Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Oct. 20, 1904, edition 1 / Page 1
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r ADVSETISING IF YOU ARE A HUSTLEF tOV WILL ADVERTISE Business. ED fir BUSINESS - - WHAT STEAM IS TO Machinery, E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE i.oo. t Great Propelling Power VOL. XX. New Scrics-Yol. 7. (7-1 8) SCOTLAND NECK, N. C THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1904. NO 42 SElU. iOVH ADVERTISEMENT X So Commonweal r o you like your thin, rough, tiort hair? Of course vou JJoiTt. Do you like thick, Jieavy, smooth hair? Of bourse you do. Then why Bair Vigor Slot be pleased ? Ayer's Hair tVigor makes beautiful heads f hair, that's the whole story, bold for 60 years. ' I have used Aver's Hair Vlimr fnr im. time. It iS. illrif'ri n irnnriprfnl liii tuni. restoring health to the hair and scalp, and, at r .ne same lime, provinir a splendid dressine ' xjiz. j. n . iitcx, aiaaiii, inn. x. 11.00 a bottle. 1H druggists. Lowell. Mass. i tor n iWeak Hair PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and tnantifiaa th. hais. Promotes a luxuriant arawth. Never Fall to Bestora Gray Cam scalp dimuea & hair falling. J0c,andl.U0at Pniggista PROFESSIONAL. A. C. LIVERMON, Dentist. icE-Over Siew Whithead Building ce hours from 9 to 1 o'clock : 2 to k'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. X. J. P. WIMBERLKi, OFFICE BRICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. A. DUNN, U TTORNE Y-A T-L A IF. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services are mired I WARD L. T&AVIs, Ittoraey and Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. 'Money Loaned, on Farm Lands. Jaws 'ightly Locked From Nervous Spasms. hysicians Could Not Prevent Fits. Dr. Miles' Nervine Cured My Wife. Tr M5W Nervine has been successfully VvH in thnncanrls of eases of nervous disor- fers, but neverjias it made a better record than Vhen used in the treatment of fits or spasms. Ciousands of testimonials prove tnis, ana ra arly every instance the writer has stated hat the fits ceased after the first dose of Ner vine was given. The statement is repeated In the following: I "Seven years ago my wife commenced Baring spasms or fits and I called in my Home physician and he said she was para lyzed, lie rubbed her with salt water and gave her calomel and she eventually got some better, but in a short time she had another attack. She was confined to her bed for three months and the doctor could taot help her. She had fits frequently, some ytimes very severe. Her hands would cramp o we could not open them and she finally Vot so her jaws would become locked. -Finally I saw the doctor was doing her no good and ordered a bottle of Dr. Miles Re storative Nervine. She received so much .benefit from the first bottle that I got some f more. She has taken a number ol bottles (but has never had a fit since taking the first Idose. She also thinks very highlyof Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills and is never without them. If there is any way of mak ing this testimonial stronger do so because fof the good the Dr. Miles Restorative Nerv ine did my wife." Wm. Y. Allen, P. M, tElkville, Miss. I All ilnnmkti s11 and traarantee first bot tle Ir. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book fen Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address H11CS nCUCU Vi raauaiii w Who is Yonr Candidate OOSEVELT OB PARKER? The coming campaign promises to M close, neiiner canuiuam in wiwi" a success. Events may happen which till change the whole aspect of the po litical situation. No newspaper is bet ter equipped to handle the news than (The Washington Post t has a nerfect teleeraohirt service, its pecial correspondents ranK nrsi in me Awanannr nrotession. ana all me news is printed without fear or favor of eith ir nartv. The Post is thoroughly in dependent, and each day will giye the true situation, uneolorea Dy partisan Veal. No oaner is more widely quoted. i3 from the London Times, giying the ews of the Bussian-Japanese war. Sabseriotion for three months, f 1.90 : wo months. S1.25 : one month, 70 mts. Sample copies free. - THE WA3HINGT0N P08T CO., 5 1 s pDITO!'S JEISURE JioUxS.. OBSERVATIONS OF Sunday's Morning Post referred to the present long drought aa follows : "Yesterday was the 25th day since any rain has fallen in Raleigh and vl- The Lo Dron ht oinity' tnsIoeiD8 the longest period of drought " ' Bince the weather bureau was established here in 1887. The longest previous period of dry weather was 22 days, from Feptember 15th to October 6th. The present period of drought dates from September 21st." t x it Perhaps the two beat known candidates for Governor in the States are W. L. Douglas, who is the Democratic candidate for Governor oi Massa chusetts, a-id George W. Peck, who is Democrat- Two Promineut Candiaatesic candldate for Governor in wl8ConB,n. w. Douglas is the $3 shoe man, to whom it is said a letter was directed by simply pasting his picture on the enyolope, and it reached him all right. Candidate Peck is said to be the author of "Peck's Bad Boy," which some years ago waa read with so much avidity by those who are fond of that class of literature. t t t t O. J. Spears was nominated in Fayetteville some days ago on the Re publican ticket for Congress. He made a speech in which be declared his appreciation great enough "Ecstasy of Servility.' Washington. The Charlotte Observer says ol it : "In all the annals of fawning and knee-crooking the performance of Mr. Oscar J. Spears at Fayetteville Wednesday, in accepting the Republican congressional nominatioa in the sixtn district has seldom been surpassed. President Roosevelt cn hardly be expected to prize it as a tribute, since he must know that no self-respecting southern man would use such expressions. Spears, indeed, reached tbe very ecstasy of servility." t t t I . The ruling prices for cotton during tbe past week have not been pleas ing to the farmers. They will not be satisfied with less than ten cents, and ought not to be. It is the opinion of many that Holding Cotton. farmers would ony jast enough cotton at c present prices to meet their needs for the time and would hold tbe balance of their crops, they would pretty surely realize ten cents lor the bulk of it. Of course no one can tell just what the price oi cotton will be a month or two months from now ; but the farmer who can even hold part of his crop would seem wise in doing so. Sulley's estimate of ten million bales wi!J hoy? it? effect, for he has not been missing it very much in his former estimates. t t t t People are more and more coming to regard profanity as rude and inex cusable, and the man who swears is generally regarded as undesirable com To Hear An Old Man Swear. he mentioned a well-known lawyer who frequently renders his conversation unpleasant by reason of his profanity. All will agree that swearing is use less and ugly and that it is to be deplored in any and all who indulge in it. It is bad in any one, but somehow to hear a man whose head is "blos soming for the grave" under the white frost of many years, indulge in pro fanity Is more shocking than in men of younger years. They seem not to haye learned with tha passing years neither the proper respect for other people nor any regard for the Creator, on whose goodness the life of all de pends. Young men ought not to swear, for it begets a habit of which their best friends are ashamed ; strong men should not swear for it shows that tbey learned to give way to the foolish habit at a time of life when they should haye resisted ; old men should not swear.for it shows that they are growing weaker in the matter of morals and manners when they should be growing stronger. The best motto for all should be: "Swear not at all." i I t t No part of this great country is attracting more attention abroad than the South. The following editorial by the Baltimore News some days ago is interesting from two view-points. First, It is The South's laporta9-Intere6ting in that it shows how the South la re garded abroad ; and secondly, it is interesting because of the subject it dis cusses. The News said: "The movement started by the Manufacturers' Record, and endorsed by representative bankers of the South, to inyite the cotton manufacturers of Europe to visit the South for the purposef studying the cultivation of cot ton, and to observe for themselves tbe extent of the increase in production that is possible in this country, should be encouraged bo every person and organization interested in the supremacy of the United States as the world's cotton centre. Already English spinners have expressed a desire to visit the South for the purpose indicated, but hesitate to do no unless assured that the trade will welcome them. The invitation should be extended personally and officially by. Governors, Mayors and business or ganizations, and expressed in such terms aa to leaye no doubt that the South will receive them with open arms. "Such a visit would doubtless prove profitable both to the foreigners and the cotton growers, in view of the agitation that has been started abroad to increase cotton production in foreign countries so as to make Europe inde pendent of the United States for supplies of the raw material. The agita tion has been growing for several years, but it did not assume threatening proportions until last year.when English and German capitalist began ex perimenting on an extensive scale In the production of cotton in Africa. Already this great staple is raised in the DarkContinent,bnt the quantity is too small to give an accurate idea of what could be done upon a large scale. There are millionefof acres of land in the South which could be utilized for cotton. The vast tract is now a waste so far as production of any sort is concerned,but could be made valuable by the expenditure of a com para : tively small amount of money. "Aside from the cotton question, tbe visit of European cotton manufae , .nnld nrobablv be profitable in another way. No section of the- QUnited States is as promising a field for the investment of capital as tbe 'South. It has vast deposits of iron, coal and other mineral, which it is just beginning to develop. The cotton men, wnom n is proposea w invito to visit this country, no doubt would embrace the opportunity to make a thorough study of the field, with a view to sending over from Europe mil lions of dollars of Idle capital to develop the resources ol Dixie. It la an opportunity which the South does not often have, and it l hoped that everything possible will be done to Induce the foreign spinner, to pay us the visit." ? ? Lulu Stanhope, St. Lcnis : "I used to have a horrid complexion. I took Hollister's Rocky Moantaih Tea nd am called the preMieat girlin tbecity. Tea or tablets. 35 cento, r E. T. Wmtte PASSING EVENTS. of a man like Roosevelt who is and good enough to eat with Booker pany while he is swearing. Recently we heard one of the circuit Judges of the State remark upon the foolish and ugly habit of swearing and From indigestion, aches and pains, Yonr system will be free, If youll but take a timely drink Of Rocky Mountain Tea. E. WUtobead 4 Co. - - A Sinner With Tolitoy. Edward A Steiner describes a visit to Tolstoy in tbe August Woman's Home Companion. He says : Countess Tolstoy, as every one knows, does not agrse with her hus band in all hia theories; but, she agrees with tbe world which worships him, and I believe that she is very proud of bim and very devoted, al though ber devotion has been severe- taxed in various ways. She baa copied yards of unreadable manu script while babies of various sizes were pulling at her skirts; she has translated b-H.ks Into three or four anguages, and has transformed all sorts of garments to meet the needs of the cl auging sixteen, her children. For many, many years she has had no new bonnet or gown, and has nevertheless, been cheerful and hap py ; and is it possible that there can be a greater test of a wife's goodness or a woman's greatness? "As I have said, the Countess re ceived me cordially, although I may have been tbe straw which threaten ed to break the camel's back, inas much as i be house already contained a dozen strangers, and it looked as if Mrs. Tolstoy was keeping a boarding house. At nine o'clock dinner was served, and I was led into (he family dining-room, which is a large apart ment where signs of luxury are not wanting. There are ancestral portraits upon the walls ; a piano stands open, and looks well used ; there la a table covered by books and magazines, and then in the center tbe large dining tabln, around which gathers a boat of people of strange faces and forms, with unpronouncable namea, and some with uudiscovered histories. The Countess it at tbe bead of the table. To the left sat tbe Count, and before him a kettle containing his favorite kasha the coarsest kind of peasants food. He helped himself from this freely, nd somewhat carelessly, as a man might who eats kasha three hundred and Mxty-five times in tbe year. I sat next lo the Count. "Two servants waited on the table, he meat as of the Hamburg-steak variety. Ihe Uouat never eats meat ; kisha and two eggs constituted his dinner. It must be oyer twenty years iuce he has eaten meat, and probably longer than that since he has tasted iquor or smoked tobacco. "There was much animated conver sation Jolly laughter and good-natured ijkine, and tbe serious seemed to be banished, for we ate, drank and were merry, and I forgot that 1 was sitting close to a man with whom I had tried to settle the affairs of the universe just a short hour ago." Two Extremes. Yoaths' Companion. One hundred and twenty-five dollars a day is charged for the best suite of rooms in a new hotel in flew xora City, and one of the wealthiest men in the) country declined to occupy the suite recently on the ground that he could not afford it. About the same time the newspapers were telling tbe story of an old woman from a country town in Pennsylvania, who, having un expectedly inherited eight hundred dollars, went to New York, hired a room with bath at twenty dollars a day, and stayed at tbe hotel until she had spent every dollar. 8be took sev eral baths a day to get ber money's worth, and when she was not in tne tub, sat at the window watching the passing throng. The contrast mis leads some commentators into arguing that tbe rich man was a triser and the poor woman a spendthiift; but this is a short-sighted view. To the one the superfluous luxury was not worth the extra coat because be was used to luxury. Tbe other, accustomed to novertv. mav have felt that she was K r paying a low price in exchange for georgeous memory that would gild the remainder of ber days. Sick headache is caused by a disor dered condition of the stomach and la nniftklv cured bv Chamberlain's btom acb and Liver Tablets. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co. Two old farmers met on the road. "Where you been, Sile?" asked the one in yellow boots. "Been shooting the rapids," drawled the other. : "Canoe ing?" "No ; shooting at those pesky racing automooiies ma. run oyer utj chickens." Baltimore Herald. A JUDICIOUS INQUIRY. A well known traveling man who visita tbe drue trade says be has often beard druggists inquire of customers who asked for a cough medicine, wneth er it was wanted for a child or for an adult, and if for a child they almost in variably recommend Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. The reason for this is that they know there is no danger from it and that it always cures.: There la not the least danger in giving it, and for coughs, colds and croup it is unsurpassed. For tfe by E.T, Wblte- CALLOWS HOT FOR HIH. Three Times Sid it Fail to Work in John Lee's Case. NOW AT LAST HS IS FSSE. Washington Post. London, Oct. 1. Dramatic as any thing in fiction, not only as a whole, but in every detail, is the story of John Lee, whom men condemned to die, but who is soon to walk the earth in free dom Providence itself having appar ently intervened in his behalf. Lee is a convicted murderer, to bang Whom three attempts were made at Exeter, all of them, however, proving abortive because on each occasion the drop mysteriously refused to work. That was in 1885, and soon afterward the man's sentence was commuted to imprisonment for life. Now, as tbe result of good conduct, he Is about to be released, and there is abundant ex cuse for recalling and bringing up to date his almost incredible story. A dispute over wages was alleged to haVe precipitated the crime of which he was convicted. As he was but twenty years old when a woman named Eeyse, at Babbacombe, hired him for a man servant; he receiyed rather small pay, and almost from the time he entered her employ he seemed to have been dissatisfied. When his em ployer was muriered, the prosecution submitted that he had taken her by surprise in the night and killed her with a hatchet, and alter mutilating the body and setting fire to the house, raised an alarm of burglars to divert suspicion from himself. SUPREME FAITH IN THE LORD. A al.ilp(nif fa.liiMi r1 tfsi trial waa toe prisoner s ueanug aim ca(urku l . I . l -J confidence in his Maker. The judge remarked on his calm- nam. savin? that it did not show that be was innocent, "j-iease, my iora, reDlied Lee. "tbe reason I am so calm is because I trusted to my Lord, and my Lord knows I .am innocent." The evidence, almost wholly circum stantial though it was, brought a ver- ! diet of murder, first degree, from the jury, and three weeks later tbe ('ay of execution arrived. In the half light of early Febru-uy morning Lee was led out into the yard of Exeter jail. On the way thither from his cell be repeated responses to the burial service read by a chaplain walking beside him, and from the scaffold be declared bis innocence in tbe same calm manner which bad ed at times with death. Tbe unresist made him so remarkable a figure in ing infant spends much more than his trial. Within a minute the execu- halt its time in sleep, and It should be tioner had Lee ra dy, and, stepping back, pulled tbe lever. Tbe drop did not respond. Then while Lee prayed! loudly with no signs of fear, exe jutioh- er and warden tried again and again to spring the drop, but to no purpose. It was said afterward that a pure white dove circled about the jail yaid while this was taking place, settling on the scaffold for a moment just as the men were giving up. underwent MADDENING ordeal. . t imitiMa effort Lee was removed to a shed in the vard and tbe scaffold mechanism faatni. Tt worked nflrfectlv. the hmeed : I part of the platform folding into the It nf thAlCIBB. pi. IHMUW ak WS BilfS'-HW. J". lever. After pounding about beneath . I a .-(nfinv ttiomoAlaaa that everything was iady the wa.ders hu-'aJLa K-.irnnii.Fth. im. .-c creased by an inability to obtain com rope and adjusted tbe noose, but for c"sJ " au " , , ... u ' M nlete repose. Ability to rest Is, wltb some mj.nuu.i.wu "" knJ.l..lMn . b h.., oy .lCu.us , -'lnMMtla-ri one'8 duties so that no saw, examine anu stamp uuui uuu. bv reDeated successful trials tbey as - sured themselves that nothing could interfere with the next attempt. Cry- ing, un, uoa ; neip mo, .a a. J t a Ihm arfeal timA n . 1 99 T over tne nmgu pviuiw " """"land rest is ot nttie rjenen unm mc Another failure, after witnessing wnicn the eovemor of the prison ordered Lee hank to his cell, remarking that the execution would not take place that aay. Me wuiuu us uwo uu uivi -n t t ft. I J . n Lam MAM Liee leu upon nis wow, """us for what be called a miracle. REGARDED IT A MIRACLE. Thraa dava later Lee, writing to a aiator. who had believed in his inno cence lrom the first, said, "I have been f tr. ,hia world three times. I be lieve what has happened was a miracle t had . dream on Sunday night that , . the scaffold was not ready and that -a, J aUaaa .a .TV k .. Ana " tney nao w m a.-t Another wno iaiuiiuwjr bwu j m, from the fiist day of his imprisonment was his sweeineari, u 7 to marry should her lover be put to death. At this writing n is no. eartainly if this girl is still alive. r hn la now forty, will come from confinement in good health, ex- nnnt for the nervous attacks from which be has suffered ever since tbe attemnt to hang him. 'At Portlaid Prison he is known as "the man they could not hang," and is quite a hero among hia fellow convicts. 0CT0B2B. J. C, McNiel, in Charlotte Observer. The thought of old, dear things is in thine eyes, 0 month of memories ! Musing on days thine heart hath sor row of, Old joy,dead hope, dear love. 1 see tl.ee stand where all thy sisters meet To cast down at tby feet The garnered largeness of tbe fruitful year Yet on tby cheek a tear. Tby glory flames in every blade and leaf To blind tbe eyes of grief ; Thy vineyards and thine orchards bend with fruit That sorrow may be mute. A hectic glory lights tby days to sleep Ere the gray dust may creep Sober and sad along tby dusty ways Like a lone nun, who prays. High and faint-heard tby passing mi grant calls; The laey Heard sprawls On .his gray stonei and many alow winds creep About thy hedge, asleep. The sun swings farther toward his love, tbe South, To" kiss her glowing mouth ; Yet, where Death stna's among tby purpling bowers, He hides himself in flowers. Would that thy streams were Lethe, and might flow Where lotus blooms might blow, That all the sweets wherewith tby riches bless Miht hold no bitterness ; Tbat,in thy beauty, we might all forget Dead dajs and vain regret, And through tby realm might fare us forth to roam Having no thought for home ! And yet I feel, beneath thy queen's attire, Woven of blood and fire, . I Ranulh (ha oanroAnn. trlrirv of thv I mmw D J - i chirm Thv mother-heart beats warm : That if, mayhap, a wandering child of I tbee, i i j . i uuaaeriess on toe sea, Should turn him hombWP'd Irom a fruitless quest To sob upon tby breast, Thine arm would fold him tenderly to prove How thine eyes brimmed with love, And tby dear hand, with all a moth- er's care, Would rest upon bis bair. The Necessity of B?st. Youth's Companion. Nature's demands for rest are im- perative. Tbey are often enforced through the infliction of pain, and persistent disregard of them Is punish- encouraged to do so, for sleep is the type of perfect rest, and most essential to growth. In adult life, energy can be made a substitute for rest to a re- markable extent. The hours of sleep may be reduced from the normal eight to four, and the week may be robbed of its Sabbath ; yet not with impunity. such practices beget a predisposition to the contagious and infectious dis- eases, diminish the capability for efficient work, and often Induce disor- nervous system. Tfce pen- "T be ,onS ee,erred bUt"f vb ore severe with de- In all circumstances, rest should ,"jr M commensurate with labor or exer- 9C. Tbe apparent demand for rest varies with tbe temperament and vigor oi the person ; sometimes it is governed largely by habit, and it is ofien in- r , . tannuv. while 1 uiauj - toward acquiring it Is generally the - . , . ,-main . n nt to . th mind. Ltasitude ard jmainan th. other hand, are often ...,.. h rstention of ntomains tr I J " .. . other poisonous matters in me system, I . . . a a a - i.l aft. i leona have been removed. I nanan,. mav ofien be derived from I mrlt,ntrttT nr th. intervals between nf renoae. A sound nap ol 1 - . I . . I. A on a jaw minutes uuranuu m min-dl. of tha day. lor example," beneficial than several hours oi sleep made restless or broken by dr jams as a result of prolonged fatigue. But tbe mind is more quickly resresnea iuu the bodv. and tbe apparent invigora- tion after a snort sieep may pruj i be of almost as short duration. There are many ways, too, oi outain I , , , . nn..i anA nhraieal recuner i tula Uwtta laisjaiiK.. - r J . ,lhou, increasing the hours ol I a O I Bleep ; even without idleness, ojujc . Mrgons ean obtain It best in reading, ben in conversation, and ..tuer, again. In solitude and thOUgni, wun a cQ . ammock or a rocking chair f ,h ke of mU8CUlar relaxatl n. Tr. addition to all ordinary rest evry one ought to take a vacation of several weeks' duration once a year or wwner, at such tio.es ana in ueo will cive the most complete relaxation and abstraction from accustomed wor- d r' Of America Use Pc n; na For AH Catarrhal Diseases. 6 .. -, "-a i ' . - racr MRS. HENRIETTA A. S. MAKSI' Wnmuu's lla'iM'Tuli-nt i'l:t:) it Mrs. ItonriHta A. 8. Marsh, Pn-siili'nr Woman's IloiK-volt-nt Ah.soHhIU'Ii, f 3J1 Jakson Park Tcrran-, Wwxllawu, Chicago, III., says: "I riifTorcd v illi la pHi'iK1 for fi vi-u wooks ami notliing holiwil iik until I tried lVruna. 1 felt nt onw that I hud at last wciin-d tho rilit modii-iiip nnii kopt steadily linprovlnsi. Within tlirro weeks I was fully restored." Henrietta A. S. Marsh. I.a (Irippe is epidemic catarrh. Peru is of national faino as a sure euro for catarrh in all phaerf mid statres. If jiu do not derive, prom,)! and h.ati faetory results from 'he uso of lVrutia, wiiU- 'at onro to Ir. Uni tin.iii, nivinj; a full rt.itement of j oin- ra.! and ho will be pleased to pive you hi.i valuable ad vice prat 1.4. A(Uirss l". llarhsian. President of The IIartnia,ii .'janitarium, Columbus, O. Prolonging the Honeymoon. Exchange. Most love stories come to an end when the honeymoon commences but I think it Is the place where the best love story of life ought to begin. I have no sympathy with the roMon that tbe first m:on of married life 1 as the most honey In it. True love, like true religion, grows sweeter ewy W. . 1 - J . I - - year. II you naye marriea tne wn i'g woman, bear the fruit of your mirjui?, ment like a man. Being married, you are bound ly every law to pull together ; nd if j u are hitched wrontr, pull your best rny way. You supposed she was all honey. Now you find her a jar of vinegni 1 at are you quite sure yon ore nil bet pj ? Here are some rules which, if adopted at tbe beginning of married life, vill make every moon a honeymoon : iJu absolutely true to your wi e. Atncr give ber the slightest cauo to ba j .a I OUS. The Bible says : "Jealousy M cruel as tbe grave." Some one 1 as well said : "Take care that your I cart don't neel much washing, lor ti:oy may perhaps need wringing a'so it they do." A husband will keep his wife ?"we usually if he keeps his own. M t women can say : "1 lovrd him -cause he first loved me." I-ov t in oi a ol love, and grows with the hiiltil 1 .t. He who rests content with the I vo received at betrothal will snn Io that. If the conning keeps up, the honeymoon will r.ever be over. For eruptions, sores, pimples, Ml ney and liver troubles, contipnti .n, indigestion, use HoMsterV Pocky Mountain Tfa. Cirrie1 new lif t i every part of the body. Tea or tn'-'ft fi rm. 35 cents. F. T. Whitehead A Co. "Money put that man into politic-." said the patient. "You havo it mixed," answered Senat r iji'. '-it-"That man is expected to put bin mon ey Into politics." Washington Strr. pluTlLEASU Ii K. If you ever toou Dt Witt's 1.1 M-e Early Risers for biliousness or consti pation you know what pill pleasure is. These famous little pills cleanse ibo liver and lid the system of hII li!e without producing nnp'ea?ant e.Tect-4. Tbey do not gripe, n'.cken or walc?i, but pleasantly give tone and strci.cth to the tissues and organs of the sU'in. acb, liver and bowels. Sold ly K. T. Whitehead & Co. Ob, jfs, I enjoyed my ycnon. Had a Cn?. ahy room, good toom, good bed, nice grub, eifect attend "For heaven's ance, and lots of rest." saka! where were you?" "In the hospital, with a broken leg." Jur'ge. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Tt3 Iti Yea Hate Always Bought Bears the . Signatoreof
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 20, 1904, edition 1
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