Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / June 20, 1912, edition 1 / Page 1
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Commonw: "ic lisrgcsl Circulation W Tf Tl The Largest Circulation OF ANY Halifax County Newspaper. OF ANY H H County Newspaper. '?5)Y, ?Aqt end Proprietor. 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year. xxvin. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C.f THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1912. NUMBER 25. i EALTH. koned 6y Over-Work. U:u-ys II:ike Impure Blood. 'lenlLhy kidneys arc re ch sickness aud'suftering, therefore, if kidney .x, trouble is permitted to ? ji continue, serious re 'v :ulls are most likelv 1 follow. Your other crsjaus may need at l ":tiou, but yonr kid ;::3'S most, because they do most and tVhould have attention !ir?!. Therefore, when vi.'"k or t:it of order, !. i w ijnickly your en t 1 ami I:c.v every organ ." its dutv. . r " feel badly," begin kid::ev remedv. Dr. !oot. A trial will con- r:t ir-erit. immediate effect of . vhe great kidney and '.y, i ; sou:i realised. It - -.-t l?eeai:e its ren:arkable :;-r properties have been .-..-:.:.dr. of tue most distress- i; ;'eed a medicine 3'ou 1!! - - ' f .-Jit, n 'tmuitmr. i..te f vj'.;ik, i i ui ? v, :vn-.TvK..ot. : ycj. have kidney or T'vtr.: T this patier Dr. Kilmer & Co., ". Don't make any mis - r tin- li.ime, Sv.-amp-et a deak-r sell you e of &va.inp-E.oot if e d:.S.tr-T)oiutcd. i-m:v at Law, iland Xock, X. C. - iD. I L . Lawyer ? whnevc hah ba required. k. mT'N. Enfield. X. C. i lA T l f w' North Carolina. r in ?M matters 'nin.rr zo mil road .vic-'I on approv- .-. x. c. i Counsellor at Law ".) Xeck.'N. C. rever his services are '(Vaired. on approved security. P. Kite-bin. M.D. my No. 1 -1. ARK 6 rtns and Surgeons . in Brick Hotel i Phone No. 21. or 0: F. A. RIFF, OI'TICIAN .y,t.r.n: Neck, N. C. exaniii-.ed free. Broken .-. n;it';';.-l and frames repaired. ''.".-i .-:tr:ct!v cash. L. SAVAGE F ItOCKY .MOUNT, N. C. Scotland Neck, N. C, on Wednesday of each month ! to treat the diseases of Nose, Throat, and, fit V.'pl ! V- ?. WIMBERLGY, iciAN and Surgeon )tiand Xeck, N. C. :'ro or. D.-pot Street. O. F. Smith r-ii'rjeian and Surgeon i.i Planters & Commercial I.'ank Building '--.v-A Neck, N. C. DENTIST, r-v OIHfo up stairs in White ? hf-ad Building. if 0Ty:r. virs from 9 to 1 o'clock nd 2 to r o'clock. Hfr PARKER'S m HAIR BALSAM, T!wri rt;i la rrtitics the hail. V; -ilvcr yaili. to Restore Orftyi - i 1-1 rK TO tit . OUMiIUi vviwn , .t li t--.- h:ir iniunx- i ' rJ!:ULTHT0 MOTHER AND CHILD. ' ' " Sootiiino SVRCP has been 'V YlCAKSby MII.LIONh or heir CHILUKr.N WHILE !h I'J-Ki KCT SlTCCI-. " .i: !!,!). SOl'THNS Die GUMS. : ; tfl'.iiS WIND COUC and y ii-r LlARKIiGiA. It a! . ;:o i-.-,n- rmcl a -I- for "Mr?. :: -T". find aiie au oilier v ( ut? a t,at'-le. ;t"-Ti.Iaiirrfnj..-m-Tr..-----..j. ilTt I Uw& if I TRiAi mm FEES !iOTAKD UlSfG TROUBLES I ft Who the Democratic Candidates Are. Champ Clark, of Missouri; born in Kentucky ISoO; college president at 23; prosecutmg attorney; member of congress since 1S93; minority leader 1908-11; speaker since 1911. Woodrcw Wilson, of New Jersey; born in Virginia 1850; practiced law at Atlanta; professor in Bryn Mawr, Wesleyan and Princeton colleges; president Princeton College, 1902-10; governor of New Jersey since 1911. Judson Harmon, of Ohio; born in Ohio 1846; judge in two courts; at torney general United States 1895-7; professor of law; receiver of two railroads; governor of Ohio since 1909. Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama; born in Kentucky 1862; practiced law at Birmingham; helped frame state constitution; member of con gress since 1S95; majority leader since 1911. Thomas R. Marshall, of Indiana; born in Indiana 1854; lawyer at Co lumbia City; trustee Wabash Col lege; governor of Indiana since 1909. Simeon E. Baldwin, of Conneticut; born in Conneticut 1840; professor of law at Yale; chief justice state supreme court 1907-10; governor of Conneticut since 1911. John Burke, of North Dakota; born in Iowa 1859; county judge; member both houses state legisla ture; serving third term governor of North Dakota. A Fetching Argument. The girls in and around Macon, Mo., have issued an ultimatum to the young men who wait on them. They must show a membership card in some good roads association if they expect their attentions to be re ceived seriously. Now, if you have ever lived in a country town you will readily ap preciate the powerful influence of this new factor in roadmaking. It should result in the creation of more good roads sentiment than a year's campaign of oratory rnd literature. Tne cost per capita, per mile, per ton, for haviing grain to the Macon markets over a given distance of mud road s is nothing in the way of a fetching argument for the young farmers compared with the slogan of the Macon county girls: "No good roads, no more buggy rides." That will bring the young men to a realization of the cost of bad roads and convert them into good roads boosters when they would give no consideration to a carefully prepar ed table of figures to show that the royal road to riches was the through fare that was scientifically graded and well paved. Kansas City Times. Hems Water Works. Probably the greatest single bene fit that could come to the average farm woman would be the installa tion of a good water works system. The cost is very much less than the average farmer imagines and the benefits from it very much greater. Farm papers from time to time have published plans for home water works and The Progressive Farmer has recently asked the National De partment of Agriculture to provide free bulletins on the subject. Let the farmer who has been bringing water from a distant spring, get out a pencil and paper, put down the distance in feet or yards, multiply it by the number of trips he must make on an average a day, and mul tiply again by 365, and he will real ize how many hundreds of miles he has traveled in the course of a year, and how many days work are re quired for getting an adequate sup ply of water for the house. A good water works system would not only save all this time and labor, but af ford one of the greatest advantages of city life by providing water in all parts of the house. Every farmer who has a proper regard the welfare of the woman he has chosen for his wife, therefore, and who can possibly afford it, should set about - . i installing an adequate water worns system. The Progressive Farmer. Water Elephant. The water elephant Is a newly dis covered animal found in central Asia. with plenty of out-door exer cise, pore food and air, will arrest consumptive tendencies, allay irritation in throat and longs, and build up the whole body. AU DruggM: Scott & Bowne. Bloomfirld. N J 12-14 THIRD TERM BALLOTS IN 1880. The Faithful 306 Stood by Grant to The Very Last Ballot. In the Republican national conven tion of 1880, in which General Grant was a candidate for a third Presi dential term, there were 755 dele gates. The number necessary for a choice was 378. On the first ballot the vote was Grant, 304; Blaine, 284; John Sherman, 93; Edmunds, 34; Washburne, 30, and Windom, 10. The balloting ran on with little change until the thirty-first ballot, the result of which was Grant, 308; Sherman, 118; Edmunds, 11; Wash burne, 37; Windom, 3; Garfield, 1, and Conkling, 1. Before the convention ended it reached into the second week. The third termers could make no mate rial gain. Their last hope was that when the break came they would gain the votes needed. On the thirty-fourth ballot, Garfield, who had previously received only 1 vote, went up to 17, the other candidates stand ing: Grant. 312; Blaine, 275; Sher man, 107; Edmunds, 11; Washburne, 30, and Windom, 4. There were only two more ballots. On the thirty-fifth Grant received 313, which was his high mark. Gar field went up to 50, an indication that the decisive break was at hand. Here is the finish, the thirty-sixth ballot, as historically recorded: Grant, 306; Blaine, 42; Sherman, 3; Washburne, 5; Garfield, 399. Ed munds and Windom were eliminated. The third term vote in the conven tion ended almost exactly where it began. Grant's greatness was not disputed. But there was then, as now. a profound feeling against a third term for any man. A great mass of conservative citizens, re gardless of party ties, objected to a departure from the traditions of the government. They were not affect ed by hero worship, even a hero of Grant's magnitude. They would have scorned a demagogue, which Grant never was, and they would havp looked npo" p noisy, egotisti cal hotspur as a menace to the sta bility of the government itself. St. 1 Louis Globe-Democrat. Walking 24,000 Miles for Water. The North Carolina Christian Ad vocate tells the story of a farmer whose family had to carry water from a spring about a quarter of a mile away. His wife, after thirty years of this work ventured to com plain about it and a little figuring was the result. The farmer could scarcely believe it when he found that his wife had walked 24,000 miles carrying water from this spring. As soon as he realized what his carlessness in this respect meant he had a well dog right at the house. Of course, there will be less walking for the good woman to do to get water from the well, yet, if the farmer had figured a little longer, he would doubtless have found out that the time and labor spent in pumping water from the well would amount to enough to make this a very expensive way of getting water when compared with a system of home water works. The reason so much unnecessary work of this kind is done is that people never stop to figure out just what these crude ways of doing things really cost. The Progressive Farmer. Building Highways. To-day work begun on the sand clay road of King's Mountain pre cinct beginning at the corporate limits of the town, on what is known as the King's Mountain-Shelby road. It will be remembered that this pre cinct voted $25,000 road bonds some months ago, and under the direction of the highway commission, this amount will be spent during the next two years in the construction of about 30 miles of highway. Work is now being pushed from Shelby to Buffalo creek on the above named road and the county of Gas ton will, within two or three months, finish the fine macadam road from King's Mountain to Gastonia, there by giving an up-to-date highway the entire distance from Charlotte to Shelby by way of Belmont, McAden ville, Gastonia and Linwood College. Cleveland Star. Which is best for a potato house, a brick wall with dead air space or a wooden wall packed with sawdust?" The brick wall will be the most per manent and costly, and I do not think, that so far as the potatoes are concerned, will be any better than the wooden wall. W. F. Massey, m Progressive Farmer. An Old Landmark. Washington, D. C., June 17. The last week has witnessed the begin ning of the removal of a historic landmark from the city of Washing ton the Arlington Hotel. For more than half a century it has housed famous men of this country. J. Pierpont Morgan at one time kept a suite of rooms constantly engaged there, and it is related that during the Cleveland administration the negotiations by which the Morgan syndicate acquired an entire issue of government bonds authorized by the last Democratic President, were con ducted under the shelter of the Ar lington Hotel, in the rooms of the financial magnate. The old hotel has been sold and will be removed to be replaced by a new structure, one of the most cost ly ever erected in this city of won derful public buildings. When com plete it is estimated that the new building will cost over three million dollars. The furnishings and orna ments have been on sale at auction for many days, and scores of men and women whose names are famil iar to the public have been buying bric-a-brac, rare vases and pictures. At times the auction room resem bled a social function, and fabulous prices were paid for articles having little intrinsic value but famous for their associations. State Normal College. We desire to call attention to the advertisement of the State Normal and Industrial College which appears in this issue. Every year shows a steady growth in this institution de voted to the higher education of the women of North Carolina. Including the Training School, the College last year has a total enroll ment of G05 students. Ninety-one of the one hundred counties of the State had representatives in the stu dent body. Nine-tenths of all the graduates of this institution have taught or are now teaching in the schools of North Carolina, The dormitories are furnished by the State and board is provided at actual cost. Two hundred apnoint- ments with free tuition, apportioned j among the several counties accord- ing to school population, will be awarded to applicants about the middle of July. Students who wish to attend this institution next year should make application as early as possible, as the capacity of the dor mitories is limited. We Must Stop The Destruction. Conservation of the forests in the Appalachians and on the far-off slopes of the Rockies might not have prevented the floods in the Missis sippi Valley this spring, but it cer tainly would have lessened the dam age done by them. It is getting high time for the American people to realize that the matter of forest protection, the storage of flood wa ters and the prevention of erosion are not only matters of local inter est, but of vital concern to every citizen. The Ohio and its tributaries carry the soil of the Central and South Central States down to fill up the bed of the Mississippi and thus make it harder for the people who live along its banks to escape the heavy freshets. The washing of the mountain farmer's land adds to the troubles of the farmers in the river bottoms, and there is no escaping from it. We must stop soil waste and destruction. The Progressive Farmer. DOCTORS AFRAID TO GIVE CAL OMEL. After-Effects Uncertain and Often Dangerous. Dodson's Liver Tone, a Mild Medicine, Takes Its Place. The use of calomel has been stopped in thousands of homes. Dodson's Liver-Tone, a pleasant, vegetable liver tonic that is a per fect substitute for calomel in curing constipation and billiousness, is taken instead. Dodson's Liver-Tone is absolutely harmless and its use is not followed by nausea and another attack of constipation as often hap pens after taking calomel. E. T. Whitehead Co's., drug store has sold so much Dodson's Liver Tone and it has been so satisfactory wherever taken, that they guarantee to give any person his money back if he does not find it a perfect substi tute for calomel. No restriction of habits or diet is necessary. Cheapest accident insurance Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil. Stops the pain and heals the wound. All drug gists sell it. PRIZES ARE AWARDED. School Children Capture Prizes Killing the Mcst Flies. for The committee of North Carolina Sorosis which had charge of the cam paign waged against the fly during the month of May has awarded to Miss Wood's room of the fourth grade of Union school the first prize of $5.00 for catching the largest number of flies during the period, j The children in this room, as previ ously noted, killed 265,000 flies, ac cording to the record kept of the! slaughter. For the most original ! and effective fly-trap the prize of I $3.00 was awarded to Harriss New- j man, son of Mrs. Linda Newman. ! who was a pupil in the seventh gmdV j of Hemenway school. Howard Han- j by also presented an original and j very effective trap and deserves ! special mention. I While the campaign in Wilming ton did not produce the results that were hoped for and are being ob tained in other cities, yet the ladies feel that their efforts have not been in vain, that a good start has been made, especially in the matter of educating the public to the impor tance of having a fiyless city, and there is no doubt but that a similar campaign next year will be more fruitful. The prize money awarded to the Union school children will be used next jTear in carrying forward the work of exterminating the fly which was begun by this year's class. Wilmington Star. A Result of Jury Service. "Could you tell us how far it is to the postomcer we asked 01 tne man standing on the railway platform. "I have no idea," he replied. "Well, in what direction is it?" "I have not formed an opinion." "Can we walk there, or should v( take a car?" "I could not say." "There is a postofficehere is th--rc not?" "I could not decide thr?t v;'h my. present information." "But every town has a postoffice, hasn't it?" "I have not talked with anybody on the subject." "Is there any one around here who can tell us?" "I have not read any of the new? papers." "But, man, you surely know whether or not there is a postoffice?" "I could not give a decisive ans wer to that?" "But don't you live here?" "I have never given the matter any thought." "Where do you live?" "I have no mental bias in the mat ter." "Great guns, man! You know you're alive, don't you?" "I should be guided entirely by the evidence." Here a listener plucked our sleeve smilingly. He took us to one side and says: "You won't get anything out of him if you quiz him all day. That's Pete Hobawot, who's been on fo many jury panels it has affected him." Chicago Post. Makes The Nation Gasp. The awful list of injuries on a Fourth of July staggers humanity. Set over against it, however, is the wonderful healing, by Bucklen's Arnica Salve, of thousands, who suffered from burns, cuts, bruises, bullet wounds or explosions. It's the quick healer of boils, ulcers, ec zema, sore lips or piles. 25 cents at E. T. Whitehead Company's. Is Your Time Ya!3b!e ? The man who walks across tho field four times, or even two times, to cultivate each row of cotton or corn wastes enough labor in one sea son, if he has a crop of any size, to pay for a two-horse cultivator. If any reader doubts this, let him take a pencil and piece of paper and fig ure out for himself just how much time he spends in walking backwards and forwards across his fields. The Progressive Farmer. Man Coughs and Breaks Ribs. After a frightful coughing spell a man in Neenah, Wis., felt terrible pains in his side and his doctor found two ribs had been broken. - What agony Dr. King's New Discovery would have saved him. A few tea spoonful ends a late coutrh, while persistent use routs obstinate coughs expels stubborn colds or heals weak, sore lungs. "I feel sure it's a God send to humanity," writes Mrs. EfHe Morton, Columbia, Mo., "for I be lieve I would have consumption to day, if I had not used this great remedy." It's guaranteed to satisfy and you can get a free bottle or 50 cent or $1.00 size at E. T. Whitehead Company's. MOW BILGOD IS MADE. The liquids and the di.cstpd foods in the alimentary canal pas through tfie vall of the canal into the hiood. This process is called absorption and take place chiefly from the smail intestine. After absorption the blood carries the food through the body, and each cell tkes from the blooJ the food it need. A paro glyceric extract made f-om Woodroot, mandrake, stone, quecn'a root and (olden1 tcfil root, and sold by tlruKU tor the ra f Jtty yours under the name of Dnctor Picrcc'n CioMcu ?2ccical Discovery, f.ivcs uniformly excd'-.Tt v:suiti cs n tor.ie to help in the assimilation of th food and in the absorption by iha Iv.ood of the food it requires. Eradicate the CliA3. FAi-.i.EER, Ji, rsilt-ts' it Ma .'riailor; v U man wliich ia wniiethins to live for." ErFaht Light in Calamity. Times of general calamity and con fusion have ever bpen productive of the greatest minds. Tiro purest ore is produced from the hottest furnace, and the brightest thunderbolt 13 elicit ed from the darkest storm. Lacon. When your child has whooping cough be cireful to keep th couf;h loose and expectoration easy by giv ing Chamberlain's Cough Remedy as may lie required. This remedy will also liquify the tough mucus and make it easier to expectorate. It has been iwed sactvssfully in many epidemics and is safe and sure. For ?al a by all dealer.-!. Cannot Eli.-.Tii--it2 Lov?. A periudi'.al devoted to the drama pleads for plays hancd op. come cnio- I tiou other then love. The diCcrilty in profJuelnr: fucTi pi ?;-.? is that every play inu'it lraro 1 V.rvi, vvA in making a hero the ?)l;iy'.vr5;,.,..t, us veil as his audience, alnrjst in- virb!y uilopts tho view expressed two thousand years ago hy a peril." on o;o or the ilead wall of iorp !: "Pe v.-. 0 never loved a von.nn Ti . j i .iitlorr.au." Move On Now! says a policeman to a street crowd, and whacks heads if it don't. "Move on now," says tho biyr. harsh miner al piil to bowel cnri'Oft ion ar.u suf fering follows. Dr. Kind's New Life Pills don't bulldoze the bowels. They gently pevmde t'lem to right l. and health i" en Is at. E. T. Whitehead Company's. Crw-istma'e Makes Demand. The (terrmn demand for apples a.a'l nut" (o In.-.js on C'ari.-sfuias trees is al ways very groat. The inland predic tion c.f apples, even in a favoriih' year, aitl cuph large, h f.-fr too small for tk? ikmand. la fipite cf ihe fact that thousands of acres of new trees are planted ear1! year. Jn order to supply tlie ijijjr.il !::nrkct, larrre qaan til in.-, of apples, and mt 3 must he im ported from abroad each year. i.'crc is PelLf for w'-rjci. If you have pains in th4 back. Urin ary, '''adder or Kidney trouble, try Moihor Gray's Aromatic Leaf, a pleasant herb remedv or women s ills and a great system regulator. At druggist! or by inr.il 5C"., free. Address, Mother Gn pany, LeP.oy, N. Y. ample Com- f,'::iC:i:oi.V.!or!. It is very surpi '.sing to lu;l In the Cbarlolto Ohssrvcr iniiuuotaiicn of an old phrase, "KveryUiir? was lovely find the gocre was hanging hisli." This is tho wi;y the liuiii forraed comnicnaMiy have ccme to write it, Lut in the Tar ITecl conn try they km.w better. The rlg'mt ren dering is "the goose hon3 hich," as tho wild goose dec-s when the weath er is fine, or, in other words, when "everything is lovely." Nashville Uanncr. "I suffered habitually from con stipation. Doan's Regtilets relieved and strengthened the bowel. so that they have been regular ever since." A. E. Dflvii, grocer. Sulphur Springs, Tex. Women SvuiUa Epidemic No fewer tl-.or live suicides, crd cf v.-cn;en, vrc roaiTOlUcd in Paris ono reerut 6s y. A mother and her dr.ugh ter took eya::lJa cf potassium Ueravse they had had i.o food for three days. The (la; ;r titer v.r., a lyric arti?t. A vowrg .Austrian ghl cf 1:5 threw her self onto- the raila v.s a train wrS en tering the r.Iar'ecti'' hi a: ion of th- Me tro. A woTi-ia1: of 4u tvt'i arseulc, arJ the ft I'.. vl:;.i vas -, viol W?!! throur:It tlie V : A. sprained ankle may a: a rule be cured in from three to four days by annlyine Chamberlain's Liniment and o;.-rii!f tee. lihu-etior.s with each bottle. For sale by all dealers. iv. In all First Cias. Varieties of Marble and Granite'; Largest Stock in the South. Remember, we pay i PwAs we employ no Agents of material and to finish it better than otherwise. Is this - y iff loa will find V itV yo,J are buying, and will get it quickly. poj'.'Jis Irom tise i;:nod with ths alterative extract which t'.ooi ;tcrhrtak she white blood corpuscles, because contain- no r;oo!:oi or other injurious ingredients. Thus the botiy cm be hi-:It up strong to resist disease. This is m torse faUen from Nature's garden that builds np those weak ened by disease. SoU by druggist everywhere. Address World's Dispensary Modical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. P!r. Cha-. Facrbur. Jr.. of r.2 V.'ooJlawn Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa vr,.fs: 1 v.as tn-jljlwl wiih rrv stomarh for a I moot three ywr. Trim! several !iictors nail most everything anybody rrcommpndcd to nu, b'-.i. -cjit f.cttiny tvnire anil lirniettly did not car to live an I was iiomt v,t :1 even though, at time, I had no pain. My nvmptomi were as follows: Always t.r. J. my whol.' body in a throb, U-lchin of rw, ?..i:n ftini m.-reiu- In the stomarh. vomiting, constipation, could not to!! T.-l-.if. t-je ai err viiwt r.-cuM turre with ni. nm! nan melancholy. But r ft. l- t.ik:i.ir i,':. Pii rre's Ct !.:. n ?.1vl;-tl llivr.nr u lik t. ' ii.. Will H. Josey Scotland Neck, N. C. I1NSU RANCE of ell hinds written. Why insure in companies that may wish to pay and can't? I represent the strongest and most liberal companies in America. Life and Accident, Mutual Renefit and National. FIRE THE HOME. A'selioverfll million. THE CONT1 FNTAT,. Assets over 24 million. THE PHILADELPHIA UNDERWRIT- 2 t!:.-. A!sHtBnvr 2-1 minion. TilE FIDELITY- PII EN IX, Ansets over ( K. million. THE GLOBE AND RUTGERS, Asuets ovfr 5 million. Should you wish insurance of any kind see me. Will see that loss is paid, unless by fraud $7.95 National Democratic Conven tion, Baltimore, Md. On account of the National Dem ocratic Convention meeting in a Southern city, there will be a very large attendance from this section. A great many of our people are anx ious to have this oppoitunity of witnessing ono of these great Na tional gatherings. To this end, the ATLANTIC COAST LINE has an nounced a special low rate of $7.95 to Baltimore and return, tickets be ing sold June L'Oth to 24th inclusive, with final limit to reach starting: point not later than midnight of July 3, 1912. The Atlantic Coast Line operates three through dining car trains be tween the South and North. Ample Pullman service available. For reservations, rates, schedules or any information, address Epp L. Brown, Agent, Scotland Neck, N.C. T. C. WHITE, General Passenger Agent, Wilmington, N. C. q 0-0000-00000-0-oooo-ooo-ooa ! Classy I Printing ! It's plain that all print g ing is not good printing. It's graded. Just a little alteration sometimes will change the appearance of the entire job. Let us suggest the change in your next job and put it in Ihe "classy" line. Printing is our business, and we want to show you how well we know it. Will you give us the opportu ty? We'll see. Satisfied customers are x our best representatives, o and when you want job printing done let us make o you one. S THE COMMONWEALTH, (j Scotlaml Ntck, Norlh Carolina. o r 000-oc 0-00000000000000 Gravestones the freight and guarantee safe delivery. the item of commissions is not in- worth considering; Whsiiin Norfolk ca.i onus. what you want : see and know what The Couper Marble Works," (Established 1848.)E159-163 Bank St., Norfolk, Va
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
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June 20, 1912, edition 1
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