Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / June 14, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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f n , . jg IS TO BUSINESS HAT STEAM IS TO- ra Macliinery, (:,:Kvr Propelling Power. E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCi-SOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $1.00. !er than V1 W7k, 1 I all your N n e i g h-rJ uuia u u u w- friencW, ; think vou f must be twenty years you are? t it's impossible to .(.' T'n'int irrifrl h l uuiiK yti;i lll r m lor or ju years in hair. It's Sf.d to voting persons prematurely old this way. Sad be- use it s ail unneces- ry; for gray nair )y always be re- VOL. XVI. New Series Vol. 4. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1900. NO. 24 THE EDITOR'S LSISTJBB II0UE3. j Points and Paragraphs of Thirds Present, Fact and Future. i :cr over half a cen- this has been the Indard hair prepara- in. it is an elegant ;ssing; stops fall- n trie hair; makes hair grow ; and mses the scalp km dandruff. ll 00 a bottle. All druggists. I hive been usinjr Arer's Hair tor for over 20 years and I can rti'.v rei-foiiinend it to the public be best hair tonic in existence." I Sirs. . L. ALDEitsos, i. - - , AC... iCA, K -1 lexpoote-i from the Visor, wriie Doctor nbout it. Airess, DE. 1. C. AYk, Lowell, Mass. I , .. V l-i ifft riffs. PROFESSIONAL. p. LIYEEMOX, J'-'v-; F the Staton Building. prs irom y to l o clock : PXLAND NECK, N. C. 2 t( r. WI-vBERL!, rFIc'E HOTEL LATVEEXCE, GOTLAND NECK, N. C. If U UN SOX, TfOEXEY-AT-LAW, - Wl-TDSOB, N. C. tee la ail Courts. tspecial at Riven to Collections. J. WARD, rgeon Dentist, E.NFIf-LD, N. C tec Harrison's Drnf Store. While Tie-tori a, the Boer " capital, has surrendered to the British, it does i.ot appear altogether that the war in South Africa is over. There is ground for the belief that ths L'oers will adopt warfare similar to that being pursue by the Filipinos against the United States forces. Having only five thous and men the Boers knew that even with Pretoria well fortified they could r.oi afford to stand the siege oi sixty-thosu and British. They will not surrender until thoy have fought much longer is a prediction wbLh seems to be war ranted by the outlook. i;r:x, TOR X E Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Xegk, N. C. cr:-; wherever his services arc RD L. TRAVIb, my and Gonnselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. t: n Loaned on Farm Lands. V. MATTHEWS, TT0HXE l-A T-L A W. ie'.tion of Claim-, a specialty WHITAKGRS, N. C. te prepared tolurnish telephone o the public and solicit patron- PATi:s FOR SERVICE. P I'hones, Ice I'hones, JBiU.er for ."F2.00 per month. 1.50 " " 3.00 " " pur purpose to give good service, ti!-: end we ask all subscribers to fcrorni.tly anv irregularities in mi ice. - M"r sisrned oonfn!a nrnhibil ,jf ihones except bv subscribers, FeT.,e.t that this rule be rigidly )press Shingles, 1! tep a nice lot of ress Sliindes ear. f t1"- suit purchaser. W. H. WHITE, t'cotlanl Neck, N. C. -tf It has bean given cut,and has not been questioned, that a respectable colored brick mi .son, name John Young, died .it Oxford recently and the colored peo ple refused to bury him and at last the white people to k up the matter and gave the colored man a decent burial. The causa for tbeir refusal to bury one of their raca was the fact tha negro Youuj was a Democrat. When party prejudice runs so rifs as to cause people of any race to ignore the common claims of humanity, those so acting ought to be deprived of tLe privilege of the ballot ; a:vd the amend ment ought to disfranchise such ignor and hate-harboring people. Iu view of the situation in China the following concerning the Empress Dowager, taken from the Atlanta Jour nal under her picture, is of especial in terest : "The Empress Dowager ot China is the on8 woman iu the world who de fies all Europe. She is now about GO years old, and for the last 40 jears has exerted aa all-powerful influence in directing the affairs of Ciiua. She was born In 1'eking, and is variously said to have come irom a high family or an humble one. She is the second wife of the Emperor, and because she bore him a eon and the first wife did not, she takes precedence. Ker beauty is said to have been remarkable in her early years, and has not wholly faded now. As to education she has received the best China can give. : A native wit and cleverness supplies what she may lack in book Knowledge. Being a Manchu woman, she is one of the prevailing dynasty in China, and there fore most secure in her position. She has always been opposed to the pres- enca of foreigners in China, and she is said to have encouraged the 'Boxer' juibreaks m her provinces." Rabbi Edward B. M. Browne, of Au gusta, Ga., is a ttaunch Republican, but says that McKiulay will not got the vote of the Jews again if he is re nominated. He has a grievance against President McKinley because he has refused to appoint any Xewish chaplain for the Jewish soldiers in the United States array. Rabbi Browne, though a Republican, has been staff chaplain to Governor Chandler, of Georgia, for three months. In an interview reported by the Atlanta journal as to his position again et President McKinley he speaks in posi tive terms. The following paragraph is especially striking : "The outraged religion of our soldier boys, who have Catholic priests to preach for them on the day of the atonement, and who bnry them with crucifixes before their eyes, these crimes tigainst Judaism will be aveng ed next November. The high-toned reform radical Jews who are anxious to get offices by appointment as minis ters to Turkey, which Cleveland made a Jewish mission, who want to be sub treasurers in Cincinnati, they and their hangers-on will follow McKinley to liis political grave, and few honest men will be amongst the mourners, for we, the Jews, who still have the religion of Judaism, will vots as we pray, iu the name of God, in the name cf justice, in the name of Abraham, the father of our religion, and in the name of Washington, the father of our country." The Great Remedy of the day is unquestionably Pain-Killer, for tne in stant reliet of all burns, scalds, bruises, etc., and lor pains in the stomach and bowels as well as In sudden attacks of cholera', morbus. No family should pretend to keep house wltoout it al ways by them. Avoid substitutes, there w but one Fain-Killer, Perry Davis'. Price 25c. aud 50e. Soma of Them Described. HOW TO DESTROY THEM. Very severe damage is annually done in tobacco fields by incect pestf and to a lessor degree by parasitic fungi. Much of this damage may be prevented by proper attention. To bacco, like other crops, must be sprayed or dusted with an insecticiie The best treatment for tobacco snd one that is entirely sale, is the follow ing : Taris Green i lb. Flowers of Sulphur 3 to 5 lb. Powdered soap stone or air-slacked lime 100 lbs. Directions: Mix thoroughly and apply to the plants while wet with dew or rain. The first treatment should be app'ied soon after the p!ants have been set out. The second two or three weeks later, and a third two or three weeks after the second. If the weather is wet, more frequent treat ment may be necessary, but usually three treatments will be sufficient for the crop and season. No treatment should be given within 15 davs from time of harvesting crop. The best in strument for applying the above pow der is a so-called power gun. Ad dresses of dealers in powder guns will be furnished by the undersigned to those who wan them. The above powder may also be put on by jarring from a coarse sacs held in the hand, or by two sacks attached one to each end of a pole long enough to reach across two rows. The pole may be carried on a mule's back. Only slight dusting 13 necessary, but the powder should be evenly distributed on leaves so that no insect can gnaw any leaf without eating the poison No possible harm can come to the to bacco or those using it from this treat nient which is similar to that given fruit for so many years without the least danger or complaint. The worst and most destructive pest of tobacco is the flea beetle. (Epithrix parvula.) This is a small, oval, brown ish beetle about 1-8 inch long. It eats , small, round, pin holes in the leaves which then admit a saprophytic fungus whi.h enlarges the holes Thesa holes rum the value of the leaf for many purposes and in every case render it light and chaffy. The larva or grub of this beetle also feeds upon the roots ot the plants and does much damage. Besidss tobacco, this insect leeds upon Jamestown weed and horse nettle, and to some extent on ground cherry, tomato, potato, egg plant and pepper and other plant3 of the tobacco or so'omceons family. If the James town weed, horse nettle and other eolonaceoua weeds in the vicinity of a proposed tobacco field are heavily poisonei with fans green a weeic or ten days before setting out the tobacco plants, the chances of damage to the" tobacco will be greatly lessened These weeds act as n tiroes and supports for the beetles before the tobacco comes on the field. The tobacco is so much more juicy a ad tender that the insects soon quit the weeds for the cultivated crop. After the tobacco ha3 been 6et out all these solonaceous weeds, horse nettle, Jamestown, ground cherry, etc., should be cut out. After the crop is gathered the stumps thould be plowed under at once or heavily poisoned to prevent them from breeding insect pests which will damage succeeding crops. JNext in importance to the flea bee tle we must pbice the horn worm, Protoparce Carolina. The remedy ad vised for lbs flea beetle will at the same time serve for the born worn, provided it is applied in time. But if the worms get' large before being poisoned they must be hand-picked. Pickers should carry a small bucket holding some water and a little kero sene oil. Throw the worms into this as soon as picked. The bud worm or boll worm, Heliothis, is often very de structive to young tobacco by eating into the leaf buds. The bsst remedy for this insect .3 a mixture of Pans green 1 part and finely ground corn meal 1C0 parts. Dust this on the buds. This worm will not eat tobacco while it can get corn. Tobacco is not a good crop to follow corn in rotation. The leaf miner, Gslochia Solonella, is a small greenish cftterpillat which eats out the green part of the leaf, leaving the outer skins intact. It makes ir regular or blotch mines in the leaves. Many tobacco growers mistake this for a kind of rot duo to wet weather. This little Insect does considerable in jury in some localities. It Infects all the other plants of the tobacco family above named and these terye to prop aate it. Remedy : Destroy solonaceous weeds as soon as the crop is set out. Watch the crop and as soon as any mining is notinced, pinch the spot aud thus kill the inclosed caterpillar. Frequent stir ring ot the soil close to the plants wil destroy this insect while it is in the ground transforming from the worm to the winged insect. The mining is always worse on the lower 'eaves. Cut worms of several fpecies often do yery great damage by cutting off the young tobacco plants as soon as these are set out.' Remedv Mix 50 pounds ot wheat bran with one pound of Paris green or white ar senic. Add to this 4 ounces of sugar or a quart of molasses and enough water to slightly moisten the whole A few days befora the tobacco is to be set out place a tablespoonful of this mixture at intervals of 10 feet through out the field. After the plants are set place a teaspoon ful of this mixture near each plant. Jt may be necessary to repeat tne treatment but usually once is enough. Cut worms will eat sweetened bran before tobacco. Grass hoppers sometimes injure tobacco! in some way. The above bait is the best remedy for these insects. Tobacco is very free from fungus diseases, but such diseases as we find are very hard to control.' Walloon or Waterloo is in some years widespread and then disappears from the locality. Its course is unknown. "Frog's eye" or white speck is due to a fungus sim ilar to that causing shot-hole in leave? of peach and plum trees. The sulphur prescribed in the powder mentioned at the bead of this article is intended chiefly to prevent this damage and will do so if applied in the right way. Soreshiu is a pretty common dis ease. It seems to be due in the first place to an injury to the stalk, near the ground, caused by the boring oi a Email beetle worm, .which eats into corn stalks in the same .way. Thu beetle is called Diabrotica. It is green ish with 12 black spots in the back. A fungus afterward comes in and causes the interior of the tobacco stalk to rot. Remedy : None so far known to be practicable. Pull up and de stroy the diseased plants. They are worthless. The undersigned desires- sample, of diseased tobacco plants for study and also of the ' insects found upon the plants. Correspondence it- invited from tobacco growers in t.ll parts of North Carolina. Address, Gerald McCarthy, Entomologist N. C. Departmentof Ag riculture, Raleigh, N. C. June 1, 1900. BOYS ON THE FARM. Origin cf the Months' Names. Chills, fevers and malaria yield to Roberts' Chill Tonic if you get the genuine, with red cross on the label. 25c. jer bottle. Money back if it fails. Druggists. "January was named after the Ro man god Janus; the deity with two faces, one looking into the past and he other looking forward to the fu ture," writes Clifford Howard, in the June Ladies' Home Journal. Feb ruary comes from the Latin word fsbruo, to purify. It was customary for the Romans to observe festivals of purification during that month March owes its name to the old God of War. Among the Saxons this month was known as Lenct, meaning spring ; and this is the origin of our word Lent. April was named from the Latin word, aperio, to open, in signifi cation of the opening of flowers. Th Saxons called the month Eastre, in honor of their Goddess ot Spring, from which comes our word Easter. May was named after the Roman god dess, Maia, and J une was so called in honor of Juno. July was named in honor ot Julius Caesar, and August gets its name from Augustus Caesar. September is from the Latin word eeptem, seven, this being the seventh month according to the old Roman calendar. October, November and December also retain the names by which they were known under the old calendar, when there were but ten months in tbe year octo, uovem and decern, meaning eight, nine and ten " The man without a purpose is like a ship without a rudder a waif, a notb- rg, a no man. Have a purpose in iife, if it is only to kill find sell oxen well', but have a purpose ; and having it, throw such s're ng'h of mind and muscle into your work as God has given yo'. Carlyle. A GOOD COUGH MEDICINE. Are They as Valuable as Colts? WHAT TO 10 FOB THEM. J. O. Shrojrer in Land and a Living. Our farm papers are full to overflow ing of helpful hints that tell us how to produce immense crops of corn, wheat, potatoes, and fruit. We are told just how to grow the best of va rious crops, and how best to market them so as to obtain tbe highest finan cial success. , , Xn We are told how to treat our colts and calves so as to develop tbem into tbe fines: horses and cattle ; page after page will tell us how to handle our milk and cream so that butter will reach the state of perfection. But the children of the farm do not seem to be considered at all in the most ot eur larm journals. 1 hey are I it be the fact that their s ins became great. Nature, in her mysterious rulings, h:is so cn.ahiei it that iu but few rrses does greatness descend from father to sn, aud, like a flash inj meteor that rushes across the sky Irom some unknown point of space, a hu man life may riu-h out from some ob scure home and dazz'a tbe world with tbe bi illi.mcy of us imagination or of the uplifted degree of its perspicuity. Hence every fther should s develop the chili that no tale it shall ba lost or no vuluable trait of character bo crush ed out of existence. Venice Without Water. IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER rouwiix ADVERTISE rocs Business. 0 Send Your Advertisement xk Now. i NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. TTTHIS MODERN SCHOOL of Shoit. hand and Business Training ranks among the foremost educational instill tions of its kind in America. It pre I ares young men and young women ft r business careers at a small cost, and places them in positions free. Pr further information send for our Illus trnted Catalogue and new publication, n titled "Business Education." J. M. Ressler, President. Youth's Companion. Veiiica without water would hardly be Vinice at all, but v.e are assured there Is a possibility that the picttir- et-que Veir.ee of today may become city of the past, and event a til v Venue ma- be waterless. According to Professor Mrir.elli, the regular iucrease m the delta of the left out entire'yi or it may be that oc- rlver lo Js such that in prnco's of casionally a story is put in some out- tIme lhe nothern Adriatic will ba dry, of-the-way corner, aud thev are dis-ian:1 Venice will lo r.o more noon tha - i missed without further consideration. We believe that through all this neglect the children of the farm have done nobly? We are proud to know that so many have gained great dis tinction, Yet, after all, have we done our duty ? Is it more important that every calf should grow into a perfect 5ea. lho annual surveys &how thai the mean animal increase of the delta during 70 .ears has bsen three-tenths ol a square mile. ' An encroachment upon the sea of three-tenths of a mile in a year means a large increase in a century. It ap pears that a total increas3 in six animal than the boys and girls of the . cem'me lias been about l'JS square farm should develop into superb men ! raIle8, lhe increase is continuing, and and women? i tne gun oi Venice is doomed to dis- Wby do our boys go from the ; 8PPGar- farm to the city? Is it not because o immediate fllarm need be felt, to hurry ell by.k at arm to me city ; is it not necause ; they have not been shown in early j and U wlH not be necessary life that the farm is better for their i of to 'Venice to take a farewi WILMINGTON &WELD0NR.R. ' AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING . OUTH.- DATEn Mny 27 laflO. Loare Woldon Ar. Rocky Mt. Leave Tarboro Lv. Kockv Mt. Leave WiiHun Li-live Selma Lv. Ku.vt'tteville Ar. Florence Ar. Uoldtitioro Lv. (ioldwlioro Lv. Miisrnolia Ar. Wilmington A. M 'V. M ii so x r,8 1 DO 9 S .1 12 21 ...1 or 1 r, 2 sr. 4 no 7 P. M It f2 in f.-. ' IAl 12 22 a."m. S e SJ S .: I. M. 6 00 :i7 7 10 7 65, r. m A. M lb 15 S C7 7 hi 20 i. M r. it. It t M 4 M P. M. TRAINS GOING NORTH. presence? .Let every farm journal have a department that shall be spe cially edited m tbe interest of these most noble productions of our rural i communities. It is especially in tbe interest of the the city in its present picturesquencss. Profe.ior Marinelh calculates that be tween 100 and 120 centuries will elapse before the entire noithern Adriatic will have become dry lad. C.ill !.t TO. T Vhi1,o,I .C. larm boy that this article is written. " drll gtora and t f M-mr,,B ') Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are an elecant i.hvsie. - u It speaks well for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy when druggists use it in their own families in preference to nv other. "I have sold Chamber Iain's Cough Remedy for the past five years with complete satisfaction to my self flnd customers," eays Druggist J. Goldsmith, Van Etten. N. Y. "I have always used it in my own family both for ordinary coughs and colds and for the cough ffijlpwimr la grippe, and find it very efficacious. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & CO., Druggists. How many fathers are there who never stop to consider that the boys in their homes are going to be compelled to battle for supremacy in an era that will be in advance of the one in which they are living, irogress has seem-1 ingly quickened its pace In the last couple of decades. And no father can, hide from an in telligent son the fact that the present is better than tbe past, and the prom ises ot tbe future are still greater than what we now enjoy. There are men who still believe that. tbe boy should walk when he plows because they did so in their youth ; there are men who are so wrapped up in the accomplishments that they achieved in their youthful days that they continually decry any progres sive idea that presents itself to the ac tive brains oi their children. There are others who do not remember that they ever loved to have a holiday. To to hear their story one must be'ieve that they were prodigies of energy and industry. Does it ever occur to your mind that in nine-tenths of ali instances a lather or mother during the first ten years of the life of their children can and do eet the limits of the child's achievements? You either give it a noble purpose and uplifting desires, or cast over it tbe shadow of discourage ment or stolid indifference. Oh, fathers and mothers, this is a great question, before which the qual ity ot a few potatoes or a few bushels of grain dwindle into insignificance Because you live on the farm is no reason w by your son should be an ignor amus or a drudge, and in these days of educational progress you cannot expect to hide this tact Irom them any long er, nor would any one who is worthy the name of a father desire to do so There are so many who have left no record of greatness to the world unless iney also improve the appetite, strengthen the digestion and regulate the liver and bowels. They are easy to take and pleasant in effect. r 8 Look before you ere you leap. Butler. 1 c3 I EiiSE Y0U3 PAIRS WITH Pain-Killer J gj A MoUicino Chest in Itself. la SIMPLE, SAFE AKO QUICK CURE FOR Cramps, Diarrhoea, Colds, f Coughs, Neuralgia, Rheumatism. Hj 25 and E0 cent Bottles. S BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. gj BUY ONLY THE GENUINE, gj j PERRY DAVIS f Remember now anu always that life is r.o idle dream, but a solemn reality. based upon eternity and encompas.--.cd by eternity. Find out your task, stand to it, the night coroeth wheu it man can work. Thomas Carlyle. You may as well expect to run a steam engine without water as to find an active, energetic man with a torpid liver, and you may know that his lier is torpid when he does not relish his food, or feels dull and languid after eating, often has headache and some iirrri dizziness. A few doses of Cham berlain's Stomach aud Liver Tat let will restore his liver to its normal functions, renew his vitality, improve his digestion and make him leel like a new man. Price 25 cent. Satnp.e Iree at E. T. Whitehead & Co. 's store. crug not Ir.ak nay, you Truth is tougb. It will like a bubble, at a touch may ku:k it about all da, like a foot ball, anl it v.ili be rotm I and full in tho miring Olivtr Wendell Holmes. A Word E p.rivr. Suffering" Women. No one but yourselves know of the Suffering you go through. Why do you suffer? It isn't nccecsary. Don't lose your health and bsauty, (for the loss of one is speedily followed by tha loss cf the other.) Don't feel " weak " and "worn out." Impure blood is at the bottom cf all your trouble. will purify your blood and bring the bloom of health back into your cheeks. Each bottle contains a quart. I!1SBS pari Ha QUART BOTTLES. Painful and Snmessed MniM fmralarlt. T-nrr- Whites. Sterilitv. Ulcera tion of tbe Uteros. change of life In matron or icaid, all find relief, hlr, benrf.t and cure In JOHNSTON'S SAHSAPARILLA. It is a rral panscc fcr headache, pains in the left side, indigestion, palpitation of the bwt, co.d hands and feet, ntrvrusr.sts, sleeplessness, muscular weakness, bearing-down pains, backache. Irrraclie, iiTccrnlar action of the heart, shortness of breath, abnormal discharges with painful menstruation, scalding- of crine, welling of feet, soreness of the breasts, neuralgia, uterine displacement, and all tnose symptoms which make tbe average woman's life so miserable. V.'o have a book zuU oi health Information. Yoa want It its frre. "THE MICHIGAN DRUQ CO." Detroit, Mich. Livercttes for Ut? f?.. ThJ Faai Utile Liver F!s. 35c ET. S: V.J., SojlUni NT3.k, IT. . fDaily except Monday. J Dally ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Yadkin Division Main Line Train leaves ilinington, U 00 a. m., arrive Fayetteville 12 05 p. m , leaves Fayette vi Me 12 25 p. m , arrives Sanford 1 43 p. 111. Returning leaves Sanford 2 3C p. m., arriyes Fayetteville 3 41 p. m., leaves Fayetteville 3 0 p. m., arrives Wilmington 0 0 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennettfville Branch Train leaves Bennettsville 8 05 a. m., Maxton J) 10 .1. m.. Red Springs 9 10 a. m., Hope Aril's 10 22 a, m., arrives Fayetteville 10 55 a", m. Returning leaves Fayette ville 4 40 p.. m., Hope Mills 4 55 p. m., Red Springs b 35 p. m., Maxton C 15 p. m., arrives Bennettsville 7 15 p. m. Connections at Fayetteville with train No. 78, at Maxton with the Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with the Red Springs and Bow more Railroad, at Sanford with the Seaboard An Line and Southern Railway, t.t Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Sc otland Neck Branch Road leaves Weldon 3 :55 p m., Halifax 1:17 p. m., arrives Scotland Neck t 5 :0S p. m., Greenville G :57 p. m., Klns lon 7:55 p. m. Lemming leaves Winston 7 :50 a. m.. Greenville 8 :52 a. na , aniving Hahf-.x ut 11:18 a.m., Weldon 11 :33 a. m., daily except Sun day. Trains on Washington Branch leave Washington 8 :10 a. m. and 2 :Wp. m., arrive Pai mele :10 a. m. and 'Op. m., returning have Paiine'e !) :'di ... n. and 0:30 p.m., airive Washington 11 :00 a.m. and 7 :30 p. m., daily ex cept Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro, N. C, daily except Sunday 5 :30 p. m., Sunday, 4 :15 p. m., arrives Plmot.th 7 :40 p. m., (5 :10 p. m., Returning, leaves Ply mouth daily except Sur.dny,7 :50 a. in ind Sunday U :00 a. m., arrives Tarboro 10 :10 a. m., 11 :00 a. m. Tram on Midland X. C. Branch leaves Goldsboro daily, except Sunday. 5 :30 a. m., arriving Smithfie'd C :43 , m. Returning leaves Smith field 7 5 t. m. ; arrives at Goldsboro 0 :00 a. n , Trains cn Nahvil!e Branch leat ilcky Mount at 9 :30a. m., 3 :40 p. m , arrive Nashville 10 :20 a m.,4 :03 p.m , Spring Hope 11:00 a. m., 4 :25 p.m. Returning leave Spring Hope 11 :20 it. m., 4 :55 p. m., Nashville 11 :15 a. m., 5:25 p.m., arrive at Rocky Mount 12 :10 a. m., 6 :00 p. m., daily except Sunday. Train on Clinton Branch leaves War saw for Clinton dally, except Sunday, 7 :45 a. m. and 4 :25 p. m. Return ing leaves Clinton at b :.5 a. m. and 10 :50 a. m. Train No. 7d makes close connection at Weldon fur all points North daily, all rail via Richmond. H. M. EMERSON, Geu'l Pass. Agent. J. R. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. FOR MALARIA Use nothing but Macnair's Bloo4 and Liver Fills. W. H. Macxaib, Tarboro, N. C. r E. T. Whitehead & Co., i-2 f. Scotland Neck. X. C TT For Drui Our Illustrated! Handbook 1 Sent Free For Drunkenness an4 Drug Using. P1eae write as. Con-Mpoadeaee eoafldeotial. THE s? ss&sji ? s?i ! ' 3 fca K I . A. M. . M. " Lv. I loronoe 9 50 7 3.-, Lv. Fayetteville 12 t 41 1 Leave Selnia 1 fit) 10 M 1 Arrive Wilson S 35 11 ail j W1 . ' a'.' m.' i"."L A" "if. ) Lv. W .ninprton 7 (Ml t i Lv. .Vnirnoliu s rut 11 1 Lv. Oo'.daboro 4 r.o 9 37 12 jf j , "' iv. M.) aVSl iv.'M. r."M. ! Leave W ilwon 2 3.". fi 33 II XI 10 4". 1 1 Ar. Uoeky Mt. 3 30 0 10 12 07 11 23 1 (Ml Arrive Tarboro ti 40 Leave Tarboro 12 21 1 Lv. hooky Mt. ' 3 30 l'a'iiV j Ar. Weill on 4 82 1 00 ! I'. M.t A. M. P. M.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 14, 1900, edition 1
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