,DVEST!SIK0 TO : c t s r C J C i i'i t 4 O . STEAM IS TO , j olrlnery T I'nOrFLI.TG FOWFJR. LA.-.-3 OF READERS 71 AT YOU i cwr AfTvertisement : iO F.EA.CH --! who read this paper. .A" r - " - i r - - 1 V.V r"3 v- f 14 J K 63 43 m K ;:,:s the circulation in -gives more power ; r : ves, supplies miss elements to the hair r i according to direc , rrr.y hair begins to color in a few days. i: has all the softness r':ness cf youth and : ":.? - c" early life returns. vou like our book : Hiir? VTe will gladly i j ycu. Is w fc.' 13 "" It -r .:! dn r.of ohtain all the s 3 on expected from 9 Iror, write the doctor i ; Kj may be able to :Zi scmeti: thina of value u. Addrc Co., Low J. i'OFlSIOXAL. FIVEriMON, ti e SLitoa Buildin?. : 0 to I o'clock ; 2 tc Y.'IMBEKLEl, . HOTEL LAWRENCE, TLAXD NECK, X. C. fORXEY-AT-LAW, Wl.VDSOB, X. G. iii nil C-irt?. Special at i- te.' n ' in Col tactions. fi-: v.'. .r. WARD. :;8 3D. Dentist, Exfield, X. C, 'r.irri.-un's Driif Store. .t 7 T-0 11 : E Y-A T-L A . ?"OTi.A.vr Neck, N. G. P v :' r -i-oreyer his servicos are I:D L. TRAVIb, I Auor;: !y Coans?e!or at LaTr, HALIFAX, N. C. frf-.., - -r T- T 7 D'-L V. MATTHEWS, f 1 TTORXE Y-A T-LA W. -oHeclion of Claims a specialty. VniTTAKERS, N. C. fcrurc - r Work with that of fi ir Competitors. ESTABLISHED IN 1865. , m M WALSH - I lis Mi ii Ntt WORKS, Ivl CT)?r.re St., rETEESBUKG, VA. l."!fir-n!--, Tomb?, Cemetery Cnrb c. All work strictly first and at Lowest Price?. . r-.t FT-RN'ISTI IRON f3, VASES, &C. T . - iJ, , ; ?C''-t to any address free, in re? I'"' 'Jr ,!,!?m I'tease give age of do snl iur.it as to price. :. Prepay 1'roielit on all Work. -ps sleepless nights 3 :r or grief, or sick- W r pcrhr-ps it was care. 1 .-..t-.-r what the cause, 1 'oi v,ish to lock old .yJ h sir is starved hair. I "-.'r bulbs hsve been lip ;. of proper food or 1 "?M&& ft H - if p ft C. f , Mass. -5EKTIOS THIS PAPER. 3 1 lv E. S. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $i.oo. C VOL. XV. New Series-Vol. 4. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1899. NO. 45. BroTmAnnmirmnrsow; ' : - - iasam i i j, mi m mi. $ TEE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOUES Points and Paragraphs of Thing Present, Past ana Future. The Commonwealth does uot take to fads very often, bat ths one-acre crop 13 to be a fad with Texas farmers next year; and we should like to sa8 it pre vail in Halifax county. Tfefl idea is to do all that can be done for one acre and keep account with it. It is worth try ing. The news of the stamping out of yel low fever by reaou of the frost is quito reassuring. The advicas form Jackson, Miss., of 4th said : ' With heavy frosts the past two mornings the fever germs are dead. Nearly all refucees excent State officials bavo returned. Sixty- cases and eleven deaths Is the total re corded." It has been given out that John Wannamaker lias made a contract to pay the Philadelphia Record one mil lion dollars for one page of advertise ments in that paper a year. To be sure, there mustba some mistakeabout it ; for such figures for advertising jus' make a -country .editor's brain spin in bewilderment. But Mr. Wannamaker, whd is the pioneer advertiser of the age, iong ago demonstrated the wisdom of a liberal use ot printer's ink. AH wise and successful business men do like wise. Wireless telegraphy is perhaps the foremost wonder of the age just now. Plans are being matured for more thorough experiments about Washing ton by the signal corps of the army. The experiments are to be very ex haustive, aad the Scientific American says that an attempt will be ma4o'to duplicate and even exceed the per formance of Mr. Marconi, who rect-i.-o communicated between British war ships engaged in maneuvres which were at tLe time eighty miles apart. There js no forecasting now what will yet le the utility of wireless telegrephy. A fairly well informed farmer in re marking recently on the improved con dition of the farmers and others, said oue of the reasons for it 13 the econo my which the people generally have been practicing for the past year or two. He said especially of the farmers that they have learned to save more And make more for themselves. This is true and the farmers who have made their own supplies are everywhere in easier condition than those who have depended upon some money crop with which to supply their tables and their farms. The South is a great country, North Carolina Is a great state, and this ought to be one ol the most inde pendent sections of the State, and we b3licve it Is. It is a great drawback to any com munity for the general public to get the impression that the people of that ommunity are careless about dis charging their financial ODiigaiionB. People who will not, and do not try to pay their honestlebte, are everywhere at a discount ; and however attractive a community majrbe by reason 01 cli mate and other advantage?, a stranger . , l ft.- il ... V. tr t l-i a rtorhnln IS SlOW IO Cast U13 lot nuoio ar3 not careful to pay their just debts. Every community, to be sure, has more or lea? 01 irus eieon -a 1 . A fllrfn a rvtkf Af t M tion, ana wnne we amaja .w. write complimentarj things, candor compels ns. to say that Scotland Neck community has its share ot just those persons; for we think there are some persons in this community, both black and white, that pay their debts as grudgingly a -any such people in the world. A NIGHT OF TERROR. "Awful anxiety was le.t r.f the brave (ienerai Duruumu y. Mnohiaa. Me., when the doctors sam .he could not live till morning' -wm-? B. H. Lincoln, who attended her . .' ,'Zt'i "Ail thought she " writ AS 'ut soon die from Pneumonia, but she EtSta. Dr. King's New Discovery "e . , th.n nnPOSflVea UBJ S and had cured her of Consumption 1 17' Bmll doses she slept easily it naa mure - . AUt : . 7 ,.. farther ase.com- Ity curS he;." This morvelous SK3 W TriaTbJtt.es free at E T?Whitebead & Co'b drug store. Commonwealth A3 it Relates to Others. SOME COMMENTS ON SLAVERY, BY G. GS03VENOB. DA WE. Written For The Commonwealth. Though this is written two weeks in advance of election day, yet the various elections of the country will have been held before itls readTaSd we shall have realized onca more the advantage q having a government that is repre isenative, a government that can be rebuked by a vote and cast out by a yote. The quietuHo with which an election paesess off is in itself a proof of the general good sense of the com munity, and is a promise of future quietude. To know that practically the same acquiescence in the will of the majority prevails all over the country is to know that Americans are capable of eelt-govemment. Whatever apparent temporary departure there may be at present, while we are in a state of war with some portions of our own country all of lis who stop to think feel confident that Americans having beeiftrue, in great measure, for a hundred years to the traditions of the fathers, will not now be found un worthy of an heroic past. If there is any one thiog more sure than another in this world it is that the dusky races that have come in under our cafe from a variety of causes will be better off with us than without us. For us to raise the voice of lamentation and say that these new possessions merely mean more office holders, more thiev ery, mom self-benefit is to utter a wail that is our own condemnation ; forif it be true that thievery and wrong doing exist in public office it means that we who boast of our freedom and inde pendence are ourselves to blame and are ourselves certainly not fit fo gov ern and certainly, af the same time not wise enough to criticise. I do believe in haying sfi'nse enough to go in when it rains, but I also believe in the ;wis-.-lom" find. th ffain that coma from looking on the bright side of things Let ua believe with our whole heart that the nation that carved its way to freedom, that dared almost to disrupt itself for th'e sake of a fuller freedom, that has had courage to be untrue to its declaration ol independence in order to do away with Mormonism and that has the name the world over for ener gy, for progress and humanity will be true to its higher purposes and aims. According as our heart beliefs are in terpreted into action, so will the nation be. Speaking of the slavery of men and women and also of the necessary effort made by the United States to have one style of government throghout, reminds one of the war being now waged in South Africa. Because England gets scant treatment from some of our pap ers, perhaps a lew words may be per mitted regarding some features of the struggle between the Boers and British. Practically the Boers are the ou!y white people in the world who defend and practice slavery. With a sort ol moral obtuseness that is peculiar at times to those who are verbally religious, the Boer prates of his nearness to Cod and then by his harsh brutality to the flesh and hlood of his brotherman be dem onstrates his nearness to the devil For two centuries he has been out of step with progress and lives his pat riarchai life in conditions far inferior to our own Cracker whites. The Mormons went west beyond all fear of future interference. They were mistaken. Civilization caught up with them, ran beyond them, surroun ded them, assassinated them this last iffiMilfvanddlatres?. The Uvb uw w - r United States could not permit within itself a region utterly foreign to the thiners. hence the Edmunds law and demonstrations by soldiery and now the opposition to The Boers trekked northward beyond all imaainings of future British ex oninn Thev. too, were mistaken. UV uu - if' The steady tramp of commerce, of trade, of development has surrounded them and already stretches northward nf them hundreds cf miles. Even within their own bounds their riches those who nave hi idcu came in and developed the country, while the Boers merely squatted on it t.uiA rintholics or Hebrews Alley from holding office ; they grant monop hv desoise the people who pay f h t.axes. Even a slight knowledge ot historv would tell us what to expect . ..h ....nmstances. The croups unuer o""" v" - - t1, or the states, or the countries that will , ctnn at their heels trodden , w.u aa tri cominz o on; it as ineviw" - sunshine to dispel darkness. D'.?Y !uVS 1 hfl croup or bronchito Waste no time ; delay may be naugci ! 9 Dr! Bull's Cough Syrup cures at II V 1 1 LI 1 v- - once. It is a safe and in, All druggist sen n 101 Let us be fair to Great Britain. She has a huge task all over this world standing out bravely even more brave ly tBan we Americans do, for an equal ity of chance. Where the fhigiish flag goes there goes commerce and she makes no unpleasant inquiries as to where goods are manufactured. She wins peace with her sword and prog ress with her maxims, arid then holds the door wdrt open for otbar nations to benefit by the1 prowess; which is cer tainly more than we do, and let us not forget that ! That sturdy little land whose men never know when they are defeated is almost the only nation that stands for "the open door." She is an advance agent for American products and she is the best friend that America has in foreign fields and markets. let when a struggle comes on that is es sentia! to the carrying out of ! her pro gram we who are the nearest to her among the nations by blood, and cuage, and literature have, been ing-out about her land-grabbing her greed and hef lustful cruelty. lan-cry- and She desires rid more land : every square mile that she adds increases her respon sibility and her burden ; y3t she turns neither to the right band nor to" the left but goes forward in the grim re alization that one nation among all the nations must lead for firmness and for progressive generosity, and that she is called to be that nation. She stands for the things that are dearest to us freedom from religious restrictions and disabilities, equality of all before the Liw; a fair distribution of the burdens of taxation, the abolition of uriwillirig human servitude. She stands also for more than we do : for we are not slow: to take advantage of an open door while we think it wise to partly close our own. it 13 not inereiore timeiy nor kind, nor generous for us to cal her a marauder when in matters 01 foree sh3 has done and 13 doing just what we have done ; nor to call her elfish, when her whole policy toward 1 r . commerce is tue most nnsemsn ai p.rosent existing in the -world. Bswitched The Steak. Boston Transcript. Charles E. Tripler, the famous ex perimenter in liquid air, recently went to Boston to yisit his friend, Ehhu Thompson, the electrical expert. He took him a can of liquefied air. It was a quart of the coldest thing on earth that Mr. Tripler had in this tin can, and he took it with him to lunch eon where he put it on the floor by his chair. They lunched in a hotel cale and ordered a steak. After it had been brought in and while the waiter's back was turned, Mr. Tripler lifted It from the platter, opened the can and exposed the meat to the liquid air. When h nut. it back on the platter it was as hard as a rock. "Waiter." called Mr. Tripler, "come here." The waiter ooeyea. "What's the matter with this steak ? he asked, anxiously. And he lifted it from the plate by two fingers and struck it with his knife The frozen meat rang like a bell. "I d-d-d-on't k-n-ow, sir," he faltered and h8 started for the head waiter on the run. Afr. Trinler. bv the way, is one oi the fiercest looking men in the invent ins business. His mustache is 01 the pirate'eut, and bis eyebrows bristle and moot, in the middle. Therefore the head waiter approached him with al most timidity. "Do you serve your steak like this as a rule?" asked Mr. Tripler, as neetrucu the time of day on it. "It's that fool chef," exclaimed the waiter as he started for the kitchen. A few minutes later the chef appear ed with the head waiter. He recognized f h Rtonlr hv sisrht at once. Then Mr. Trinrer took it up and rang it again Then Mr. Tripler laugneu anu iur 1 . . 1 t . 1 1 lf Thomnson smiled. A new steafc was ordered and the frozen one was carrieu below to fool the rest of the kitcnen. "The Fourteen Mistakes of Life. a lict ni "tho fourteen mistakes of tifA" was recentlv given by an English naper. The list is not exhaustive, but is certainly suggestive : It is a great mistake to ser up our own standard of right ana wrong, ana judge people accordingly ; to measure tha Pmovment 01 oiners , uy um uu , to expect uniiormiiv w upimuu i world ; to look for judgment and ex rAripnppi in vouth : to endeavor to oil dispositions alixe ; to look lor refaction in our own actions ; to worry ourselves and others with what cannot be remedied ; not toyieia in immaterial matters ; not to alleviate all that needs alleviation as far as lies in our power ; not to make allowances for the Infirm ities of others ; to consider everything impossible that we cannot perform ; to beiieye only what our finite minds can grasp ; to expect to be able to under stand everything. ' i And the last and greatest mistake ot all is to live for time alone, when any moment m ay launch us into eternity. V T O 3F8. 1 b v-The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of GONEYKLAND. As Seen by a Tar Heel Boy. THE ?AEl0tJ3 SIGHTS AND SCENES OF A DAY. Written For The Commonwealth. Volumes have been written about Coney Island, but to get a definite idea of it ono must visit and see for hi m seii. As a place of amusement it ifa'nds alone, and is easi'y the most popular resort in the world. Travel where you may, far or near, you will find but one Coney Island. It is a most wicked place ; hence its popu'Itfrlty. Thoso who patronize the evil shows and gambling resorts afe more responsible ior the wickeduess, however, than the men who run them. Those men are quick to see what the lower class wants and turn their knowl edge into gold by catering to the baser passions of the mob. .Nine-tenths of the showa are "fakes" pdre and simple. But, as the old adage goes "all fxjls are not dead yet" and the man who gets up the biggest fraud makes the most money- It looks as if tiie people go there to get "buncoed" and are rather disappointed if they don't. This is especially true of the rural visitor, who wants to go .home and tell all about his marvelous ex periences and hair breadth escapes. The native Mew Yorker so admires the audacity of the knaves who work the Various games that h looks pleasant and says nothing, if he gets fleeced. Tha place has some' redeeming quail- tie:?, however ; it is not totally bad, a3 some think. "The island" is seen at its best (or worsO on Saturday or Sunday evening during summer. The stranger is surprised most of all by the terrific noises, the size of the crowds, and th3 number of leather- unged "barkers" at every turn. The etreets are lined wth stands where they sell every eatable imaginable, such ns fish, oysters, tatnatas and frankfurters, cooked while you wait and piping hot. Let me caution you against the last named article, in case you should ever visit Coney. They look tempting, I know, but leave them alone ! They are supposed to be sausages, and are made from the choicest cuts of the noble horse, and I hava even heard it whisp ered that dog's maat form a goodly por tion of tlv?ir make-up. The varici9 forms of amusement are innumerable ; I can only mention a few of the best ones. First ot all is the "chutes," the Mec- caofall country people, the pride of the island. "Chutes" is only another name for a steep incline down which a boat dashes at a break-neck pace into a pool of water below. While the boat is in motion the girls all hold their breath and even forget to scream, so great is the speed, but they make up for lost time while the boat is being rowed ashore by the sailor in charge. After the "chutes" comes the to boggan, a rather lively affair. The passengers seat themselve in a email car and are drawn by cable to the top of a spiral structure forty feet high, and turned loose. The car starts down with lightning-like rapidity, taking a sudden drop every lap, and always gaining momentum. When it finally reaches the ground the passengers are dazed and "see things.". Next in order is the tower, a skele ton steel structure three hundred feet high, which commands a magnificent view of the surrounding land and water. From this dizzy height the scene at night is one long to ho remembered. The myraids of electric lights in all directions make a picture from fairy land. The streets below are an ever changing kaleidoscope and the long white line of surf breaking upon the shore adds grandeur to the scene. Side by side with the tower is the Ferris wheel, looking rather tame in comparison, with its lofty rival. It nas one feature though that is anything but tame the "zagtime" steps leading to the ticket office. They are two seta of steps sid8 by side, bobbing' up and down like a"piston-rodand playing see saw with untiring energy. It is ex tremely amowng to watch , the fat peo ple trvmg to climb them. They brave ly start up, and aitcr getting firmly planted on the first step begin to per- form a series of acrobatic "stunts" that would make even the rubbzr man jeal ous. Tney hold to the railing like a drowning man and reach the iop red in tf B f;ica and out of breath after jen minutes of terrific exertion. , Pekry Davis' Fain'-Killkk. Its valuable properties as a speedy cure for pain cannot fall to be generaUy appreciated, and no family should be without it in case cf accident, or -sudden attack of dysentery, diarrhoea or cholera morbus. Sold eyerywhere. Avoid substitutes, there" is but one Pain Killer, Perry Davis. Price 25c. and 50c. - After the Ferris wheel we have the scenic tuhnfll, which is like the tobog gan, only the cars rud through a 4wk tunnel filled with a choice collection j of ghosts and hob-goblins. Then the maize, a glass house with mirrors so arranged that you can see yourself a thousand times in as many directions. As ycfu watider on you see a helping hand beckoning to" " you arid of conrse must follow it. You cott?e into violent contact with a mirror every way you turn. Finally yon reach the exit when you least expect it. Across the w;y Is a gyfisy tent where they make a specialty of solving tb3 Knotty problems of the heart. AH around are numberless swing (scups as they are called) merry-go-roun&sj picture tents and shooting galleries. The last named are liber ally patronized by the youthful sport?, the majority of whom couldn't hit a bull wero he as large in proportion a s the circular tin is to the proverbial eye. Each gallery is equipped with a number of glass balls so arranged that they seem to float in mid-air ; but tbey are really kept up by almost invisible streams of water. Eyeryrher you see a variety of show.3 with an energetic "barker" outsit! 3 urging the people to go In and see 'the Cuban wild girl," "the Filipino giant" or sortie? other outlandish freak. None of them are genuine, tbey are only the ordinary thick-lipped "nigger" dressed in a ferocious looking costume and hired to fool the unintiated. Last but not least we have the Bow ery, Ihe main attraction of the place. It fs ofily a narrow broad walk hemmed in on each side by a succession of dance and concert halls. During the rush hours it Is alwajs so packed that there is not an inch of space left. It is there that the ''barker" is in his glory. Hour after hour he stands outside the ticket I. booth and with stentorian voice com-1 mands the people to go in to see his show. But his voice avails him nothing on Sunday. The law forbids him to "bark" so he stands with a most appealing look, beckoning to the crowd with his handkerchief, and pointing to a small sign bearing the pathetic words "we are not allowed to talk." The dauce halld all do a rushing business, and beer flows like water be twectt the dances. The most popular places of ail are the concert halls. They are always fill ed ; the crowds sitting around the tables drinking yile beer and watching vile performances. The Bhows consist mainly cf a lot of girls in abbreviated costumes doing the "cake walk" and singing "ragtime" songs. A large part of the island was des troyed by fire this summer and it has not yet been rebuilt. There has been much talk of making a park of tho burn ed area, and it will prove a double blessing if tnc plan is carried out. It will wipe out the foulest part of the island and will provide a beautiful play ground for the poor people. Retlaw. FALLING OF THE STABS. Will Take Place in Noyember, Says Pro Linnean. Dunn Union. Prof. J. F. Lanneau, of the depart ment of Physics and Applied Mathe matics of Wake Forest College, writes a citizen of Davidson in answer to an inquiry about the falling of the stars "There will be a remarable shower of stars this year, very much like the ordinary 'shooting stars' we see now and then of an evening quickly shoot ing across the sky with more or less of bright trail, and suddenly disappearing Only, in the shower, there will be many hundreds of them succeeding each oth er irregularly for four or five hours, and all seeming to come from the same part of the sky, namely from about the constellation of stars, known asji"Leo, or "The Lion." "You may see that constellation of stars of an evening now, say at 8 or 9 o'clock, and may know it by its posi tion and shape. You may see it well up above the Eastern horizon, its prom inent stars being in the shape of an old fashioned grass, blade. "The shower will occur the night of Monday, Noyember 13tb, or rather be fore daylight net morning. It may begin at any time after midnight of Monday, the 13th, lasting several hoars perhaps until daybreak. Ur It mny not occur until Tuesday night, the 14th after midnight. "It will be well wortn the sitting up two successive nights. ' It occurs every 33 years. Possibly is may be seen only in Europe, occurring during oiir day time, as it did in 1866. But keep a lookout it will be worth the "trou ble." o 8aan th. - j9 TiK Y5J H.gva Alffijt BotlgK Bifnatnro IF YC3 Ml liUSTLER YOUWlZt - ASVKRTXSE rocs Business, KOBFOLK, VIRGINIA. TTTH1S MODEIt JT SCHOOL of Short- Land and Business Training ranks among the foremost educational institu tions of its kind in America. It pre pares youug men and young women for business careers at a small cost, and places tbem in positions free. For further information send for onr: Illus trated Catalogue and new publication, entitled "Business Education." J. M. Hesslee, President. WiLm!N6T9H&WELD0N R.R. AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LIHE RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING r.OUTH. DATED S S ? . Jnlyal.tSW. o eSgjga && a. . ......... . A. M. P. M. P. M. A. M. P. M. LeaTo Weldon 11 so 9 43 Ar. Uocky Mt. 12 66 10 80 ................ ...... . .. Leave Tarboro 12 21 6 00 rlv. hocky sit." ...i oo lo'sMt "e'ir. "i"io is ia - Leave Wilson 1 5$ 11 14 7 10 20 S 4 LuaveSelina 2 65 11 57 Lv. F.i.vetteville 4 30 1 IV Ar. Florence 7 S6 3 15 P. M. A. M. Ar. Coiiiaboro 7 50 Lv. Goldsboro 7 1 S M Lv. Magnolia 8 09 4 tt Ar. Wilmington 0 40 6 M P. M. A. M. T. M. I TRAINS GOING NORTH. I- S a? si 62 ZZ 0 OS OS Sss, fca ... P. M. 7 4S 9 45 10 54 11 31 A. M.' "" P."m" a'.' m" 7 0(1 9 46 8 :u 11 l 6 15 V 45 12 M a. "m" p."m" v"."i'. & 43 11 81 10 3K 1 ) 0 15 12 07 11 35 1 S "Y'oi 1 w I A. M. V. M. A. M. Lv. Florence 9 40 12 20 1 60 2 35 Lv. Fayettevillc Leave Set ma Arrive Wilaon Lr. W' .ninjrton Lv. Magnolia Lv. tioliisboro ! J Leave Wilson P. M. 2 :;r 3 30 Ar. Kocky Mt, Arrive Tarboro Leave Tarboro Lv. Rocky Mt. 12 21 '"a'aS 4 32 Ar. Weldon P. M. I fDaily except Monday. tDaily ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Yadkin Division Main Line Tram loaves Wilmington, 0 00 a. m., arrives Faj-ettcville 12 15 p. m., leaves Fayette- viIIh 12 25 p. m., arrives San ford 1 43 in. Returning leaves hunford 2 .fO m., arrives Fayetteville 3 45 p. in., leaves Fayetteville 3 60 p. m., arrives Wilmington 6 t0 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennettsviile Branch iraln leaves Beonettsville 8 15 a. m., Maxton J 20 a. ni., uea springs v a. to., nopw Mills 10 42 a. m., arrives FayetteviLo 10 55 a", m. Returning leaves Fayette villc 4 40 p. m., Hope Mills 4 bo p. m.. Red Springs b 35 p. m., Maxton e i.o p. m., arrives Bennettsvillo 7 15 p. in. Connections at ayeueviiie wna train No. 78, at Maxton with the Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with the Red Springs and Bowmore Railroad, at Sanford with the Seaboard Air Line and Southern Railway, at Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Scrtlana Keck Brnncn Road leaves Weldon 3 :a& p rn.f Halifax 4 :io p. m.f arrives Scotland Neck at 5 :0S p. m., Greenville G :57 p. m.,Kln- ton 7 :55 p. m. Returning leaves Kinston 7 :50 a. m., Greenville. 8 :52 a. m., arriving Halifax at 11 :18 a. m., Weldon 11 :33 a. in., daily except Sun day. Trains on Washington urancn leave Washington 8 :I0 a. m. and 2 :30 p. m., arrive Parmelc 0 :10 a. m. and 4 :00 p. m., returning L a e Tarmele 9 :3o a. m. and G :30 p. m., arrive Washington 11 :00 a. m. and 7 :30 p. m., daily ex cept Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro, JN.f;M aauy except Sunday 5 :30 p. m., Sunday, 4 :15 p. m., arrives Flymoutn .w p. m., 6 :10 p. m.. Returning, leaves Ply month dally except Sunday, 7 :50 a. m., and Sunday 9 :00 a. m., arrives Tarboro 10 :05 a. no., 11 :00 a. m. Train on Midland N. C. Branch leaves Goldsboro daily, except Sunday. 7 :05 a. ro., arriving Smithrield 8 :10 a. m. Returning !eaves Smitbfield 9:00 a. m. ; arrives at Goldsboro 10 :2a a. n , Trains on Nashville Branch Ieaa Rocky Mount at 9 :30 a. m., 3 :40 p. ro , arrive Nashville 10 :10 a. m.,4 :03 p.van Spring Hope 10 :40 a. m., 4 :25 p. m. Returning leave Spring Hope 11 :00 a. m.. 4 :55 p. m., Nashville 11 :22 a. m., 5:25 p.m., arrive at Rocky Mount 11 :4f a. m., 6 :00 p. m., daily except Sunday. Train on Clinton Branch leaves War saw for Clinton daily, except Sunday, 11 :40 a. and 4 :15 p. m. Return-, mg leaves Clinton at 7:00 a.m. and 2 :50 p. m. Train No. 78 makes close connection at Weldon for all points North daily, all rai' via Richmond. H. M. EMERSON, Geu'l Pass. Agent. J. B. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. M. EiiERSO-N. Traftin Manager. MONEY AUIi.Vt'3 or FIUM fn xclusi76 Territory. Our Fire and Bunrlar proof Safes sell at sisrht. City or Country. OUTFIT FREE. NO CAPITAL NEEDED. Agents actually getting rich ; so can vou. One Agent, in one day, cleared i?73.40. ALPINE SAFE & CYCLE CO., 9-1-irm. CINCINNATI, 0. Subscribe to The Commxo wealth. -s