Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / July 19, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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I If Yon Are n. Hnsttfir ADVERTISING i, 10 BUSINESS WHAT STEAM IS TO MACHINERY That Great Propelling Power. YOU WILL Advertise .... YOUR .... Business hViirt in Your Al. Now. E. E.HIL.L.IARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $i oo VOL. XXII. NewSeries-Vol. 9. (6-18) SCOTLAND NECK, N. 0., THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1906. TO. 29 The Commonwealth. I OverWork Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the blood in your body passes through your kidneys once every three minutes. at -nr. - l ne Kiuiitys are yuui blood purifiers, they fil ter cut the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are sick or out cf order, they fail to do their work. Pains, aches and rheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in thi blood, due to neglected kidney trouble. Kidr.ey trouble causes quick cr unsteady heart bea!s, and makes one feei as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is " ever-working in pumping thick, kidney poisoned blood through veins and arteries. It ussd to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begirt . ning in kidney trouble. It you are sick you can nmke no mlstaks by first doctoring your kidneys. The mile and the extraordinary effect cf Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy i: soon realized. It stands the highest for it: wonderful cures of the most distressing case-: and is sold cn its merits fCVL by all druggists.in fifty- fti cent and one-do''ar siz-K'--'2:ik3M:Hi;-fS e.3. You may have aaCggg sample bottle by mail Homo cf swamp-Rnut free, also pamphlet telling you how to fine out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Don't mske any mistake, but re member the narrc, Swamp-Root, Dr Kilmer's Swamp-root, and the d"frCFs Binghamtou, N, Y., on every bottle. TRINITY COLLEGE Four 1 Vartiients---0 1 1 i 1 , ( ii Mi'iuatc. Kngineoring' and Law. Larue library I'acilit ifs . "Well (iuiicl laboratories in all department-; of science. (Jynmas iiun fin ni.-li!''.l with best appara tus. Expanses very moderate. Ail for worthy students. Young Men wishing to Study Law should investigate the su perior advantages offered by the Department of Law in Trinity College. For catalogue and further in formation, address, D. W. Newsoji, Registrar, DURHAM, x. c. 6-21-St JL0 Young JIfiu and Wrmet 9w jJave rjesu educated at this School since Us establihmer.t nine years ago, and we offer $1,0.00 to any graduate who hus not received s position. What we have done foi others we'ean do for you ! Write to day for our catalogue and for particu lars regarding first Five Soholarships issued in each county. SOUTHERN (JVIV&57Y J. M. RESSLER, No.i: LX, VA. rilESil'KNT PROFESSIONAL. O. F. SMITH, M. D. PHYSICIAN A?4D SURGEON. CCGTLA&D NECK, W. C. Office Pormerly Occupied by Dr. Hassetl. ILL H. JOSEY, GENERAL INSURANCE AND ACENT, Scotland Neck, X. C. JjR. J. P. WIMCHRLKi, OFFICE B2ICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. WA. ALBION DUNN, I ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Scotland Neck, N, C. Practice wherever their sarvices are required. 11 W. MIXON, Refracting Ottician, Watch-Maker, Jeweler, Enckavek Scotland Neck, N. C. 0 R. A. C. LIVERMON, Dentist. 0 FKiCE-Over New Whlthead Building O'rice hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to 5 o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. DWARD L. TRAVIS, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, HALIFAX, H. 0. fJT Honey Loaned on Farm Lands. THE ORIGINAL. LAliATlVIZ COUGil EYRU5 KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE ISONYTAR ii'i Clover Eldttom sui Euisy Bee cn Evtry BsUla. DITOI'S JEISURE JOUFS. OBSERVATIONS OF The Raloigh correspondent to the Charlotte Observer studied carefully the reports made by the cotton counMes In North Carolina to the State Farmer8VConventiou in Raleigh last week, and N. C, Cotton Crsp. leartied that tbe crop of lh5a sea80a 5s about 75 or 80 per cent, of last year's crop. The dty and cold spring, late frost?, heavy laius the latter-part oi June and scarcity of labor have all had some thing to do with the crop condition. The outlook is net generally good, although in some sections the crop is rair. f t t t fT has gone out through at leaid some part of the Republican press that President Roosevelt has said he will pay his own traveling expenses, not withstanding Congress has made an appropria Will Pay Iirs Expenses. o u00 for thiU l)Uri,osa , f Mr Roose. velt sticks lo his proposition and refuses to accept the appropriation which Congress made for his traveling expenses he will call forth appreciation of many a lax-payer in this country. Whether it is right or wrong for Con grass to p.iv the Pi3si ljat's trivalln;; exposes the people will app'aul htm when be reluses to accept it. Mauy of the plain people think that out ol a $50,000 salary a mau can afford his own traveling expenses, and so he can. t t t T In irs address to the farmers of the State at their meotiug in Raleigh last week, (invemor (ilenn is reported as advising them lo take an active Fanners in Polices. advise the farmers to make up a third party again, lie is too wisu a man to even think of ruch a thing, lie simply meant that the farmers beiug a great factor in the s!rong citizenship of tbe Stale they are entitled lo an interest in the political affairs that control the gteat interests of the State. He meant further that the farmers should be as intelligent as possible in their exercise ol the billot, and by ttkmg due interest in political affairs they can discharge their duties of citizenship with better iuteliigenco. t 14 t Some people uro over-itLxious about the honors which they hope will come tu th"m and teem to think mro about the honor desired than of the Anx'ous Aloat Honors in the Wilson Times by E'd. P. D. Gold, is full ol rich suggestion : "Much B accomplished in this life if a man is fortified with a noble purpose ol serving the principles of right in what ever sphere ha is placed. It is not the position th;.t honors him unless he fills it well, but any position or avocation of liL? rccogn'zod us joeuful by the oc-upant will reward tbe faithful servant with honor. The conFck usne.a that one has honestly en deavored to do what is right between man and man yields him the fruit of peace that is of great price. One need not be anx'ous merely to obtain honor. Thoy will come as the ha vest of good sowing and proper culture. To l3 a nun in the true souse of that word will itself gather honors from men." tut The canning bnsiuess seems to flourish in many sections, and the last fruit which has been entered on the list for canning purposes is blackber ries. While Canuin" Iilackbe. ries. the matter there are few things that finish off a July dinner better than a blackberry dumpling or a blackberry pie. The Gactonia Gazette Las gath ered a little information which it prints as follows : "An institution which appears to b3 performing its mission well is the canning factory near Mor ganton. Blackberries aie now being brought lu by the wagon load, for picking which the women and children get from $1.00 to $2 GO a day, to say nothing of red bugs. A correspondent of the Charlotte Observer siys that the men even have stopped ether work to pick blackberries on ac count of smerior financial inducements. After the berry season is over the cannery gets iusy with beans, torn a toe?, and corn, and finally pump kin, which carries the business well up to December. What, wo would like to ask, is the matter with the canning business?" 'tut A long lime at;o we he ird a farmer tell about how an old kiusmin of his planued for a crop. He said the plan was to plant just as large a crop as he thought he could eultivHe, then plant an- I loss by Lantern. , ... - ,, .. other big field and drive r'ght on all the time aud cultivate it all. Ho outclassed in calculation the enterprising dentist at Charlotte about whom the Charlotte Observer reMes the following : "Sometime since, Dr. Charles R Z ckler, a well known dentist of tbe city, purchased a small tract of land east of Charlotte for the purpose ol run ning there a little farm. The doctor did not realize how much time he would have to give to the tilling of the ten acres when ho made bis pur chase. He doubtless thought that he could run out late in the afternoon and early in the morning and attend to his farm without inconvenience to his practice. But he wt;s sadly at latilt in this respect, for his cares fell upon his shoulders heavier and heavier. Something must be done. This lea him to devise a scheme which is worthy of imitation by other farmers in the county. Dr. Zickler procured somewhere a brilliant bicycle lamp, which he fixed to hia plow in such a way that the light was rellected aloi g the row in front of the horse. With this lamp, lor several nights pastDr. Zickler has' been hard at work ploughing when all other folks were a-bed. The ecene of a white man ploughing by lantern light has created a vast deal of talk among the darkieg of oast Charlotte and numbers of 'them gathered to witness the sight." HUMAN BLOOD MARKS. A tale of horror was told by mark9 of human blood in the home of J. W. Wil liams, a well known merchant Bac, Ky He writes : ' Twenty years ago I had severe hemorrhages of the Lungs and was near death when I began taking Dr.King,a New Discovery. It com pletely cured me and I have remained wello ver since." It cures Hemorrhages, Chronic Coughs, Settled Colds and Bro nchitis and la, tbe only known cure for Weak Lungs. Every bottle guaranteed by E. T. Whiteheaed & Co., Druggist. 5C0 and $1.00. Trial bottle lree. PASSING EVENTS. part in politics. This is all well and good, but let no one think that Governor Glenn meant to means that will bring the honor. The follow ing concluding paragraph o! a timely editorial some may sneer a bit at blackberry goodie?, when you como down to the truth of ONLY 82 YEARS OLD. "I am only 82 years old and don't expect even when I get to be real old to feel that way as long as I can get Electric Bitteis," says Mrs. E. H. Brunson, of Dublin, Ga. Surely there's nothing else keeps the old as young and makes the weak as strong as this grand tonio 'Medicine. Dyspepsia, torpid liver, inflammed kidneys or chronic constipation are unknown after taking Electric Bitters a reason able time. Guaranteed by E. T. Whitehead & Co., druggists. Price 50o. 'TRADE AT HOME." PROBLEM THAT ISf BROUGHT HOME TO COMMUNITY. 5v"hy Do Mail Order Cencerns Thrive When Consumers Are Not Benefltedf The Home Advertisement. The increasing volume of business which is being directed from- local dealers to the big mail order houses Is threatening the prosperity of thousands of country towns and cities. The busi ness of these big concerns is multiply ing at an alarming rate, and if the ra tio continues the ultimate demoraliza tion of business in many rural towns is a foregone conclusion, says Edward K. Slater, food commissioner of Minne sota, in the Retailers' Journal, Chi cago. Who suffers the greatest financially? It is the business men of the communi ty. Any disinterested person familiar with the ins and outs of the business will concede that the consumer Is not profiting at the expense of the home merchant. If this were true the con sumer could not be blamed for taking the best end of the bargain. For the sake of the argument we will assume that the consumer is receiving just as good treatment at the hands of the mail order house as he does from his home merchant. The loss to the mer chant must be somebody's gain. It follows, therefore, that the mail order house proprietor is the only one who is benefited. But the question naturally suggests itself, why does the business of the mail order house Increase at such an alarming rate if the consumers are not being benefited? This is one of the greatest arguments advanced by the advocates of the mail order business. The answer Is found in the fact that the purchaser responds to advertising and he doesn't like to do business with a country merchant who went to sleep soon after he opened up his business and hasn't waked up yet. That Is the situation In a nutshell. The business of :he mail order houses has been built up on advertis ing, advertising, advertising! My department has been giving con siderable attention to groceries shipped into the state fcr mail order houses. We have been trying to place before the consumers the fact that many of these goods are illegal under our pure food law., and that this department has no jurisdiction over such ship ments. We cannot punish such violat ors and thus protect the consumers, as we are enabled to uo when the goods are sold inside xhe state. It follows, as a matter of course, that this de'part meut desires to see goods only pur chased through local dealers, so that all consumers will receive the protec tion afforded by a strict enforcement of our pure food laws. The country merchant must do his duty if he desires to compete with the catalogue house. He must beat him with his own weapon advertising. He, too, must have special prices on certain articles if he wishes to hold the home trade. Grocers and country merchants who think they are so located that they cannot advertise successfully should study the subject of advertising. There is probably no store, city or country, whose business could not be advertised successfully if the propri etor only knew how and has the nerve and patience to do it. There are a few country merchants in remote localities who have mastered advertising so suc cessfully that mail order competition does not bother them. This idea that you have lived so long in a town that everybody know3 you and you don't need to advertise is a mistake. This very indifference to advertising, indif ference to doing business the way busi ness is done in this day and age, is wh;it has enabled the mail order houses to grow from mere nothing ao great concerns. The merchant who can convince the people of his section and keep them convinced that his store is the best place to buy this and that article will not lose trade to the mail order house. Of course, he cannot afford to get out a catalogue as thick as a Bible, but he can keep an advertisement in his local papers and see that it is changed every week, thus keeing new bargains con tinually before the public. He should also have a maiUug list and send out a circular letter at least once a month. . Nothing is more discouraging than beginning an advertising campaign. Results are almost invariably slow at first. It takes pluck you must keep at It and master it. Don't look upon your country news paper as an object of charity. There is not a single country newspaper in your state, with a general local circu lation, which is not able to give full value for money received. The country papers can help you solve this question if you will give them the chance. Quakes and the Panama Canal. The engineers who recommended a sea level isthmian canal did not lay particular stress upon the greater abil ity of that type to withstand an earth quake shock, but this undeniable ad vantake assumes fresh Importance in the light of the San Francisco calam ity. One of the strongest arguments against the Nicaragua route was its admitted liability to earthquakes, and while the Panama route is not open to this objection it cannot be safely predicted that it will not be visited by shocks severe enough to damage a sea level canal and to wreck one with locks. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Modern Definition. Professor Suppose an irresistible force should meet an immovable body, what would be the result? Student A merger. Judge.' There are only lbO miles of railway Jo Paraguay. TO POLE BY AIRSHIP. DASH WILL BE MADE BY NOTED EXPLORER. Particulars of the Daring Venture in Contemplation Craft to Be Employed Prospects of Success. Mr. Walter Wellman, that notable explorer and journalist who has twice gone to the Arctic region in attempts to reach the north pole, expects to start from Spritzbergen the first of August on a third expedition, which will travel through the air in the largest dirigible balloon ever built. The envelope of the balloon is being constructed by Louis Goddard, of Par Is. It is to consist of two layers of rubber-covered cotton and one layer the inside one of rubber-covered silk. In Its central zone, which is the strongest, the envelope is to have a tensiie strength of 2,800 kilogrammes per square meter (about 575 pounds per square foot) thus giving a factor of safety of 6 to 1. The average fac tor of safety is five to one, as against to one of the Lebaudy airship. The form cf the balloon is to be main tained by an interior ballonette filled with compressed air by means of a five-horse power motor and compress or. On account of the triple rubber layers (which are lapped one inch at the seams and sewed together, and the stitching then covered with cemented strips) the leakage of gas is guaran teed not to exceed l1 per cent, per day. The amount of fuel and supplies consumed daily will more than coun terbalance this. The length of the gas bag will be 50 meters (164.04 feet); its greatest diameter, 16 meters (54.49); its surface, 1,960 square meters (21, 093 square feet); its capacity, 6,350 cubic meters (224,244 cubic feet); and its lifting power (with gas having a lifting power of 1,1.10 grammes per cubic meter) 7,240 kilogrammes, or lf, 000 pounds. The weight of the balloon is 2,860 pounds, while the framework, steel car, motors, and all other para phernalia bring this up to a total of 7,500 pounds. This leaves an avail able lifting power of 8,500 pounds for the crew of five men, three or four motor sledges, a metallic boat, and all supplies, says the Scientific American. The airship is to have two four cylinder water-cooled gasoline motors of 55 and 25 horse power. The larger motor drives a forward propeller through reduction gearing, and the smaller one a propeller at the rear in the same manner. A speed of 15 miles an hour will be obtainable with the 55-horse power motor, and 19 milts an hour with both. The total distance to be covered is about 1,200 miles, while the 5,500 pounds of gasoline to be car ried should drive the airship nearly twice this distance. This fuel is suf ficient for a 140-hour run of the main motor. Should one motor break down be yond repair, the travellers can use the other one; and if the airship gives out from any cause, the travelers can take to the sledges. A wireless telegraph outfit is to be taken along, so that communication can be maintained with the base as long as possible. At a meeting of the New York Mo tor club on March 2.1. Mr. Wellman ex plained fully his plans for the trip, and showed how he ha tried to pro vide for every contingency. The air ship is to be transported to Spitsber gen, inflated there, and experimented with during the month of July. If everything works satisfactorily the dash will be made in August and pro visions will be carried sufficient for 75 clays. Everything has been so care fully planned by Mr. Wellman, who has an intimate knowledge of what is required, that the expedition through the air, if not altogether successful, bids fair to be by no means a dismal failure. Rush Paper. Very little paper has been made of late years from rags. Vegetable sub stances are employed, as alfa, wood and straw; the idea has not prevailed that the wild or cultivated rush can be employed for thi3 purpose. But an in ventor has ascertained that when suit ably treated, the plant will produce a very white and consistent paper pulp by means of the following treatment: One thousand kilogrammes of the green rush, cut up as fine as possible, is mingled with a caustic lye of 30 de grees B., and boiled in an autoclave lor five or six hours under a pressure of six kilogrammes at 170 degrees C. The pulp is washed with water, sulphuric acid in suitable quantity added, then bleached with chloride of lime and washed energetically. It is then suit able for employment in the manufac ture of paper. Lo Papier. "Tar" for Sailor. Why is the word "tar" a synonym for "sailor?" Some dictonaries say that the allusion is to the seaman's tarry hands and clothes the "savor of tar" of Stephano's song in "The Tem pest," Burns uses "tarrybreeks" &3 equivalent to "sailor." But it is re garded as much more probable that "tar" is short for "tarpaulin," since Clarendon and other writers col loquilly use "tarpaulin" to signify a seaman. Of course, this ultimately gets back to tar, a tarpaulin being a tarred "palling," or covering (the same word as "pall"). . Busy Queen. The queen of the Hellenes probably dispenses more of what may be de scribed as "official kisses" than any one else on earth. Every lady pre sented to her with whom she is on in timate terms she kisses on the cheek; others who have not the hon'or of knowing her well she kisses on the forehead. . Hatred is ofun the result of know Jog but one side of perwa. LEADS IN LOGGING. ' GREATEST SOURCE OF TIMBER SUPPLY THE UNITED STATES. Almost Inexhaustible Resources of This Country in Woods Prac tically Unlimited in Variety. Recent otBcial reports show that Uncle Sam is easily the greatest lum ber man in the world. The greater part of the timber that is used in mak ing everything from matches to masts is hauled from the shore3 of the North American continent. While pine and fir form the bu'' of the trade, other American woods are much in demand. Even the trce-clothcd island. cf far off Australia depond upon American forests for their supply of commercial timber. It is estimated that half of the spool stock used in the thread man ufactories of England la birch wood that comes from Maine, a state that has been turning out on an aveiauf! 150,000,000 feet of lumber per annum' for the last 50 years. Southern cypress, for many years regarded as fit only to furnish shade for alligators, is now the standard shingle wood cf the world. California redwood, which half a century ago was practically unknown, is to-day eagerly sought for in all ihc markets of Christendom. One of the best examples of the demand for cer tain 'American woods is found in tin: prices paid for walnut, which comes chiefly from the middle Atlantic states. German agents have been known to pay from $250 to $400 each for fine logs of Pennsylvania walnut. Notwithstanding the enormous out put of timber from the United States, there is enough left to furnish food for the hungry teeth of the great saw mills for many generations to come. It was estimated by government ex perts in 1900 that the stajdi;i; sup ply of timber in the United States amounted to more than 2,000.000,000,. 000 feet, board measure. With wit ii a supply, together with the scientific methods of forestry that are coming more and more into use, there is lit tle fear that the United States will have to go outside her boundaries to procure lumber. The very magnitude of modern enterpiise in :i gimMity that measures will bo taken to pre serve the forests. A single corporation operating fn the state of Maine, has invested r- arly $16,000,000 in mills and machi.iery. dams and forest land. Willi sii' ii an amount of capital tied uu it i.i evi dent that the future proiiity . th.; undertaking depends upon the 'reser vation of its supply of raw material. The lumber-producing territory of the United States may be divided into six geographical sections, each of which is commercially distinct from the other. The lake region, with its white pine and hemlock, includes the stp.t:s of Michigan, MiiiLeaotc and Wis consin and parts of Missouri and Illi nois. Practically all of the states south of Mason and Dixon's lin and as far west as the Rocky mountains,- comprise the section from which come principal ly the long and short, leaf pine and all the cypresses. Of the various groups that which furnishes the great est variety of woods includes the New England and north Atlantic state.. Their forest products range from the spruce and birch of Maine to the hick ory, oak and walnut of the middle states. Ohio, Indiana and part of Illinois form a district whose contribution to the world's supply of lumber ia prac tically, all hardwood. Redwood, Doug las fir, cedar and spruce flourish in al most unlimited quantities In the Pa cific states and the Rocky mountain states supply pine, aspen, cottonwood and spruce. That the American lumber tiade has long since passed the clays of Its infancy and is now one of the foremost industries of the country is plain to every one who glances at the statis tics prepared by government expert.. With the growth of the industry log ging has been transformed from a crude operation performed by hand la bor, helped out by oxen and horst.s into a business conducted as skilfully and with the same attention to care ful organization and detail as are seen In other great enterprises. In the almost Inexhaustible forests of Washington a single company oftpn has hundreds of men on it3 pay roll and works a score of logging ensrins on Its own railroads, some of which are more than 80 miles in length. Companies of this size are crpahle of turning out 500,000 feet of logs daily during the entire year. Unlike other industries which have been rapidly developed from small be ginnings, lumbering has not lost all its picturesque features. The red shirted river drivers still guide the great drives down the rivers, but now massive dams control the flow of the water and the logs float to market with a regularity unknown in th? early days. To the old-time pictui esqueness has been added a s'Jow of discipline not unlike that belonging to an army. Chauffeurs of Long- Ago. There were chauffeurs long before automobiles. History tells u& that about the year 1795 men strangely ac coutered, their faces covered with soot and their eyes carefully disguised, entered by nights farms and lonely habitations and committed all sort. of depredations. They garroted their victims, dragged them before a yreat fire, where they burned the soles of their feet and demanded information as to the-whereabouts of their money and jewels. Hence they were called "chauffeurs," a name which frightened so much our good grandmothers. t3r Early Risers TH9 1mm !"- 1 MRS. EMMA FLF.T:,NVR Suffered Over TutoWars -Ifcu.'h JVaS In a Precarious Condition Caused ly Pelvic Catarrh. ':Tfaw'wwt:'9: -v ;- i . . - ;; X-V:-.-.-:- " -C-X ' .;-.,4A :, .ft rJ m HEALTH AND STREHQTii ; RESTORE!) BY "Mrs. F'mms Plei-sncr, 1112 Flxth Ave., Seattle, Wp.fh., Worthy Tl'-aa-Drer Nop c-f Temperance, writes: "I suffered over two yenrs with ir rctfulira.i'J pali'dil periods. &1y li alth was in a very preaar.-w; comfit: m ant! I wr.s xnxlc;;3 to find something to rs inri try hcettii ur.d s-tr-jnth. ! wa-i vory f.lad to try l'oruxia and fl. li-lit-'d tol'nd Hint it vasd'iiiv nit po.-xi. I coutiiiucd tnxi-c it a little vex tm o luoatl'K and .ouml l-iy Irould' r' 10 nioved. " ennr-idtr it a r':-.'V.d medicinp and sl:n!' i rv?r ft.? tv.' ,., r ft, taking v d'tsc oc.j S':;.illy what I feei run rfjwji and tire J. " Oar t'tlns eontr.n tiiMi.-wud- of t r-1 i a'.enifd-- wlii'-t: lr. irnr'in.in hi'"1 ra cdved frt-'iu --r-.-.tt-fuj, haj'py v.-.itvn vli-i hiivo hecn te.-torod to hcn!ti l,y rehK-'iy, IV.t.uh. lvi" n:. i '.i ; ou ! ive cny !r"-.b! iu lcr.rij.Si.;' to j'!? the cruel? li'.u'M S wmJ'.i :;ie ifonli-.. Ali th" T:eli;.h i"y ivc'i rr id o;:- 'Jhi c : Nf.v .- A k v r.o ciii's'i .) Jioni , Knh ry r:ri--, !-(! it bv, b balder irjublw i r tli-M.-w u'.- 'si v.ti) vi I t.vito a ti. .-e t-f rii.p uh-j. f.p'tu :et: t till.f will bo re'if. u-d U-f-.Tt; n.onuiiS '!e:::hu Ti.;M:iy, v. h;.t il.e i. wid est wti'-d that t.:fOvts? Tt-i'Miiy Tho Liiid u feiici'js ;;"! ( .:'K y.xLci SsUtrtir.iti. A liquid co! vt;r: f- r childen lh! i j-V-.r i'.i, hf ."i !; 'i-.J (ifi'l UVl i:5 HtVs J. v.,;ive jr. -:oy . !.d 'l'..r cri;i to n'.l f.iii'-r etnjlt -yi :!. .r cold remM:fi- hetv.ws it r.vt t n l lit b-..v,i!s. A :Wi i 'it.aly f.'i- Ct.lihi. C., ih'.v.y., -W::; ;,!; t'c':,'h u,l !! c.r :!'c ) t r-i... !.!?.! : ilVi tirr. v r-.rl-srt i'ie:fH.n:t ;.;Ki. K. T. Wh-ehdid S: : ..-'. t Ids J Neck, f.oggeil'M Drug Irt.up, SUhyo l "A hi-.::t chil.i d'cr.d-t th;; lire,"wi.i the retd) Ira.! ' j.hii'.jwoj !:i 1 "I th.n't know al-oi't thr.t," .s-ivtrcii tSiO ttsua tvii ' h'n.iVc' coj)ii-H-.ii.'U "1 tee that l:n hi. i v. :i:'a a ot'.v ii-iv." Wrshinij- A u --1 i -i cr th ;ir; .!.; ! the j-yof :i Hh-i. V..-1 v.ouMr.'t want to l ytnr rt-ii'o, ii r i-.vfctl.fiait with a bid breath. i'"u crr.'t have a t.vee; hi cat b wi;h'.ut a he!:hy htomatdi. Vou ."nii't bine a hc- .'lhy .-t' rv-".h wjtbottt f.ti'ecl d.csiir.n. Then U i.ly oufc remedy ibat diCht wliht v:i aiil and iMkea tl.f. h:'e)th as nwet t it ro and that ir-m.-.dy i KODOh I OU DYrrr'l A. It is a itlicf f ir eotir dorracii, ii:ilr.iiation id the bc.;irt, mid ilf.cr ailments ari.-i-.j: from disord- r of i he sinmach and digft.tio:s. Tao m little IC-idid rftni jotir meulr' nd see h;;t It will do for jou. Sold by K. T. Whi(eh? id t Ci. Or.r.'t How d think I cmii fnt such an un.i'fjvisiive meal an this? What Ur.d f stuff lo you call thi, anywr.j ? WnUr TLalV unaul'cr atod hod, sir. ljt;(:it l ree I'tvt. Try a little KOlML I OU DV.-rfir-Sl A a (for your meat.-?, ir-'ee the :i7c:t 't wi!l pit ducc on vour j'fii'-r ii f t-Ilu by d.uerliiic your f.i.d ut.d 1 e'jib;-; (jin r!oir:::ch to j;Lt It-e:.' l:;t. Mmty H'oinciii" irf overworked to )h noint whpro tf.ry rffo.-" to t" I'ir'her. Koh.d di,r is yonv ftifni t ''. r'.ive- ur t'.i'n'ich !!in re t it i (i.c--, v-bile its ;C eor.struc.li vc jro ;rtic ;ct fie cton.ach lack into 'Vi'kt! or.!cr. 1 rt-- '.KM , i if;; i'CP, s.Mir Ff.oi;"c;i, j..i Ution .f thft l.earl, I-t-lchii.;; tic. o'il I v I'. 7. 'Al.l.fhtad .t C . Tho wor.-t kU' l of a :ei Ii:!'.m:i o have is v. here v,uh dy kt-ow:- cs ctly vh;it-you hivo dn. m. csct vbi. !y m -et;U a :!iiT.;.e-f thi.i.-.' :o ut J'm. tvv ! iy f-:-c iia uu: "! H 'i.rfT Ul ft tWiil' UV.T I battle With (.)::'. -'C H.l i n, ..!'.. lit I sotpc, ur.fil J tried Hi.tiVt.' A'.ici ' Salve ; which turned the ticTe, by i :ir inir l:Olh. till not a trace rem writes A. r. Rruce, of Farnivlllr, V. Hct for old l.'lcers. Cut.-. ih::r,. t-.r.d iw-.tibds. a.'ic at K. T. Whitctu.i: & Co.. dr utK'sH- I .Tij;'-3h:;x-:v--: : :v,
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 19, 1906, edition 1
1
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