Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / July 4, 1912, edition 1 / Page 1
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COMMONW t. .1 : l . l - The Largest Circulation OF ANY Halifax County Newspaper. O" ANY i.;ifnv CohmIv newspaper. r an Proprietor. 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year. ... SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1912. NUMBER 27. 1 1 i:4 upon the mind, .uubition; boar.ty, u- ::(! I'Ueeri'rJ- v'Tl l'ie k of o'U- . .. xTivv iron yie iias - - - - - - liV.lIt ilt i tti-.- c '.tc.l with 5rl-vet :!iV.-i t"!ociv.:-e of Ihcdiffi- fed V'-- : :: the ii':t ".Is fr.e treatment cf T'ji'! unpleasant : :ia?cl condition of uUkn- una :;ct to a ' SV.oto;.', f trqto thi tat see ' bar .V i A,. m;s?r- .1, 'r frn"!i I; of testi- suae. to n t make Ir.i. r.ame, Dr, i ,1.., i i '"TATOX, ;. x r: Is J? DUNN c v. !i !. hi son 'equnv: Xr.rth Cfi a ! matters to railroad on app cov :ior at Law ar" 1 1 1 i-K .s 0. -.ken tired. for;-, x. c. Me.:-!:, N. C. '--n 'of each month t!v diseases of TovoM, and fit-. " ' "v- f1 . . e ',., j., . K . ' --p'.t Street. 4. iMITII r;'ifl Surgeon ft Commercial 'Ti'd.ing :;ck, N. C. 'TIST. "n str.ira in White :': Budding. j r-iT!. fi to 1 o'clock ) oVlock. iipfjtre Gn?,y: -s : - '"ii."..:.:u.l i;o-o. . - I ) tpwpf a, TO MOTHER AMD CHILD. . I ' 1) COLIC, ana ivilo.A. It is a!- : ! .-i-:i for "Mrs. ir,-! ':j,e no other 's KS $ 14 -f ' - J . l';'-l . (;; a K r'('f. i '.t KiSTS TO ?s!0TKERS. "Cl?.?.n!insss is Kext tc Godliness" in Fending Bablss. Your baby came from a world of f'i.;. ! perroet cieaniir.oss. II io Has been - used to perfectly pure and whole some food. Ho has a perfect right '.?'-. t it is r.vt v.ncom- expect it after his arrival in this r:"; ,r.-v:l""H to be world. If the mother can furnish it t.ik 1:.i!nvys! If 'the I he"50', b-by is fortunate, for -n. i'V.-.o u: ine redds he will then ho served in the most ?-lt?s an-; nnnrnvpri rnd cnnifarv ivm? c i. !;.- to control the : , , '. , " ... ... ir. nowever, no must oe a Pottle ahy." remember that his life may depend upon absolute cleanli ness. only the cleanest, purest and freshest of milk. See that it is clean nd coo! when vou get it. Put it on j'rctt rrmltly! 'co immediately. During hot weath L:.:to etiVct cf i er ice is absolutely essential for the h-cl. itifssolJ. j nvo.-orvation of milk. A little money SS-TrJi I spent for ice may save a large doc- i""ri; I tor's 1 i 1 1 later. Never allow a fly around your baby, his food, or his bottle. As soon as the bottle of milk is finished, wash it thoroughly with in-a: the i cold water, using a bottle brush. Dr. i-uhncr j jhen clean with hot water and borax . ., bo sura and i . . , , , , lnv (a. taciespooniui ot borax to a pint of water), and turn it upside down r.V'.ot "1"wi,'' ; in a clean, sunny place away from ! flies. I Never let the baby nurse again from the milk remaining in a bottle ! after he has finished it once. Stale ! milk curds in the bottle will become vices are poisonous in a few hours, and may j contaminate fresh milk coming in contact with them. I Always boil the bottle thoroughly j in water to which a little soda has ! been added, before putting fresh I food into it. The easiest way is to have as many bottles as the number ' of daily nursings, so that all may be ;eriiized together. The simpler the nipple the better. . Xever use a nipple to which a long ! tube is attached. It can not be kept clean and will certainly cause bowel trouble. As oon as the bottle is finished, remove the nipple, turn it inside out over the finger, and clean with a brush, used only for this pur- pose. After u?e, always boil the "Early to be bed and early to j once to plant abundantly of this im brush. Keep the clean nipples in a . rse." makes a long day for swat-1 portant crop. Plant some on poor covered class niiaJ with fresh borax ting the flics. Jiand for turning under; plant some I water. Always rinse the nipples, as 1 well as the bottles, in boiling water b c- f o re u sing a era i n . Do not put the nipple in your ! mouth to determine the warmth of j the milk. Let a few drops fall from ; the bottle on your wrist. If the ! miik h not hot for your wrist, it is I too hot for the baby. J Always observe the utmost care ; for ch-anlin '-s in all details. Be I c:;use cvher babies have survived ! f'ics and filth is no reason that yours will. Bear in mind that eternal vigiiance is the price of cleanliness, and babv's health is the reward for Gr.rsrnmen! Ccunt of Sheep. Government reports bhow that there are to-day more than G7,000,- 000 shvep in the United States. Some one has calculated that if this number were placed in a column, two abreast they would circle the globe, and still there would be a few left over. To ascertain the cost of producing this vast amount of wool j and mutton, the government has spent more than a year in investiga tion. Whenever the tariff occupies in politics and Schedule K is talked about, the question of the cost of producing wool is one of the chief topics. So many conflicting views have been presented on this subject that the government has employed Prof. E. L. Shaw, a noted sheep ex pert, and corps of assistants to in vestigate the conditions in the sheep States and to submit a report. Pro- "3 1 feasor Shaw has been busy since a year ago last October compiling sta tistics as to the exact cost of sheep raising both in the East and the L'West. Some idea of the thorougn ; np of t he work can be srathered svr't lint been i ijuju tin; tiio m jjv """i VK.V4XIwHnjr i Professor Shaw and his assistants "i oi cci'.ss. it i rni)nt five wrpk? Yamininp- the books TKNS lh? GUMS. bi ' - " of fourteen large sheep ranches. Mew York Sun. a people are sick people. They lack vitality and resistive power. Scotts Emulsion brings new life to such people it gives vigor and vitality to mind and body. All Druggist: I Scott it Bownc. Iiloomficld. N. J 12-9 OLD HICKORY CHIPS. A General Mixture Designed For The Busy Readers. in 1852 the Whigs did not realize that their party was dead until thev received an invitation to the funeral in November of that year. History is about to repeat itself. When Tom Piatt made Roosevelt Vice-President he certainly had no conception of what he was starting. Good baseball players, like good politicians, now look forward to a residence in Washington as a re ward. Prospects for the cause of wo men's suffrage are being rapidly im proved through an instictive recog nition of the fact that it is easy to get a man to make promises when he is cornered. Seven little governors, where have they gone? Seven dark horses came and they all got on! The Spanish aviator who was wrecked by a flock of locusts should congratulate himself that he wasn't flying in a New Jersey skeeter belt. A New York health culture faddist says that to remain beautiful women should talk to themselves. But those who remain beautiful don't have to. As Mrs. Malaprop would say, it's the proverbial case of the irresponsi ble force and the immovable body at Chicago. And in the meantime the person ally conducted Ananias Club mem ship has reached high tide and the private census of undesirable citi zens has grown beyond recognition. There's a difference between a business administration and com mercializing a National convention. First, the Republican party divid ed into progressive and conservative factions. Then the progressives sub-divided into LaFollette and Roosevelt men. Now the Roose velters have divided into bolters and non-bolters. By and by the bolters will divide into a colonel and another fellow, after which the colonel vi3 S ott and disintegrate himself by working off his grouch. Although he had committed his crime a year before, a hold-up man was recognized by his victim and ar rested; The moral is that a man with that kind of a face has no busi ness to go into the hold-up business. Here is a divorced couple quarrel ing about the ownership of the pet bull-dog. This is at least better than having the feeling of tender children wounded by court proceed ing and the ruined home. "Bacillus glycobecter" is the name of the newest advance agent of longevity, which has had many names, since men began to dally with retorts, test tubes and germs. A man who undertakes to support Colonel Roosevelt must be agile in keeping on the dark side of the spot light machine. We begin to think that Harry Thaw doesn't like Mrs. Matteawan's cooking. The trust that really could dis solve is the sugar trust, and it has too much sand. A former Seattle livery stable man has just sold a flock of Alaska mines to the Guggenheims for $2,000,000. He can now follow the horses again. Thoughtless admirers always try to compel a man who is having a fight of his life to waste an immense amount of precious time shaking hands. A Senate doorkeeper says that the colonel was stung in Africa by a crazy "moonfty." Well, at least he wasn't bitten by a sleeping sickness bug. A New York crook, we read, kept a stiff upper lip when sentenced to sing sing the other day for the elev enth time. He has the courage of his convictions. Doctor Cook has returned to start a lecture tour. He has a splendid opportunity to get even with the colonel by swiping his press agent. Lil Russell has missed a lot of mighty good advertising by not ac companying her new husband on his honeymoon trip. In baseball as in politics a winning pitcher goes to the well once too often. Mr. Taft may be down on college yells, but where would he be with out the rooters? Meanwhile the grand old party elephant would enjoy a vacation from his diet of peanut politics. Charles W. Morse's movements are so closely watched by Wall street that it is doubtful he coum uuy d without being suspected of de- I cigar j signs on the tobacco trust. VALUE OF COWPEAS. Every Farmer Should Arrange to Plant a Large Crop. Again we desire to remind the farmers of the importance of plant ing every available, cultivated acre to cowpeas. They are valuable for the following reasons: They are fairly good human food They are one of our most nutri tious foods for stock. The peas are alone worth from $5 to $20 per acre. Cowpea hay is easily worth $20 per ton. If left on the land and turned un der the vines are worth from $5 to to $15 per acre as a fertilizer. The roots and stubble are worth $2 to $4 per acre as a fertilizer. The vines, roots and stubble fur nish humus (vegetable matter) some thing nearly all lands are deficient in. This humus helps to make the land cultivate easily. It absorbs and holds moisture that will aid a crop to continue its growth during a drought. Humus furnishes the conditions necessary for the existence of bene ficial bacteria. The shade of pea vines in the for mation of valuable nitrates in the soil is helpful. Pea vine roots are good subsoilers. They go to considerable depths, opening up the earth so air and water can make a deep soil. Peas get some of their nitrogen (amonia) from the air, free of cost to the farmer, so that very little ni trogen is needed for their fertiliza tion except for poor soils. Peas draw heavily upon the sup plies of phosphoric acid and potash; therefore these substances should be supplied to them in fertilizers. Many pea crops fail for lack of phos phates and potash. Cowpeas fit in well in nearly all systems of rotations of crops. They are well adapted to growing among corn and after small grain harvested in the spring. Every farmer should arrange at for hay; plant some for grazing by horses, cows, hogs and other stock; and by ail means plant, fertilize and cultivate a few acres for seed peas so you will not have to buy at high prices next season. Nearly everything said above about cowpeas is also true of of soy beans. The beans excel in being a little more valuable as stock food, a little better adapted to wet soils, stand droughts some better and us ually make slightly larger yield as grain and hay. C. R. Hudson, State Agent. Kansan's Ton oi children. A family of nine children measur ing over 53 feet high and weighing almost a ton. That is one central Kansan family, that of P. M. Coons, of Canton, Mc Pherson county. Last week a fami ly reunion was held of the Coons chil dren and grandchildren, and they as sembled from ail over Kansas, it be ing the first time they have all been together for fifteen years. The nine children of Mr. Coons weigh an average of 203 pounds each and their average height is 5 feet, 10 inches. The four sons average 6 feet 1 inch in height and weigh an averageof 243 pounds. The father of this husky bunch of children weighs only 155 pounds and their mother weighed about 140. The Hutchinson News. BETTER TO TAKE THAN CALO MEL. Dodson's Liver-Tone, a Wholesome, Reliable Medicine Thnt Takes The Place of Calomel. Dodson's Liver-Tone strengthens the liver it does not drive it to its work by over stimulating it as calo mel does. Dodson's Liver-Tone does not have any of the dangerous after effects of calomel. It is a vegetable liquid absolutely safe for either children or grown people. Everybody likes its taste. No restriction of habit or diet ne cessary. Get a bottle at E. T. Whitehead Co's , drug store, 50c, and try it. If it doesn't satisfy you, if it doesn't take the place of calomel, you can get your money back by asking for it. WHERE THE OLD PIAXOS GO. Far-Away Markets Founds For Bics3 Taken in Trade. What becomes of all the old Pianos0 Thousands of new pianos are sold e ery year to the greater number of those who already have old musical instruments. The salesman allows a liberal price for the old pi ano in trade, accepts a little cash, and takes the balance on monthly payments. Now, while he has so!.' one piano he has just as many on hi hands as before, for he has accepted an old one. What becomes of it? He does not care to sell it to some one who has never had a piano if he can avoid it, for if the process of trading continued he would soon be following himself around in a circle and there are no dividends; in that. He must find a rnarhe'. f-r ho o'd musical instrument, i'o d" this ho repairs and revarnifhosthe old pi?r . boxes it, and, with hundreds of others, it is shipped to South. Ameri ca, Africa, Asia and other benighted portions of the world, where it ir. sold to the natives, who yearn for j bow are you related to th deund music and whose ambition is to!;'n'L-" drum out tunes on an instrument of their own. These pianos are sold for a small amount down and the balance in monthly, sometimes week ly payments extended over a long period of time. In this way the deal er gets back not only the price he al lows for the old piano in the first place, but the cost of repairing, box ing and shipping, with interest added to each of the charges. Baltimore Sun. Shall Girls Dsncs With Boys? There are some harmless things that the disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ refrain from for the kingdom of heaven's sake. And the beauti ful fact of life in Christ is that there- is no hardship, but only privilege, in such renunciation, when it l plainly the will of the Master. A minister's wife in Ohio asks about a question that confronts many girl.';: We do not allow our sixteen-year- old daughter to dance or attend the theatres or play cards. She wishes to dance with the girls. Shall we allow it? We can trust her not to dance when boys are even in the room. Does dancing with girls make it j messenger and ?rI?T!o. Druhou-March-easiervnot to dance with boys? If a ardin ii the divmmcr whcao duty it girl becomes proficient in the vari- , -s to announce each, proclamation of ous graceful dance steps, and finds j iht mayor. Mme. Druho"u-Mai char great enjoyment in dancing with din is desrribed us an octogenarian other girls, are these facts going to prove an additional safeguard to her as she grows up into yourg womanhood, and is urged to dance with her boy and young men friend-? Or, when the invitations crowd in upon her, if she quietly answers that she does not know how to dance, has never learned, is she at ?i safer distance from the border-line? There would seem to be but one answer to these questions. The de cision to leave dancing entirely out of life may seem very hard to a girl. She will be in a very small minority, for the present. And d?nc;rg with other girls is harmless enough, in it self. But it certainly exports ivr to a temptation from which she may keep well away, if she wii!. No one's life is ever th poorer for being tin - able to dance. What is lost in the way of certain social opportunities may be a great deal more than made up in other ways which arc not only far more important, but are more enjoyable as well. If this view be lovingly suggested as the parents' conviction and de sire, not as a command, children may be led to see its wisdom and to adopt it as their own. S. S. Times. During summer months mothers of young children shouid watch for any unnatural looseners of th-r how els. When given prompt attention at this time serious trouble may be avnidfwl C.ha mViprlain ' f!nl if hnl. pra and Diarrhoea Remedy can al- ways be depended upon. For sale br all dealers. Whoever remarked, "Least said, soonest mended," was no politician of the present school. Who cares about mending anyway? Mail Carriers Will Fly. This is an age of great discoveries. Progress rides on the air. Soon we may see Uncle Sam's mail carriers flying in all directions, transporting mail. People take a wonderful in terest in a discovery that benefits them. That's why Dr. Xiiv;Y. -:-'.' Discovery for Coughs, Colds and j other throat and lung diseases is the most noDU Jar medicine in America. "It cured me of a dreadful cough." writes Mrs. F. F. Davis, Stieknoy I Corner, Me., "after doctor's treat-! ment and all other remedies had fiile-1 " For couehs, cokte or a-,v ' bronchial affection its uneiuaiied. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free at E. T. Whitehead CjY. ' Tire Ye-tz I iZXA Nervous ? Sows cl ;h? tine rcnlly :' ? Csfcch cold easily and frequently (suffer f roai bi!iousr!C3S or headache ? The reason i thr.t your ystem docs nor rid itself c :ho po;jO5 in the blood; u:rt as impossible es it is for the grate of a stove to rij itself of clinLerb. Tfc? west? (hies ts u?. exastly r.hat the clinkr do to the stovt; j mr.ke the fires burn low until enoujMi r!ir.!cers hsve aocurm fated and then prevent ' s urnn4 at f-'- Vc-.-.r l'ver is iA:iC ClAi vou nro dull cud heavy ilee? docs no .u?!iv iiui ;u-i i.i;ywiz.:i a- iu.j u'lr.jii'ira iiuh m; uoviup &uviui i Kite n Goidan Medic.1. jGixv er- cr iieaUs t'c-s ooLcziz ttozi tlic body a glyceric alter ntive fcxtrast r..rA n Itjncdrcxif, fo'de-a rc-l n.d r.isndrske root, ffone ami queen 3 root, v. i.uut ihe uc i.i ncoho The lawyev eyed the woman in the '.vilr.-s box in patient de?pir. Then he rallied visibly. "Yen say, madam." lie began, "that the defendant f a sort of rc- j 'ation of yov.rs j plain what you Viil j"i)U please ex raeau by that- just "Well, it's like this," replied the witness, beaming upon the court. "His first wife's cousin and my sec ond covin's first wife's aunt mar ried brothers named Jcnes, and they wore cousins to my mother's aunt. Then, again, his grandfather on his mother's side and my grandfather on my mother's side were s-.'cond cousin and his stepmother married my husband's stepfather, after his father and my mother died, s.nd hi.s brother Joe and my husband's broth er Harry married twin sisters. I ain't never Mggered out just how close related we sre, but I've ahvay looked on him a a soit of cousin." "Oulte lih'." absented the !aw- ver ieeoiy. Tit-Bits. Froisay, a snia'l town hrdfway be- tw m Paris and Amien"., in France, is aaid to bo tae orfij civilized eom mnr.iJy in wh'ch the murddpii! af f ir? nrs eni.ire !y in !h:- hy.nds of wei.)- Tin: rv.i or iz a woman, and s' is 1 !u' '."tint' ea. ei t .e rai'- way Flalion. theEv.itchpian, the mail carrier and bailor. IMme. Leseboro is Xlv.t telegraph j who h; ; held her post through wind in for upward of twenty The letter carrier, Mmc. ' and ri ars. Doubour, has held he; more than ten yearr, and office for goes about with her letters rcrdlcs? of th yeather. The Ir.dii.nr poll? News. Ay A certain lady, who supposed her- so!.: you ngor thai she was. had two j ladies of the :-:ii!e type hers.df for friend-, named "the WAws Hills." When the census eallr-clcr came to her house, ho a.ked for her name and occup.itJ.on, which was readily fiven, lie then akcu her ags but I the worthy dame in juiredif it wrs j necessary to have it: j On being told that ic was she (asked: "Have the ,!is-s3 ; Iiiiii next j door given you their age1?" to which ! he replied that th-jy had. imagine Jurf surprise wnn sac told him to put her age the same, and the. entry he made in his book was, "As old as the Hill.''- Presby terian Yvitnees. Notwithstanding a new partv or two the corn crop will be just irs large. Buy it now. Ciiambsrlsin's Colic, ! Chnlo-rr nnd T)'j"rhoo.t Remedv i r almost certain to be needed before the summer is over. Bur it now and be prepared for puc.h an emergency. ! For sale by rieaiers. n.-m ic-afs will have lobe respect ful to one :tjiol!'U-T. The Republi can:; i::-ed up al! th cu.-i word". "Gonerndv (.k'bbitHted for vears. Had .-k headaches. lacked ambition, j was wern-oiiL ir.d &11 run-down. Burdock Blood Bi tiers made me a well woman." ira. Chas. Frietoy Moo -up, Conn. As a ratification masting the Re- J publi.'an convention wa a lamentr ble failure. r.v:.C. C!! (.! I.co. A Boston mat) i.s!:!:i ? r from t ii-.-? I hi to oi an in::ec en iv b-.fir To avert. :;uc and bites of cs.!.'..'trt:c!. r a .slings i v.v-- US.' Arnica halve promptly to kiH l.e ; poison ard prevent incarnation, i sweihng p.n.l pun. ri.-als burns, boil-s u.cers, pde, ec:;c-:i.a, cuts, j i bnr.s-s. O.dy -.j Whitehejsd Co. ! -7 7. -. i I Worried? iter li.w stror. the uonstitution t-; c:.:..;jSii 1 1 .;,:! f 1.3 " ti.(. ..-f .Ater ' at times ; IB consc rvBMsu tbe Mcd is disordered, tor the stomach is the labo rs! cry for tl.o ccns:ct renmifucturc oi blood. ?.-. rrr:?. rj.Ai;r-. of Tort Pw, Ont. Bo tG, wriB: "Ihsva T nrr. rr,i:.t siir.Vrcr lor yoa-s from lirvit trct ). catarrh, indurcation, -!.-.' ir'j i',!;' ' inz, oirtHtimtioa nd nervoMBiisss at timaa 1 would : 1 'i l 1 1.-'., l-ivn uW,s ! i- u; af-'-H- Va 'ituir ninny ditTicctit doctor t : v ii ! ,-. t m'.wr for a iiuU vkhHe, tiieo 1 wauld trodwn with ci:-. :i:r. inli:.-.np-.-.:tn ta t'l'V'ii'h .1:0. iV-r iiim-tMn yaara 1 had hil I' ": n ti my .!. A .tc- Irvin? rHi!y evaryrtainir I rot wow. I rwik. ; ' il' 'V .r.;. s uswix.m SiT'iB MfftieoJ Aiiviirr vt Dr. Piarca'ii fioldra I r- ;.vi: r; ,c.v, . n, p,.. .sr.fc's rVtcarrh Sn)4r. 1 b takan th '' cu ' U'.corry' 'MuiU Plltit,' aaij kava iwd 6v l'.t i". s-v'. '. f- .a-.Th K7noly. 1 aia now abla ta da my wo. k. -nl v. ; .i iiaj'-if. I ifn IiKe a new wivtivn. 1 anjoy everything r .nil'. 1 '.ir r- t 1 1.,,; Jt i?itinjj irie live Joint enough Ui find BanHh iaiiii? i!i.t n.a v. l aifawi." Dr. f'k-rci'i ?i'-;ii.:nt l'i.!!.!3 regulat livor sad bowels. The Biilcreoce. Running a newspaper is just like running a hotel, only different. When a man ffoes into a hotel and iindo something on the table which does not suit him, he does not raisfr hades with the landlord and tell him to stop his old hotel. Well, hardly, lie sets that aside and wads into ! the difihes that ?uit him. It i diff erent with some newspajxr readers. They find an articl occasionally that do not suit them exactly and, without stopping to think it may pleave hundreds of other readers, make a grandstand play and tell th editor how a paper ahould be run and what should be put into it, but such people are becoming fewer every year. Grand Junction Herald. Dysentery i always serious and often a dangerou disease, but it can be cured. Chamberlain's Colic, Chol era and Diarrhoea fteniwdy ban cured it even when malignant and epidem ic' For fale by all dealers. A UxiA Lsw. The lawyer was determined to dis credit the witness. "Vou are positive this happened on Wednesday?" hs demanded. "I am." "Sure it was; Wednesday?" "Ytr." "Can't be mistaken?" "No." "Why couldn't it have been Thurs day or Tuesday?" How is it that you can fix tlii day so postively in jour mind?" "Because," answered the witness vilh some spirit, "we had chicken tkat d?y. Chicken day i Wednes day where I board."- Washington Herald. ? 0 owe it to yourself and family to see the STIEFF PIANO to get acquainted with its Icaatiful rich tone. Hearing nrd sffim is h!5fvintr? come m ... " a i ti our warerooms, Re and hear for YOURSELF. You will be ?urprised at the difference; particularly at the I price and terms. Buy From The Maker. Send for Catalog. Chas. M. Stieff, Lyon II. Steele, Mgr., 114 Graaby St., Norfolk, Va. j ! jl-u Will H. Josey Scotland iNeck, N. C. t rv i e i r- a I r !i lilH O U IX MINUd oi !! fclirts written. ( Wliv incur. ?n crimrnnina tr?lt , j may wish to ay and can't? I ? represent the strongest and I most libera! companies in America. IJfe and Accident, Mutual B?nefit and National. FIRE THI? ITOME. Ai-m'.s ovar 11 million. TIIK CONT1N 1.N TA !.. Amu ovar 24 rii.livn. t:i i'!;ii. V'C' rniA uwurjawruT- l.i.S. Aiwuwtir -4 tailiioa. 'HVJ riPEUTV-i'IIEKMr. A.at ovfr 10 niii!im. ti:u ci.oi;: and rutcexs. At avar j ::iili.r;. Should you wish insurance fi'anv kind see io-3. Will sec that !os6 is paid, unless by fraud w fcj fi Ii J i Jf u i i
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 4, 1912, edition 1
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