Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Aug. 6, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER TOD Will ADVERTISE too Business. -.. O B. B.HIL.L.IARD, Editor and Proprietor. EXCELSIOR" 18 OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICB fi.oc. SCOTLAND NECK, N. CU THTJBSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1903. NO. 31 SMU. OUR AOVKariSKMSKT Il Now H VI Great Propelling Power. VOL. XIX. New Series Vol. 6. (6-1 8) -ADVEBTISING BUSINESS V1IAT STEAM IS TO Machinery, o COMMONW - - - - ' . if, V 1 HE s HarSplitsA " I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for thirty years. It is elegant for a hair dressing and for keeping the bair from splitting at the ends." J. A. Gruenenfelder, Grantfork, III. Hair-splitting splits friendships. If the hair splitting is done on your own head, it loses friends for you, for every hair of your head is a friend. Ayer's Hair Vigor in advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting has begun, it will stop it. SIM e .-.i:-e. JnnMa. If your drusgirt ennnot supply 50a, fend us one ir sul re will express mi 1 Wkttlo tt tnrn rrivna n.m of your nearest exin-oss f-iifce. Address, T t ivcp'rn t 11 Xo Yoti Enjoy What Yoti Eat? You can eat whatever and whenever jon like if you take Kodol. By the use of this remedy disordered digestion and diseased stomachs are so completely restored to health, and the full performance of their unctions naturally, that such foods as would ie one into a double-bow-knot are eaten without even a "rumbling" and with a posi tive pleasure and enjoyment. And what is more these foods are assimilated and transformed into the kind of nutriment that Is aroropriated by the blood and tissues. Kodol is the only digestant or combination of digsstants that will digest all classes of food. In addition to this fact, it contains, in assimilative form, the greatest known tonio and reconstructive properties. Kodol cures indigestion, dyspepsia and afl disorders arising therefrom. Xodol Digests What Yon Et f Makes the Stomach Sweet. mottles only. Rejubr size. $ 1 .00. holdlne 2M tiatm I the trial size, which sails for SO cents. Prepared by E. O. DsWtTT OO.. Oh lea, U. E. T. WHITEHEAD & CO. PAkfttstk'ts HAIR BALSAM Promote a InxaiiaUii Kever Tails to Hectare Gwy! Qnm c!p diseases hair fadling. nair 10 ilbi duuuui uohbt. ALL HEADACHE n TT "O TP T PROMPTLY and no bad S U X -111 XJ effects by CAPUDIIJE At ail Urus Stores (Liquid) PROFESSIONAL. A. C. LIVERMON, Dentist. Or FicE-Over New Whithead Building Dl'ice hours from 9 to 1 o'clock : 2 to o 'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. G R. J. P. WIMBERLKx, OFFICE BRICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. A.DUNN, .1 TT ORNE T-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services are ouired R. H. SMITH. BTUABl a. entiii JJM1TH & SMITH, A TTORNEYS-A T-LA IF. Staten Bid'g. over Tyler & Outterbridge Scotland JSecK, JM. u. E DWARD L. TRAVIb, Attorney and Counselor at Law HALIFAX, N. C. Money Loaned on Farm Land. CIAUDE KITCHIS. A. P. KITCHIN. KITCHIN & KITCHIN, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Practice wherever services are req aired Office : Futrell Building. Scotland Neck, N. C. ESTABLISHED IN 1865 CMS' M WALSH lm Mi tad Mte WORKS, Sycamore St., Petersburg, Va. Monuments, Tombs, Cemetery Curb ing, &c. All work strictly first class and at Lowest 'Prices. I ALSO FURNISH IRON .a FENCING, VASES, &C Ocsierna sent tn anv address free In writing for them pis. "co fihe.age of de ci;?l aui limit as to price. . t ? ' I Prepay t Freischtc all Work a pDITOr'S JBISURB jioUIS, OBSERVATIONS OF That was an ugly item which was sent oat from New Berne a few days ago telling bow some of the State Guard returning from camp at More- Soldiers Ought to Behave badly that dier boys panned him at a fearful pace and the little boy in -the race tell and received serlocs injury. It was bad manners and should have been condemned by those who were in authority over the soldier boys. tttt It has been given out through the papers recently that Harnett county has had only six sheriffs since" the county was established, and that all of them were Su Sheriffs in HalfCentury Lillington rectly .Harnett county was established about;1855,and that would give each of the six sheriffs an average of eight years apiece. This is a "good record both for the people of the county and for the sheriffs who have served it. ' XX XX . A correspondent from Washington to the Charlotte Observer gave an interview with Senator Overman who talked thus on the race issue : "The No Baco Issue. and they are well contented wilh their present conditions. As for the much discussed race issue, it only exists with those who desire to create it. That question will adjust itself if let alone. That is all we in the South desire." XX XX The following unique news Item was sent out from Washington, N. C, a few days ago, but we would "admonish the colored brethren that such bless ings come Cometh Not lay Prayer. dav long and dium sized crowd of negroes, led by an elder, has been in the county court house praying and singing and passing a petition to Congress to pass the Hanna bill Introduced in the last Congress for the purpose of pensioning the ex-slaves. They have been loud in their lamentations and are led by an elder who is duping them." tut Recently there has been some discuaiaon oncerniog the number of candidates for the gospel ministry as compared with the number of such candidates i o former times. Rev. R. C. Holland, Candidates far the pajjtor of gt Mark,s Lutheran ohurch, of Char- ICnlstry. lotte, states there is a decline in the number of candidates for the ministry. It is observed that the same state of affairs applies to all denominations. The Richmond Times-Dispatch says : "We telieve that the reason for this decline is to be found in the fact that the churches are not taking as good care as they should of their old preachers. Some time ago, in'conversation with a distinguished clergyman and by the way he was a Presbyterian clergyman we were astonished to hear him say that he had laid up nothing for his old age, although for many years he had been getting a fairly good salary, as preachers' salaries go. But the demands upon a warm-hearted preacher are so great that it is very hard for him to save anything out of his scant salary, and if the preacher does try to saye he is apt to get the reputation of being penurious, and so Im pair his usefulness. Nor can he engage in any outside business by which to make money. He must give his whole time and attention to his work, il his work is to be properly done, and when he has worn himself out in the eervice he and his family should be properly cared for by the church which be served." tut Two weeks ago The 'Commonwealth asked three of our scientific ex changes why so few women stammer and why so few women are bald headed. The question was directed especially to Whj Women Do Not the 6reetmlle Reflector, the Charlotte Observer Stammer. and the Norfolk Landmark. Only one of these seientists has answered, the Greenville Reflector, and here is what It says : "Liie is too short and the price of provisions too high to allow us to consid er the subjects at length and in a striotly scientific manner, but if a little mid-summer philosophy of a very light nature will soothe the truth-seeking soul of our Scotland Neck contemporary, we are not the scribe to with hold the same. While we have known one woman stammerer, we will admit that they are infrequently encountered. This we attribute to the fact that women think witfi their hearts while men think with their W - bTains. The heart being automatic, requires no process ol ratiocination, while the brain must be worked by hand, figuratively speaking. The fact that women are seldom bald may be accounted for thusly: They take a great deal more care with their hair than men, spending more time upon it that upon any other personal possession, or accomplishment, if you will. As about three-fourths ot a woman's life is passed indoors, they do not wear hats long enough at a time to hair It Is well known that the masculine custom of wearing hats con stantly is responsible for many smooth and shiny pates." After answering so closely ana scientifically our inquiry, the Reflector tries . .ut -ith us bv asking the following question : "And now will The Commonwealth get a good grip on its mental gymnastics and solve the fol lowlne? When a man stands on his head, the blood immediately rushes that point. When he stands on his feet .. . kt. uA Now, don't say k owuo - - Now, doesn't our friend, the Reflector, know that the centre of grayity is in the biggest lumpT And so the blood must stay in the proper end from the watst belt. But we do not proi-ose to be catechiHsd, for we have not -et uo as a scientist like the papers to which we referred the questions ol stammering and baldheads. To Carc;o PASSING EVENTS. head frightened a little negro at New Berne so he broke bis leg In flight. The sol present at the great celebration in two weeks ago. If we remember cor races in our State are in perfect harmony. The negroes in North Carolina do not care to vote not by prayer. The item says : "All extending into the night a me prevent fresh air from affecting their why doesn't the blood rush to his feet? im hnllnw and him feet are not." iTitePVT- rv lilNiv was u . I Irv . ,ft - BBL TheTast Cure. Selected. " The fast cure is one of the new ideas that will become fixed in the minds, ol Lthe people. In fact, U is today very firmly believed in by many who have adopted a more simple regimen of food and, In some cases where the outlay of effort is slight during a day, have form ed the habit of omitting one meal, either the breakfast or the luncheon, from the usual three. ' A great many of the ailments that humanity suffers from proceed direct ly from the stomach, wble as many more proceed indirectly therefrom. Apoplexy, heart failure and in many cases sadden deaths, can be traced di rectly to the stomach, overtaxed and weak, yet pushed on to the task for which it is unequal. The result is in evitable. A restricted diet is always an aid to ward recovery, and fasting, together with the hot water treatment, that is, cups of hot water drunk during the day as a tonic, will produce remarkably quick cures in some stomach troubles. Doctors prescribe milk diets and other 1 diets not so much tor the virtues of the ' diet itself as to avoid the harmful ef fects of the foods it excludes. To keep a person on a milk diet for a week or two means that the stomach gets a complete rest. x As to the fasts one generally hears of, such as fasts of several weeks that have been known to produce good re sults, they are a matter to be regulat ed by the Individual constitution and could not be recommended generally. But there is one rule that would hurt no one, and that is a general restriction in eating, especially in the . item ol meat. That is why the abstinence of Lent is so beneficial.. Dyspepsia especially yields to fasting and light meals rather than dieting. Indigestion is only a symptom ot some thing awry with the internal machin ery, and one of the most common-sense cures is to give the machinery a rest and let the body right itself. But the dyspeptics are continually dosing themselves with drugs or trying to'find something they can eat with safety. Everything disagrees with the overburdened digestion, but they never stop for a day or two days to allow the wheels to rest. Many cases of dyspepsia have been cured by adylslng fasting for awhile and then gradually regulating the diet This, with freeh air and exercise, dee breathing, which is especially' helpf u ! in this disease, and hot water, takei internally, baths and massage, will surely bring about improved conditions even in cases of long standing. Where the Work Is to Be Done. There is a good deal of preaching nowadays about irreverence of young people and their impatience with relig ious life. The people who have chil dren are more to blame for this than anybody else. II they would look af ter the training and education of their own people instead of adopting machine methods of kindergarten and Sundaj - school Instruction in piety, probably there would be a very marked change in public sentiment toward the things- that used to be regarded as sacred. Charleston News and Courier. There were neyer words more fitly spoken. Irreverence is becoming tbe bane c.f Misam Tifa Parttnfa ora tint rAVArAnn uiuuciu mui a au wuaa aiv uw w v ed. The aged man or woman does not get tbe meed of respect due. The home la not reverenced, the church is not held as reverently as of olden times, But there is a cause for all this, and if imvrovement comes the cause most be removed. Parents and others who ahTMild mould and shape child life arc resnonsible for this state of affairs ThRv d.-t not eive enoueh personal et- tention to the care ana training oi . .i I their children. ... . The kindergarten is a gooa mmg in It. nl.M la thfl RunriHV-achool. . - posed to do nor are capable of doing tbe most imoorunt wo tnas lanes piace m inaiviauaa . That work mast db aone in anu . . . vr. A. the world can do it as it should be done, OV IOD uulce. uiuci ivins Do not trust to others to do the work that should be done by the home the nealect of which work means a blight throughout life. Kmston Free Press. PUT3 AN END TO IT ALL. A erevious wail of times comes as a result of unbearable pain from over taxed organs. Dizziness, Backache, Liver complaint and Constipation. Bnt thai ks to Dr. King's New Life Pills tbov nnt an end to it all Tbey are eentle but thorough. Try them Onlv 2."u. Guaranteed by E. T i Whitehead & Co.'s drug store. ca every FBZCIOUS STONES GET SICE. When the Turquoise Fades the Jew el Doctor is Called in. New York Mail and Express. Jewels, like lovely woman who wears them, may be "indwposed." Accord ing to A. J. Linde, a New York expert in precious stones, the sickness ot gems is no uncommon thing "Diamonds," said he, "are free from maladies because of their great hard ness, but other gems, such vs ruble?, sapphires and pearls, all . have tbeii ailments. Now, here is a sick tur quoise which I am trying to cure. You can see it is set in a ring with two other stones. Just note the dull, faded color compared to the healthy tur quoise, and you will see the difference at once. 'The effect is due to atmosphere and surrounding conditions. As man is affected by the weather, so was this ti j J. . . . it is composed were softened by the el- ements ; a change in its color took place, and the stone is what we call 'sick.' Whether It can be cured re mains to be seen. "We usually put 6uch a stone through an acid course to harden it. Sometimes it regains its original color and health, but if it has long been affected a cure may be impossible. "Pearls usually suffer more than other precious stones. Through the ravages of times and other causes they lose the beautiful reflections which constitute all their value. Often, too, they become more or less yellowish. In both cases we jewelers usually call them 'dead' pearls. In thl? condition they are not worth much and a hundred and one means have been resorted to in order to restore their luntro. In some cases the operation succeeds ; in others it is a failure. "There are many 'pearl doctors,' and ail have some secret recipe which they claim will restore the lustre ; but they are only auacks- Their remedies are very mysterious, and I have seen one which contains as many as eighty-three ingredients. One recipe I have heard of is dew taken frpm.tbe leaves ofjeerT tin plants. My experience has prov ed that, alter all, an acid liquor is the best. When you take into consideration the constitution of the pearl and how readily it is dissolved by on acid liquor, you can quickly see that a stone sub merged in this liquor will be attacked, and as a result its exterior layer will disappear. If the pearl is only a iriflo yellow and dim, the remoyal of the innmont larer will leave ex nosed the normal layers and the stone will recov er its lustre. II, however, all the lay era are dimmed and opaque to the cen tre. nothing can restore the pearl's health. Care of the Eyes. Selected. Don't work looeer than two hours without closing the eyes and retting them for five minutes. Don't use tbe even when they are tired Qr weak lrom ittneea: Don't sleep opposite a window, or wHai-a st rone lieht will strike the eyes on awakening. Don't expose the eyes to a strong ; light at any time, such as sunshine or gas or lamp light. Don't have colored shades on tbe , tt. ,hiA or arnnnrl laai. If I . . j i.i tt I lauiii-it wow o 9 m riav tie vsi a swa inn iai hiimiin an ta a i villi an aa nil iia v u am wavww be green. Don't read In a leclining attitude, or in bed. Don't use the eyes before baeakfast. Don't sit facing a strong light. If possible, let tbe light fall on work or book from over the left shoulder. oasionally with salt water. a weaa glutton is best. Don't bathe eves that are inflamed - - - i - i ,. . L .. j t when bathing,. especially Id salt water, Dont fau to wash , the eyes every Uieht before retiring, so as to remove . . . " t.. nn n onv nnn mil mir uo vu j the lids during the day. Don't allow a cold, raw wina to strike tbe eyes. Don't Took too steadily from a car flying past you. v Don't wear a veil with blacic aois, mm - . a or one woven with double threads. Don't try to get a cinder out of the eye by rubbing. Dip a tiny camel hair brush in oil and draw gently across tbe eyeball. Don't rub tbe eyes by outward mo- tion, but toward the nose, wnicn rounds the ball and preserves its nor mal shape, Oon'i fail to consult an oculist if jioa i ioo "y'fMnmhM7. window at objects that are eonstautly g on eartb and Jwm pre- Oi.d that jour eyesight is growing din , npeded to cleanse the stomach . r ftfrsiu-te to wpar glasses if ,yon need ward off tne approaching attack, t em. Kodol Dyrpcprla rr 1 xsx yea What a Barrel of Whiskey Contains. A barrel) of headaches, heartaches, of woes, A barrel of ctines, a barrel of Mows ; A barrel of sorrow from lovirg, weary life, A barrel of care, a barrel of strife. A barrel ol nil uuuvailing regrets, A barrel of caresj n barrel of debts ; A barrel of hungf f ;f po!fon, of pain, A barrel of hopes a I blasted and, vain A b-irr il of poyarU, nil i and blight, A barrel of tear (hut run In the nlLt ; A barrel of crime, a barrel of gronof, A lrrel of rrph ins' most piti'u! moins A barrel of serpents that lji as they pic, That glow from ibe 1 qur !n the head or the nlatf ; A barrel ot falsetto 4-, a barrel of cries That falls from the muic' lips as be ditw A Threshold (fretting. Youths' Companion. An Italian em n.igrant steamer, every available foot of its deck space crowded with sea-worn passengers, steamed Into r ' . New York hnrtor, and making its way to a North River dock. Just In midstream a doublc'-deckei lerry boa', laden with commuters from New Jer sey euburbs of the big me'topolis, slow ed up t) allow the steamer to cro-s its bows. Fora moment or two thecommulers, most of them New' York business men on the way to tbeir office,. stared with cool indifference t this ship load of pessant foreigner, many of them fresh from the daverv of Simian sulphur mines, 'others from the worn-out, tax ridden fields of Calabria. In mute wonder.mucb mh miht uo many round eyed oxen.lbe immigrants gzed at the prosperous looking inhabitants of the new laud to which they had come. Then a young man on the upper deck cf the ferry boat, prompted per haps by nothing better than a spirit of fun. waved a newspaper. That was enough. Those two thousand vojage wearied peasants, who bad cut nil lies of home and country, who bad braved all the terrors of a trip across tbe big ocean to try their for times in a strange land and among a strange i eople they understood. The careless wave ingonhai newspaper meant tr them a friendly welcome from tha'kinfolk of their adoption ; it meant a Iriendly greeting from tbe land of the free. kwA hr th AiA mnmnii! In an aaSMm aw vmv w vwj--"- - Instant the crowded decks blazed witn .i. wma oiivo with tnrtion. A vo.. i...oi tiAtir hikti if Mt-fth a fa IUUUDHUU g,cj -u tv. w - MW were in tbe air, a thousand battered hats were wavine. u;k on oioa lifrmi the ior. lAJgjUf OiUlll MUSS VIVWI aww v i r.3 shouts from the crowded decks, There were smil. and jeats and laugh- me. The New World bad recognized them, had greeted them in a friendly manner. Hurrah ! All was well now. Across the narrow striD ol water sep- ira'ine tbe two boats leaped tbe entbn- iam. It unread amonir the commuters, i u : j; ir-- . n ihvwI ni. VUIU iuuiuvivuw ta ' ft"- - i . ..I tared interest. Brokers, merchants, i..nirnr Kinrka vniinir women stenoE- raphers all caught the spirit of the - - ... . . . moment. Silk hats, derbies ana wnne lawyers nave ior mui.DJ handkerchiefs were waved in answer to latures, town councils, county commiK the salute cf the poor immigrant.. B- sioners ; they have sought to unduly tween the two sets of pastengers, o. course was still a wide social gulf, but for the moment humanity bridged it W and lair. It the lmmierants went on to meet .. . i.i i l . iriii.lnaMul wth the whole number of IDS TeuvlODl iwriuuk island with cheered hearts, so several f,nnArrf v Vnrkera took un the wor i umi - - I . . a i j :!- aUa waiift u wiamai nT mm nnai navsoi iihv wars lib liid whku iii vr a cav vuua uvww --mm consciousness of having participated n a kindly act. EAT ALL YOU WAN 1. -n. - . uia iK inUrtinn n; dyspepsia can eat all they want if tbey r HlflUUB UUU1CU wawu aaw--.w will take Kodoi lyspepsia uum. xuir nmMlff nrcnuni tOS Stomacn ior luei Igimilation ot ail me wnoiesomw iwm that may be eaten, and enables me ai- gestlve organs to transform the same into the kind ol blood that gives health and strength. Sold by E. r. White- head & Co. At the erem tu rv is that burn from whence no traveler ever returns. THE DEATH rhSAlili. A little thing sometimes results death. Thus a mere scratcn, insignm- cant cuts or puny boils bave paid tbe deatn penauy. a. ' . I .. t. t. h.ra Kn.ir Teut fatality, when Burns, oores, ui . a ar im a cars and rues tnreawn. .yu.j G. i. wniieneaa ot oj. a mug - . a J ml. arv ' awnwaa Every thief would like to Keep him self unspotted. Mrs. Mollie Allen, of South Fork, v aha has prevented attacks of cholera morbus by taking Chamber- lain's Stomach and Hver xanieta wnen BhA felt an attack coming on. Such w naiifillv caliaed bv indiaTest- you I . , . hM T-hUia are iust what and At- t.cks ol bilious colic mav be praventea in' the fame" way. For s!e by E. T. Whitehead A Co , SooUrnd Neck, and Leggett'ri drug storat Ilobgood. CONGRESSMAN LIVINGSTON Says Pe-ru-na Is a Splendid Ca tarrhal Tonic COLONKk L. 1. LIVINGSTON. Colonel In 1. Livingston, Member of the Industrial Commission and the lead Ing Democratic member of the Com (hittee on Appropriations In the House it Representatives, whose home is at Atlanta, Qk, writest take pleasure la Joining with Oenerml Wheeler, Congressman Brewer and others In recommending Peruna as an excellent tonic and a catarrh cure. "Col. L. I. Livingston. Catarrh Cured. All phases of catarrh, acute or chronic, are promptly and permanently cured. It is through Its operation upon the ncr reus system that Peruna has attained uch a world-wide reputation as a sure and reliable remedy for all phases of catarrh wherever located. Mr. Jas. O. Morln, 1179 Ontario street Montreal, Canada, writes: . 4 Peruna is certainly a great catarrh remedy. It cured me of catarrh of th head and I gladly indorse it. Canadians are peculiarly afllicted with this discos and for years the doctors have tried td overcome it with elixirs, powders and pills, but Peruna has solved the question and since the medicine has been estab lished here hundreds of people havs been cured of catarrh.! Jas. O. Morin. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory result from the use of Peruna, write at once to I)r. Hartman, giving I full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad vice free. Address Dr. Hartman, President ol She Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus. O. Lawyers and Editors. New and Observer. Suppose tbe l'quor dealers sbonld meet and decide to py mine editor to I give them the use of hi columns for presenting tbeir opposition to closing up she shops where drunkards are I mads, and snnnoss an editor were lO r - a g agree lor a specinc sum w nuvuow their cause and conduct their cam- Uo vn . Thfi editor would be on the . r-n same footing as the lawyer who would accept money to manage their cam n.lcn. Wheiein lies the difference, it there Is any 7 woooay wouia respei.. an editor who would thus eell his col- umns. Is the lawyer who for pay runs tv If campaign any batter man mo os.- itor who would sell his columns? This Is a question that deeply cou- cerns the legal proslon and Mia whole community. The profession ol I lar im an hnnorab.a One. Jt nas ai I W.. .1 - ..... . . f at.- I .M . ways naa me respeci m cause it has deserved it. Latterly lor the truth ought to be told too many I . I f l..l.l.1Al 1 Attl-U control jurymen or pack juries, nave accepted pay ior promon'iu r...w. . personal booms ; and have ior money conducted campaign .wr psloons in prohibition or dispensary ngnts. t. om- tho i ii.- legel profession, these have been ew in number. Some of them have, witic I f . . I aiif rsntut inn. hGOCl6 CUT M V O 11119 a uu a w w - unprofessional conduct. The result has been that their course nas injnrea the leiral profession. It does not stand I tn nnnnlar anproval as it I aaagma wz Uld in 1890. let me sav. Jt is wrong I v - th4t lhe majority of the profession Bhoud 8uHer for tbe sine of tie minor . ... . . ji m wist ed to do so penecny wnen mcu h.; c gross and notorious unprofessional conduct are not detarred or eveu called to account. POTENT PILL PLEASURE. Th nllls that are potent in their action and pleasnut in effect are De- .... .. Tt... PI.... W H Phil. not of Albany. Ga.t says : "During a in hiWona attack I took one. Small as it WM t did me more goou tnan caiomci, blue-mass or any other pills I ever iw - - - - I . i . I ha ..ma unw ia ail. fartid pleasantly. Little Early are certainly an ideal pill." Sold - py g. x. Whltaneaa & to. - . . wh , . w . Tha world is but a ring I i nuiiu mmw avww w - - man cut their eye-teeth. SUICIDE PREVENTED. The startling announcement that a preventative of auicide had been dls ZnvmrmA will intereet many. A run down system, or despondency invaria- tiy preceue buiciw m - been found to prevent that condition which makes suicide likely. At tba fi at though ot sell destruction take Electric Bitters. It being a great tonic and nervine will strengthen tba name and build np the system. It's a great Stomach, Liver and Kidney regulator. Only 50c. Satisfaction guaranteed by v. T. Whitehead A Co., druggist. la 3: npira our Work rith tfcat o our Ccrrrrl -T r "
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 6, 1903, edition 1
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