Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / May 28, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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qpo4 Advertising I to Bommws what Steam is to Machinery, that groat propelling power. This paper gives results. COMI Good AdvcrtUr U?c theke columns lor MtfftttS. An advertisement in this paper will reach a good class of pople. . E. MILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. 'Excelsior" is Our Motfo. Subscription Price $5.00 Per Year. VOL. XXIV. New Serie Vol. 11.6.13 SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1903. NUMBER 21. H Tf Tf iONWE 1:0 YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK ? I.idney Trouble Makes You Eliserable. bod who reads the naws to know of the wonderful cures made by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the frcat kidripv 1iro- it t- F - and bladder remedy. ZrU , ' t'"" iii'-i" .- " w.ic- !?ji teenla century; dis l"!:t covered after years cf scientific research by fl Dr. K:!m?r, the emi " nent kidney and Llad- der specialist, and ir escfal in promptly curinr v.-r-ndcrfuily sue ' 'me back, ki his; Mcs and Eriehi's : bladder, uric acid trou zcn.se., which is the wors; '.rm ci kidney trouble. Dr. K;S:-n;r?s Sivamp-Root z not rcc-c-mmendad for everything but if you navel: id icy, liver or bladder trouble it will be found j -;at the remedy you need. It has been tested :i so many ways, in hospital work, in private, -rastice, among the helpless too poor to pur c haD relief and has proved so successful i:-. :'v-:.ry ci'-.c that a special arrangement h?s lzc:. i.:;'.d3 by which all readers cf thispnocr o Ivivt not already tried i!, may have & '.?.:-.-,)!?. bottle sent it so by mail, also a bock :-.-:lii" more about Swarr.p-Root and how to i.nd : .:t if you have kidney or bladdertroublc. When '-ri;;:.j mention reading this cnerou? effer in this pap?r and f?-rfVL. rend your address to tfiFpik Dr. Kilmer Sc Co.,Eir.g-E?ifts?j rOjJ'.l'ar tut ceiit ar.d ITomoof Sv, an3;i-Roct. dollar sues are sold by ail good druggists. Don't make any mistake, but re ;:KTi)bor the name, Swamp Koot, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Hoot, and the address Wil' ;h.;T.iton. N. Y., on every bottle. P R, MILLS Land Surveyor Scotland Xeek, N. C. .vu-tf . J. P. OTIBERLEY, Physician and Surgeon, Scotland Neck, IT. C. Office on Depot Street. A, C LIVEPJ10N, DENTIST. Office up stairs in White Q5 head Building. Office hours from 9 to 1 o'clock and 2 to 5 o'clock. r SI. Refracting Optician, Watch Maker, Jeweler, En graver, Scotland Neck N. C. B McBRYDE VEBD, Attorney and Counselor at Law, 219-221 Atlantic Trust Building Norfolk, Va. Notary Public. Bell Phone 7G0 gDWARD L. TRAVIS, Attorney' and Counselor AT Law, Halifax, N. C. Money Loaned on Farm Lands yJILL H. JOSEY, General Insurance Agent, C. Scotland Neck, N. Fit fjr C ly-ly'-L-' 42 ' i I'romf is n luxuriant grow'.ti. f tv.-'v""- jiiNc:r rails to Hfv''' ;.v : ia.crs.rAo .rum rii,ac.j l hair 1"i'in.?r. PS IT. I am prepared to serve my old customers and the 'V' public generally with the very best of fresh Beef, Pork, Sausage, &c. All orders filled promptly, and every customer s wants regarded. J. 13. IIIM, Main St., next to Prince's Stables l-2-2m Cough Caution Towlungs. Wyoa rovgh-ofon from a simple oWonljr-y houW 8lwyflhcal,80otl.n. and ease tlio "Titeted t ron- i::iiai n uut xvu , uiuv u tVi intra EU.pofyins poison. It's strango how sqnthinea lir.atiyromo about. Fortwenty yeftrs Dr Shoop hns constantly warnfd ropTe not to take cmign Chloroform, or similar poisons. And now-i i Ji ioloi)3nro m your toiigii uiui. ,"";v end others, should insist on having i)r. 2""P l;ii)cls and nono in the medicine, clso it must oy law be on tlie latal. And it's not only K b Z is sn id to be by those that know it best, a truls ro- T-arti'm!:ir!y v ith your children. Insist on ha InK V-T. Shoop b Cough Curo. Compare carefully the It. Sboop package with others and roto the diffrrence. No poison murks there! ou cau elways ho on the sato Biae uy uuiiiuuun.a 9 Couah Cure Aimost every t '.per 5 is euro 1 ;PJ rket new i A. 0. PETERSON. THE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOURS. Observations of Passing Events. The News and Observer made the following timely editorial comment on the nomination of Hon. Claude Kitchin in the Con Weil Deserved Honor. paid to Hon. Claude Kitchin by the Democracy of the Second district in renominating him by acclamation for Congress. Mr. Kitchin has served three terms in Congress with ability and fi delity. He has served his constituents faithfully and taken a high stand in the House. Early in his congressional career, when Mr. Roosevelt was at the height of his popularity, Mr. Kitchin made a speech on the action of the President that had a national circulation and made him much reputation. Inher iting his Democracy from his brave father, the late Hon. W. H. Kitchin, who was a tower of strength to Democracy on many hard-fought battlefields, Mr. Kitchin has always been a Demo crat of ''the most straitest" sect, and from boyhood was a fight er in the ranks until he won his way to leadership. Of clean private life, correct ideals of public service, and devotion to his convictions, Mr. Kitchin stands among the foremost leaders of the young Democracy in the House." Col. Fred A. Olds writes the following encouraging letter to the Manufacturers' Record of Baltimore: "The fact that the nnmlnn - ir it r Corporation Commission has been noti- Resuming in North Carolina. fiedby officialg of the Norfolk & goutli ern Railway that arrangements have been made for the imme diate resumption of work on the great trestle across Albemarle Sound a t Edenton is taken as a good sign. The cost of this great work, the trestle being five and a quarter miles in length, will approximate a million dollars. Work was very abruptly stop ped last November after about 150 yards at each end of the trestle had been laid in place. A noted lumber company has made very heavy purchases of timber in the section between here and Springhope, less than 30 miles northeast of Raleigh, and will construct a line to this city, connecting with the At lantic Coast Line at Springhope. Raleigh is arranging to take something like 2000 horse-power from the electric power plant at Buckhorn Falls, now owned by the Central Carolina Power Company, which is a branch of the Electric Bond & Share Co., Egbert Douglas being the general manager. At the plant at Buckhorn Falls, on the Cape Fear river, 28 miles from Raleigh, the horse-power developed is 4000, and of this Fayetteville Cotton Mills take half, two mills already using the power and three others having contracted for it. A full force of men is at work on the dam and power-house of the great electric power plant at Blewett's Falls, on the Pee Dee river, near Rockingham. Cotton mills are very thick in thrt pcct'O". This plant will develop 28,000 hore power. All the North Carolina'plants are being built on the 60-cycle system, so that all can be tied together if necessary, this applying to the great Whitney plant, the Yadkin river plant, near Winston Salem, and various others. The Buckhorn Falls plant is the most easterly one in the State of importance. There is one at Milburnie, on the Neuse river, six miles from here, which deve lops only 800 horse-power." Just now hundred and hundreds of boys and girls from the various public and private schools, and students from the vari , . . ous colleges and universities, are going from the confinement of the classroom to the freedom of home. It is a good and gleeful season and many of them richly deserve the rest and sleep and recreation which will come to them in their homes and their accustomed places of rest and amusement. TI13 grind of student life for a long weary year, with books and maps and examinations, is rpa v a frvcai iansrue 10 me vouiitr iiiau or vuuus vujiiu,u, tue bov or girl, who meets duty t is no easy thing to study hard the end of the time be subjected to rigid examinations. It is a severe tax on the mental and nervous powers, and not infre quently on the physical powers as well. No wonder that some- iraes the young woman or the dupois under such strain until they come to look like a "bean' pole," as one school girld expressed it. Along with the pleas ure of rest and recreation comes also the other pleasure of being at home and taking in the joy of home life with father and mother, brother and sister, and other friends and loved ones at lome. There are joys and pleasures peculiar to each individu al case which help fill the cup of peace for both the parents and others at home, as well as for the boys and girls returning from school. But to the boys and girls a word of suggestion seems to us not out of place: After the full rest of a few days or a week, as the case may be, when dent to college or school life, has passed off and you feel your selves again, don't forget that while you have been tired out and fatigued at school by study and examinations, tests and all that, those at home who have school have also had a year of to vours, and in many respects wearying. They have been economizing, may be, in order to furnish vou books and clothes, awake many a lonehy hour in planning for a way whereby they might keep you at school. And there has been added to all this the anxiety for the success of their boy or girl away at school. Bear in mind all this, bright and iollv youthful people, and ones at home after you have gained tne rest wnicn iney are so glad to grant you. IT REACHED THE SfOT. Mr. E. Humphrey, who owns a large general store at Omega, O., and ; .oc;,Vr,r, nf t.ho A, atiis l.'ounry lei- ephone Co., ns woil as tuc Home xt-w-phone Co., of Pike County. O , says oi Dr. King's yewD:scovcry : It paved my life once. At least I think it aid. It reemed to reach the ppot the very scat of my cough when everything else failed." Dr. King's New Discov ery not onlv reaches the cough spot; it heals the sore spots and the weak spots in the throat, lungs archest. TSold under guarantee at E. T. Whitehead Company's drug store. 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. ; t rn1 gressional Convention in Kinston last week: "That was a well deserved honor at all times in all these things. for eight or ten months and at young man . reduces in. avor- that tired, worn feeling inci made it possioie ior you to oe m toil and anxiety doubtless equal perhaps far more wearing and and perhaps tney nave lam the dead and silence of night be a willing helper to tne lovea A great many people imagine they have heart trouble when the fact ia that the whole trouble lies in the stom ach. The pains in the side around the region of the heart are not necessarily heart trouble. We suggest that you start with the' stomach and wdienever you feel a depression after eating or whenever your food seems to nauseate take Kodol. It will not he very long until all these "heart pains" will dis appear. Take Kodol now and until you know you are right again. There isn't any doubt about what it will do and you will find the truth of this statement verified after you have used Ki-dol for a few weeks. It is sold here by E. T. Whitehead Co. A STUDY OF OPTIMISM. A Panacea for All Ills. - (Success Magazine.) Savages and primitive peoples have great faith in the fact that the Creator put into some barks, plants, and minerals remedies for every physical ill. But we are beginning to learn that man carries the great panacea for all ills within himself; that the antidotes for the worst poisons, the poisons of hatred and jealously, exist in his own mind in the form of love, charity, and good will essences. We are beginning to learn the magical medicinal quali ties of right thinking. The cheerful, hope thought is itself a powerful remedy for a score of ills, such as the "blues," melancholia, and discouagement. Optimism is an antidote for some of the worst men tal diseases. Laughter has cured many a condi tion which would otherwise have re sulted fatally. If persisted in, even mechanically, laughter will often work marvelous physical and mental changes. Think how many ills hope and en couaragemt antidote! Kindness, and a helpful, inspiring mental atti tude, have kept thousands of people out of insane asylums as well as out of prisons. Some people are so terrified by the dread of poverty, or the fear of fail ure, that they are robbed, of their ability to succeed by the wasting of their physical vitality, their mental energy, and by the killing of their enthusiasm. On the other hand, confidence, self-assurance, and the tonic of hope, optimism, multiply a man's power a thousandfold. Think how many human ills can be antidoted by the magical, medicinal power of love! It is a solvent for selfishness and greed, a destroyer of hatred, envy, and jealousy, of re venge, criminal intent, and a score of other mental and physical ene mies. Hold to optimistic ideals, and you will drive out pessimism, the great breeder of disea:?. failure and misery. Stand porter at the door of your thought; be on your guard, and keep out all the enemies of your happiness and achievement as you would exclude thieves from your home, and you will be astonished at your entire change of thought with in a few months. You will face life in a different way, and be able to protect yourself against everything that would injure you or hamper your progress. The constant contemplation of the success thought, the thought of prosperity, of abundance a3 one's birthright, the claiming of all the good things of the world as ours by right, because we are part of the great creative principle of all things, because we are heirs of all that is good in the universe, will so change our mental attitude toward life that we will begin to be prosperous and failure will be impossible. The health thought, the constant affirmation of physical vigor, strength, and power, and great vitality, a3 the right of all the children of God, will tend to bring U3 into the realization of per fect physical harmony. The habit of holding the thought of health as an everlasting fact, the thought of strength, vigor and ro business as a reality, will soon give us a consciousness 01 increasing power. We shall feel that we are being buttressed and supported by almighty principle, because our thoughts and sentiments are sur charged with life and truth, and are creative. All thoughts which suggest weak ness, failure, unhappiness, or pover ty, are destructive, negative, tear ingdown thoughts. They are our enemies. Brand them whenever they try to'gain an entrance into your mind. Avoid them as you would thieves, for they are thieves of your comfort, thieves of harmony, thieves of power, thieves of happi ness, thieves of success. Every true, beautiful, and helpful thought is a suggestion which, if held in the mind, tends to reproduce itself there clarifies the ideals and uplifts the life. While these inspir ing and helpful suggestions fill the mind their opposites cannot put in their deadly work, because the two cannot live together. They are natural enemies. One excludes the other. We shall learn after a while to dis tinguish the enemies of vigorous Stops earache in two minutes ; toothr ache or pain of burn or reald in five minutes; hoarseness, one hour; mus cleache, two hours; sore throat, twelve hours Dr. Thomas Eclectric Oil, mon arch over pain. thinking, vigorous living, vigorous achievement, and to know that all envious thoughts, every bit of hatred or jealously, or love of revenge, tends to poison the blood and 5o weaken the mental processes. We shall re alize that purity of thought purifies the blood, clears the brain, adds greatly to th physical vitality, and is a constant mind and body refresh er. I know a lady who has learned the enviable secret of quickly refresh ing her mind even in the most trying and exacting conditions. Knowing the power of mental images to renew the mind, she has already made a study of her thought enemies and learned to eliminate all those which suggest dark, unfortunate images. She knows that those which bring beautiful, cheerful, uplifting, en couraging pictures are her best friends. By cherishing one and excluding the other, she freshens and clarifies her thought and rejuvenates her life at will. She can shut the door of her mind to her enemy images, those which depress and make her feel un comfortable, and she can keep all the mental avenues open to the health-giving, inspiring images, to the life thoughts which build, recon struct, recreate. In the midst of great disappoint ments and sorrows which would overcome an untrained mind, this lady has been able to bear up, ar d without losing her calm, sweet serenity, to maintain a'hopeful poise, cheerful mental balance, and har mony of disposition. Tbe Reclamation cl Lands. (Th Cotton Journal) . A majority of our readers are fa miliar with the fact that the Govern ment is doing a mighty work in the West by the erection of great dams and power houses, building great flumes, digging great ditches, and placing the life-given water on the barren desert. Very few of them are possibly aware of the extent of unreclaimed swampland in the country where the trouble is too much water in stead of too little. Florida, for example, has twenty 1 million acres, Lousisiana ten million acres, Arkansas five million acres, .Mississippi five million acres, and the whole country has approximate ly seventy-five million acres of swamp lands, only needing drainage to make them the most productive lands of the country. These reclaimed lands always prove to be the most valuable, owing to their inexhaust ible soils and their special adaptation to certain kinds of crops. No one would think that the State of Geor gia as a svramp land State, and yet it has two and one-half million acres, or an area that if reclaimed would give 50,000 farms of 50 acres to the farm. In this one State there is ly ing waste enough choice l:md to sup port in comfort 250,000 people. In cutting away our timber, already disappearing far too rapidly, we are changing pestilential marshes into prosperous and healthful homes, and if all the swamp lands of the coun try could be drained in a day, we could the next day set up in busi ness 1,500,000 families, giving each 50 acress. This would mean a pop ulation equal to the great State of New York, or equal to the combined noDulation of Georgia, Alabama, iississippi and South Carolina. And tbia fT-Amondons asset now lies idle for the most part. Florida under the lead of a progressive Governor, has seriously undertaken the recla mation of ker swamp lands, and it would be a splendid investment if other States would follow the ex ample. The general Government might well make the work a part of the general reclamation service now be ing so actively carried on in the West. At $50 per acre, which is a mod erate estimate of the value of re claimed swamp lands(and some could be cited that is at this moment pay ing big interest on $500 per acre), the swamp lands of the country would representa value of nearly four thousand millions of dollars, or more than six time3 the assessed valuation of the great State of Geor gia. Is that not a bi.ar enough item to iustify the best thought of some of ou r big public men? Weak women should read my "Book No. 4 For Women." It was written expresslv for women who are not well. The Cook No. 4 tells of Dr. Shoop's "Night Cure" and just how thei-e soothing, healing, antiseptic supposi tories can be successfully applied The book, and strictly confidential medical advice is entirely free. Write Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. The Night Cure is sold by A. C. Peterson. . The Spring PatlJ. (By Will T. Hale.) old path, leading from the The kitchen door, Down to the spring below the hill what charm It had when we were country boys, before Ambition led our footsteps from the fai-m. Beside it grew the loaded orchard trees. The bees with dronings flying in and out; Here a wild rose made sweet each passing breeze, And there the jay sent forth its jeering shout. How oft we, loitering, water pail in hand, Thought of the future, as the childheart yearns. Till from the kitchen came the stern command, "Fetch on the water, boys the gravy 11 burn'" 'Twas there we ever heard the ear liest lay Of catbirds sounding down the sil ent morn; From there of evenings in twilight L'ay, The whipporwill retold its tale for lorn. And there in days before and thc-e that came, Fond lovers strolled and dreamed of the to be, Wiiile all the world shone, for affec tion's flame. With the soft light ne'er seen on land or sea. And so I .feel, as old Time onward plods, Recalling those far years of hap piness, Wo boys were truly favored by the gods Despite bare feet and home-made galluses! A PI fir l!ss Enys. (3y J. D. Gallup.) . Let me speak a word in your c;ir, iittle mother. Just a word for the dear, naughty little boys who, with their muddy feet, torn' trousers 2nd dIHy h?.nds. so vex you, as they mal.e havoc in your "spick and span," clean sitting-room. The wee pirlie never does that. She remembers to take off her rubbers on the porch, and wire fences have no attraction Cor her. She washes the tiny hands a dozen times an hour for '.he pleas ure of seeing iha soap bubbles. Then she lays those rose-leaf lips upon your check so softly and nestles in your arms so gently that not one fold of your dainty chiffon is disar ranged. But along corals Master Ted, jumps astride your lap, throws, both sturdy arms about your neck and gives a bear hug that threatens to dislocate it. He is only pursuad ed to desist, when really convinced that he hurts this precious mother, whom he loves with nil the ardor of his loyal little soul. As you valiu.' that immortal soul, never give h;:n reason to suspect that you do not prize that loyalty as a priceless gem, even thouarh it Le yet in the rough. Do not discourage the little man by too constant effort to repress and tone down those animal spirits, which r.t time3 rise so tempestously. The toil . and care cf life will soon er.oujrh do that. When in the midst of the morn ing's work he rushes in with, "Moth er, ea:i I have some bread and butter and jelley?" never mind if you mu?t stop in the midst of cake to prepare it. The days are coming when those words will ring as a precious mem ory. When the buttons drop oft. so un accountably, every stitch you put in to fasten them on again fastens the heart of the dear boy to yours a lit tle firmer. And when at bedtime he asks shyly, "Won't you please come up and stay with ma a little while, mother?" even though you lay aside some favorite author, I beg you, go with him. It is often, then, you may speak those words which will sink into the fallow ground of his heart, that when he has gone out to fight the battles of life, will 1 elp to keep him upon the side of right. As some one has indicated, there is no need that you should go to the polls, dear mother, if you teach your boy those principles of truth, right eousness and honor, so thit when he ! comes upon the scene of rction in public life he may never be turned aside. NOTICE TO OL'il CUSTOMERS. We are pleased to announce that Foley's Honey and Tar for couhs. onlds and lunir troubles is not affected bv the National Fine Food and Dru? J . . . . Law, as it contains no opiates or otner harmful drue. and we recommend it aa a safe remedy for children ana disenso 11 tairen in iime. r,. x . i;ue adulta. E. T. Whitehead Comiany. i head Oompany. Wfcat the South Needs. rrorrrff!i-e Farmer. In a minute or two, wo shall men tion some of these men whom we know in North Carolina (and later on, perhaps, some in Virgina and South Carolina), but our object af ter all h not so much to do honor di rectly to these workers, worthy ss they arc as it is to urge their example upon other men in every sec; ion of the South. What we need in North Carolina and South Caroli na and Virginia and Georgia and Tennessee to-day,and in every South ern State for that matter, is a dozen men in every neighborhood and township dedicated to some line of progressive thought or to some phase of community improvement. These, we repeat, these are the silent mak ers of the world's best news, and it was of such that Dean Swift wrote two hundreds years ago when he de clared the man who makes two blades of grass grow where only one grew before "does mere essential service to his country than the whole race of politicians put together." And this is good doctrine. The man who teaches his neighbor to double their corn yeild deserves as much honor as a Congressman. The man who originates a new type of cotton rr tobacco is as worthy as the scien tist who makes some great chemical discovery. The man who gets good highways i:i a community where bad roads or.ee hampered progress should have a monument as high as a gen eral'. And li e man who founds a good school and develops the minds of boys and girls who would other wise have walked in darkness he should have tbe prai.se of men no less than if he had painted some maste piecc of art or wrought some splen did 'sta'ure. These ore the things we need to learn in North Carolina and throug out the South to-dny, and these aro the men we need to honor the man who stands for some vital idea, some plan of constructive work in rebuild ing his section, and therefore in re building the South. Ho is a worthy son of the men who wore the gray, and no one else i3 worthy. To make rov ?i r low and selfish aim and its fruits wili turn to ashes on the lips unless in making money oneslao serve one's fellow. I.VWitl's Li:t!? Early Uisnrs are -iii;t!l, Mifc, suit siitd gentle little pills. Sold hv V.. T. Whitehead Co. Some people st em to make a sper irdty of thinking second hsnd thoughts. Mot li-(i;;!iiin skin eruption, -ciV'fula, p:tntI s, lihes, te.. aiv due to iiupuiv Mood. Jiurdock Dlooil Hit t'i'i i a e'eansing 1!ood tonic. MnkM you c !,vir .-ycd, clcar-brumed, clcar ) Linned. Our opinions are like our visits more appreciate! when not forced upon people. "ITefdih (Vfi.r i-i r"al'y tli closest ff'v Iniiluti n evoi- u-t produced. Tl;ii clever Cott'c-- Substitute was re :'M)t!y prodwd I y Dr. Shoop, of Ha- ir.o, V.i-. Not : Km in of nal (V-ffoe in it s:!i r. Ir. .JioopN ir':iltli 0f- fi'p m irn.i' ii- ni J im' I ".'!:- 01! grams, with in;tH, li'it-i, c. Really it wrndd I'oo! nv. txpe-.t who might drink it for f'o.'. e. o i or .':0 minutes tedious ooiiing. doctor. Made in a minute" says the M hy Howard liroeeryCo. The rainbow chaser a run for his money. it least gets ThTe it. a rink P.iin Tablet m.ado by Dr. f-hoop, that will positively ftop any pain, nil y here, in L'' minutes. fr'igi::t- r,verywh'ie sell thorn ns Dr. -boop's Ilea laiho TaSMs, but thy :-op ether pain? ni oa-iUy lieadadif. Tr. Snoop's 1 i.sk IV in T.ib'ets simply coax Mood p!C.-tue away from pain center" that i- all. Pain eomts from hjoed prcrf'ivo errrestion. Stop that procure with Dr. Flioop's Headache Tablets and pain is instantly roup. 20 Tab'f'tf 2.V. Sold by A. C. ir'cterion. The fellow who does the talking has no chance to win the argument. A Gcrlalii Cure for Aching Feet. Siii k" into your fdiocs A11'n'B Foot-E:i-?, a powder. It euros Tin-d, Ach inv, Cal'-oiK, F wen ting, Swollen feet. At a1! Druvoista and Sboi. Store, 2.V. ainp!'' Fi!T:K. trd. LeR'.v, N Address, Allen S. Olm Y. A little flattery row snd then will soften up the hardest men. Itehir-g piles provoke profanity, but profanity won't cure them. Doan' Uhitni'-ni cures h clung, bleeding or pr.itru lu g piles after years of tuffer-i.n;r- A: env drug store. If you let others do your bragging for you, it isn't apt to be overdone. Kidney complaint kill? more people than any other disease. This is due to the disease being fo insidious that it j get?, a good hold cn the system berorw ... : 1 T7i.... i':,l.. . 11 is rccogmwu. x u..-, a ftmm? vmw will prevent the development 01 latai
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 28, 1908, edition 1
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