-r"T : 1 1 MtSFz. - ' ' . The Largest Circulation OF ANY Halifax County Newspaper. TEL The Largest Circulation OF ANY Halifax County Newspaper 7 c. HARDY, Editor and Proprietor. Excelsior" is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year VOL. XXIX. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1913. NUMBER 35. HE UQMMOMWEAIL Twentv-one Years :iIICll-u r:' lit, Fminrl RehVf. . 1 man j w.- offered for twenty-one wi'th a Pain in my side, I final ve,r f' .ul relief in Dr. Kilmer's 'v haU ivt The physicians called Srt;?K'vr' Fain" and injections of ' ;;,';'ne wi-re my only relief for ,;il,rl' ' of time. I became so '""ir ili-'tt I had to undergo a surgical f1' J vJ -ie for two years. When K-iio pain came back one day I th; lick that I gave up hopes of ?! " A friend advise:! me to try V ill vaur S'.var -Hoot and 1 at once ising it. Tne first bot- ir- now ' n,r-piicei using u. ue nrsu uui f" f 1 v,-h STOOd that I DUl iwduo'more bottles . lam nw 1 I lil mlliV'"1" i"-""- " i J a new woman. I passed a grav Mnre as large as a big- red bean 1 se'-en1 c- a-1 ones- have not H the least feeling of pain since Si vUr Swamp-Root and I feel l'-v"diiv w recommend this great IJiVne'to all suffering humanity. m Gratefully yours, Joseph Constance, ivove''par. Marksville, La. ppracnaliv appeared before me, .1.,,- rsf Tnlv IQII Mrs this lom ut iWnh Constance, who subscribed !he above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance 3!,J VM?M"Rmv. Ntary Public. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Biaghsmtcn. N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yon. Send to Dr. Kilmer & Company, Bip"hamton. N. Y.. for a sample bule It will convince any one. Yiu will a'tfo receive a booklet of n'aable information, telling all awut the kidneys and bladder. Wn writing, be sure and mention i:ic Commonwealth. Regular fifty vnt and one dullar size bottles for sr.'.e at a!! drug stores. A.N. DUBOIS (Wring Analytical Textile and SarJtarv Chemist. Office end Laboratory CCS N. 9th St., Wilmington, N. C. Analysis of anything, particular attention to Fertilizers. Cotton Seed md Cotton Seed Oil Probsts, Well Water. Spring and Mineral Water, Canned Foo I Products, Dairy Pro- d'j.'H, Urine and Earth, etc. Farmi's hou:a have their vyv!f U'er examnea at le&si once a year; and all that part oi their Ir.nd that cira porr crops, analyzed to una ir'ia'. is miss-ine, so it can be added to tieir knd to make it good ar.d Ask for mv i ric i of analysis, whicn is not high, and mav save you lots cf trouble. &&&&& PASKSX'S 3 !r.';:.r r,.t Win the haia! aiAk.-' I i:-;r to its Youtnfol Color. I J riisvi' i i;-ir l- its Vontnful Color. j)l A. L LIVERMON, DENTIST. f).ricf iiyt stairs in White '"i'ttl? h:vl Building. )ric"ho"ir from 0 to 1 o'clock arid to o o'clock. Dii. A. 1). Morgan Physician end Surgeon S:otlsnd Neck, N. C. OiU :e in the building formerly HyDr. J. P. Wimberley. ('has. 1, Staton, Ah3rnev-ai-Law, .Scotland Neck, N. C. ' racucos ".vh. rover his services are required. ASI!1JY)UNX A'Wnev an-i Counseior at Law Scotland Neck, N. C. -tcttcos wherever his services are required. ,ney to -'-m on approved security. D'-B. L. SAVAGE r 01-' ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. ; fi'nl Vn-,ky of each month k' ? n'W to treat t.hr flinasps nf Sias;' lr. Nose, Throat, and fit o. f. Smith 'siciaa ar.d Surgeon ce inThe Crescent Pharmacy, Inc Scotland Neck, N. C. O.Hc Notice, anv hV-S to notify all persons having oM Tr t,ainis aainst the es" of h,i;4 " Ij"wii5, deceased, late tinr-ra? c.0URty North Carolina, f,tpScnt t0 tH' undersi2ned nfef-vof July, 1013. M us . Matti e J . Lewis. H. Allsbrook" p Life Insurance. l'&tinc: Thc Metropolitan Life lnTOranceCo.,of New York. ' urainary an1 in(ustrial Policies written. - : Scotland Neck, N. C. HOLDEN PLANS TO PUT ! k ALFALFA ON EVERY FARM ,Plan to Unite All Interests in Nation-Wide Campaign for the General Growing of Alfalfa. . ' Extension Department to Aid Any Community Interested in Con ducting Campaign to Encourage the Growing of Alfalfa j No More Difficult to Grow Than Clover and ! ' . Gives Double the Yield. Alfalfa Automobile Trafns Important Feature of the Work Schedules to Be Arranged and Meetings to Be Held at Farm Homes Prominent Speakers to Accompany Each Alfalfa Train Alfaifa Organizations Will Be Formed In Each Community to Promote the Work Flelcf" Men Experienced In Alfaifa Growing Will Follow Up Preliminary Work Wherever Possible and Give Aid in Getting a Start Prof. P. G. Holden, Director Extension Department, International Harvester Company, Chicago, Will Direct the Work. The campaign will be conducted in co-operation with farmers' Institutes, bankers, business men, farmers, commercial cjubs, granges live stock and dairy associations and other organizations in any community where the , peo ple are anxious to improve their agricultural conditions and are willing to give time and money to carry on the work. County and city superintendents of schools, colleges, institute workers, Chautauqua lecturers, and others interested in the work will be assisted in obtaining alfalfa charts and lantern slides. Alfalfa literature and booklets will be given wide distribution throughout the country. Special alfalfa arti cles will be sent to farm journals and magazines, and plate and matrix pages to newspapers. Alfalfa editions of newspapers will be published where cam paigns are conducted. Dates will be arranged for "Alfalfa Day" In the schools. To Begin Campaign Work in East, West and South. Work to be started immediately in the cotton belt states and In the east and west. Thirty to forty meetiEga will be held in each county, the num ber depending on local conditions. To accomplish the most In agricultural development, we must begin with the man behind the crop. Upon him depends the final working out of the principles of agriculture the simple and practical things which our schools, colleges and experiment stations are endeavoring to bring into gen eral use. Professor Holden proposes to carry these principles further even than the very effective work done on the agricultural trains, by using that most modern vehicle the automobile going "directly to the people on their own farms where the meetings are to be held. Alfa'fa Greatest Soil-Enriching Crop. Agricultural development need3 in addition to the work of our public institutions, the Individual efforts of every merchant, banker, corporation, or laboring man, and this plan calls for their heartiest co-operation. This plan for Increasing the yields of our crops by the more extensive growing of that wonderful soil improver, ALFALFA, is meeting the approval ( f all men who have anv knowledge of the beneficial results of Its introduc tion as a general crop. , Campaigns are now being conducted in many of the central western etates, and Professor Holden is daily answering requests for his assistance in organizing other localities, and invites cordial co-operation with every com munity interested. "Where campaigns are contemplated itIs required, first, that a request be made to the Agricultural Extension Department for assistance in carrying on the campaign. - What the local people will provide: (1) Expenses (meals and lodging) for the alfalfa speakers and staff upon their arrival and during the campaign. (2) From ten to twenty automobiles for each day of the campaign to carry the alfalfa crew and invited guests; one auto truck to carry literature, baggage, charts, and other equipment. (3) Arrange for meeting places and publish schedule of same (4) Local advertising. (5) Photographer, if possible. The Agricultural Extension Department will provide: (1) Advance men to assist in organization work. (2) Lecturers. (3) Literature. 4) Special educational articles for newspapers and farm journals perti nent to alfalfa culture, object cf campaign, etc. (5) Field men to follow up the preliminary work and aid the people in any community where sufficient interest is shown to warrant it. ALFALFA FOR HOGS. Kansas Experiment Proves the Great Value of Alfalfa and Corn as a Balanced Ration Hog Grow ers Note the Result of This Interesting Feed ing Experiment. This experiment was conducted at the Kansas Agricultural college: The pigs shown in the accompanying chart were litter mates. The larger pig was fed on a ration of corn and alfalfa hay; the smaller on corn alone. Several litters of weanling pigs were equally divided into two lots. The pfgs were carefully- chosen as to weight and thriftiness, so that each lot represented a fair average of the total number of pigs used in the experi ment. e The experiment was carried on for a period of eight months. At the end of this time the pigs fed on corn and alfalfa hay were In excellent condi- ALFALFA BALANCES THE CORN RATION SAMF UTTER CORN ALONE CORN & ALFALFA HAT fiSC KAN& EXP. STA. pounds, dressed, while the pigs fed on corn alone were thin and scrawny and averagea" but 60 pounds each. In the latter case, one pig died of what the veterinarian declared to be starva tion, notwithstanding the fact that this lot of pigs had all the corn they could cat. Must Have Protein. The scrawny 60-pound pigs lacked protein, that element required in growing animals, to develop bone and muscle, bipod, nerve and tis suethat which builds the frame th very thing that the pigs did not get when fed upon corn alone. Corn is deficient in protein and has an abundance of starch and sugar. Neither alfalfa nor corn when fed alone will give the best results, but a combination of the two make a per fectly balanced ration. A balanced ration is a combination of feeds containing elements necessary for the proper physical development of the animal. Protein, the most essen tial element in animal feed, builds the frame of the body while corn is essen tially valuable for the production of fat. The bones of the "corn-alfalfa" lot of pigs wpre double the size of the lot fed on corn alone and stood a breaking Btrain of 1,370 pounds as against 520 pounds for the lot fed on a single ra tion of corn. Women as Scbool Trustees. tion for market and averaged 250 fp After any Sickness or uperauon doctors prescribe SCOTT'S EMULSION it contains the vital elements nature craves wnata. create pure blood and buUd physical strength. No Alcohol or Opiate -mt sown. wlmfiri. S- J- i Although many Guilford county people were active in getting a law i passed to allow women on school committees, when tne county uoaru of education came to appoint the committee there was found to be no demand whatever on the part of thQ women of the county for places on" the committee. But that fact does not mean that women would not make good committeemen or committeewomen as you may choose to call them.- To be modest about seeking places of honor is a virtue that is not much in evidence in tnese piping times of self-aggrandizement but is nevertheless virtue. We have an idea that the average woman n about as well suited to the duties of membership on a school committee as the - average man and no better. New Bern Journal. . HAY CAP8 FOR ALFALFA. rw j Alfalfa should be raked and either put in the barn or if It is not sufficient iy dry, put into hay cocks. It is a mat ter of economy to have two or three hundred hay caps (made of six-cent clotn one yard square) tc ure in case of bad weather. You may think this Is considerable bother, but poor al falfa Is poor stuff, and when we re member that good alfalfa brings us In actual results nearly as great returns as wheat bran, we can better realize the Importance of taking care of it II any of us had 500 "hav cocks of bran" In the field, we would take care of them, but with alfalfa we think of It as "just hay." These cloths may have wooden pegs or some sort of weights attached to each corner to hold them In nlace: th pegs can be pushed into the hay to hold Che corners fast. Hay caps will soon pay for themselves in finer quality of hay guaranteed by their Senator Lee S. Overman Commended. The lobby investigation by the United States Senate is even now certain to establish Lee S. Overman, junior Senator from North Carolina, in a position of power in that body. It is Overman who heads the lobby probers. He is the backbone of the whole investigation. He made the fights on the floor for more time and more money to press the inquiry to the bottom, regardless of how many fathoms detp that bottom is. He determines the course and fixes the policy of the committee. When the Mulhall letters came out and it was apparent that some Sena tors and Representatives might be come seriously involved, Overman, instead of soft-padaling his investi gation announced that iti should go on, regardless of whom it hit or how many of his perpen&l friends it hit. This investigation : has started tamely. Each member of the Sen ate was called and politely asked what he knew of ithe President's charges that a lobby was at work in Washington. It looked for a time the committee's report could be made in a week and the fact vouched for that no Senator or Congressmsn had been improperly influenced by lobbyists. As the probe went on, however, however, clues began to develop. A famt thread of suspicious work was discovered here and a trace of it was pursued there. Then the com mittee suddenly opened up a wilder ness of lobbying. The exposures were so far reaching and startling that the committee itself was atfirtt to bewildered to do more than as sure the country that all the facts should be known. Every fresh development is fur ther vindicating Senator Overman's assurance that no whitewash would be apt lied by his committee. Mr. Overman has been a Senator for 10 years. Until last March 4th he was a member of the minority, but he was preparing to take his place in the leadership of his party in the Senate. The Carolina's Senator's most im portant move, after the Democrats reorganized the Senate was to make a demand upon that body that the civil service of the United States be investigated. He made a strong speech on the Senate floor about a month ego, in which he showed by a Republican testimony that the civil service laws had been applied fcr years to strengthen the Republican party m governmental machinery. He showed that under the Repub lican administration every depart ment had been crowded with office holders, ard produced the report of President Taft's Economy and Effi ciency Commission to bear him out. Down in North Carolina the peo ple like to remark that years ago Lee Overman was Senator "Zeb" Vance's private secretary. As chairman of the Senate Com mittee on Rules, as ranking member of the Committee on Judiciary and as a member of the powerful Appro priations and Claims Committees, Senator Overman is in a position to render fine service to his State and to his party. Washington Corres pondent Baltimore Sun. LIVE STOCK ASSOCIATION MEETS. Re-EIecl Officers and Adopt Prizes for Live Stock Exhibit. Tarboro, Aug. 22. On Wednesday the members of the Roanoke and Tar River Live Stock Association held their annual meeting at Maple ton, in Edgecombe county, the coun try home of the president of the as sociation Mr. B. F. Shelton. By acclamation the members pledged themselves to work for the county fair which is to be held in Tarboro the first week in November and do all in their power to make it a success, and en motion it was or dered that a committee be appoint ed to arrange for prizes to be given Bt the fair for live stock exhibits. Dinner was served by Mr. and Mrs. Shelton in the grove around their home. Barbecue, brunswick stew and other appetizing refresh ments were served, which were en joyed and heartily disposed of by those present. At the afternoon session the com mittee appointed to select prizes for live stock exhibits at the county fair reported the following prizes and and contests: $5.00 for the best beef bull over one year old, any breed; $5.00 for the best dairy bull over one year old, any breed; $2.50 for the best gilt under six months old, any breed; $2.50 for the best boar under six months old, any breed; $5.00 for the best brood sow, any breed, and $5.00 for the best mule colt under three years old. Twenty-three were elected to membership in the association. Short talks on timely subjects were made by Messrs. B. F. Eagles, W. D. Leggett, B. F. Shelton, R. W. :ott, Jr., and Dr. L. L. Staton. By a unanimous vote, Messrs. B. F. Shelton, president, and T. Peny Jenkins, secretary and treasurer, were re-elected to serve for the en suing year. For dysp3psia our national aiiment use Burdock Blood Bitters. Recom mended for strengthening digest;on purifying the blood. At all drug stores. $1.00 a bottle. Many a man who is willing to be a grafter lacks the chance. How the Trouble Starts. Constipation is the cause of many ailments and disorders that make life miserable. Take Chamberlain's Tablets keep your bowels regular and you will avoid these diseases. For sale by all dealers. It's difficult for a man to collect himself when his wits are scattered. J Suffered Ecxema Fifty Tear 0W Well. J Seems a lonir time to onrlm-o iha awful burning, itching, smarting, skin-disease known as "tetter" an other name for Eczema. Seems good to realize, also, that Dr. Hobson'rt Eczena Ointment has proven a per fect cure. Mrs. D. L. Kenney writes: "I can not sufficiently express my thanks to VOU for VOUr Dr. Hohson'n Rraom . Ointment. It has cured my tetter. which has troubled me for over fifty years." All druggists, or bv mail. 50c. Pfeiffer Chemical Co., Phila delphia, Pa., St. Louis, Mo. Cores Old Sins, Other leaidlts Wii't Con The worst cases, no matter of how long Standing, are cured by the wonderful, old reliable L)r. Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relieves l'ain and Heals at thc same time. 26c, 60c, L00. Ooooooooo oooooo ooooooooo- SANITARY Barber Shop! (All That The Name Implies.) Two White Barbers. W.C. Smith & M. A. Bradford Mr. Smith has had charge of the shop for past sixty days, but the work was too much for one man, so we secured the services of Good Reason fur His Enthusiasm. When a man has suffered for sev eral days with colic, diarrhoea or other form of bowel complaint and is cured sound and well by one or two doses of Chamberlain's Colic,1 Cholera Diarrhoea Remedy, as is of- j ten the case, it is but natural that he should be enthusiastic in his; praise of the remedy, and especially J is this the cash of a severe attack j when life is threatened. Try it when in need of such a remedy. It never fails. Sold by all dealers. For Weakness and Loss of Appetite The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the system. A true tonic and sure Appetizer. For adults and children. 50c MR. BRADFORD, who comfs to us well recommended, having; H'-Tved years at the trade in the Lorraine and Lynnhaven Hotels, Norfolk, Va. Mr. Smith is an artist when it comes to Ladies' Shaupooing and Massaging also Cutting and Bobbing Children's Hair, as ho has had several years' experience in Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlors. Any ladies desiring work of any kind done at their homes will please call Telephone Number Ninety-Seven. For those pimples and bad complexion you should try an Electric Massage. Sanitary Barber Shop, Scotland Neck, (Hotel Building) North Carolina OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOO 000000000-6 m This Handsome 31 Piece Dinner Set For $2.49 worth $8.00 RUB-rJiY-TISEV. Will cure your Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used in ternally and externally. Price 25c.i We have just made arrangements with. one of the largest potteries in the country to furnish us a bv a coin gold filigree. A verv attractive set in the nicest of decoration. We are going to give our 'reguler subscribers an opportunity of securing one of these sets for ex actly what they cost us. Every set is guaranteed by the manufacturer and ourselves. How to Secure This 31 Piece Dinner Set Pay your subscription to The Commonwealth, plus $2.49, and secure the Dinner Set. , If you have already paid your subscription pay for another year m advance, plus $2.49. and Secure ahnewsubscDer for The Commonwealth, forward the amount to us, plus $2.49, and secure tne winner oer. THE COMMON WEATH, Scotland Neck, N. C. Plan 1. Tlan 2. Plan 3.