Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / June 15, 1899, edition 1 / Page 1
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IF YOU ARE HUSTL R YOV WILL ADVERTISE YOU . 8 TO S'JSHiESS .w: i TfiA.M S TO Macliineiyy -Q GfirT PEOPELUS.G ?OWER. Co en mmomw; KABTH 0 THAT CLASS OF KEA DERS THAT YOU Wish your Advertisement TO KEACH ; the class who rend this paper. es fen? M 1 Uma O rJ f. "i I 2 Are your nerves weak? Can't you sleep veil? Pain in your back? "Lack energy? Appetite poor? Digestion bad? Boils or pimples? These are sure sigas of poisoning. from what poisons? From poisons that are al ways found in constipated bowels. i v N If the contents of the $A bowels are not removed from J tne Doay eacn oay, as nature intended, these poisonous substances are sure to be ?1 ! -.hcorhed into the blood, al- a mvs causing suffersca and r--itTitlv osiiifiinir cpvam f : -J- There is a common sense ! cure. I They daily insure an easy Krl 2nd natural movement of f J the bowels. p 1 You wiii Snd thatthcuse of 334 Y i 3 ? with the pills rill hasten recovery. It cleanses the bleed from all impurities and is a great tonic to the nerves. Our I-.;':ic3l rtepsrtcser.t has on of the most eraiaeut physicians ia 1 & lust how you are snffsTing. L. V will receive the 5c-t medi :a U.Y1CO ? J trj' nout cost. Afluiess ft iowtii, Mass. PROFESSIONAL. pR. A. C. LIVERMOX, i iCE-Over the Stnton Building. :K0 nOUi'S irom 9 to i o cioca ; 2 to -.1 SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. A. DLNN, 7 T 0 R N B Y-A T-L A W. Scottaxd Neck, N. C. !.eijc3 wherever hU services are W. J. WABD, Burgeon Dentist, Enfield, N. O. 0 'va over Harrison's DruJ" Store. t OViTARD L. TKAVIS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. , Money Loaned on Farm Lands. n -U L V. MATTHEWS, f A TTORNE Y-A T-L A W. P'OrCol lection of Claims a epecialty. WHITAKERS, N. C. 771 7. . -I Compare our Work witn tftan oi our Competitors. ESTABLISHED IN 1865. CHAS M WALSH hm !'i;'si; aid WORKS, 18 '-il S tea-more Si., Petersburg, Va. r?-'-?JL - Monuments, Tombs, Cemetery Curb- mg, tc. All woiK soricuy class and at Lowest Prices. I AL0 FCNX.SH IfiON' Desisrns sent to anv address free. In writing for them please give age of de ceased and limit as to price. I Prepay Freight on all Work. MENTION THIS PAPER. 3 1 lv . 7 '.. Send youur orders for Job Printing to tins of fice. Firs t class work and low "Drice& : V jji ar . u.ouxc7isa. E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $i.oo. o VOL. XV. Kew Series Vol. 3. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C.,? THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1899. NO. 24 Send Your vt n.xv I I "" - ... THE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOURS. Points' ami Paragraphs cf Things Present, Past and Future. It is gratifyiiag to see many of our best young meu taking a decided stand for temperance. The hope oi this re form lies largely iu the young, and it augurs well for our immediate future for youug Lieu who are to be leaders of thought to take a positive position ou this great question. The good people of the entire ;jtate will applaud the following strong and stirring sentiment expressed in the graduating speech ot ilr. 1 S. Carlton at Wake Forest com mencement three weeks ago : "The greatest curse which hajs ever befalleu the American people is the granting of liceato to distill and sell intoxicating liquors. Look into the Sold of history and from the flood to the records of yesterday, we see that strong drink Las been to' the masses of mankind u curse intolerable and appar ently interminable in its malignity. Air. Gladstone once said , that drink hpd produced evils more deadly than those caused to mankind by the great historic scourages of war, famine and pestilence combined. - "Now, is tnere any remedy for this greatest of all evils ? Is there any way to free our eouutry from this curse? The o"ily remedy lies in the ballot-bos. If thecitizcmof North Carolina wished, to got rid oi this curse, and would ex press this willingness at the polls, eyery grog-shop iu the State would be closed within less than twelve months." Michael Cuduhy, n partner oi the grout Armour L Co., in talking about how he made his tirsfc thousand dollars, gived utterance to what every employe in any and nil industrial enterprises' would do well lo study aud lea;u toliye v p to. I le says : "I m?ks my inisiues-3 my recreation a tc cars, l lie man who nag uie in terests of his employer at heart, and takes thi view of the matter, has to Le told when lo top work.' He is too iiilereated in bib task to be listening for the ""quitting-bcll. Mis daily am bition is not to 'knock ofl' atnight,bat to do his work and do it well." The proposition to make a home for Admiral Dewey has not met -with ap proval in many places. While the people of the United States appreciate fine services by our soldiers both on sea and land ; when a man is as well paid for his services as Admiral Dewey is, it is hard to make the common peo ple see why the people ought to con tribute to build him a magnificent home. His salary and general ingath erings ior his services are much more than thousands and thousands of other i citizens get ; and theu he has beea in the service Toy what ho could get out of no doul-t. Admire1. Dewey hardly needs any help, lak'ng into consid eration the condition of the seventy millions of American people as a whole. No, no : Admiral Dewey will fare well as long as he lives, else he is a poor I manager for his own comfort. T!, iaeaas .jquoL l c c man of intense fecmigs and strong powers to become idanlifieC with some great interest i .i. ir. I.i.-i nvmnatlilPS for wmcu - -7 its support ana wenare. jiu-o o ouw I ia Tr. reea's decliuiug the presidency of the tfQnfian -Baptist Theologicpl fctmhiary. To be sure, it was a great iwv- ! oi.fi . rr-o.st imnortunitv to be JIM! l l Ittf . O ' X V chosen aa the head of such an institu Dr. Green, in his letter ck- clming the call, expresses the couvic- tiou tha1; it u iia .utv to remain with U - rr,,.. r,.n ( Vibw. Hn remains 11 1 1 ' i'li' 1 .1 n ! 1 vj.ivvt If IIJII v-.. hi a gmnl ler place because lie nas ue- t - - .--v.. .1 ll.Alnatiflltirili I edt interest. Heroic devotion to duty i Liist Id l gpmiiied my lett hip while hnmilin some heavy Dozes., xuv uw tm T cflliaa on said at first it was a :t ft .,,. ni woulO soon uu c an.I the doctor men : . T ; .1 ofic-m Tt continued B.lt J. . .i t ,1 1 ,-rn t to Z r..w worse uxvi i coma uaiuij flXOi in work. I went to a urug , .... i.,4ininf racnmrnflndej scoro . . " wi.ii' Pain Balm. ana me Aiiungw", T iahalfcfaSacent bottle " La ,v,o Antirolv. I now reccm-nend Z':u Z irM-F. A. Babcock KrfS.1L It b ior sale by E.T.White- hea. & o O Beitn4ke Cfiatan iTha lino Toa raw Aiwag PRESENT DAY THOUGHTS About The Holland Conference. DISCUSSIONS FOB PEACE. BY G. GilOSVENOR DAWE- Written f r The Connnonweatlth. 3y the time this article is read the wonderfully picturesque gathering in Holland, of delegates from all civil ized nations for the purpose of discuss ing various phases of Peace will haye scattered. Whatever may be the out come of this gathering, the building in which the delegates met must for ever be regarded as sanctified by one of the most remarkable international movements that has ever taken defi nite shape amid the restless and antag onistic nations of the world. It is a proclamation that all nations are grad ually coming to a sense of the unity of man and of the rights of the ob scure man who, by the way, has al ways borne the most arduous brunt and burden of the battles of men. To the young Czar of Russia, son of a father who was himself a power for peace in Europe, all honor is due for not being content merely with his own I iuner leanings towards peaceful devel opment, but for being willing to run the risk of misunderstanding and of suspicion in trying to convert others to his ovu way of thinking. Pausing for a moment to consider the nation of which the Czar is the head, it is strange, but nevertheless very fitting, that the proposal for disarma ment and arbitration should come from . a nation wnose very yastness is tnougn to permit it to overwhelm all other nations that would meet it on land. udged by orainary standards, no na tion could have less to fear from the continued armament of Europe, and therefore no nation had less need to suggest disarmament. I speak, of course, from the point of view of its compact - nd couoank territory, its yast reserve supply of men, and its cliratic conditions, but of course, not rom the view-point of its bonded in debtedness, which is very great indeed, and actually exceeds that oi Frauce. Reviewing now somu of the work of the Peace Conference, it is very note worthy that the UuiteJ States, fresh from successful warfare and flushed with conquest, should have been able to bring before the conference a plan for arbitration that secured more ap proval than the plans submitted, by others . This is not peculiar, lor our nation has Dot yet run short, and nev er will, of far-seeing men whose vision extends beyond conquest to uplift, and beyond immediate'gain to future glory. Though ail that we have done during the past year has, so far as the national ieai t is concerned, been done well, and been done for the best, national vision 13 not at all blinded to the fact that there will be greater glory to us if the history ot the next hundred years should show our nation greater m some particulars than Russia to have believed more in preventing conflict than in precipitating it. The results of the conference will not be "immediately visible to the great hurrying world, because from the pressure of daily life and events, the mass of us lose sight of a movement as soon as our text-books, the news papers, cease making comments upon it. It will not be surprising, therefore, if there should arise a lull of interest, but thi3 will be apparent rather than real ; for each set ot delegates will re turn with a report to its home govern ment, and out of these reports will de velop correspondence back and forth in relation to the future offensiye and defensive plan3 of each government, The result will be increasing interna tional understanding and the gradual evolution of ideas, by which in future disputing nations will find it more than eyer difficult to go to the extreme of actual battle. Five years or ten ava:. will not be too many before we can hope for the creation and the main tenance of a good working plan among the great nations ot the earth which great'nations lor all practical purposes aro simply Russia, Germany, England and the United States. The discussions of the Conference relative to human methods of warfare sncli as the disuse ot flattened bullets of balloon explosives, and of certain (afa nf nheels. aie mere dust in Wiiiv-; CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Tt3 Rfa3 Yen Hstb Atom Bfiugh Bears t3w Signature oT the balances of the wider question of the economic advantage of avoidable warfare. These minor subjects,- be cause somewhat picturesque in their details haye aroused among many peo ple the greatest interest : but their right position will be understood when it is stated that the cesvtion of warfare is much more important than any method oi waging it. All lovers of the common man must welcome any forward step in the di rection of thisConference ; for the huge standing armies of -Europe are a terri ble burden on the young manhood of that continent and also upon the aged ot that continei t because of the gov ernmental demand upon the young and strong for several years oi unpro ductive effort. These conditions are fairly well understood by us in Ameri ca not because we have a vast standing army, but because a large proportion of our European immigrants have come here to ayoid enforced and there fore hated military service. The American heart is also well prepared for making the dream of the Czar an actual working power; since its own record in the past century has been more notable than that of any other naton, both in the number of its own disputes that have been settled by arbitration and also through its haviug been the arbitrator in the disputes of other nations. It yet hopes to see the nations of the old world become in relation to Peace, the United States of Europe. An Answered Prayer or a Whopper. New Berne Journal. Mr. Thomas, of Adams' Creek, who kept a fine hog in a pen near his resi dence, went out Tuesday morning to care for his pet pig, and on going to the peu, found that a bear had been there during tLe night and carried the pig away. Mr. Thomas, to give expression to his feelings at the loss of his pig, bowed himself down smd iu a very ear nest way prayed that the bear might Le choked to deatn by the bones of the This afternoon Mr. Thomas had oc- asion to visit a thick wood a short dis tance from his home, and to his great delight found bruin stretched out on the ground, dead, and on making an ex amination, found that he had attemp ted to swallow a hock bone, which be came entangled in his throat and chok ed him to death. Although Mr. Thomas regretted the oss of his pet hog, he felt that he had been amply repaid by the answer of prayer. A Goat At9 The License And Post poned The Ceremony. St. Louis Dispatch. " The fondness of a billy-goat for paper caussd the postponement of tbe wed ding of T. II. iJryson, formerly a mer chant of this city, but now a resident of Mississippi. Mr. Bryson was enga ged to be married to a widow residing at Olive Branch, Miss., and was visit ing a married daughter near there at the time the accident happened, A ew days before the date of the wedding Mr. Bryson procured a license at Hernando and placed it in his inside pocket. The morning before the wedding day he saw that a loard was loose on the herceop, and taking o.l his coat, pro ceeded to nail it. When he finished this he saw a pet goat munching at something containing a real seal. Bry son realized that it was his marriage license and tried to rescue the paper, but tfce goat was too quick for him and swallowed it. As the document was indispensable, a long drive to Her nando was made to procure a duplicate, and this caused a postponement of the marriage for twenty-four hours. Buckwheat For Low Grounds. Cultivator. The buckwheat crop is peculiar in the fact that it can be putiu after July and still make a crop of graiu that furnishes excellent foodfor man. It is almtst always sown on low, wet land, that could not be tilled earlier iu the season, in iact, n is more cueu a lan- -- . . . r 1 ' f 1 ure than not, if sown on high, dry land, even in the East, where there i3 usually plenty of moisture. It caunot be grown with profit beyond the region ot the ereat lakes, and tLo two tates of Pennsylvania and New York pro duce yearly more buckwheat than all the Other States in the Uuion. A CARD OF THANKS- I wish to say that I feel under last ing obligations for what Chamberlain Cough Remedy has done for our fami lv. We have used it in so many cases Of coughs, lung treubles and whooping cough, and It has always given ine most perfect satisfaction, we feel great ly indebted, to the manufacturers of this remedy and wish them to please accept our hearty thanks. Respectf ul lv Mrs. S. Doty. Dea Moines, Iowa. $ For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co. IN AGE. Growing Old, And Keeping Young. SOME WHOLESOME LESSONS. BY REV. THEODORE CUYLER, i. 1). Biblical Recorder. Since the time when Cicero wrote his immortal treatise on Old Ag3, in numerable creeds have been written on this venerable topic ; but as it is an ex perimental matter, there is always room for another one's experience. Some regard old age as a disgrace, and practice cunning devices to conceal it. Their wigs and other simulacra pretences wear out and expose their folly; for Solomon declares that a hoary head is a crown ot glory it it be found in the way of righteous ness. That old age is an incurable malady is only partially true, for some vigorous persons 'pass fourscore years without ever having caught it ; or they have it so lightly that no one suspects them. "Old" is a relative term after all. I have known people who were rather pitably old at fifty ; and when I met that swift-footed Christian, William E Dodge (senior), at the age of seventy five, with the brisk gait of a boy, r rid with scarcely a gray hair on his head, I said to him, "You are one of the youngest meu in New York." How to keep young that is the prob lem ; and it is a vitally important pro blem, for it really means how to make the most of life and to briug i;i the largest revenue of seryice for the Mas ter. - Healthy heredity counts for a great deal. Longevity runs in certain ciean lived families. For example, that Etal wart philanthropist, Neal Dow, alert at ninety-two, told ine that his, Quaker father reached ninety-four, his grand father eighty-fiye, and his great- grand father ninety. Such inherited vigor is a capital to start with aud not to be wasted. On the other hand, one of the most atrocious crimes is committed by some parents who not only shorten their own days but make long life an impossibility to their offspring. Supposing that a man has a fairly good and unmortgaged constitution to start with, there are several practices and methods to ward off the infirmi ti es of a premature old age. The first and most important is to keep the commandments. "Our Creator has written certain laws on our moral bodies laws as irrepealable as t!use written on the stone tabies ot Sinai ; laws for the breach of which Jesus Christ made no atonement. To squan der vital resources by violating thesa laws or even by neglecting them, i an unpardonable sin. There are suicides iu Christian churches yes, iu some christian put- pits ! Rigid care as to a digestible diet does not mean fussiuess. It inems:. clear head, clean blood, and a chance for longevity. Stimulants arc danger ous just in proportion as they become indispensable. Hard brain work, hearty eating, aud no physical exercise aro shore roads to a minister's grave. That famous patriarch of tbe New England pulpit, Dr. Nathanael Emmons, who was vigorous at ninety-five, used to say, "I always get up from tbe table a little hungry." The all-comprehensive rule of diet is very simple whatever harms more than it helps; let it alone. Wilful dyspepsia is au abomination to the Lord. A second essential to a healthy long evity is the repair of our resources by sound and sufficient sleep. Insomnia is worse than any of the plagues t f Egypt ; it kills a man or woman by inches. How much eleep is absolute ly necessary to bodily vigor must le left to nature ; she will tell you if you don't fool her. "Burning the mid night oil," commonly means burning up your life before your time. Morn ing is thetime for work one hour before noon is worth five after sun set. ' ' . . , When a man who has as much strain on his brain and on his nervous sensi bilities as most ministers hav? goes In his bedroom, he should school himself to the habit of dismissing all thought abeut outside matters. If he has diffi culty indoir.g this, he should pray for divine help to do it. This suggestion is as applicable to hard-worked business men and to care-laden wives and housekeepers as it is to ministers or brain-workers in any profession. That wonderluf physical and mental phenomenon of this century, Mr. Glad stone, once told me that lie had made it a rule to Iock eyery affair of Stale ; An OI& Zdecu Every day strengthens the belief of emi nent physicians that impure blood is the cause of the majority of our diseases. Twenty-five years ? this theory was used aa a basis for the formula of Browns' Iron Bitters. The many remarkable cares effected by this famous old household remedy are sufficient to prove that the theory is correct. Browns' Iron Bitten if told br all dealers. and every other care outside of his bed room door. To this excellent habit he attributed his sound sleep ; and to his refreshing eleep he largely attributed his vigorous longevity. Taddy's ru'e is a good one "when you sl.ipe, pay attention to it." Personally, I may remark that it is to a full - quoa of slumber at night and a brief nap after a noon meal that I owe fifty-three years of steady work without a single Sunday on a sick bed. To keep young eyery man or uoiumi should endeavor to graduata !i3ir la bors according to ther age. After threescore and tea lighten up the loads. It is overwork that wrars out life ; just as it is the driving of a hor-,3 after he ia tired that hurts bun and shorten his days. But while excess of labor is injurious to tbe old, an entire cessation from all labjr is still worse. A work less life is commonly a worthless life. If a minister lays o5 the burdens ol the pastorate, let bins keep the tools sharp by a mimstry-at-largo with pen aud tongue. When a mar chant or tradesman retires from busi ness for himself let him serve the pub lic, or aid Christ's causa by enlisting in enterprises of philanthropy. Rust Las been the ruin of many a bright intellect. The celebrated Dr. Archibald Alexander, of ihe Princeton Theological Seminary, kept young by doing a certain amount of intellectual work each day so that he should, not iose his touch. He whs as lull o! sap on the day before his death as he was when a missionary in Virginia nt the age of two a id twenty. Hj per pared iitil olte.n ued a prayer that was so beautiful that I qu.)lc a port.ioa of it lor may fellow-disciples whose life clock has strode threescore and ten. "Oh, in out msroiful God, cast me not off in tha time of old age; fors.i!:e me not if uiy st.nf.igi! fuileth. Miy my hoary head be f ju s i in righteousness. Preserve my mind fror.i dot.iiio and im becility, and my bo3y froii piotr.kd disease and excnifiau.igpaiii. Deliver mo from despondency in my di-clininji years, snd enable me to Le:n with pa tience whatever may bs'lhy wili. 1 humbly ask t hat my rex? -n maybe continued to the l:st ; :utd that I may leave my testimony in favor of the reality o! religion an.l of Thy faithful ness in fulfilling Tily gracious prom ises. Anl when my spirit ieawj ihis clay tenement, Lord Jems receive it! Send some of the blessed angels to con voy my inexperienced s nil to ih man sions wh'ch Thy lovo bus prepnied ; and oh, may I hsivo an abundmt en trance ministered unto me into the Kingdom of our Lorl rtiii Saviour Je.-us Christ." This beautiful petition Hooded !;:s closing years with sweet peace and a strength unbroken to (lie hist. A sore temptation to the aged is a tendency to qucrulonmess and pesi misiri. Losses are unduly lamented, and gains aro not duly recogn'.zad. While we cherish and cling lo many oi the things that are old, an l iie nil the letter fur having been, let us not seek to put our cyoa in I ha back of our heads jr. id live only in the pust. Keen step with the times; keep sympathy with young hearts; keep in touch with every new-born enterprise ot c'nirny, and in line with the marchings of Gxt's providence. A ten minutes of c'.at or play w'.lh a grandchild may freshen you mere than an hour spent with an old companion or an rid l ook. Above all, keep your hearts in the love of God, atid walk in the warm sun shlrc of Christ's countenance. Our "Indian Funimer" ought to be about the most golden period of a life conse crated to Him who has b ught us with His precious blood. Eve hath rot seen, tongue hath net told, Anl ear hath not heard it sung. How buoyant and fresh iho' it ssems to grow old, Is a heart forever young. The hue Jarnes Sptirge'vn was a very thrifty mar. His estate was valued about .?200,0' 0. Charles 1L Sptirgeon bad not ere -fourth much rroptrty. Dr. James f-j-urgeon le?t .H his pro perty to his widow. . - Health fi.r ten Cfints. rascatets make Ihe bowels and kid! eys aci naturally, destroy microbe,, enro hcid.-.d-p l il iouf.Ti?s? a?:d constipation. Ail'hi.'gisls. - "A "'evman biolog'st has ca'culafed that the buraao br mi contains .' ;'0. 000,000 nerve cells 5,000.000 of which die and are succeeded by new ones eyery day. At this rate, we get an en tirely uew brain eyery sixty Jays." AGENTS WANTED FOR "THE LIFE AND Achievements cf Admiral Dewey," the world's gre test naval hero. By Mumt Fiilstead, the life-long friend and admirer or the nation's idol. Big gest and best book ; over 500 page?, 8x10 inches ; nearly 100 pag03 halftone illustrations. Only $1.50. Enormous demand.; Dig conirr.Isjtono. Outfit free. Cbanco of a - lifetime. Write quick. The Dcniiuirn : Company, 3rd JTloor Caxton B!dg., t'Licago. I Paying Double Prices f for everything is not pleasant, is it? But that's what you are doing, if you don't buy litre. Did you think it SOfsible to buy a (50.00 icyclefor$i8.75? Cat alogue No. 59 tells all Price, $18.75. about liicycies, sewing Machine. Orfnne a,t Pinnri. V What do you think of a fine suit of Clothing, niade-to-your-measure, guaranteed to fit and t txpres iirtiVj to your station Jt for Js-so? Catalogue No. 57 aujns 11, any uaiaii! ill Shoes, Hats and Furnishings. Lithographed Catalogue No. Am cllftwta rrn.ta Dune Psi , 1. ... a V tieres and Lace Curtain?, in hand-painted colors. H'e pay f Freight, sew carpets free, and V furnish lining without charge. What do you think of a Solid Oak Dry-air Fam ily Refrigera tor for $3.95? It is but one of over 8000 bar gains contained in our Gen eral Catalogue of Furniture Z 1 1 1 L.U TF We save you from 40 to 60 Ser cent, on everything. Why uy at retail when you know Price, $3.95. ciust wnicn catalogue do you want? Address this way. JULIUS HINES & SON, Baltimore, Md. Dipt. 900, - WiLMfNGTON & WELOON O. AND LUANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY OP ' SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. t-KAlNS GOING . OUTH. DATES') Mny 5, ls:-i!l. 'a- .cr : c 0 y.-tzSr. C C !r 'A A. M. 11 ;; 12 05 V. M A. H V. M. Leave Wolilou Ar. Uoet.y Sit. 10 "U Louse Tnrboro ( 00 ...1 ii) 1 -v. Lv. lto-!i.v Mr. i.i iiVL' Wilsun !,:'(1V(! hViniii in II il 11 :.7 1 (i jr, ft t() L! r.2 2 40 Lv. r.iv:ri1-vil' Ar. Florence 1'. M.iA. M Ar. ;oHr:!.(ro I Lv. OoM l 01 o V.v. 51a ; i;i Ar. i liiirgl-ou 7 ull 7 01 :t 21 4 i'5 !) 4 r, rii t. .V. a. :i.'v. m TUA1X.S GOING NOHTlf. is1--' - a - . x. m.i Lv. r'oroin e '.) -I'll l-.M.I il 4:;! 10 il.'i 11 Jill Lv. Fi'.vc f, viile. J 21 L:ive Si'linn, Arrive Wilson 1 III), I 1 A. M. I. M.'A. M. 7 ! U IIS s iii! 10 ra 9 n 12 so I,v. W .niiiAtou Lv. y.!t.M)o!; Lv. (ioldsbor-i I r ir. ! 1'. M. I A. V. 1 M.1!'. M. 2 :'.. r, -!:!; 11 Jil; 10 :SI 1 10 I : ; v.- w. 11 juI 1 ca Leave Wilson Ar. I Jock v Bl 1 . Arrive Tnrboro! I 7 ill' Lvive 'i'urlioro 12'l! t i.i. Lv. jjuck.v .mi-. ;: :;a 12 on Ar. V;!il;iil 4 :i 1 (III M. A. M. ! M. i:u!y orfj t Monday. jD.itly tx- (:ej;t riunday. - . : . i . l . i ... .1 i. i. x 1 . i ll u:i in;: i;l :.u:u j .-i.iiicii lloiid leaves vVeldon 15 p m., Halifax 4:1." p. m., nrrlvci Hcr-tljind Neck at -j :0S p. in., Gioc-nvill'j :.ri7 p. n:., lv ins ton 7 :CT p. m. llelnrnin 1,'nvcs Ki!:sto:i 7 :-"j0 a. in., tten iilo iS :."2 a. vli , arriving Halifax ;.t !1 :iS . in., Woldon II j33 a. ia., tb.ily except Sun day. Tr.:M,s on W;i.--hin,u!on Ilrauch leave W.vhiuc-iou 8 :U0 a. ni. and 2 ::J0 p. in., arrive Pannele U:10 d. m. nd l jO0 p. in., rottii-tiing leave Piirme'e U j35 . ir. and 5 :o0 p.m., nrrie Vr'ii.-inn.L-toii I L :00 a. m. and 7 j2'. p. m., daily tx cept Si:;id.:v. Tr.iiu leave-! T.-.rboro, N. 0., daily' except Sund.-iy 5 :"0 p. tn , Hominy, i :17 !. in., nrr:ves Plvniouth 7 :10 p. ra., ) :i0 p. m,. Keltirr.iiig, leaves Pl niooMi ds.iiy except Kti.vlny, 7 :)0 m., and .SnruUy :0 a. tn., jirrives Tnrboro 10 iOo a. m.. 11 :00 n. sn. Train on Midbmd N. C. Branch le,ivC3 GoioVboi'o (biilv, except Sunday, 7 :05 a. tn., jirrivmg Smith lie'd S :10 n. ni. Pciurnir: !p-iv-s HmiibfirM 0:00 :.. in. ; firiyes ;it Goidtboro 10 :4 a. n Trnifs on Na!iviPr Cianch on Rccly Mount ut 0 :30 it. m.. : :10 p. m , arrive Na.-h viile 10 :10 n m.,4 :03 p.rn , Spiing Hope 20:10 n. in.. 4 :2." p. in Kslorniiv,' le.ive Spring Hope 11 :00 . m.. 4 :"!" p. r,y., Naslivillft 1 i :22 n. in , " .23 p.m., .-iriive .it Poc!;y Mount II :1-j n. in , 0 :00 p. in., c?ai iy except Sundiiy. Train on Clinton Lmncli leaves Vrr iw for C!intn!i d.iily, except Snn-lay, S:10 . m. r.pd 4 :1 j. rn. n.-turn-inr le-avos Ciin'on ut 7:00 a.m. and 10 :00 n. m. Train No. 78 rnnkes clofo ?onnp.ilon at W( l ion f r .ni poini North daily, all rail via nichtnot:d. II. M. TCMEPSON, Gc-n'l Pa'S. Agfciit. J. R. PENLY, Gen 'I i5:!:ncer. T. M. EilERSON, Trafii:- Marngcr. jEEl'S THE QUALITY OK C(.Oi-S d'i'Jretl by the people who Wici o o j p t i! s il n p. n n r. Complete lino of Hor.vy nnd Fimcy GllOCEIUES, FRUITS, VEG ETA D LIv , C UQL'KKll V, STOSE and TIN W A II K. Also ;EST II AY; Corn, . Rice-Meal, 0tp, 13 inn, Cotton-sced Meal, Hull.-, and Genera! Feed Supplies. -. '''.':'."' Clover tnd Grans rsceds. 'Phone Call No. 1. & C tf. 1 A ft & ;? ! . vf
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 15, 1899, edition 1
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