Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / March 1, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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ABVE3TISING IS TO ih: !NtSS WHAT STKAM IS TO M A C 13 1 N E II Y Thai Great Propelling Power. If You Ara Hustler YOU flLL Advertise PTT I HI (UOMMONWEALTB .... v o u i: .... Business $.vm in Your Ad. Now. E. E.HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRIC E$ioo VOL. XXII. New Series-Vol. 9. (6-18) SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1906. :T0.9 ! A Doctors Medicine Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is not g a iiiipic v.'uii oyiujj. ii ia a strong medicine, a doctor's medicine. It cures hard cases, severe and desperate cases, chronic cases of asthma, pleu risy, bronchitfs, consumption. Ask your doctor about this. The best kind of a testimonial " Sold ioj; over sixty years." jKdle tv J. C. Ayrr Co., Lowell, Mass. Also manufacturers of 'H - - .'r' SARSAPARILLA. &$ 5 HAIR V Wo have no seorets ! Wo publish the formulas of n'l c.ir medicines. Ycu wi!l hascer. recovery bv tak- rt one of Aver's FMSIs nt bedtime. hair balsam i W4T?'rl Clen.e and beautifies th 2 1 f'iolc lnxurinu e;ro ti-'C'viP-7 5tv;r Patio to .Restore :",4v' !! ." - "1 liai. to ita Youthful i tho hair, ruwth. ore Or ray il Color. a:p ri leases it hair tailing. PR0FESSI0AL. ILL II. .JOSEY GENERAL INSURANCE AND AGENT, Fcorr.ANn Neck, X. C. Hi. J P. WlMBF.KL.Ki, J JFTICK T.ICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND NECK. X. C. A. A AL3I0X DUXX, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Scotland Neck, X. C. I'i ict'ce wherever their services :ir reotiired. W. MIXOX, IlEFii .VOTING Orxict .V X , Watch-Maker, Ji.wu.ek, Esoraver Sci)t!;u Xec'.f, X. C. li.A.C. L1EI:3I03, Li Dentist. )t'?i c-')v.?r lew Vhithead Buildinf )i!L-e li.).ir.s from ) to 1 o'clock; 2 tc 5 I'eioek, . ra. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. c tdor.'iej i Ccnnssier ai Law, HALIFAX, X. C. 'Lmrij Loaned on Farm Lauds. n y w ii n il. Days Was My Life's Limit. Agony From Inherit ed Heart Disea.se. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure Cured Me. Ore person in every four has a weak heart. Un'e!S promptly treated a weak heart will easily become a disea.-ed hrart. A little extra strain from any cause is sufficient to bringon this .'eadly malady, the most common cause of sudden death, j r. Miles' Heart Cure will tone up the heart'ii action, enrich the blood and improve the circulation. "My trouble beq-an v.-ith catarrh and I have alwavs supposed it caused the trouble I have experienced with my heart. I had the usual symptoms of sl- epiessress, lost appetite, con stipation, palpitation ci the heart, shortness of breath and pain around the heart and un der left arm. My mother suffered in the same way and 1 suppose m:ne was an inherited tendency. At one time I was in agony. I suffered so severe'y and became so weak tjia my doctors said I could not live thirty lavs. At this time I had not slept over two liMirs a niiit on account of nervousness. 1 hej least exercise, such as walking about, woind bring on palpitation and fluttering of trie heart so severe that 1 would have to give up even thins a:id rest. Nerve and Liver I lus cured me of constipation and heart syinptoms disappeared under the influence of Dr. Miies' New Heart Cure. I am in better ln-alm than I have been in twelve years and I thank Dr. Miles' Remedies for it. I thuitt they are th - grandest remedies on earth anil I am constantly recommending them to my friends." Mrs. L. J. Cantrell, Waxahachie, Tex. All drug-gists sell and guarantee first bot tle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Addrcs Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart, Ind. DO YOU WANT j POSITION? j3v v ii-.we een educated at th .8 School si i see Us establishment nine vears ngo, and we oiler .$1,000 to an v irrudu who h is not received a position. Whit we have done for other we c tn do for yon ! Write to day for OJr ctUlue and for particu lars reg;trdi0'4 firt Five Scholarships issued iu each county. SOUTHERN (NVERStTY t A IGOR. 9 4 J. M. EESSLER, XoilJ-'OtK, VA. PREStDESI y OBSERVATIONS OF pDITOI'S Mr. Sydney 0. TAf, a graduate of Wake Forest College, and native of Xorth Carolina, but now a prominent and Influential lawyer in Atlanta, .,. , . has written a book entitled "The Struggle." W ill Be Poi ular Here. . . , , . Rockefeller, Duke and Pisrpont Morgan are taid to be the villairs in it and Hon. W. W. Kitchin the hero. Mr. Kitchin is one of the most useful and best beloved men in North Carolina, repre sents the fifth District iu Congress, and for this reason the book w'il be popular with the people ot the State generally. Scotland Xeck is his home town. He is greatly honored and lovad here, and for these reasons the book will be especially popular m Scotland Neck, Halifax county and eastern Xorth Carolina. Mr. Tap, the author, being a Xorth Carolinian, will aleo cause the people of Xorth Carolina to be interested in it. XXX X The Xew York Sun g'ves the following figures concerning deaths of mail clerks and accidents in railroad wrecks : Since 1900, seventy postal clerks, substitutes and regulars, have been killed Protection For Mail .... Clerks. ln ralIroai wrecks while on duty, 414 have been injured seriously, and 1,GGIJ have been hurt slightly. Efforts are being made to have cars built that will insure better safety to such employes. And the Charlotte Observer wisely comments : "It is to be hoped that thesa new cars will prove safer than those hereto iore generally in use. The clerks in the railway mail service are among the most faithful aud expert employes of the government and the depart ment should leave nothing undone that will tend to lessen the dangers that surround them and improve the conditions UMder which they work. The mail cars are generally placed in the most dangerous part of the train and the clerks are so busily engaged in their work that they have no means of protecting themselves in case of acciients, as some others haye. Their task is hard enough with tha element ot risk at the minimum, and it is good news that the government will likely require the use of steel cars for the mails." XX XX Ever so many hard things hava been written and printed about con ditions concerning the Panama canal, but Frederick Palmer contributed a Panama Not so Bad. accustomed to view them. The writer commences a series of articles on "Panama Without Prejudice", and this is the first one published, but he 3..ya it is really his second article. He wrote the first at Washington from hearsay knowledge, but finally concluded not to publish until Le had seea things at Panama for himself. On arriving upon the scene of operations and making a personal investigation he thought bis first paper not fit to print and so wrote a second aud calls it the first. Things were done ln too great hurry at first to secure the best results in the great work o digging the canal. The locality had to be made healthful, bo to speak, before much else could be done. Yellow fever and malaria had to be guard ed again.-t, and the two kinds of mosquitoes which carry the two kinds of fever had to be mastered by the proper kind of protection. The death rate amongst the employes is not near what we have been accustomed to think. Out of seventeen hundred white employes four died in the month December, aud only two of these deaths were from yellow fever. Out of twenty-two thousand employes on the Isthmus, including all the negro employes, only twenty are absent from work daily on account of sickness, while twenty-seven per thousand are absent daily from the Xew Y'ork Stree't Cleaning Department. So after ail, things must not be so bad over there as srme of us have been led to believe. XX XX The Xon'olk Dispatch thinks that the criminal expenses in Virginia srs toj great. It says the criminal expenses of the State of Virginia are $316,000 a year, and expresses the opinion that Criminal Expenses ill n ja far tco much. It compares Norfolk's crimi- ilgima, naj expengeg wjtn Richmond, giving the figures for Xorlolk at $34,000 and for Richmond at $37,000. The State of Vir ginia pays out great sums of money, says the Dispatch, without setting bacK a tithe of it in work done by its jail birds. Says the Dispatch : "Nor " folk county could have had a splendid system of roads if the jail birds of the county had been put to work during the past thirty years, instead ot being housed, fed and pampered at the expense of the State, Norfolk city could also have saved in tne neighborhood of a million ol dollars 'f its jail birds had been put to work, instead of being kept out of work during this period. It is pathetic when one comes to think of it, that so little ba3 been dene in the direction of say ing this expense. The criminal element would be greatly improved by being obliged to work, and the entire State would have saved millions of dollars if it had put them to work." All of which is well considered an! well said by the Dispatch ; but the surprise and wonder over here is, th-it such a progressive place &s Norfolk has so badly neglected such an important matter so long. And truly is it said that tha criminal element would be greatly im proved by being put to work. If a State, a county, or town has the oppor tunity to work jail birds evsn at a level expense, it is far better to do so than to keep them in cells and pent-up rooms where they can make no return for what they consume. One would have thought Norfolk is doing better than to neglect such an opportunity to make the criminals serve the State and save expense ; and if measures shall be inaugurated that will bring about this result, the wise words of JNorfolk's splendid afternoon paper, the Di patch, will be truly "like apples of gold m pictures of silver." They novar gripe or sicken, but nleauso and strengthen the stomach, .iver and bowels. This is the univer sal yerdict ot the many thousands who use DeWitt's Little Early Risers. These famous little pills relieve head ache, constipation, biliousness, jaun dice, torpid liver, sallow complexion, etc. Try Little Early Risers. E. T. Whitehead & Co Blind, bleeding, itching and pro r.ruding piles are instantly relieve! by ManZan. This remedy is put up in sollapsible tubes with nozzle attach ment, so that the medicine may be ap plied ioside directly where the trouble originates. ManZan relieve instantly. E. T. Whitehead & Co.. S .tUr.d Neck, Leggett 's Drug Store, Hobgood. EISURE PASSING EVENTS. paper to Collier's Weekly which puts some things in a different light trcm which we have been All old-time Cough Syrups bind the bowels. This is wrong. A new idea was advanced two years ago in Ken nedy's Laxative Honey and Tar. This Remedy acts on mucous membranes of the throat and lungs and loosens the bowel? at the same time. It expels all cold from the system. It clears the throat, strengthens the mucous mem branes, relieves coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, etc. Sold bv E. T. Whitehead & Co. The season of Indigestion is now at hand. Ring's Dyspepsia Tablets re lieve indigestion, and correct all stom ach disorders. E. T. Whitehead & Co., Scotland Neck, Leggett'a Drug Store, Hobgood CONCERNING RARE WOODS What Ones Are Especially Good in Cabinet Work and the Impor tance of Proper Seasoning. Old and well -seasoned oak is hard to get and harder to work. There is no jrreat quantity of old oak furniture in the market, and old pieces that would supply large enough lum ber for important work are seldom found. New kiln dried oak is uncer tain, being liable to warp and crack. Paneled articles can be made of such material with some safety, but large solid articles are likely to give a bad account of themselves at the end of a winter in a Fteam-heated house. Rosewood, also, the best cabinet makers distrust. This wood has a pe culiar oily quality that makes it un safe When glued. For thia reason rose wood is used chiefly as a veneer. Thin Eheets lose much of their oil and take glue satisfactorily. Native walnut is no longer a favorite with the cabinet makers. This wood was in effect exhausted a quarter of a century ago or more, and is now as ex pensive as mahogany and by no means bo beautiful. Chestnut is a good deal prized, not for furniture, but for wainscotting and for doors. It is sometimes put up in the rough with good effect, and some times oiled and polished, when it is re markably beautiful considering the cost. Gulf cypress Is used with great effect in like fashion, and when filled and ciled it makes one of the most beauti ful woods for inexpensive interior dec oration. Cherry was the old substitute for mahogany, and is still a favorite wood with the furniture makers. It is, how ever, not easily obtained in a prope.rly seasoned condition, for proper season ing makes it expensive. The fact is that with cherry, as with oak and mahogany, the seasoning is on important element of cost. The cabinet maker who must sink his cap ital for two o. three years in wood that is undergoing the process of sea soning, finds St hard to compete with those who use kiln dried material. Mahogany is? the favorite wood with the best cabinet maker. There is a vast amount of seasoned mahogany tc be had from ruinous old articles made in the last century, when the rage for mahogany was well developed; and while the new mahogany is less beau tiful than the old, purchasers of fur niture seem to have learned that it is worth while to have the new wood well seasoned. Chicago Journal. THE WORK OF FRIDAY. In Cleaning the Bedrooms a System Should Be Followed at Least Simi lar to One Given Below. For the weekly cleaning out of a bedroom one should collect all the re quired articles to work with, such as the long carpet whisk, the dust pari and brush, the dust sheets, and thf mattress brush. This is followed by the brushing of the mattress and the dusting of the bedstead. ' Make the bed and shake and pin tir. any curtains. Remove short muslin ; blinds. Dust all the ornaments and ' place on a tray outside the room. Shake and fold up all toilet covers and cover the bed and large pieces ol furniture after dusting with dust i sheets. Roll up rugs and mats and carry out of the room to be shaken .Then sweep the ceiling, cornice and walls with a clean broom covered wife a clean duster. Shut the windows and sprinkle one strip of carpet with clean urained tea leaves. Sweep the carpet with a long-handled carpet .whisk towards one pile, sprinkling and sweeping in strips till the whole is clean, afterwards sweeping the wooden surroundings with a hair broom. Then open the windows and leave the door closed for dust to settle While waiting prepare all the things that have been removed ready to re place. The dust sheets may now be removed carefully, shaken in the open air, folded, and put away. Dust first the highest things, win dows, door frames, etc., and after rub bing the furniture the wooden surround ings should be gone over with a damp rubber, dry duster and floor pol ish. Now clean the windows, and the week's duty has been done to the bedroom. Chicago Tribune. Fruit Rolls. Stir one tablespoonful each of buttei and sugar and one teaspoonful of salt into one pint of scalded milk; when lukewarm add one-half yeast cake dis solved in one-fourth cupful of watei and three cupfuls of flour, or enough to make a drop batter. Let it rise un til light, then stir in one-half cupfui of butter creamed, with one-half cup ful of sugar and enough more flour tc make a stiff dough. Knead untii smooth, and when light roll it out thin iand cut into squares about four inches Lay on the center of the dough halt a canned peach, well drained and four or five stewed prunes, or any preferred fruit which has been stewed and sweet ened. Bring the corners up to the cen ter and press them together lightly, leaving spaces where the fruit shows Lay them close together and when risen again till light, bake in a quick oven. Spanish Macaroni. ; Boil the macaroni in salted water, ,then melt three tablespoonfuls of but Iter and add two tablespoonfuls of chopped green peppers and one table- spoonful of finely chopped onion; coolt five minutes, then pour on gradually three-fourths cupful brown stock and three-fourths cupful stewed and ,'strained tomatoes; reheat macaroni in jthis sauce and season with salt and Ipaprika. One r.linute Cough Cure For Couohsf Cold Craua THE WELCOME EXTRA DISH Braised Beef Is a Most Palatable Ad dition to the Evening Meal in the Cooler Months. With the chill of autumn evenings, the savory little extra, fresh from the fire, is most timely and agreeable. It may be any one of a hundred little dishes, for a great variety of materials is available; from the long list let us se lect only a few. If the extra dish is to be one of meat, try braised beef. This will have been cooking for hours while other work was in progress. Any good solid t ut of lean meat will answer, say three pounds from the thick portion of the round. Dredge it with flour and brown on all sides in a little melted fat. A small onion stuck with two cloves may be browned with It Cover it with water and simmer slowly for several hours. Two hours before it is to be served add a pint of diced vegetables, carrot, parsnip, tur nip and celery and a sprig of summer savory and thyme or parsley. The little bag of dried sweet herbs may be used if fresh ones are not conveniently at hand. Salt to taste and paprika. Serve with the vegetables and gravy. If more water is needed to cook, then add boil ing water and only enough to cover them. A rich, savory meat gravy should characterize the dish. If the cooking has been the proper slow simmering the beef will be tender and well flavored, good for slicing off cold. A simple hot soup makes an appetiz ing hygienic addition to a cold supper for the cooler months, very suitable for an occasional extra. For tomato bisque take a shin of veal, or the neck and foreleg of lamb makes an excellent basis for a tomato soup. Cook the meat by slow simmering in water to cover it well for two or three hours. When the meat begins to fall from the bones, cool, remove any fat that forms on the surface, and strain the stock. Cut a quart of tomatoes in slices, scald well and strain the pulp. Add to the stock with a bunch of sweet herbs, a bay leaf or a sprig of parsley, a few peppercorns and salt to taste. Of course the seasoning maybe varied indefinitely to suit individual tastes. A shaving of onion may be liked, only a mere hint of the flavor, or a few bits of celery. If further thickening is wished, a few tablespoonfuls of cracker crumbs may be added just before taking up. Coun try Gentleman. PRETTY KNITTED EDGE. Because of the Great Vogue of Hand ' work Even the Old-Fashioned Trimmings Revived. Cast on 22 stitches, knit across plain. First row Slip one, knit one( over, narrow) three times, knit four, nar row, over, knit two, narrow, over, knit one, over, knit three together. Second row Slip one, over, knit three, over, narrow, knit two, over, narrow, knit 11. Third row Slip one, knit nine, nar row, over, knit two, narrow, over, knit five, over, knit one. Fourth row Slip one, over, knit seven, over, narrow, knit two, over, narrow, knit nine. Fifth row Slip one, knit one (over, narrow) three times, narrow, over, knit two, narrow, over, knit nine, over, knit one. Sixth row Narrow, over, narrow, knit five, narrow, over, knit two, nar row, over, knit ten. Seventh row Slip one, knit ten. over, narrow, knit two, over, narrow knit three, narrow, over, narrow. Eight row Narrow, over, narrow knit one. narrow, over, knit two, nar row, over, knit 12. Ninth row Slip one. knit 1 (over, narrow) three times, knit five, over, narrow, knit two, over, knit three to gether, over, narrow. Tenth row Narrow, over, knit one. over, knit two, narrow, over, knit 14. Eleventh row Slip one. knit 11, nar row. over, knit two, narrow, over, kni one, over, knit three together. Repeat from second row till lonu tnough. Boston Budget and Beacon. Peach Custard. A tablespoonful of cornstarch wit two tablesponfuls of cold milk; add one naif cupful of sugar, stir well, turn inti a stew pan. add teaspoonful butter, and a little salt and one pint of boiling milk Separate the yolks and whites of two eggs; beat the yolks till light and blen with them a tablespoonful of cold milk Stir this into the cornstarch mixture Place all over the fire and cook three minutes, then set on ice. When quit told, add to the custard six ripe peache. pared and cut into small pieces. Ovei the top spread a meringue made of th two whites of eggs and two dessert spoonfuls of pulverized sugar. This ii delicious. Stuffed Potatoes. Choose 12 good-sized potatoes, wasb them and scrub the skins with a brush bake them until done (about an hour) Remove from the oven, cut a slice oP of one end of each, scrape out the po tato, mix it lightly with a small piece of butter, pepper and salt, replace it in the skin, and when all are done reUirn them to the oven for ten min utes. In serving cut a slice off tht other end to make them stand upright on a flat dish, leaving the top uncov ered. A little cooked meat can be mixed in before replacing the potato in the skin if desired. Use of Apples. A recent authority asserts that the generous use of apples will improve the disposition, removing all disagree able feelings and making existence more enjoyable for all. He also de clares that apples arc an infallible cure for the drink and tobacco habits !and that their use as a daily article of diet will have a wonderful effect upon the whole system. FRIENDS TELL NOTHING rE-niT-NA 'S POPULA RITY IS IX A'O SMALL MEASURE DUE TO THE C EXE ROUS PR A ISE GI I'EX IT BY CRA TEFVL PEOPLE. Tells Every One About Pe-ru-na. Mrs. K. T. Fennessey, Bound Brook, N. J., writes : "I have taken 1'eruna and find it a. very good medicine. After I took one bottle of Peruna, I was cured of my cold. I cannot help telling every one I know about Peruna and asking them to try it. I would like every one to know of the good Peruna does." Recommended Pe-ru-na to Many. Mrs. J. M. Ilorton, J)2i K. loth street, Birmingham, Ala., writes: "I had a severe attack of la grippe. After taking the third bottle of I'erur.a I was fully restored to health. I have recommended it to many." A Neighbor Advised Pe-ru-na. Mrs. John Haynos, 107 E. Main Ht., Columbus, Ohio, writes: 'For over two years I suffered with headaches and svere pains in my head, and all these two years my friends would say, 'Why don't you take Peruna?' "Finally one of my neighbors just in sisted on my taking it. I tried it and before I had taken one-fourth of a bot tle my headaches were gone. I am never without reruna. I advise every one to take Peruua.' 2 Early Cabbage Plants Guaranteed to Satisfy Purchaser EARLY JERSEY CHARLESTON SUCCESSION AUGUSTA SHORT STEMMED WAKEFIELD LARGE TYPE TRUCKER FLAT DUTCH TtaeEarlies WAKEFIELD The Earliest Flat A little later Lariat and Latest Cabbage Grown Second Earliest . Head Variety than Succession CnbhiiRO PRICE: In lot of I to 4 m. at $1.50 per m., 6 to 9 m. at $1.25 per m., 10 m. and over, at $1.00 per m. F. O. a. YOUNG'S ISLAND. S. C. My Special Express Rate on Piants ia Vory Low. T . Di.-.. nnn.iiuoii .ni ! Ion. or will rchiml Hip tnrc haA Guarantee nAo to anv customer who is bage Two to frames prown ln the open Oeld, on Seaeoast of Hmitn Carolina, in n raio LV.nt " .n i, ErowinK the hirrtiest plants that can t.e (rrown In the I'mten Hti.te. 1 nese plants can i IJ reset ia the interior of the Southern States .lurinir the months of Jan.isry, H.ruurv. ai 1 March. They will stand severe cold without b.-inr Iniured, and will mature a hesd of ci- Tbree weeks sooner than II you grew your own ymuis m nm ucu, auu vn.. My Largest Customers are the Market Hardeners near the Interior towns and eltles of south. KTheir nrotlt dem-nds upon them having Early Cabbage ; for tliBt reason they pur- the TaES SVowYfu'lf iTne OTipH.nt. and Fruit Tree,, , as Strawberry .g Mjto. Tomato, Egjr Plant and Pepper Plants; Apple, Peach, Pear, Plum, Cherry and Apricot Trees, Fig Busnes, and Grape Vines. BOX special terms to persons who make up club WM f fU J? ATY. ,c, ,ui, r- orders. Write for illustrated cauloeue. . W YOUNG'S ISLAND. S. C. NORTH CAROLINA FARMERS Need a North Carolina Farm Paper One adapted to Xorth Carolina cli mate, eoils and conditions, mfde by Tar Ileels and for Tar Heels and at the same time as wide-awake as any in Kentucky or Kamchatka, Such a paper ia The Progressive Farmer RALEIGH, N.C. Edited bv Clarexce H. Poe, with Dr. C. W. Burkbtt, of the A. & M. College, and Director B. W. Kilgore, ot the Agricultural Experiment Station (you know them), as assistant editors ($1. a year). If you aie already taicing the paper, we can make no reduc tion, but if jou ure not taking it, YOU CAN SATE 50 GENTS BY PEXDIXG YOUK ORDER TO LS. ; That is to say, to the Dew Progres sive Farmer subscribers we will send that paper with The Commonwealth both one year for $1.50. Kegular price $2 00. Addreea all orders to THE COMMONWEALTH, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. He "Woman is more beautiful than man." She "Oh ! yes ; natural ly." Me "Oh ! no; art I Seal I v." Baltimore Xews. Tha Kind You Have Always Bough Bears the Signature ...M.l FRIENDS- LIKE PE-RU-NA," Friend Advised Use of Pe-ru-na. Mr. E. W. staloy. BP-' Fillmore St., Nashville, 'IVnn., writes: "I was down for Ilirci niontli.-i with pwunmnia and had gotten very weak. A I'rii'iul advised mo to try Peruna, which I did, and soon found it was t ho tbin;; T need "i I. When I finished tho third bottle. I found I weighed moro than I ever did in my life." Sjireadir.;? tho Gocd NeTrs. Frof. .1. Ivison, dealer in nuisic-il merchandise, bos Si.i, Cumberland, Md., write-: "It is now five months .-ir.ee my vif began taking P. runa and from the first, day improvement has be ;i going n:i noticeably. She is now in ood health. We never tire of making this fact known to our many friends." A Friend Had Used Pe-ru-na. Mr. Henry 1. Goodwin, x i trait artist, ."S(;ovcslrect,E. liostou, Mass., writes "For three years I have been suffer ing from a general rundown condition of the system. I triod many remedies. "A friend of min i.d ised me to u-io Peruna, as it had benefited l.ini. "After taking tw'fi hotibv T f.-lt botivr. Now I am in the best of he.:Ith." n .n a 4 8 c v m o o c t 4 0 z n .ltusalistie.l ut eti-1 of season. 'I Iicsm pistils am o 0 .v-css". mm mm i! Correct Dress The "Modern IVicilioc" syitem cf high-grade tailoring inticduccd by L. C Hays & Co., oi C:cian&ti, O., saibfics cd cresscro everywhere. All Garr.-.er.U Mad? Zir'.z'.Vj to Your Fnure ct moderate prices. 500 ttvl - of for."if,.i and doxcslic fabric from v. I.i.ii to choorc. Ask your lie.iler to the v ycu cur i:;if:, cr .f not rcr resented, writs to us i 'r partlciiar. T. C KAYS O, CO. ItlDDICK & HOOKKK, Mam .'KACTi.-khRV Aci-STs, rCC.Tr.AN'I) NECK, N. C. FOR OVER SIXTY YEARS. Mrs. Winnlow'ii Soothing Syrup has been used for sixty years by millions of mother? for their children while teeth ing, with perlect success. It soothes the child, softens the gum?, allay all piin, cures wind colic, and is the bett remedy for Diarrhoea. It will relieve the poor litt'e sufferer immediately Sold by druggists in eyery part ol the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Pe sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow'a Sootl -me Syrup. c? a. e; t o ft. t. y. . iiMn .v. j The Kind Yon Have Alwavs Bo-: Iba Kind Yoi Bignatcrs ft '''' in az. ji rrmrm
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 1, 1906, edition 1
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