Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / May 5, 1898, edition 1 / Page 1
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I- J , 1 ' ' ADVERTISING " ' - tIS TO BUSINESS WHAT STEAM IS TO Machinery, That Great Prop elusg Power. THAT CLASS OF READERS THAT YOU Wish your Advertisement TO REACH is the class "who read this paper. -ALL WOMEN. Mine-tenths of all the pain andsicknessfrom which women suffer is caused fcy weakness or derangement in the organs of menstruation. ! Nearly always when a woman is not well these organs are affected. But when they are strong and healthy a woman is very seldom sick. The Commonwealth. ' ; E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor IF YOU ARE HUSTLER YOU Witt ADVERTISE YOUR Business. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $1.00. VOL. XIV. New Series Vol. 2. SCOTLAND NECK, N. G., THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1898. NO. 1Q j. Send Youb Advertisement is Now. TEE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOUES. Points and Paragraphs of Things Present, Past and Future. CAROLINA Mrs. Catharine Dillon, of Bristol, Fa., is said to be 113 years old and still has vitality enough to enjoy life. She walks a mile every Sunday to attend church. -Bristol is not a large place but has perhaps 100 persons who are SO years old or more. RALEIGH'S FIRST COLONY. An Enterprising Failure Attempt ed Settlement on Roanoke Island. Studies ia North Carolina History, by W. C. Al ien, ! iv niiiingcon Messenger. from some member of the party. As soon as the fact was discovered, a de mand was made for its return. The guilty party acknowledged 7 the theft and promised to return the stolen prop erty, but the promise was not- immedi ately complied with, the simple savage being delighted-with the cup and de siring to possess it longer. - Not having the patience to wait up on the savages, the party made an at tack upon the town, carried it by as sault, the Indians fleeinsr in pvpit-v After the publication of the report of dlrectioi, flnd WnR(i .-. t(1 f ho Amadas and Barlowe in September, Nofc satisfied with that wanton destruc- 1DS4, Kaleigh had no dimculty in se- t they destroyed the fipld' of Arrow- in the New World. At his first -us 'r. insrton trvinsr to set rendv to raisP. a ,n i L . . "er uumg away - c- - uan la-sitj iiuujuers vomnieeieu. ana n r n " ' irora mem Col. R. C. Marshall, of Portsmouth, Va., has visited Richmond and Wash- regiment of colored troop from the found himself reduced to the necessity one week. mm mm i Is nature's provision for the regu lation of the menstrual fu tion. It cures all " female troubles."1 It is equally effective for the girl in her teens, the young wife with do mestic and maternal cares, and the woman approaching the period known as the " Change of Life." may all need it. They are all benefitted by it. Eastern Shore of Virginia and North Carolina. He thinks he can easily ! raise the regiment, as many colored men desire to enlist. He proposes to call the regiment "Marshall's Black Battering Ram." The current number of the Mann- js factnrer's Record patriotically prints on ig us ouisiae me ionowing mome to our This precipitate conduct of the ad venturers was cruel and thoughtless. It would have been more profitable to them to have giyen up the cup without a word, rather than to have incurred the enmity of the natives. As it turn of For advice In cases requiring special directionr:. address, giving- symptoms, tne it ,.es' Advisory Department." ihe Cn.ctanooga Medicine Co.. Chatta nooga, Tenn. THOS. J. COOPER, Tupelo, Miss., sayst 'My sister suffered from very Irregu'ar and painful menstruation and itnMnra could not relieve her. Wine of Cardul entirely cured her and also heloed m mouier tnrough the Chanaa of Lite " PROFESSIONAL. JR. A. C. LIVERMON, land and country : COLUMBIA. Oh, Columbia, the gem of the ocean, The home of the brave and the free, The shrine of each patriot's devotion, A world offers homage to thee ! Thy mandate makes heroes assemble, of rejecting many and choosing only such as he wished for the enterprise. As a consequence, by the early spring, Raleigh touud himself prepared to send out a colony of 103 men under immaim m or xvcnara ureenviue ed out, this was but the heainnine wiiu aipn ine as governor ot tne nI w,u between the two people that oc proposea settlement, Greenville was casionally produced serious trouble. Pnmmflllrfflr rF tha Dvnaitmn ni l, in ! -r. ... .... r'"'" "'" it was ouiv a lew davs alter the re. su-ucuons to see tne settlement estab- trn nt tht. narrv w. ti,a Bt. wahaA f"-J -V ..." .v,v VJ.as..V- nsued ana then to return to England anchor at Wocokon and came to Hat r , s -r . . I ior supplies, leaving i,ane n control. teras. There. Graneanimeo. brother to Accordingly, on the Vlh of April, (he kin2 came aboard with Manteo. 1585, the fleet of seven sails set out wno ha(i been sent, several days before from Plymouth for Carolina bearing the to inform the king of the arrival of the colony ot lVb sou's, besides the crews of Englishmen. This friendly Indian me vehheis. ui me seven Doats usea chlef came to assure the adventurers in this expedition, only two were over Qf the friendship of the natives and to xuu ions Duraen, ana tne others were invite them to Roanoke island, the little better than modern pilot boats. I rntr nf Wmnina'. Hnmininn rrh When liberty's form stands in view ; A dozen such vessels could be put into invitation was accepted, and all repair- Thy banners make tyranny tremble, When borne by the red, white and blue. begin the settle- JL2 OFFiCE-Over the Staton Euilding. Dihce hours from 9 to 1 o clock 2 to 1 o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. the hold of a modern ocean steamship ea to the island to and not exhaust the space. It was man t a'ir.h Cllri lirhata oa thaoa that tha s n i I . . . . . , iiJC Tter seeing tne worK on tne "new English colony to America came. fort" besrun, and the colonists - estab Governor Lane wrote an account ol ished on Roanoke. Sir Richard Groan Dillirasu iUSi "S8n tu iue nis voyage wiin a narrative oi nis stay ville sailed back to England, leaving farmers of the State to plant full lood in North Caroliua, which is printed in the colony under the management of crops this year, and then raise all the ttakluyt a history of early American Eaph Lane i v- 1 1 1 r i i it ii im iii it w 'ii'i'i wiiir i u in i i t r . rrtton thev mav. It reasons fhna - v " uuvemor l,!uib was a man oi cmer- . , I . ... the names of the 108 men, who consti- prjse and skill. He had been chosen X Ullr 11 LUC nai OUUUIU UUUtlUUO Ulltll I .,4J t- . . I tuted the company. Among these is bv Sir Walter Raleigh a man Rn. ll-A- i- U J .-C I . - . . I CT auuiucr fiupis gmucrcu, iwu siuus that ot Thomas Harlot, who is known will be in great demand, but cotton to the world as the inventor of the sys- will not. If farmers have to pay high tem ot notation in Algebra, as well as being a philosopher of no little reputa tion. He afterwards wrote a descrip tive treatise of Carolina, giving a de tailed account of the country as to its prices for something tr eat next fall and winter and have cheap cotton to sell to get the money to pay the high prices, they need not blame any one resources, naming the kinds of timber. A. DUNN, but themselves, says the Post, for they have teen warnea in time. Ana so they have. ATT ORXE Y-A T-L A TT. Scotland Neck, N. C. rraetices wherever his services Miiired. are W. H. Day. David Bell. DAY & BELL, A TTORNE YS AT LA W, ENEIELD, N. C. Practice in all the Courts of Hali fax and adjoining counties and in the Qt military affairs, supreme and Federal Courts. ' Claims collected in all parts of the State. A review in a Pans paper gives out a rather strange declaration concerning the leaders in the war between the States. General Cluseret is the man interviewed. He won his grade of General fighting for the North against the South. He says that there was poor generalship on both sides in the war ; that Grant was densely ignorant and that "Stone- n?.. V. J. WARD, 1 Surgeon Dentist, EXFIELD, N. C. Office nrer Harrison's Druf Store. gDWARD L. TRAVIS, Attorney ami Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. EZF'iljupy Loaned on Farm Lands. fjOWARD ALSTON, Attorney-at-Law, LITTLETON, N. C. IT FURGERSON. ATTOUXEY-at-LAW, 9 9ly HALIFAX, N. C. P tt'L V. -MATTHEWS, A TTORNE Y-A T-L A W. 3FColiecfion of Claims a specialty. ENFIELD, N. C. l!-C. A. whitehead; U "rrAM--S'.S"-f-.$ DENTAL Surgeon, Taebobo, N. C. RING PARK HOTEL J- L. SHAW, Proprietor. LlXTLETON, N. C. Gond n .-. - . ' 1tt ""-wuiuiuuauoiu near duiwb C?ealpg Springs 'at $1.50 per day, play Bates f LQ0r , ? -A-. , wall" Jackson was the only officer on either side that had any real knowledge of tactics. But he says the quality of the soldiers on both sides made up for the defects in the leaders. The Smith field Herald recently told how the Lord spake twice concerning some Mormon elders. It says two Mormons approached a certain man's house in Johnson county with the in tention of spending the night there. One of them addressed the , gentleman of the house in this manner : "Sir, the Lord told us to come here and you would allow us to spend the night." "That may be true," replied the far mer, "but I have seen the Lord since and he requested me to tell you to move on." There have been various comments upon the verdict of a jury m Goldsbo- ro recently which acquitted Gilbert Ward, charged with murder. The ev idence against the prisoner was direct and the defense relied on the plea of "alcoholic insanity." This was a slen der plea and there are many men in the country who would never have listened to it with a moment's consideration. But suppose itwas a righteous plea, what Is to be said of the man's crim inality in wilfully bringing on such a Btateof mind? And how ought the man feel who sold him or gave him the liquor? BTJCKLEITS ARNICA SALVE. The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, ftdt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter, Chap Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions,-- positively cures PUes, or no rv reouired.. It is guaranteed io gi perfect aatisfaction or money rmnae. rZtt m per box. For sale oyj minerals, grasses, animals, and all kinds of vegetable productions. In the list other names, such as Gardner, Vaughan, Rogers, Harvey, Taylor, Robins, Philips, Kelley, Lind sey, Harris, Norris, White, Barnes, Ma son, Skinner, Blount, Evans, Williams, Walters, and others common in North Carolina todaj7, are found. Among those mentioned as "principal gentle men" of the party, whatever that may mean, are Thomas Candish, John Arundale, M. Raymond and M. Stuke- ley. The last named "gentleman" af terwards had an infamous share in the trial and conviction of Sir Walter Ral- eign upon charges wholly false and malicious. Candish became a free booter alter leaving Roanoke, and the other "principal gentlemen" are not in the best repute, according to the inner history of the times. Philip Amadas, who with Arthur Barlowe had visited Roanoke the year before and bore now the title of "Ad miral of the Country," was also in the company. ist, out not least, Manteo and Wanchese, the "lusty braves," who went to England with the Englishmen the year before, were also in the party. It was this company that set out from England in April, and after cruis ing for a while among the West Indies struck the coast of North Carolina and cast anchor at Wocokon on the 26th of June. This island, then called Woco kon, now Ocracoke, was directly in their path to Roanoke Island. They baited here tor nearly a month, imme diately sending word to Wmgina, the king of these parts, of their arrival. While waiting there to receive the reply of the king, a party of explorers consisting of Sir Richard Greenville, Ralph Lane, Thomas Hariot, Philip Amadas, John White, and others, pass ed over Pamlico Sound to the main land and explored the present counties of Hyde, Beaufort, Carteret and Cra ven. On this trip they discovered three Indian towns ; namely, Pomeiok, Agu- ascogoc and Secotan, together with a lake, which they called Paquipe. These towns, according to an old map of the country made bv Theodore de Bry. are situated in Hyde and Beaufort coun ties. The lake was no other than the one now known as Mattamuskeet in Hyde county. This exploring expedition occupied seven days, ana, is remarkable as being the occasion of tne kindling of hostili ties between the English . settlers and the Indians. One of the savages at the town oi Aqaascogoc stole a silver cup Children like it it saves their lives. We mean One Mmute Cough Care, the iitfaiiihlA remedy for coughs, colds, eroup, bronchitis, srippe, and all throat and lung " troubles., a. . n uiwubbu cialty fitted for his office, and notwith standing the fact that some American historians have slurred at him as being incompetent to fill the position which fie held, still the truth remains that his ability was recognized in England ; for he was a member of the council of war at the.4ime of the invasion of the Spanish Armada, several years after he left Roanoke. He showed lack of dis cretion, perhaps, in dealing with the Indians ; but he certainly was alive to the welfare of the enterprise, and strove to find out ail that be could about the country around. Not many weeks passed after a fort had been built and a settlement formed before Lane commenced exploring the country to the north, south and west of Roanoke. With a party of explorers he went toward the south from Roan- ' oke island, as he tells us himself, "four- scor3 miles," passing throughout the length" of Pamlico sound and up Neuse river as far as the present site of New Berne. On this trip the adventurers explored portions of the present coun ties of Pamlico, Carteret Craven and Jones. "To the northward," Lane says, "our furthest discovery was to the Chesi peans, distance from Roanoke about 130 miles ; the passage to it was very shal low and most dangerous, by reason of the breadth ot the sound, and the little succor that, upon flaw, was there to be had." This country of the Chesipeans was near the present site of JNcrtolk, Va., so that we infer that Lane tra versed the whole northeastern pari of North Carolina and came to the banks of the Elizabeth river in Virginia. "To the northwest, the farthest place of our discovery was to Chowanook. distant from Roanoke about 130 miles." This place, as the name implies, was on the Chowan river, about the point where the Nottaway and Meherrin riv ers unite. It will be seen then that Lane passed by the present counties of Chowan, Bertie, Hertford and Gates, thus viewing one of the finest sections in the state. On this journey he found out from Menatonon, the chief of that country, the existence of the Chesapeake bay, though he did not visit it. He became thoroughly convinced that somewhere on the banks of that bay the colony would be more prosperous than on Roanoke island, and resolved to remove thither, as soon as possible. In his narrative, Lane says- he was satisfied that a better site could be found far ther north. . BeIo e he could put his plan of re moval into execut ion, an event happen ed which changed his whole purpose. This was the conspiracy of Pemisa pan for the destruction ot the colony. The feelings of this chief had under- A little boy asked for a bottle of "get up in the morning as fast as you can," the druggist "recognized a household name for "DeWitt's Little Early Risers," and gave him a bottle of those famous little pills for constipation, sisk head ache, liver, and stomach troubles." E. T. Whitehead Co. ' , gone a complete change toward the col onists. He had never been so friend ly, however, toward the whites as had been his brother, Granganimeo, and his father Ensiore. Granganimeo had died August and Ensinore in March, and thus the two strong friends of the English were removed. Wingina, upon the death of his orother, changed his name to Pemisopan, and became a deadly enemy of the settlers. His father, however, restrained him and held down his animosities to some ex tent. But when the aged chief had died there was no one to offer restraint Manteo staid with the English as one of them, while Wanchese, the other In dian who had gone England with Ama das and Barlowe, was with Pemisopan, against the whites. He was one of the chief conspirators and helped to set the trap in which he expected Lane would be caught. 1'emisapan was artful and laid his plan well. Pretending undying friend ship for the English, he volunteered to give Governor Lane some information concerning the country along the Roanoke river, representing that riyer as rising in a vast rock near a great sea to the west, so near indeed that the briny waves of the sea sometimes beat over into the headwaters of the river. Along the river, near its source, were a people, rich in miilerals and other things, and that gold could be gotten almost for the asking. Unfortunately the governor believed this tale of the artful savage, and set out upon another voyage of discovery up the Moratoa river, as the Roanoke was called by the natives. Meanwhile Pemisapan sent word to the Chaonists and Mongoaks, Indian tribes on the Roanoke, that Governor Lane was com ing against them with hostile intent; iind stirred them up against him. It was, therelore, with delight that Pe misapan and Wanchese saw the Eng lish go deliberately into the trap set for them, expecting them to fail easy victims into the hands of these power ful savages. - It was another case, however, of the intended victim turning the tables up- n the plotter. Lane sailed up the riv er about 130 miles, vanquished the savages in an attack upon him, and re turned in safety. He was gone a week. His journey took him along the bor ders of the counties ot Washington, Bertie, Martin, Halifax and Northamp ton. As he approached the Indians fled farther up the river, believing that he came to bring war upon them. After proceeding up the river four dajrs, and having reached the locality near the present town of Weldon, they first saw the savages. About night on that dav they heard Indians on the shore calling to them. Manteo, who along, answered them, and Mney began to sing a song. Manteo, understand ing their meaning to be hostile, in formed Governor Lane of their designs in time to escape a shower of arrows that were shot among them without in jury. Immediately lane dispatched a bod' of men that he calls "the light horsemen" ashore to charge the enemy. They reached the shore, charged up the hill, and put the Indians to flight, chasing them some distance into the forest. Then they returned to the boats. By this time their provisions had given out entirely, and they hid to re turn to camp, reaching there only af ter enduring the severest hunger, hav ing feasted one day upon boiled dog and sassafras leaves. Their return was a great surprise to Pemisapan and Wanchese, who had industriously cir culated the report that the English had been completely destroyed by-the Indians of the upper Roanoke. They even began, during the absence of Lane, t ridicule the Christian religion which the settlers bad tried to estab lish among the Indians, saying to their followers that the God of the English men was no god, because he had allow ed them to be destroyed In the forest. Pemisapan was not completely dis concerted by the return of Lane, how ever. He concocted another plan which came nearer succeeding. On the pretense of celebrating the funeral ser vices of his father he appointed the 10th of June as a day for the assem bling of all the neighboring tribes on Roanoke island, telling them secretly what his real object was, wnich was to destroy the settlers. Pemisapan had confided the secret to Skyco, an Indian prisoner in the governor's hands. Skyco immediately told Lane about it, and the governor made preparations to offset the treacherous say age. Toward the last of May the tribes began to assemble on the island. Pe misapan had taken up his residence on the mainland, but was to come to the island early in June. m When the Eng lish saw the savages assembling, they began to think of means for their pro tection. Therefore, on the last night in May they resolved to seize all the boats of the savages on the island. In the effort to do so a conflict took place, in which six Indians lost their lives and the rest were driven to the woods Next morning Governor Lane, with about thirty men, went in search of Pemisapan. Having found him, the governor began to converse with him, until a favorable time came when he gave the signal of attack. The Indians were taken by surprise and fled at the first fire, but they were hunted down and many of them killed. -Pemisapan himself was shot by an Irish lad in the woods, his head cut off and brought to the English camp. Thie ended the troubles with the Indiana for that time. The fate ot Wanchese is unknown, but he may have fallen in this fatal affair. iew u;ijs auei mat bit rrancis Drake, with a fleet of English vessels, arrived on the coast, and as provisions had entirely failed, the colony and the native were hostile. Go venor Lane applied to him for passage to England, which was granted. Accordingly, on the 19th oi June, the colony of 104 (four having been lost) returned to England, after remaining in North Carolina one year lacking five days. Thus the first colony ended in a failure, b'lt carried No. 083. Made In 64, 48, 42, 36 Inch widths. $2.25 buys this Brass-trimmed White Enameled Bedstead. Ia otock in all widtUs : length, 75 inches. It has one inch pillars, two-inch brass vases and caps. This bed retails at from 6 to 6 aoiiars. Buy of the maker and save the mid dleman's large profits. Our Catalogues are mailed for tlie asking. Complete lines of Furniture, Carpets, Draperies, Crockery, Pictures, Mirrors, htoves. Refrigerators, Baby Carriages, Lamps, Bedding, etc., are contained in these books. Our Lithographed Carpet Cata logue showing all goods in hand-painted colors isalso free ; if Carpet Samples are wanted mail us 8c. in stamps. Drop a postal at once to the money-savers and remember that we pi freight this month on purcbnwi of tternets. Lace CurtMino. Pnr. tier and Run amountlnir to $9.00 and over7 Julius nines & Son BALTiniORE, BID. Please mention this Paper. If Bum Should Die. NETTIE A. PARHAM. should die, betore If rum dawn And we should wake to no more. back to England a fair knowledge of How many dreadful things would cease another find it was the country. Is Leo Our M;sec? to be, And blessings come which been betore, If rum should die ! have not (ihicago Inter Ocean. This popular enthusiasm was not due to anything written or spoken by Gen eral Lee. He has made no speeches and his correspondence bas not been made public. Nor bas he shown the lightest disposition to promote a poll, cy of any kind. He has kept himself within the lines of his consular duties, and that alike under Cleveland and Mc Kinley. Bat ne has met every emer gency with unfaltering courage, never hesitating to go forward, never im patient. Not once in all his consular Service did he run up the re i flag of defiance or the white flag of peace at any price. There is nothing the American peo. pie so much admire as pluck. It was the true grit of Andrew Jackson that made him the popular hero of the day. Whether confronting the British army at New Orleans or demanding the sur render of the Spanish fort at Pensecola, he had the grit of a true American The people believe that Fitzhugb Lee is every inch an American, with all the How many gloomy faces then would smile, The drunkard's wife would cease to mourn and sigh, The drunkard's children, playing in the street, Would not at papa's coming hide and cry, If rum should die ! his mouey for to lead a dif- The man who spends the drink, . Would nov commence ferent life, With no saloon to tempt him by the way, He'd carry home his earninps to his wif, If rum should die. times through- Id soon de- woild There would be better out our land, Murder and misery crease, Almshouses and prisons, too, would empty stand, Instead of drunken riots would be peace, If rum should die. Our land would be delivered from its foe, Would be delivered Irora its greatest shame, high courage and absolute fidelity A truly Christian nation to become Thirty-five years make a nation. That is how long Adolph Fisher, ot Zanesville, O , suffered from piles. He was cured bv using three boxes of De WittWitcb Hazel Salve. E.T. White bead & Co. which are the material out of which heroes are made. At whatever port he had landed, his journey to the national capital would have been strewn with the flowers and palms oi popular acclaim. No American could evoke a more cor dial and general welcome. If, for in stance, even Stewart L. Woodford, Uni ted States Minister in Madrid, should land at San Fraucisco .tomorrow and traverse the continent it would be doubt ful if he would be greeted by a baker's dozen where Fitzhugh Lee is welcomed by thousands. The demonstrations in Lee's honor have been in every way popular and spontaneous, and not partisan : yet they suggest a partisan possibility. The Democracy has been looking for a Mo- Ses to lead it in 1900. May not Lee be the man? In deed and truth as well name, If rum should die. as m the Ye?, all these many blessings would result, If rum should die : but, friends, it never will, Unless the citizens of this, our land, Unite their energies this foe to kill, And make rum to die. It ought to die, we know it very well, But still the voters calmly let it stay ; Oh, let them from the lethargy awake And at the ballot-box united say, Rum, you roust die. Peculiar Man. Foundations of Fortunes. Selected. Cyrus Field began life as a clerk in a New England store. Pulitzer once acted as stoker on a Mississippi steamboat. "Lucky" Baldwin worked on his fa. ther's farm in Indiana. Dave Sinton sold sugar over an Ohio counter for ?1.00 a week. Moses Taylor clerked in Water street, New York, $2.00 a week. George W. Chi Ids was an errand boy for a bookseller at $1.00 a month. Jay Gould canvassed Delaware Coun ty, Now York, selling maps at $1 50 apiece. C. P. Huntington sold butter and eggs for what he could get a pound and dozen. Andrew Carnegie did his first work in a Pittsburg telegraph office at $3.00 a week. Whitelaw Reid did work as corres pondent ot a Cincinnati newspaper rfor $5.00 a week. Adam Forepaugh was a butcher in Philadelphia when he decided to go in to the show business. Senator Brown made his first money by plowing his neighbor's fields with a pair of calves. Selected. Daniel Root, of Cleveland county, is a very eccentric old gentleman, but witbal a clever man. He has peculiarities and some of them make interesting reading. He s an old man, about SO years, and has owned a white horse all his life not the same hors3, but always a white one. He is now living in the house in which he was born, and the fire in the fire, place has becki burning for 25 yeaas. No matches or kerosene oil have been used in this house. Mr. .Root is hale and hearty and a thrifty farmer. He has always raised his supplies and nev er did buy bacon, corn wheat, etc., and all of the clothing worn by the family is homespun. Hard times don't effect him in the least be don't buy and sel dom sells anything. He is independ ent of his surroundings, and neither the oil trusts, stock gamblings or even the railroads disturb his peaceful slum, bers. State op Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County. h. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm ot kF. J. Chexey & Co., doing business in the City of loleto, county and btato foresaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case of Ca tarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarra Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Gth day ol Dec ember, A. D. 1886. SEAL ( A. W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Care is taken intern ally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send Thousands of sufferers from grippe have been restored to health by One Minute Cough Cure. It quickly cuies coughs, colds, bronchitis, pneumonia, '; for testimonials, free, grippe, asthma, and all throat and king F. J. CHENEY CO., Toledo, O. - ' yaoia oy .vnigRU-, ioc. ; v . diseasea. E, I. Whitehead & Co.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 5, 1898, edition 1
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