "Big Sul- "This Pnur Vein," Bandolph Shaft, Gold Hill Mine, as an illustration, see what we find from its valuable contents. The ,fi5.:o 1 ( n VU.UU er .f -4 1.75 s it Fias been Avorked heretofore for companies, is, tna, - 1 t m m tmg a compeieiu iaa, - i,PP!1 s;ived. and here, to operate the mine, it usually has been the custom to operate it from nf thfi London promoters, per ton. and stock speculators, who usually Mm J. H, LAWRENCE, Dealer in GRAIN, MILL FEED, HAY, CLO YER AND GRASS SEEDS. Improved Farm Implements A SPECIALTY. Agent for Clark's Cutaway Harrow and the Deering Mower, A Model of Perfection. SCOTLAND LECK, N. C. 1 6 ly make the most by "liquidating" the old companies and forming a new one for what there is in the stock jobbery .-..-..1 r,r in the mine. But wnat 01 iliivi 1 the honestly-invested and now defunct company? No intelligent victim but that will admit one of two causes : 1. That the company will not have enough capital to make a success; that the ores were too refractory sul phide ores to save the gold by the com mon amalgamating process that has been almost universally employed in extracting the precious metal. Re member, I am discussing vein mining, not placer mining,. OPERATIONS THAT SUCCEEDED. That all operations when on the brown or oxydized and free-milling ores has been a success is admitted. This was the case and was the source of many a fortune here, and the mines o'.l on their reputation, but what fol lowed? These brown ores, which are found onlv above water level, are soon exhausted; then the trouble begins the other $36.75 lost. To mine and mill this ore has been costing about $5 Hence no profit, and tins caused a failure, and it is why no other mines are at work. Does any one won der, then, why gold mining in North Carolina is a failure? Yet in this Gold- Hill mine alone there are several mil- ions of tons of this ore in reserve above the bottom, left standing in the slopes, because it cannot be worked at a profit What applies to this mine also does to nearly every other one where deep- vein gold mining is done. WHAT IS WANTED. What is wanted here are reduction works similar to those of Swansea Wales, where ores from all over the world are treated, not for one metal but for all that the ore contains gold silver, copper, lead, zinc, antimony, ar senic, sulphur, etc. Then the mines , .1 i ..IOI r. rliv:irlonr1 i r fV)P can oe mauu 10 icm i mvi-i stock-holder, and not until then. By this process the sulphur of the gold ores can be turned into sulphuric acid. So also with the copper ores, and the metals saved as by-products, the copper saved as metallic copper, or made into from pyrite ores obtained from Spain, Africa, South America, and the United States, and they treat the ores for all they contain, get the contents out at a profit, and utilize the most refractory (that which has kept our mines from paying) to manufacture, and sell back to us our own products in the shape of fine bleached cotton. THE ONLY WAY. If Swansea can treat ores from all four corners of the earth (the most re refractory ores, that contain almost ev erything) at a profit, why is it that the same thing cannot be done in a section where practically the same ores are all found in abundance, at no point further than a 100 miles from a suitable place to erect these reduction works? The ores are shown to be in sufficient quan tity to supply not only one but many such works. Thus, and only thus, can these fields ever be made to yield up their precious metals at a profit to the stockholder. It would render this the richest country in the world, because the mines would be profitable ; the cotton factories of the South, instead of making, as now, only coarse goods, could turn out cheaper than England, or anywhere else in the world, the fin est kinds of cotton bleached goods, and. if for nothing else, the difference 111 freights would be a biy dividend. The farmer would be the gainer, as his fer tilizers would cost inm ou per ceni. less, and he would have a home mar- et for his crops ; population would be increased, and all branches of business would be benefitted. The practicability of this course is lain and feasible, because it is made profitable by foreigners who utilize our dormant raw material in a foreign coun try, and we have to pay them tribute for what naturally belongs to us. To do it will take brain, energy, and cap ital, and lots of it. Who will be the first to join hands to do it? J. J. Newman. figures represent the paid admis-bm-during the time alloted by Connres which the Exi-ition should le kept open, yet, it is calculated that at least 100,000 tickets will le purchased be fore the beautiful white city is disman tled and levelled to the ground. When the Fair closed Sunday night the to tal paid admissions up to that time were 21.209,039. When the receipts were counted last night the total was 21.117,212. The total numW'r of ad missions on passes was 2,052.1 SS, mak ing a grand total of 23.529,-100. After the debt of the World's Fair has Iwi paid there will remain at least $1,000, 000 and perhaps more to le distributed among the stockholders. Since its organization to yesterday morning the Exposition has paid out $30,558,819.01, or three times the amount the managers expected to spend when they commenced building the Fair. The gate receipts during the Exposition period proper were little over $10,000,000. To yes terday $3,300,00 had been collected from concessionaires by Mr. Black mar's department, and nearly $700,000 were paid before he took hold. The returns from concessionaires was one of the big surprises of the Fair. Nobody was reckless enough to predict that that sum would be realized. The Paris Exposition got but $800,000from that source, while the Centenial man agers, being lietter traders than the Frenchmen, got $1,200,000. A Life fcr a Billiard Ball. Guaranteed Cure. We authorize our advertised druggist to sell Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, upon this condition. If you are afflicted with a Ceugh. Cold or any Lung Throat or Chest trouble, and will use this remedy a.s may return the boitle and have your money refunded. We could not make this offer did we not know that Dr. King's New Discovery could be relied on. It never disap points Trial bottle free at E. T. White head & Co's Drug Store. Large size 50c. and $1.00. From the Million. The globe of ivory which is knocked about a table in a game of billiards costs, if of good quality, at least '2. This represents its cost m money. There is however a far more important and formidable clement in the price which has been paid for it. The bil liard ball of pure ivory represents, as it lies white and glistening upon the .11, on nvirfM-iditnre of human life- V 1 1 fill n ' - 1 ' blood as well as of money. Elephants' tusks are brought down to the African coast by caravans, generally in charge of Arabs which have been trading in the interior. Very often they have picked up slaves as well as ivory. But this phase of matter may be left out of the account. It is estimated that every large caravan bringing ivory to the coast has lost more than 100 hu man lives through fights and murders in the course of the expedition, thir ty more men are likely to have suc cumbed to fever or other diseases and the fatigues of the march. The hunting of the elephants and the capture of the ivory are very likely to have causal the death of ten men altogether. Such casualty are the rule in elephant hunting rather than the exception. An average tu-k does not furnish more than enough male-1 ; rial for two good billiard balls. Of course the remainder or the ivory in each tusk is made use of in other ways ; a perfect cut billiard ball requires spec ial quality, or so called "nerve," which is found only in one part of the tusk. The chances are that a billiard ball of the first quality has cost at least one human life, and there h not one such ball which may not truly l-e blood. They can hardly be considered, therefore, a cheerful accompaniment to a sensitive person's diversions. tli.nt everything ! A ttal 5"-" W.H s.ixcd. Kington Fft V' It rr;rt ed by a prwngcr n the log tr.u:i or the- J ew road that Me--. Abner r-I.uuh-ter and le Smith, of Sift Crv W town-hip. Pitt county, had a di-pute rtlnast a dividing feno e-trd.i Thev shot at each other with pi-'.oj. and lth were killed. Mr. H.vaichwr merchandi-ed in Kins'.on .ceral e.-ir ago. Durham Sun: Durham had a Gret na Green le allair thi- afternoon. Julius Mitchell, of Wake county, !ocd Minnie Howell, of this place, daughter of H. C. Howell, and the father obit -clod to the match. Hut love latiuh- and traols. The cotij.le elojl thi- after noon about 2 o'clock and will U mar ried this evening, three miles ft--in Apex, by Rev. William Olive. Washington (!;tt: On Friday last Mr. Ransom Gurganu- was run into by a cart driven by a colored boy. One of the thill-struck Mr. Gurganu in the side, inllicting severe injurie-. from which he has not fully ro-ocnd. The carelessness of negro diiver- i proverbial and i-a constant source of danger to the lives and limb- of our people. Step- .-hould le taken to abate the evil. Lexington hiptth: Wo learn with regret of the painful and horrible death of a little three-year-old child of Mr. J. H. Michael, of near Tyro. It was burned to death Saturday even- front of the fire in the evening, when its clothing became ignited, from which it died several hours later. The family and other relative- certainly have our sympathy in their sad and untimely afi'iction. Monroe Kniii r,r: A few night" since a fiendish attempt was maU burn Messrs. Stewart, tin's store at on the steps and on the house ami a quantity of wood wa.s put under the house before the fire was put to it. Strange to say the house' did not bum. The oil on the step- caught on lire but went out U-fore any damage was done. There is no clue a- to who the scoundrel was who attempted to do so foul an act. We hope that the would' be incendiary may be brought to jus tice. Messrs. Stewart and Perry had . !.,.. .,,,,1 l.,rn fir-ed hv the hand of some enemy a jenr or two ago. Clinton Ih mot-mi: Maj. Wm. N. Peden rec-ived a painful injury on last Thusnay afternoon at the home of his son in-law, Mr. R. H. Hubbard, on Fayettevillo street. Maj. Pedcn !iw at Mr. Jl-ibhard's and on returning Isc-iU 4 lb" "Pa'hcr f I i? i ran--1 bv . Torp; 1 1 i.:nl i roru r.ilh . Ampi!;;cd th LOSS Cr APPETITE. SICK HEADICSE. EAD ESEA1H, E'C. To treat tvnstipAtii n e.u-i k i .illy 1-1 vy 7K' 2 It is a nul 1 lav ttic a.d .. t tl (Vyc-liv cr i', . 1 ' . Fira'a I.. v. : I ' tirrmo'.- jc-t. , 1 ' ' . 1 ular .habit of I n-!;ou--!i ' 1 r'd 1 ! d A:, to'.io (o - i : i .: poit . ..... lb . i I . W . l r , 1 - . . v V .1. II. I ll IV .4 to. How in 'l I I U I .-KP. I'M Mmj.lv nj'l atie - Omttncttl.' No infernal u.edi. n.- ms,uim-1. ' tetter. v,'C!l!:t, itch. m'.I enq n-n. on the fa'f. hands, A.-.. Vn:. g th -kin clear, white and be t!.b . ll- g" at he;. ling and curative -u.--, .tie 4hJ , not.the! ieii -d. A-k '-ur dlUggi-t for Sw ;.,- Oll.'ll.el.l. roi: ovr.R i n rv vi: k- As- i i vo Win I i i: " R vt ,v i Mr-. Win-low - -.,.,,,. .. v.i. l-en u-tsj f,,r ove: lift v yea: - h rnil of inothei- ! Iheti hi! Iret. ! while teet!,i:r-'. Willi --i'e. l s,,.-. t It M,,the- the cbild. -oft,..,- th- roil.-. ll..., .,11 ..in,- w i ml colli", all' I 1 .1 : i ji - th !f-t leiued.v p'easant to the l.r''. m every pai r-t ill oaill elite- wind t . , , i . Jo- 1 ' , . i I I 1 1 " ' " - ,! ! b I;!ig- j ib.. Wolld. Twentv lie eentf. ." li i'H' is Ineaiculah . P.e -me .11.' Winslow V Sttoihing nip. no other kind. i valu . f .1 Mr-, and lakf Kngli-h S-ain I. inm" o "c.e .11 H ud Sofl or ( allou-ed l.tlinj- ani .Mil (Memt-he- fioMi Sna in Sim b-, S I .hut el if I'.!. H. lling- , . .1 letl M by worm line-. p " . Tl "...l. 'I,- I'.O" Si'.W' of o;,e bo!,!e W ... : !"' ,,,,,-t won.l.ful P.atn:-m 'ore cer ' t"; known. S..M m. lv I ''i'" - " Perrv, and An.- ' " 1 'Oil 1 ,- Ames. Oil was ioured I 'L- --- . .. no Tin' b-f -abe in lb-- n... Id f' .t "ut-. ,.ruiMM. M.re-, ric.-.-. Salt lib-urn, Feser So;es. Tetter, b. , --l llmd-, -l.ilKl .in Corn-, and all .-..in Frup- Miid iHi-iti .elv C'llf- 1 " 1 .... . . . . 1 . . 1 . 1 1 i;i n 1 1 1 -. - - . 't . .ti-f ., ti,.n . 01 Uionev lefun U-l I'lice 7tl cent- J-"l" bo.. For Sale by F. T. Whi'cbead iV ' o. d. ll H g'iaiant't-1 1" gn' l irr- i n 1 - ' " mini, i m 1 siyvnoMM Moi -tin" ; illlell- i f ' - ing an.l -tinKinu ; nc-t a! ' .'bt :woim, . .. t ..I.;,.-- If a Mowed ' tmii" tutnoi- fronrwhi'-b "f'";' ... 1 mil,.! IIM'V .!f OINIMIM -top- the il. b:n.: I,...!- ul. t i a io;i. in re o'r " ' . , , , 1 ... At u: 'O.VI-- V "T1 lid 111- .V ". 1 I ,.u b'.tl- ' M"- Iiire- the tumop mail for ' t-ut-. Phihidelj.hia. .1 Itch on human an-t I. .-iniiiials cured J. (..r,' S.mitarv I..!!o:,. s,,M bv I. I hi" ne.tO .V , 1 .- b", Tii- 1 1 .1 . ... .. hi - 1 full. home lrom a waiw tmn , , .. ...;,, v(.(.. .(. I ;rm-' i-' .' II 1 '.! ly. .,,, all W'-H.l. 1 .1" T foot tlij.ied on the step- and he wa thrown on hi- side. Hi- right ;trm was broken between the shoulder an ', elbow. Dr. A. M. Jx-e wa.n imm'-liatc-, a ,wt Art.,. if the iniured lv sumjiioin-i mi.' - Maj. Peden is something more than eighty year- old. but a remark ably well pre-erved man for hi- age. 11.. ; . ,1, iu.!l Mt this time and it 1 1 'J is ll'JII.h - - thought he w ill .-on lie entirely rc-.-v ered from his injury. KITS. AH ti?" hv Pr. Klili'-'s (Jreat N re l:--to.er N UU nfter fir-I day'- u-.. Marvt-lon- - me 'I re -tti-t- tnal Iff'if U-' Mt .-end to r. Kin-, M Ar.-h M, Phil.ibdphia, P. I -m:v- m 1 1 nn 1 l eitrai : mm. I have ju-' '.'nel a m' ..A m.I- tt.- p.-itronage of ei if"! an (,i t.r.d )je publie. Nufin to Make ii Wid. A fi-k- t,e ,.u Since its fir-t introduction, Electric i j j;ilt nM.,, Bitters has gained rapidly in I"'I',jlar -Q00f PnrTr. FrGSh Fish Arid 0;'ei - in -4a-":i. For water brash and sour stomach take Simmons Liver Keulator. favor, m.til now it is clearly in the lead among pure medicinal tonic- and alteratives containing nothing which permit it- use a- a leverage or intoxi cant, it is recognized as the lie-t and purest medicine for all ailment- ol 1. 7 iv..r Kidnevs It will cur? , ioiii.iv , j,--" Sick Headache Indige-tion, Constij.a tion, and drive Malaria from the sys- . : . 1 Satisfaction guarantee! wiui ill U; re- I will pay Ligh"-t c..-h ''- f"f NICE FAT STOCK. IK-ctfull v. P.e-. Exchange. A colored cook at Charlestown, ex pecting company of her kind, wa- at w... i,mv to entertain her menu?. Sbe deoWol ,0 exyloin the mnt.er to each l-ule .at ladv rtiid. "You I ,,,!cl. S.I.I by 1.. " HHcm-a ; . L ALLSB100K tern. v." "La misses, her mistress. Tl must make an apology. 9" 7-ied hoe. no butter, liow can I make it?' 'T got no apples, no eggs, no nuffia to make it wid," Fo- b.eal'.h an 1 hapj-iness, in'- l-ton o ..,.,.,i.;..i ii'hp Simmons Liver Ol an m:;. " J Regulator. K 31 :5m LADIES Scotland Neek. N. C. wfls.viousmys GOI.DEH (IftPS'JLES' CoT-tt Market bU, tb.a
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 23, 1893, edition 1
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