Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Sept. 21, 1905, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
ss . I J w - ' t ADV2STISIKQ 13 7 BUSINESS - - VHAT STEAM IS TO Machinery, - r Great Pro --ellix a Power mmonw; p- w .HTT T TftTMl Plhn in croprtetor. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. VOL. XXI. New Series Vol. 7. (7-i 8) SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $1.00. 1 I Sometimes the hair is not g properly nourished. It suffers I for food, starves. Then it I falls cut, turns prematurely J gray. Ayer's Hair Vigor is a (Hair Vigor s hair food. It feed?;. nmi ricic. I 1 he hair stops falling, grows I long and heavy, end all dan 's drui? disappears. 1 31 us" t- K. Vr i ;;n, Landing, jr. J. I. C. .A VER CO.. I i.nivei!. Mass.. 5i 9- Th ?3 tiasrl MA!!? Ptni 3&R4 3.-h SrgiJoaK-ios a lauriar.t growth. ;'fiFffJSg ,?v?ri-E:s t? Scatcro Gray Mai-- to its Youthful ColoS Cures c:p disfsres & hair ialiisir. SCOTLAND NECK, N.C., THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER SI. 1905. NO 39 IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER roc witt ADVERTISE YOPB Business. Smi 'of Advebtipemekt is now J&i & I I I " j I fLA ft-il-.- . , L . " I " . ' IT ESh4 I I UUAULJ (V till rHSITITITC I U t-J I I.U (fill! I n 1 T. ? fca mi i i a, i i i - i a uwa rumum ?k rfSA V I SJ-I T -r 111 I DITOFJS jEISURE Ji O U IS, OBSERVATIONS OF PASSING EVENTS. PROFESSIONAL. H-U. J. T. WIMBERLKi, - OFFICE BRICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND 2TECK, N. 0. 6-5 H 9 . rc ALEIOX DUNN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Scotland Is eck, N. C. Trachea wherever their ssrvicea are required. EeFRACTIXG OfTICIAN, Watcu-Makes, Jeweler, Esgeaver, j Fcotlarsd Neck, N. C. H il . A. C. LIVER MON, u illl Dentist. 0 :--KiCE-Over New "Whithead Bnildicg O lice hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to cioes, p. m. SGQTLAND NECK, N. C. riVASD L. TRAVISs. Attorney and Counselor at Law, . HALIFAX, N. O. iT Money Loaned on Farm Lands. At 70 of Heart Dis ease Contracted Btir-ing Civil War- Veteran Grateful. I;r. Miles' Heart Cure Ki fscled Cure. iicart disease is curable, but in people of : ,;v;;r."e'"s it does i;ot readily lend itself : cr.iiiiary trcatraect. There i? however, -f jr all suffcrsis in Dr. Miles' Heart 1 "'T: we know froni Tratchinjr hun- vrjy-s ct cajss and from theletterscf grateful s ;i'-'rers, will c:rre where all else has failed. .:3 net only-a trenderfu! care for weak and vc?ed h-sxts, but it is a blood tonic, a reg i ttor of the heart's action and the most .ec::e treatment ever formulated for im I "oviii? the circulation of the blood. . "Lur:r.T the Civil war I contracted heart :, sense. ai;i in lS;"i, while living in the grand j.'I town of Lesington,.Va., I grew so much '"'re, 1 kit t'ure v. it'i mv wile to. visit my --jr-iv; !a-v, Mrs. T. A. Kirby, at Roanok v a- V hii I said nothing to anyone I never epectcii to live to return to the dear old V' On reaching Mrs. Kirby's she insisted i fiioald ,try Dr. Miles' Heart Cure. I pro ti:v'.! a lev7 bottles of it,al o the Nervine ! Tonic. After using o:;e or two bottles, I c nil iee no improvement, and I despaired ' t ever being better, but my faithful wife in 5 -i on keepirjr it v which I did. Im I r'jvenioiit soon began in earnest and I took ' a;, fifteen or sixteen bottles. I was re ; tired to perfect health and while I am 70 y-ars OA, I am comparatively a boy. You Ere a benefactor, and I cheerfully recom "'ni Dr. ?.i,Jes' Heart Cnre to suffering ' .inanity." J. L. SLAUGHTER, Salem, Va. TAIitn,cl?kts 5651 anc Farantee first bottle ! Miles' Remedies. Send for free book V,1 :T"OUil ni Heart Diseases. Addref Vl' Medical Co, Elkhart, Ind. k Helps, 8? iii y 0 r y Buggies Harness 'V. 11 USPS? R 0 bes lire, Norm Carolina. t U a j!ea-ur3 to take Dr. Dade'e i.iver Pills and enjoy their tonic eSeet upon the liver. Sold by E. T Vv'ailehc-aa &, Co., Scotlaud Neck, and L3S-Jtt'8 cling store, Hobgood. . In the Farmers' National Congress in Richmond last week Hon. J. Bry an Grimes, Secretary of State for North Carolina, delivered an able address Col. Grimes' Great U "The ASricultural Resources of the South," Address. We bave seea no ab!er Presentation of the South's wealth, and fhe address may well be filed away in every office and home for the study of our great resources. The eloquent closing paragraph was as follows : "In this summerland, the land of boundless undeveloped wealth, of inexhaustible resources, lies the future of this great Republic. Here in the most American part of our Union the dawn of a new era is upon us. Here, beside the farm is being buiit the factory. Around them are great forests, and iron roads, and deep rivers run to growing ports. Good roads are being built on every hand, postal routes will go to every man's door. A pareels post is being recognized as a neces sity soon to coma, and everywhere telephones destroy isolation. School houses are near every home, and church spires rise In sight of each other Prosperous, cultured and happy hemes abound everywhere. We are rich in all material resources, but riche.t in brave men and good women To this heme of plenty, Ibis land of promise, our own fair, Sunny Southland, we would love to welcome you !" ' I X X t As there is a reward for every good and right thing, 80 there is a penalty for every fed and wrong thing. The rewards to labor, honest and manly The Penally of Idleness. Iabor' are iacalculable aaJ unnumbered ; and so also are the penalties to idleness and incorrect living incalculable and unnumbered. The Atlanta Sunny South in a recent editorial rr tide on this subject said som3 very wise and thought ful things. Following is the closing paragraph : "We are reminded of the case of George M. Pullman, the millionaire maker of the modern. sleep- u. tl.marin son 01 tne same name. Pullman, senior, in his first round with fortune, had only determination, natural ability and good health as backer?. Through sheer native force he won lite battle and established a princely fortune and an enviable reputation. ; How sadly reads the son's story in contrast. From his cradle aocuitomed to gratifica lion of the lightest caprice, and, in spite of his father's strenuous teachings, imbibing the idea that inherited wealth exempted him from a share in the' , world's work , he gave himself up to diversions and a life of the grossest idicnes3. Pleasures which the libertine has made odious he quaffed to de eti&nrand dis J-praisilturelwltn nothing tomark his psssaga'th rough the world but a slimy tiall of scandal and dissipation. This is only one in stance of the harm wrought by an absence of the incentive to work. Other parallel cases could be cited. There are the conventional exceptions, of ,...0, U m tuv, waiu ius Bviy is luiurauiy consisienE. Don t rail at fa if you were bora to a birthright of labor. It is the one thing that makes a man discover unknown glories in himself and the world, and which allows him some portion of the credit for the developing of tha power which are i 1 him." tttt The public is familiar with the case of Thomas Nail, a patient in the State Hospital at Ealeieb, who escaped, was captured by four attendants A Full Investigation. aad takea back to ths iastitution whsre b xn died. As a result of the death the four attend ants were charged with the crime of maltreating Nail and causing his spe?dy death. The four attendants so charged are in Wake eonnty ji'l to be tried in the Superior Court for Nail'd death. The board of directors of the institution, at the suggestion of Governor Glenn, met some days aso In Raleigh to make a thorough investigation concerning the treatment of pa tients in tho State Hospital. This is entirely correct and Governor Glenn's advice and the course of the board of directors for the institution will meet the hearty approval of every thoughtful citizen of the State. The people of the State support the iastitution, and whenever there comes any sus picion of mismanagement in any way, they are entitled to know the truth about it. Not only 13 this true of the State Hospital at Raleigh, but it is true of any other Stjte institution. We are making no suggestion that there has been mismanngement at the institution in qaestion, for every thing there mav have been done perfectly and in order; but the fact that a patient died under circumstances that warranted an investigation, and that as a result o? that investigation four men are charged with his death, is sufficient cause to make the people of North Carolina wonder if that is the only case of maltreatment. Like winds and thunder storms, investiga tions purify the atmosphere, notwithstanding some people mty become a little frightened during the progress of the storm. The investigation has closed and -it Is believed that when the directors make their report to-day they will disagree with the coroner's conclusions and will endorse the man agement of the institution. x Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Sept'. 14th The American Nut Journal in its September issue has the following con cerning the local peanut market : Practically no trading will be done in farmers' crops of peanuts until the ar rival of the new crop, as all of the old crop of both Virginia and gpanish nuts has been exhausted. There are no Span ish goods in the hands ot either dealers or commission men in the Norfolk mar ket, and very small stocks even with cleaners in Petersburg, with the ex ception of one firm , which has stock ample for its requirements. There has been a slight falling off in prices during the month, Spanish now bring ing !M.12 1-2 per bushel for farmers' grades. No. 1 Spanish shelled are quot ed at 7 cents, and No. 2 at 4 cents per poacd. The receipt ot farmers' goods on the Petersburg market do not average more than a carload a week, and the receipts oa the Norfolk market are correspond ingly low. The weather for the nast mr t9ii days has been exceedingly unfavor able for peanut growing, and the crop will be much later than was expected earlier m the season. Crops, as a rule are looking exceedingly well, and if the cold, wet weather is not too long con tinned they will make very satisfactory yields. On account of unfavorable sea sons many crops are yery grassy, while other crops have not been nronnrlv 1. J worked on account of too much wet weather. Farmers' stock of Spanish has been , exhausted on the Weldon, N. C. mar ket, and it is not thought a carload could be found inlthe state. Prices re main firm. The fcrospects are that the yield in jthe Wefclon eection will be about the same as last year. The Wilmington, N. C, market has been rather dull for several days, but Westminster. O giveme the joy of living, v And some g!orious?worlc to do ! A spirit of thanksgiving, -?J With loyal heart and true : J Some pathway to make brighter Where tired leet nowstrav : Some burden to make lighter While 'tis day. Oa the fields of the Master's gleamlne May my heart and hands be atronc xjbi me Know lire's deepest meaning, iet me sing nte a sweetest sone : With some faithful hearts to love me, iet me nobly do my best : And at last, with heaven above me, Det me rest ! Admiral Togo's Ship Lost. a bigger demand; is looked for after Soptembar 1. The outlook is bright tor an average crop. St. Louis reports a very satisfactory market with but light stocks in the ! hands of distributers. There Is a steady consumptive demand. Spanish shelled are still in urgent demand, the recent advances not. materially affecting the traie for this varlett'. B3 Good for Something. Selected . The highest virtue contlsts of more than merely being good. It is being good for something ;and good for some thing not to one's self alone, but to others and to Gad. That negative, self-complacent virt ue which - is only a strict abstention irom evil, is of quality far inferior to the virtue which suppresses evil or he'p3 another to re sist it. Virtue, in the old Litin sanm is synonymous with valor. It implies not only an espousal, but a champion ship, and, it necessary, a fight. Virtue is not only being good.but doing gooi, I and the better we are the more we ought to do. We believe in these lines of R. R. Bowker : "It Is bad for the ignorant and the vicious to do ill. It is worse for the educated and honest to do nothing." Following is the account ot the blowing up of Admiral Togo's ship Sapt. 11th : Tokio, Japan, Sept. 12. 2 p. m. The navy department announces that the battleship Mikasa has been destroy ed by fire and the explosion of her magazines, causing tho loss of 599 lives, ncluding men of othei ships wno wen to the rescue. The fire started from an unknown cause at midnight on Sunday night September 10. Before the officers could be rescued the fire reached the aft magszice, which exploded, blowing a hole in the port side of the vesell be low the water line and causing the ship to sink. An investigation is now being held to determine the cause of the fire. The Mikasa was a first-class battle snip of 15,200 tons displacement. She was built in England and was launch ed in 1902. The battleship wa3 400 feet long, had a speed of over 18 knots and carried a crew of 935 officers and men. She wa3 beayily armored and carried four 12-inch guns, four (5-inch guns. twenty 12 pounds, and a number of smaller rapid fire guns. She had four submerged torpedo tubes. In the battle of the Sea of Japan, tfce Mikasa was the heaviest loser cf all the Japanese ships, having sixtr three killed and wounded. She an- proashed nearer the Russians than any other battleship. The Mikasa was also the flagship cf dmiral Togo alter the great naval battle fought off Port Arthur oa Au gust 10, 1904, on which occasion the Japanese flagship also" suffered the most, but continued in the fighting ine. On that occasion the Mikasa had four officers and twent-nine men killed six officers and twenty-nine men severely wounded, and four offi cers and twenty-eight men slightlv wounded. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Malic Impure Blood. All the blood in your body passes through your kidneys once every three minutes. i he kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are sick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, aches andrheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the kidney trouble. .8..i Kidney trouble causes quick cr unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, becauss the heart is yvcr-woring in pumping thick, kidnev- rw. IWv uuwuga veins ana arteries, it used to be considered that only urinarv vwvwv "VUrf it UU II aCf.iI in tha Ir but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning in kidney trouble. If you are sick vou can mak nn mitiu by first doctoring vour kidnevs. Th "miM w.....uilIiljf chcii 01 ur. Mimer s Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures cf the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits f--W by all druggists in fifty- gggS? cent and one-dollar siz- Bftf?S'g33i'SHk5K,, es. You may have e sample bottle by mail iIom8 of spitoot. free, also pamphlet telling you how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr, Kilmer & Co., Bingharnton, N. Y. ' Don't make any mistake, but re member the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. turner s &wamp-root, and the address 3inghamton, N. Y., on evnrv bottle. SCOTLAND NECK GRADED I SCHOOLS CURED OF LAME BACK AFTER 15 YEARS OF SUFFERING. I had been troubled with lame back for fifteen years and I found c-orapjeie recovery in ine use ot (Jnan berlain'a Pain Balm," says John G Bisher, GUJam, Ind. This liniment is also without an equal for sprains and bruises. It is for sale by all druggists, ITT, . . , . vvnn me Japanese-it ussian war ended, Anguinaldo.the erstwhtle leader of the Filipino rebels, has been resur rected. The Philippine leader will not stay bought, it appears, and is en deavoring to foment another insur rection. Newport News Times-Herald. LIKE FINDING MOSEY. Finding health is like finding money so think those who are sick. When you have a cough, cold, sore throat, or jhest irritation, better act promptly like W. C. Barber, ot Sandy Level, ,Va. He says :"I bad a terrible chest trouble, 3au?ed by smoke and coal dust on my lungs ; but, after finding no relief In jther remedies, I was cured by Dr. King's New Discovery for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds." Greatest le of any cough or lung medicine in the world. At E. T. Whitehead & Co's. irug store ; o0e and $1.00; guaranted. Trial bottle free. - One night is all the tiie necessary to prove that Pinenles is the best rem edy in the world for backache ar.d aH kidney and bladder troubles. If yon have rheumatism or any other blood .MaaA Mnele dose will give relief. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co., Scot land Neck, Leggetl's drug store, Hob sood. , - . Are you lacking in strength and yigor.' Are you weak? Are you in pain? Do you feel all run down? l'he blessing of health and strength I Anivta r nil l- noa tT.-il I? T 1 Of Cholesa Morbus with One Small ."T." ' " !l 8 muuuiaiu sv toll to. Xj J. THREE JURORS CURED Bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Whitehead & Co , Scotland Neck, Jno. N. Brown, Halifax. Those enthusiastic crowned nabobs Mr. G. W.' Fowler of High tower, of Europe who are "slopping over" Ala., relates an experience he bad 1 with congratulations to our "big stick" while serving on a petit jury m a mur- monarch, doubtless realiza bv thia timA J T7 J J S.I a A .1 oor case ai -cuwarusvie, cuumy sem, ui A trnal , S4 . . . ill ir I VUab UC7- UTWlWUft34 a KWU UI L Wilt) Li Ciebonrne connty, Alabama. He says : I . . , - biie there I ate some fresh meat uo' J uu' w loa Pe,cq and some souse meat and it gave me I negotiations at Portsmouth. Ashe- cholera morbus in a very severe form. I yile Citizen I was never more sick in my life and sent to the drug store for a certain cholera mixture, but the druggist sent me a bottle cf Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in stead, saying that he had what I sent for, but that this medicine was so much better he would rather send it to me in the fix I was in. I took one doso of it nd was bet-ler i 1 five mm- ute. Tha second dowj cured me en- FOR OVER SIXTY YEARS. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for sixty years by millions cf mothers for thetr children while teeth ing, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind coic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will relieve Is it Right? Is it right that a property owner should lose $4 20 to lot a dealer make 50 cents? A dealer makes 50 cents more on fourteen gallons of ready-for- use paint, at .f 1 oO per gallon, than our agent dees en eight gallons of L. & M paint and six gallons of linseed oil which make fourteen gallons of the best paint in the world, at $1 2C per gallon ; the property owner loses just $4 20. Is it right? It only requires 4 gallons of L. fe M and 3 gallons linseed oil to paint a moderate sized house. Ten Thousand Churches painted with Longman x Martinez L. & M Paint. Liberal quantity given to cburcbos when bought from E. T. Whitehead & Co. mes. i 8 "U;w cuic u- - 1UU sufferer immediately tirely. Two fellow jrtrors were aflbcted t,rtlirpUtlt ev,rw pt in the same manner and one small bottle cured the three of Hale by all druggists. us. For Sold by druggists in every part ot tbe world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and hbk for Mrs. Winslow's Sooth ing Syrun. Ifodb. Dyspsrrb Ccro A girl can never understand why a man persists In remaining in tbe bachelor class after having met her. Croup is quickly relieved, and Whooping Cough will not "run its cours" if you use the original BeeV Laxative Honey and Tar. This Cough Syrup is different from all others be cause it acts on the bowels. You can not cure Croup and Whooping Cough until you rid the system of ali conges tion, by working off the cold through a copious action of the boweif. Bee's Laxative Honey and Tar does this, and cures all Coughs, Croup, W hooping Cough, etc. No opiates. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co., Scotland Neck, Leaget s drug store, Hobgood. A REMEDY WITHOUT A PEER. "I.find Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets more beneficial than any other remedy I ever used lor stomach trouble," says J. P. Kiote, of Edina, Mo. For any disorder ot the stomach, biliousness or constipation, these Tab lets are without a peer. For sale by all druggists. 'To think," grumbled the struggling author, "that I can't get any one to pub'it-h my novel after all the pains I took with it." "But," replied the crit- c, "if it were published, think of all the pains yoa'd give." Philadelphia Ledger. , It is dfficult to cure a cough or free yourself from the discomforts of a cold unless yoii move the bowels. Bee's lmative Honey and Tr acts on the bowels and drives all cold out ot the system. For Croup, Whooping-Cougb, Colds, and all Lung and Bronchial af fections, no remedy is equal to tbe or iginal Bee's Laxative Honey and Tar. A Liquid Cold Care. Sold by - E. T. Whitehead & b, Scotland Neck, Leg- The Scotland Neck Graded School will open Ikhf, Sip. 1, 1 Tuition for Fn pils outside of town as follows: First Grade $10.00 per year. Second and Third "Grades Si 5. 00 per rear. TFourth, Fifth and Sixth Grades 820.00 per year. Seventh, Eighth and Ninth Grades $25 per year Music $35 par yosr All Tuition Payable Quarterly in Advance The 'Ivlodern Method" eystera of high-grade tailoring introduced hy L. E. f lava & Co.. cf satisfies good dicssero everywhere! sar iKjasure j' ... rnoocrat,. prra. 500 tvl of for and c:r.est:c Lbrics from wl,kh !o choo. ! ahowa cur line, cr ;f RIDDICK & IIOOKKK, MASfPACTI'dlcRS' Ai.KMS, If SZZ.ZCTOT7EI -JS STORES V Cream Soda Cream Soda Chocolate ARE THE FAVORITE DRINKS. At our Fountain eii ChocoiatoSyrup.i are m&do with CJiocolateCt V " IteCi ) Hot Chocotn Chocolate, using their Formula. Tb&t's wliy w have tbo SarffMt Bod E. T. "Whitehead "c (?ompany Hale Agents Scotland k, N. C. C. W. WILSON SUIi EI I NTEN DENT 8-25-tf ,iMy The Largest and I'avt f 'q nipped Plant in the Slr-te a Quarrior and M.-tntif.-to'urcr K - .1 U 11 t 0 TOMBS, GRAVE3TOME3 of Every Description. 3 11 menTs Fi-fdoht )ro):iil on nil ship - i Li i T 1 ' iiM'ius. raio (leiiverv mi;u-' tin teed. Write for and priTH. di'siyiiM "I hear Jinks has left the bank in which he was cashier." "Yes, he's left the bank ani that's about all." Houston Post. m mm SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES Aliens Fuot-Ease, a powder. It cures painful, smarting, nervous feet and ingrowing nails, and instantly takes the sting out of corns end bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of tho age. Allen's Foot- Ease makes tight or new shoes fvel easy, it is a certain cum for sweat insr, callous and hot, tired, aching foct. Try It to-day. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe store?, 25j. Don't accept auy substitute. Trial package FREE. Ad dress, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Tron TiYnrMnrj for purpose; C-,.7.-!.- t,l. 1 ..7 I.J Cemetery and other fWl a Si' KCl A ?,T V . PETKKSisriio, Va. J. Y, Savage, Agt. at Scotland Nock, N. C. "That's Mis3 Robinson, who just left your house, isn't it?'' asked the neighbor. "That's my Aunt Carrie Robinson," replied the little girl. 'Your aunt, eh? On your mother's side?" "No, sh3 stands up for p.i. every tltm." Philadelphia PrC!s. ATTACKED BY A MOB and beaten, in a labor riot, until cover ed with sores, a Chicago street car con ductor applied Bueklen's Arnica F:i!vo, and was soon sound and well. "I use t in my family," writes G. J. Welch, of Tekonsba, Mich , "and find it per fect." S.'mply great for cuts and burn:. Only 25c at E. T. Whitehead & Co's drugstore. ARE YOU EXUAGED? Engaged rcr.p!n i-Uov.IZ rr member, that, after marriage, rrm:y qtirrelsoit b:j avoidfd.by kcefiing their digPhtlonn in good condition with K!?:tric !!;(( re. S A. Brown, of Bar-neilgvi'le, S. CM raj's : "For year.', rr.y wife ptifl'eird in tensely from dyepepiii, cr-mpHcnted with a torpid liver, until hbe lot bfr fltrengli nd vigor, awl became a mcrt wreck of her former pelf. 1 bnn i-bo tried Electric Bitter.-", hr.h heljed her tt once, and finally mado her c.i tfrely well. Shn. is now Kdong and rjealihy." E. T. Whitehead A Co., drucgiRts, pell nr.d guarantee thtn, at o0c a bottle. All old-time cough syrups wnre des igned to treat throat, lung and bron chial affections without duo recrd 'or the stomach and bowels, hence tr.o.t ot them produce constipation, life's, the original LaxstUf llosif -y r.r.n Tat U the nrlgh.al Luxttti .$ (Vmiih F'. m p. Look for tha letter B in r: .1 n tvry package. Sold hy E. T. Vhit?hu;;d t ' Co., Scotland Nec!;, L?rr;eti'H !itig store, Hobgood. When school opens their troubles begin the children. Ex. CHAMBEIiLALN'S COUGH REM EDY AIDS NATURE. Medicines that aid nature arc always most effectual. Chamberlain's Cough itt-medy acts on this plan. Is alias the cough, relieves iba lungs, aids ex pectoration, ooens the secretions, and sids nature in restoriu? the system to a healthy condition gists. if S 3 3 vi e T ? 5 iftk B Bm Ka -5 y, AND OWRK T5S WITH C om?tJMrTio:j 01JRKS and OLDS TriC9 50o 4 SI. 00 Fres Trial. Sold bv all drujr- Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT artd LUNG T3.0UB- 4 jLES, or HONET BACK. OASVORZA. t .t.- lir.lt Vn H Kn:id.t a
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 21, 1905, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75