Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / May 5, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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Cood Advertising 1 t.. I'.unioy what Steam is to Vi'i-hiiKTy, rliatreat propelling ... i .t of. i'iiis psipor gives results. r Good Advertisers Use these columns for result. An advertisement in tliis pftpri will reach a good class of people. ommonwea: ra j, C. J.-VOT, editor and Proprietor. 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year. XXVI. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 5,. 1910. NUMBER 18. 3 "V Wss&raed Over-Weft. caitv Sidneys Blake Impure BleoS. unhealthy kidneys are re for much sickness audsufiering, o therefore, if kidney " , y?rj?'; trouble is permitted ti ' - ': ,j'i',''?tj j! continue, serious" re :' cults arc riot likely ' : ' jv'"rV- to follow. Your other ' "- VM h ':T'Ta-ls may need at ' ? ..& 1 ' ter.tion, but your kid - '' ,; I neys most, because : Y'liJP they do most and " :f sh'.mld have attention J l:::"t. Therefore, when '. Vi. vsr.re v;-r.!c cr out of order, .. . kT.-.;...!: .1 hov. quickly your en- :'';Veted and how every organ ..! uil to do its i!.:t v. i r.; v rick or '- foci brdly," begin kidney icmedy, Dr. ' . : v -v.: p-lloot. A trial will con . w.i :f it js ;rt-at merit. , ' v.: ! nr.d im-'vdiate effect cf --Root, the great kidney and iv ! j-.lv, is scx-n realized. It 1. :. h . . . because Unremarkable '.: . . ' ; properties have been : . iito:; -:i:Ki'. of the most distress It y-'.t nc .d r. medicine you . and on.x loj- f ?-&mB m!&3!3 ,i - . ht-tile 4 --- . r'SsSs3a 1 r.iso a "474J3S8gSg t y yi h. ;'-.:Vu!r ; - ;.u 1 if you have kidney or .'Io. Mention this paper to Dr. Kilmer & Co., :i. X. V. Don't make anv mis--.ne:nb.T tlie i:me, Swamv- i :'Ki: iSc a dalt-r sell yea .-'.x'.:. ; i.i i.'l.'.c? of Swarrtp-ILoot if v. ; be fi. ijointed. jt PAUL lilTCHIN, Attorney at Law, Scotland Xeek, X. C. 1 ' : ; i ' t i -1 : " Anywhere. 5 IS. SMITH & WIHBERLEY, PiiviciAys and Surgeon Sr,.;land Xeck, X. C. OMIee on Depot Street. f5. .-.. 1. Li Virwi lbl, DENTIST. Vys O;heo upstairs in Whitp " head Building. CK'?? r 'I--.', fro?n 9 to 1 o'clocl-r o: 1 J to o o'clock. L. TRAVIS, Attorn r:Y and Counselor at L.vvr, Halifax, X. O. linny Lonnad on Farm Lands C-rv.-.-uAi, Insurance Agent, Scotland Xck, X. C. Lei Us Have Your Work r?:D. Rove ?j Colclen. Fi o Tailarir?, Pressincr and Re ri'4"- Guarantee prices and y.-'Tk.tu-r.sh-p. All our work done in t-u :.! -ng- on JIain Street, Scot ri . X. c. That Fit. ;v; tisfnotion (iufirnntced Wo rind our own Ion .sos. !1 A H It Tn:k-r, Hal! & Co., The Expert Opticians, 33 Oranty St., Norfolk, V: Catalogue ca Application. Mail Orders promptly at- tn:Jed to. -..- Hair' iAL3AKI CZ.a.-i."?s and t eawilica lu:T. J "'t-i)ll'w:ii.-!r? Iczuriant trowth. t-:r-r rr.i'ir. i.o 3;jBtoro Gray? Vv-'4 l.j j-ij youtUful Color. Pf.i: l ,ra3-i a liair T illiUiJ. POSTED ! . All the lands formerly owned by Al12 North Carolina Lumber Com ply, against bunting, fishing, or trespassing of any kind. 14l , S. F. DUNN, Agent itf fpr Dr, H. H. Frim i ! s The Hero. Go sing your song to him who dreams, x To men who carve or paint or play, Whose splendid vision ever seems To keep our grcser world at bay; Such souls, you say, possess the lar ger view I sing the virile, common men who Do! Go sing your song to those who reap A golden harvest of acclaim, Who gallantly to glory leap, Whose herald is the trumpet. Fame! I sing the quiet man with fur rowed brow, Who does his homely duty, here and now! Go sing your praise of Art Divine, Of "Color, Form, and Atmosphere, Sing of the mystic Muses Nine, And of the men They hold most dear. I sing the song of work, of men who keep Their faithful watch and ward that we may sleep! Go crown ye him whom all revere, The Rich, the Strong, the Proud, the Fair, No room for common mortals here But laurels for the great who dare. I crovVn that man, responsible and true Who bears the brunt of Life for rne or you! Elilabeth Newport Hepburn, in New York Times. The Cows. Into the barn at the close of day The mild-eyed cattle come, one by one; Soberly into the stalls they stray Munching their cuds, at the set of sun. Bess and Daisv stand close. beside Switching their tai's in a friendly way; Molly and Susan with quiet pride Into their stanchions at random stray. Maud and Nancy in awkward haste Stumble in turn through the wide barn door; Wandering Gypsy is homeward chas ed, The last to blunder across the floor Swish, swih, swish, into waiting pails,. In rythmic motion of hands well s'n'uleu. Splashes the milk, while the nervous tails, Flap and flop till the pails are filled Then qvjet reigns and the cat tle rest; Through the drk the barn rat roams unawed, All undisturbed in its midnight quest By Bess or Daisy or mild-eyed Maud By Helen M. Richardson, from May Farm Journal. Be Kind. Be kind to the stranger who comes to your door, whom trouble and dancer have buffeted sore; if struggle and worry have driven him gray, don't be in a hurry to chase him a way. But feed him and lend him a slice of your pile, and in the morn S3nd him away with a smile. For life is uncertain, and nothing is sure; and Fortune is flirtin' with rich and with poor; to-day Colonel Croesus is frisky and gray, and slick er than grease is, things coming his way; the colonel, tomorrow, may be in the hole, the comrade oc sorrow, with gall in his soul. And you, who are camping where luxury lies, next year may Jbe tramping along on tl- e ties. The tramp you are feeding (if kindly you are), next year may te speeding along in his car. Thus Fate keeps us guessing, and , guess ing in vain; and life is distressing don't add to its psin; be kind and be gentle to stranger and friend, and call for a mantle and a harp in the end Walt. Mason. Copyright, 1909, by George Matthew Adams. Separate "the-Brood Sow. The brood sow should early be sep arated from the herd which Is to be sent to market; she is to serve a vast ly different purpose and should re ceive a correspondingly different treat ment. Corn, which is probably the most cheaply produced of all cereals, must continue to be an important food stuff for swine. It is rich in fat and carbohydrates, and as such is especial ly adapted for fattening purposes. Proper Ration of Feed. It is not the worth of food that stock eats that give3 the most profit, if first-class hay is fed a ration of roots that cost only half as much as a ration of grain will oftentimes give more profit than a ration of grain by aiding ss more perfect digestion of the hay. A few years ago tiymg arliines were narui, lought of, nor was Q : cmmer. Now Scott s Emt uision is as mutn . - -. u winter remedy. mer C: Aid it. All DruireUt. I Live stock notes. Do not sell ha'f fattened hogs. "Pigs is pigs" at present prices. At present prices hogs offer a mighty good market for corn. The character of the fefed determines the character of the meat. Stinting tfie brood soy cfteu re sults in stunting the pigs. Fully developed breeding stock brings the strongest offspring. The hog appreciates a clean, dry bed. Change the litter frequently. Many a farmer wishes now that he had not sold his stock hogs off so close. Field peas have been made to take the place of corn in the cornless sec tions. Many mares are ' Unable to supply their colts with sufficient milk, par ticularly when hard worked. In such cases they should be helped out. If you cannot afford to buy pure bred mares at the start, buy the best you can, then trade and buy until you can get the rea article. See that the colts get exercise every day. Feed them oats, bran and clover hay. If you have any roots an occa sional feed of them will be beneficial. Do not always be obliged to go to some other farmer for improved blood, seed grains, etc. Provide some of the best yourself and thus reap the first profit. Are the calves kept In a warm sta ble? This is important. It should not freeze in their quarters, and it should be dry under foot at all times. Bed them well and change it often. Feed the live stock a mixed ration at all times. Do not feed one kind of grain or one kind of forage until it is all gone and then begin on another. Aim to give variety and to balance the ration in the elements of animal growth. Oats, clover hay and corn fodder make an excellent combination for breeding ewes during winter. 1'hey should not get much corn. A little will do no harm with the oats. A little wheat bran added is also ex cellent. USEFUL PORTABLE PIG HOUSE Illustration Shows One Easily Con structed and Can Be Put to Various Uses. The cut shows a good sow and pig brooder house made and used by Mr. J. P. Gognet, near St. Frances ville, 111., one of the best breeders and growers of hogs in that locality. Mr. Gognet Portable Pig House. has many of these simple houses which he uses for sows rearing a lit ter of pigs. Being roof-like in struc- I ture and easily movable, he uses them in late autumn for covering potatoes in piles in the field on frosty nights j and rainy weather. They may be sim ilarly used for temporary storage of other fruits and vegetables, or as a shelter for any small farm animals. The house is 6x8 feet inside, and 5 feet high, on runners 2x8 inches 9 feet long. The rafters are 2x4-inch stuff and the lath 1x3 inches. The roof is matched inch pine boards and the gables common siding. The en tire house should be painted with two good coats of paint, especially the i-oof, to prevent leaking. At the price of lumber here, Mr. Gognet constructs these at approximately $5 each, ex clusive 'of paint, doing the carpenter work himself. The house contains no floor. BEST KIND OF PIG LITTERS Sow with Ordinary Care Cannot Prop erly Nourish More Than Eight or Ten Six Is Better. (By A. J. LEGG.) It Is customary with hog raisers when selecting a brood sow to want one with a large number of teats in or der to accommodate a large litter of pigs. I had an inquiry from a cus tomer some time ago for two sow pigs, and the buyer said that people told' him that a sow should have 14 teats. There are few sows with so many teats, and really the very large litter is not, in my opinion, the most profit able one, anyway. A sow with ordi nary care cannot properly nourish more than eight or ten pigs, and I am not sure but six or seven is better than ten. I have had sows with ten and eleven pigs, but there are always some runts which do not grow fat. It takes just about all that thesow can digest to keep the pigs making satisfactory growth. The sows with six or eight pigs will keep them growing rapidly and T believe, making as many pounds of pork as the large litters, and there is not such a strain on the sow's sys tem to provide food for the pigs. Thft Commonwealth is $1 a year; 3GME FAMOUS ENGLISH lAP.T Ideas from Across the W-ater That Are Worth Copying by Ameri can Housewives. Pastry in English assumes various forms; but the one pre-eminently fa vored is the tart with top crust only. This Is baked in a deep oval pudding dish, in the cente"r of which is placed a small inverted cup to support the crust. The edge of the dish having been previously covered with a strip of pastry and moistened ,the top is then firmly pressed down upon it. Next in favor is the tartlet. Fatty pans, lightly greased, are liiied with paste, and a piece of buttered paper filled with raw rice, kept for this pur pose, is placed tfl each tartlet to pre vent . tiife center puffing up. The paper and rice are replaced by fruit when the pastry is partially or quite done. Open tarts, much 'larger, are made in the same mannerl Cream Paste. Cream p?zte is much in Vogue for special occasions. The ingredients called for are one pound of flour, one-half teaspconful salt, one teaspoonful sugar, one-quarter pound of fresh butter, one-half cupful of cream. Sift the flour, mix in salt and sugar, rub in the but ter; add cream, . gradually form ing into smooth paste. The flour may take up more ur less cream. The yolks of two eggs beaten in a lit tle milk may be substituted for cream. Roll out paste three times and use at once. Queen's Apple Tarts. One cupful of apple sauce, three tablespoonfuls of currant or other jelly, four eggs, sug ar to taste. Line a deep pie plate with puff paste and bake a delicate brown. Have ready a boiled cus tard made from the yolks of the eggs and milk sweetened to taste. When the pastry ' is baked put into it a layer of half the apple sauce, one of jelly, one of cus tard, then the rest of the apple pauce. Whip the whites of the eggs to a stid! froth, beat in two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Spread over tarts, and bake a light brown. FOR DELICIOUS BLANC MANGE Try This Method the Next Time Yoii Have a Few Friends in for the Afternoon. A good dish to serve as a change at an afternoon affair is a chocolate blanc mange or sponge cake. Make ordinary plain cake or sponge cake in layers, having but two of them, and fill and cover with the bland mange, which in turn must be covered with whipped cream. Serve with tea, iced tea or coffee. For the blnnc mange scald two Cups of milk with one teaspoonful of butter and a dash of salt; add two table spoonfuls of arrowroot dissolved in a little of the milk and two table spoonfuls of melted chocolate, or more; cook 10 minutes; now turn into this two yolks mixed with half a cup ful of sugar and return to double boil er and cook for a moment. Pour this into a bowl and beat a few minutes, then fold in the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs and flavor with a tea spoonful of vanilla. This should be Very cold before it is spread upon the cake and it should be just stiff enough not to run and yet not as stiff as a jelly. To Make Sandwiches. Fifteen minutes spent in watching a caterer make up the sandwiches for an evening entertainment yielded some profitable information. With a sharp knife he first cut up all his bread into thin slices, trimming off the crusts from a dozen slices at a time. Then into a bowl of freshly made mayonnaise he stirred the con tents of a can of deviled ham. It was the work of a moment to spread this rich paste upon two slices of bread. A slap with the big knife pressed them into a thin wedge and a sharp cut divided the sandwich square in two triangles. Sandwiches for 50 peo ple were made thus in less than half an hour. Sport-Loving Australians. Australia's love of outdoor sports flourishes greatly on a very favorable climate and the universal half-holiday on Saturday. Stomach Misery for Over Sixty Years. Read what Mr. Hoffman, landlord of the Webster Hotel, writes. "I suffered misery and intense pains from stomach trouble for over six years, and all the doctoring thj t I did or medicines I used were of no avail until about two years ago, when I used a treatment of Mi-o-na. The first few days' treatment helped me greatly and upon using it a while I was made entirely free from any stomach trouble or complaint what ever. Since the cure by Mi-otna I have gained my weight, 1 eat and sleeD well, am never nervous, and my entire general health is much better." Max M. Hoffman, Webster N. Y., Aug. 2, 1909. Mi-o-na stomach tablets relieve distress in five minutes. They act like maric. They are guaranteed to ! cure sour stomach, gas eructations, heartburn, dizziness, biliousness and nervousness, or money back. For sale by druggists everywhere and by E. T. Whitehead Company for 50c a large box. Try Booth's Pills for constipation; they never disappoint, 25c, - PASTE THESE IN COOK BOOK Ideas for Addition to the Menu That Will Be Sure to Come Handy Some Time. Dainty, delicious sandwiches for afternoon tea are made Of thin slices of buttered bread filled with a mix ture of raisins and nuts chopped verjH tine, moistened with whipped cream and seasoned with a pinch of salt. An other tasty sandwich Is of white bread spread with rich jam and topped with cream cheese. A despised frizzled beef takes on quite an air of festivity when mixed with chopped green peppers. Another combination is the chopped yolks and whites of hard-boiled eggs. A variation of the ordinary club sandwich is to cut a boneless sardine iii half and spread it over the slice of chicken or turkey. Fried mush -is much better if the mush is cooked a whole day in a double boiler set on the back of stove. Water must be renewed when . it threatens to boll away. A nice home-made confection can be made from prunes with the seeds re moved and stuffed with peanuts, browned in the oven in butter or olive oil. Do not salt the peanuts. Cover the prunes when cooked with pow dered sugar. Boil vinegar in the fish skillet or pan to destroy the fish odor. Sprinkle grahulRted sugar on top of jellies to prevent mold. Add a pinch of salt to starch. It will keep the ir.ons from sticking. To remove the odor of fish from steel knives wash them in hot vine gar, then suds. Whipped cream tinted with any veg etable matter Is tempting on a cup of hot chocolate. Dry salt and a brush will take dust off from velvet, plush and heavy em broidery that cannot be washed. If your rugs curl up at the edges, they can be made to lie flat by damp ening the curled eda'es and pressing with a hot iron. Nearly all metal teapots will cor rode or rust slightly when put away for a time. A woman who travels rays she preserves such articles by filling them with flour. It is dry and will not admit the least moisture. Marshmallow Cream. Here is a very delicious and at tractive dessert. Buy half A pound of fresh marshmallows and Cut into pieces about a quarter of an inch square. Have ready a third of a pound of nut meats, almond; pecans and English walnuts, ground in a meat grinder. Mix these by stirring in lightly the white of one egg whipped to a stiff froth. Have ready a rather shallow cut glass bowl. Put a layer of the marshmallow mixture first, then one of Malaga grapes, seed ed, another layer of marshmallows and nuts, and finally a sprinkling of shredded pineapple the canned is D9st Cr Maraschino cherries, cut fine. Chill in the ice-box and serve with whipped cream, the latter in a separ ate bowl. Cream Tomato Soup. One-half can tomatoes, one tea spoonful of sugar, one-quarter tea spoonful of soda, one quart milk, one slice onion, four tablespoonfuls cf flour, one teaspoonful of salt, one eighth teaspoonful of pepper, two tablespoonfuls of buer. Cook the to matoes with the sugar and onion 15 minutes, add the soda and rub through a sieve. Scald the milk in a double boiler and thicken with the flour, the amount given above, wet with water to make a paste. Cook 20 minutes, stirring constantly at first, then com bine the mixtures, add the butter and seasoning and serve. Onion Pi. Peel, wash and slice one quart of onions and put into kettle with one heaping tablespoon of melted butter. Cover tightly and stir often to keep from burning. Let them steam until tender, then add two level teaspoons of salt, one level teaspoon or caraway seed, one-fourth teaspoon of black pepper and one-half cup of sour cream. A good biscuit dough is better than a pie crust dough. This makes two pies. It is very nice and if any body likes fried onions they will surely like this. Noodle Soup. Add noodles to beef or any other good soup after straining; they will cook in 15 or 20 minutes and are pre pared in the following manner: To one beaten egg add as much sift ed flour as it will take up, with a lit tle salt. Roll out as thin as a wafer and dredge lightly with flour. Roll over and over into a large roll and cut thin from one end. Shake out. loosely and let dry, then drop into the ttoiling soup. Prepared Flour. One heaping quart of pastry flour, four even teaspoons of cream of tar tar, two even teaspoons of soda, two heaping teaspoons of salt. Sift several times and it Is ready for use and equal to any you can buy. Sunday Evening Tea. Sunday evening tea may be served I- Hhrarv. It may be composed of sandwiches, chocolate and fruit. This saves the arranging oi me aming room and gives a variety to one's lav. The Commonwealth is $1 a year. VffjJS fine, rich, or plain food. equally valuable and saving. Indispensable For Home Balling "Be Good." Beware of making your moral staple consist of the negative virtues. It is ; good to abstain from all that is hurt- ful and sinful. But to make a business j of it leads to emaciation of charac ter, unless one feeds largely also on j the more nutritious diet of active sympathetic benevolence. Oliver Wendell Holmes. Thirsting for Information. Little Gertrude, entering a butch er's shop for the first time, stood ga zing around her in silent absorption. Presently she took her mother by the hand, and, leading her to where hung a string of bologna sausages, she put a tiny finger on one big sausage and gravely inquired: "Mamma, what was this when it was alive?" Exchange. Chance for a Bandmaster. Conway, which is in need of a band master, has issued the following adver tisement: "He must be a cornet player, and between performances he will be required to act as a range minder, in spector of hawkers, boats and car riages, storekeeper and such other du ties as the town clerk may from time to time direct." Western Mail. Word Painting. Jimmy (readins;) "Casey swatted de leather into left garden for a brace of sacks, an' den pilfered thoid base an' dented de pan on Mulligan's lalli paloosa dat sailed over Outfielder Shaughnessy's nut." I tell yer, Willie, dat's word-paintin', dat is! Shake speare never could beat dat! Unobservant Male Dramatists. Masculine dramatists are old-fashioned enough to make thoir wonin "catty." It shows a lack of observa tion to make the feminine character in a modern play behave in the man ner of the eightecu-eighties. London Sketch. Thing Greatly Worth Having. The one thing supremely worth the having is the opportunity, coupled with the capacity, of doing a thin? well and worthily, the doing of which is for the welfare of mankind. Theo dore Roosevelt. Friends Seized Opportunity. "How did it happen that your friends got the best of you?" queried the inquisitive person. "They got busy while I was watching my ene mies," explained the man who had got the short end of It. Output of One Shoe Factory. Ten thousand pairs of shoes are produced daily from a single eastern factory. Every 24 hours it uses the hides and skins of 7,800 kids, 300 horses and colts, 300 calves and 425 steers. Don't Let Problems Worry. Of course life is full of problems. The only way to get any comfort is to throw them all In the wastebasket and to do the things we can see clear ly in daylight. For Married Men. Don't expect to have your own way in life. You must yield one-half at least. Let your wife have her way once in a while and experience a throb of generosity. Exchange. Tendency to Exaggerate. We exaggerate misfortune and hap piness alike. We are never either so wretched or so happy as we say we are. Balzac. Wise Rule in Austria. The government of Austria makes special inducements to farmers who will reclaim water lands and make use of them. Slaughter of the Birds. It is said that the annual bird slaughter for plume3 and other decora tions is 300,000,000. Work of Jungle Monarch in India. A year's death rate from tigers in In dia numbers 698 human beings and nearly 29,000 head of cattle. TV T?nckfdler would cro broke if he should spend his entire income ruincr tn nrpnarp a het.ter medicine than Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for diarrhoea, dysentery or bowell complaints. It is simply impossible, and so says ev ery one that has used it. Sold by E. T. Whitehead company. Chief Justice's Golf Stroke. The lord chief Justice, on circuit at Birmingham, had a curious experience while playing polf over the Kdgbaston course with Walter Whiting, the local professional. At the second hole his lordship drove into a bunker, the ball lying badly under the bank. Taking his niblick, he hit hard. The ball jumped into the air and dropped into his right-hand jacket pocket. London Standard. An Architect's Patrons. John Merven Carrere, at a meeting of architects in New York, said: "Amazing, the age of an architect's patrons! The average man, in fact, is 35 before he begins to save serious ly; his pile isn't made till he is CO; he begins to build himself a house in his old age, and his funeral takes place about the time the painters are called In." The Smart Boy's Opportunity. In these days farming is becoming more and more a science. It is the smart boy who stays on the farm in stead of going to the city. And It is well known that when proper method are employed the present yield will be doubled. There is not much pros pect that in the next century the doc trine of Malthus will be exemplified by seeing this nation lacking for food. "Did you hear the shriek that en trine gave as it flew by?" asked 1 he first man, as they approached a rail road crospintr. "Yes. What caused it?" rejoin d his companion. "I presume the engineer had it by the throttle."-Smart St. Cheapest nceidnt insurance Dr. Thomas Edectric Oil. Stops the pain and heals the wound. All druggists sells it. "The huckster who usd to cheat us so," sa'd Mrs. Iiyors, "has been arrested. "Yes." replied Mrs. NayJmr; hear he's in a peck of trouble now." "We! . I do h'ic that peck isn't short measure, at any rate." Cath olic Standard and Times'. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets will clear the sour stomach, sweeten the breath and create a healthv armetite. They promote the trastric iuice. thereby inducing go-d digestion. Sold by E. T. Whitehead Company. "Mav I see mv father's record?" asked the new student. "He was in the class of 1877." "Certainly, my boy. What for?" "Hotnlfl m when I left home not to dii-yrr.ee him. sir. and 1 wish io see just how far I can go." Buffalo Express. A touch of rheumatism, or a twinge of neuralgia, whatever the trouble is, Chamberlain s Liniment drives away the pain at once and cures the com plaint quickly. First application gives relief. Sold by E. T. White head Company. "Shakespeare says you know, that some rise by sin and some by virtue fall." "Well, what about it?" "Oh. nothing nothing. Iwasgo- ing to say that you needn't be afraid of getting a fall of that kind. Chic ago Record-Herald. The High Cost cf Living. Increases the nrice of manv neces sities wit hout improving the quality. Foley's Honey arid Tar maintains its high standard of excellence and its great curative qualities without increase in cost. It 13 the best rtin edy for coughs, colds, croup, whoop ing cough and all ailments of the throat, chest and lungs. ine gen uine is in a yellow package. Refufe substitutes. Sold by all druggists. Pat The census is to foind how many folks there are. Mike Fcine; then they should hold another to foind how many there ain't. New York Sun. What Ever) body Wants. Everybody desires good health which is impossible unless the k'dneys are' sound and healthy. Foley's Kid ney Remedy should be taken at the first indication of any ii regularity, and a serious i lnes3 may be averted. Foley's Kidney remedy will restote your kidneys and bladder to their normal state and activity. Sold b all druggists.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
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May 5, 1910, edition 1
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