Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Aug. 2, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER YOV WIIX ADVERTI8E TOOB Business. 0 Sbkd Yocjt Advertibemest nr Now, to TO ?i H S I P P ?s J t? V J i Vr !J WHAT i'TEAM IS TO- Tl To ri 1 "H PTTT fOMWEAl TTVTTTT 03 E. E. UILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $x.oo. rpEAT PHOFELI.I-G T'OWK" SYL.Ssw Scries Vol. 4. SCOTLAND NEGK, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1900. NO. 31 '.JL-.1 A man with a thin head rj cr ns:r l s M V ::1 a marked lj rrr.n Wn r mull. uui J the big , esid spot fc-J .is net the V mark most ,-1 I :"f-? like. many men in h -I twenties are k j j belief that the passing of the amend Ti'llS IS Sfosurd 3 m"yit will woaderfullv Quicken thn r:;a sii unnecessary, ilealthy hair shows !m build up the nair from j rne roots, to prevent p .-.---3 cure iH. v XaSS t5 ral Mm f Hl l always restores to faded or gray fj Notice that And 1 V, it cures dandruff. S 1 .00 a bott'e. AH dresjtets. 1 - I" I'lislness calls me out amocar t-rn-.-ers ; grer.t deaL I woriti ii-.-r.aily I-flshr-iaci every time i voulvl take elf lay hat, my hair v j thin and t'lie b.ild sjots . . .veil s plainly. I becpm the pse t y T.r Hair A isor less than three is'. rtas ago. Today I nd I have as t.u-i a hf :d of hair as I ever tad. I 1 1 everybody what I used, and a ' t :-y 5-37 'it Diust be a wonderful kfj i -.ouy. UEO. XEASL. rc. 14, 1KB. Chicaco, HI. f - sri a " -.-jk r,n The Hair an:1, f "4 ; .it. If y a d.-- rot dL-tan t'l tho , oa rz-.eeiV'd from the tiso of ..a v ;-j. -witp l;9 doctor about :.. Address, - DP.. J. C. aykr, Lowell, Mas3. i ironi ' to j. o ciocK la:;d xeck, x c. . T . V. WI?IBEi-tEISl, ::Fi'ZOE ITOTKI. LAT72ESCS SCOTLAND XECK, X. i AT TOEXE Y-AT-L AW, vrixisri:, X. C. ::t:ce in all Courts. .Special ton given to Collections. A. J. WARD, E?TFI5JJ, X. C o over Harrison's Dru Store. A. tUXX, If" t" A ri T A TT SCOTLAJSTP Nf.CSj X. C. :;es wherever Ms service? are ) .VAED L. TTl.WIs. utornsy srd.C&iaisdor at Law, HALIFAX, X. C. Mi)')'-y Loaned on Farm Lands. X Y. MATTHEWS, A TTORXE Y-A T-L A V. "Collection of Chuaia a specialty. WHITAKEKS, N. 0 1 V M e are )repared to furnish telephone ice io the public and solicit patron- It ATES FOR SERVICE. ir,e:s Phones. S2.00 ner month. Silence Phones. 1.50 " r o5 either for 2.00 " " tj our tiiirpfMP f r n up (Tcw-irl sfirvice. L t 1 1 " - L " " J C5 p if' ibis end we ask all subscribers to :'xt Promptly any irregularities in service. . Our signed contracts prohibit 7,3 ra-picst that this rale be rigidly reed. w sfemgies b-a'l kopp a nice lot of pressv Sliiiierles 1 ices to rchaser. T. H. WHITE tlnd Neck, N. CI XOE'S.LSISUSa HOURS. .rajraphs of Things ast and Future. i-uVic education 13 claiming the tt3ulicn of the peop'c of North Caro S.r.a .n-r-.v r.s perLepj never before. AH ov:-r the K tato the ' subject has been vigorously aU-cnssed dancer the oreeant circpaign. and the people are think ii' rao:5 s-boat it. There is genera! ;siet't:nd hot ,eneSfed tv it. i'.nce tviil be graatly Fpe.iking of the election that takes place to-day throughout our Slate, the XorfcTk Virginian-Pilot says : "If tho people of Xorth Carolina have not lost the sterling good esusa i;'om which they have seldom lapsed in the f ast, a landslide may be predict ed with confidence for the Democratic ticket, and what it stands for. We .bciild regard any supposition to the contrary as an insult to the intelligence piitrioti&ih --nd probity of our .-elg!; boring (commonwealth." S.-)uic.r.'iys ago a m.n whom we re-5-.irded as intelligent spoke to ua dis p iragingly about the little contiibu tiou '1i:e Commonwealth has been raisiugfor the famine sufferers in In dia. Vv'e were pained to bear him say t'lat it is England's duty to take care or thorn. Suppose it is, and England does not sea fit to do so, what good Will it do the starving people to say, "Engird ought to relieve your wauLsj'" That will not save them. But the one wno, says that .England has ucno nothing for those suffering ;l3 i:; much m's.taken, for already . a been Si.,-iut in giving It v;m employoiant-jast enough to keep ! tliose ecoployea Iron: starving. It is a j 'worthy appeal and the people of this i 'and ought to hfisd it. lien. C. 13. Ay'cock has closed his c-ocpr.lsii through the State and to day txsreisea his right of franchise by voting for the amendment which he 1 s.3 so ably championed horn the inouctains to tha seashore. It is caxcoly remembered by any in the State when there was an abler cam paign Mr. Ayccck was seemingly the man of all the Democrats in the State to lead the fight and nobly and v,'ell has ne done it. Eefore all the readers of The Commonwealth have received and read this issue of the pap er, the matter will have been decided. The amendment will have been carried and Mr. Ayccck will have been elect ed Governor of North Carolina. He has been untiring in this great cam. pa:.e:n and few men have ever had mora influence over the popular mind. He is a great man and will make thi good old State a great Governor, We write this several days before the election which will . determine whether the people of Xorth Carolina desire to h ive the proposed amendment to the Constitution : but all indications are so plain that there seams scarcely a doubt a" h .ut the result of tha election. With tho negro largely eliminated from .politi cp there will be a freedom of the franchise ia the State that we have not known m a third of a century. The necessity o! binding every one down to party policy and party interests regarciless of too man who represents them, will have passed out, and other questions will be taken up. A broadening of the politi cal horizon for the voters of North Carolina awaits us by reason of tb passing of the amendment. It will be possible for good' men to differ about other things and maintain.; respectabil ity on either side. Ihe Stomach op Man ia subject to a dozen such common but painful factions as cramps, cholera roorbun and dysentery, that by neglect, mai be made chronic and daneerous Ihe bc-U, handiest, surest d.qaickwt rem-edj- w PaiN-KuXee, a medicine that L JJ , . . . - K...i a half Of been triea xor wu o - fief Avoid substitutes, tbere is bnt one Pain-Kiliev i-erry ; ABOUT BREATHING. D33? 33SATSIIT3 13-GOOD. A Crjfo For Coisusipticn. Fireside. Phy.-Jcians of renown have repeat edly made the statement, and are frequently reiterating the assertion, that if people but knew how to breathe and would then give dally attention u tbe proper manner of inhalation, such a thing as a consumptive need never be known. "There is no reason why any ona '-horjlfl die ct c n-umption, nor .would the disease exist," says one oi them, "if better care were given to general health and an understanding be gain ed of theright way and the wrong way of breathing." He further insists emphatically that consumption raay not only be avoided where there exists what is known as a hereditary tendency in a fnmily or families, but that the disease itself may be arrested when it has made even a considerable headway and that the lungs ma' be restored to & healthy condition after the tubercu lar bacilli have for some time been carrying on their work of destruction of the lung tissue. Ninety-nine per cent of the popu faticn are ignorant of the true and only right manner of taking into and expelling from the lungs the constant ly inflowing and outgoing air that we breathe. Deep breathing is exhilarat ing and healing, whils the practice so common of inflating but the upper part of the lungs proves dangerous 'Hard colds" may thtis be accounted.' for, and rainy of tha "tired feelings" that overtake tbe individual who takes less thought to proper personal care than to the a mount of woric that "must be dona." Lung troubles so frequently follow that it issidons-seventh of the Lnraau' vacQ die from soma form of it. The a Fariioa is appalling in the light ol the fact that of consumpti-e here need he !.nro j Toe iii.i-.Mi th-st - iiairics on 'h(i work the lungs cAnnot pr-; ppgate. or live in pure, fresh ah. As the bacilli of other specie, they fluivo only where un healthy conditions exist and where insuSicient nerva-force lie.?. One who has ever noticed and made examination of (ha lungs of animate, or even o knows they are of a sub stance that is spongy and full of the minutest of holes. Through defective breathing but a few inches of the lungs are retaining the poisoned, vitiated air that sooner cr later brings disease in ns wake. Hence our consumptives and our sufferers from lung and bron chial affections. Our physicians tell us that "women are the -worst offenders in this respect." And it is because they wear clothes that are too snug, corsets that press down upon the lungs and the other vital organs, and it is difficult to breathe freely and deeply. WTomen who take more of forethought to "looks" ia form and style than to health and to nature's ways of health provision soon learn to breathe less and lees deeply, and the habit is soon acquired of breathing lightly rather than from tne very depths of the lungs. Results of an untoward nature in some form must inevitably be the result. If the lungs are not perceptibly affected, be cause unusually strong, the brain and tierve centers will at least suffer. The blood m its passage through the lunts becomes laden with impurities, and the brain and nerves must suffer the effects. But an understanding of right breath ing carried into practice will work miraculous cures and cause many re forms. Tight corsets and heavy-weight ar ticles ol wearing apparel are not con ducive to a serene and happy state of mind, for general discomfort of body must prevail under those circumstances. And a discomforted body must reflect its woes upon faces. Moreover does it reflect, upon the faces of children whose mothers have given more care to "form" and society demands than to right living. Right living means right breathing to a great extent. It 1s a simple thing to acquire tha habit of taking deep breaths, if persisted in. One may take- this course of physical training with out the services of a physician, and once thoroughly acquired the new habit becomes as fixed as was the old, unless one lapses into carelessness and indifference again. ; . V Step out into the open air, or-into a room with open windows and where there is do fire, and expand the lungs to their fullest capacity by a slow draw ing in of the breath through the nos trils. -Should the exercise need to be taken in a room warmed by fire, first The One Day tfiold Cure v.-- 5 Fqr cold jm the head and sore threat Kit Kei ott'i CbocolatM alive Quutlw, (be." OM 7 - , - t ' - introduce fresh air by opening doors or windows. Eresh air is all-important. After the lungs are filled and d'a phragm expanded exhale the air just as slowly as pnseibSs, letting it pass out through the mouth. If one's lungs are weak to bein with, the inhalation of air by the deep ureal liing process will prove painful. Finding that it 13 painful, the patient can cease drawirg air iuto the lungs ust as the pain gives warning. But in time the painful sensation gives way to a feeling of rest and exhilaration, and becomes an habitual practice to thai conduct the breathing. ' Our ph3'sician requires, ar in fact demands, if his patient be a woman, that loose clothing be worn and the corset entirely discarded. If the pa tisnt is a man no such demands are needed. Men dress sensibly and in comfort. Women do riot, as a rule, and in all probability they never will except as the warnings between life and death choosing demand it. To master the "art" of right breath ing one should take exercise ot this nature several times each day. but not of periods of long duration. An aid to deep breathing for the purpose ol fill ing the lung3 to the very lowest air cells is to raise the arms from the side, lifting ihem higher and higher until the fingers can be clasped above the head. This as the lungs are undergo ing the process of filling. Gradually loner the arms again as the air is slow ly expelled. It is an exercise not un pleasant to begin with, and one that grote easier and attended with pleas ant ar sensation as the patient grows accustomed to It and as the lungs grow stronger. This is a.'-suredly the cheppest cure in the world nature's, ramedy : pure fresh air. And it is a : d"udly foe to tubercular bacilli. - Xostruns will not reach diseased lung tissue, and our physicians are authority for the state ment that cod-liver oils and other so called remedies for consumption are but a waste of money. Many man and women to-day owe their lives to a persistent practice end ';?neral y.dopl iou of the physician's prescription that consists principally of fresh air taken into tbe lungs ia the right man ner. It is such a simple thing, though that many will hesitate to accept it and vviJl go on believing in "change of climate" or cod-liyer oils, or in the in uch worse bohef that death is the only and ultimate end that is just in sight. But if we need not die of con sumption and kindred ailments, why will we persist in it? N "The doctor" believes firmly in the bicycle for people of weak lungs and bronchial troubles from the fact that it is a violent exercise that compels the rider to puff and blow. And thus a great quantity of air is drawn into the lungs and forced out again, of nec essity carrying away with it impurities and air that has lain dormant in tbe lower air-cells and carrying death to the bacilli that is swarming and prop agating in this deseaeed portion of the human body, that was intended one ot tbe heaitiest organs of the entire human system. A "Word With Tho Boys. Boys seldom realize the value ol the evening hours. If profitably em ployed the spare honrs at the com mand of every boy and girl would ren der them intelligent and equip them for a life of usefulness. If these spare hours are wasted, the opportunity for securing an equipment for life may never return. Increasing years mean increasing duties, and ex acting demands upon one's time. The boy who spends "an hour of each evening lounging idly on street corn ers wastes in the course of a year, 365 hours, which, if applied to study would acquaint him with the rudiments of the familiar sciences.- If, in addition to wasting an hour each evening he spends 10 cts. for cigars, which is usu ally the case, the amount thus worse than wasted would pay for ten ot tha leading periodicals in the country. Boys, think of these things. Think of how much time and money ' yon aro wasting, and for what? The gratification afforded by a lounge on the corner,' or a cigar, is not only tem porary, but postively hurtful. Yon cannot indulge in them without seri ously injuring yourself. You acquire idle and wasteful habits, which will cling to you with each succeeding year. You may in after life shake them off, but tbe probabilities are that the habits thus formtd in early life will remain with you till your dying day. Be warned, then, in time, and resolve that, as the hour spent in idle ness is gone forever, you will improve each passing one and thereby fit your self for usefulness and happiness.-Luth-ern Observer. Cure Cold In mead. --. Kermott's Chocolates Laxative Quis to take and quick to ewe cold ia baad HELP T1SDFFBBBES. Helpless, Star-Ting Children. STILL THEY PEEISH. Of all the sad sights to be seen in tbe famine districts, the most pitable 5s the helpless, homeless, starving child ! Not a few but thousands have not only been made orphans since the famine began, but- are wandering along the highways, waifs of a desert country, like drift chips in the sea. Their mothers aud fathers have died of star vation, and now they have not' ' a soul to turn to, no kith, no kin, not a sin gle heart among their own people to look after them. It is in the rescue of these orphans, these waifs from the highway from death itself, that the missionaries devote a large part ol their working hours. Onc8 lu a mission compound, the little etarvling, if care and food haye not come Too late, is sup ported by fnnd3 sent to the mission through The Christian Herald. Last month, among the many starving or phan children taken from the fi9lds by -Dr. Taylor and his wife, missionaries at Ahmedabad, there came one little girl wno insisted on entering the house, She came into the library, and after a a brief look about, lisped in her own tongue "Please may I die here?"-and then threw herself on the floor and STARVING CHILDEES. went to sleep. It is gratifying that the long sleep and tbe hot milk alter ward giyen to this child, saved her from death and she was added to the fold of orphans' in Dr. Taylor's care. Even in the streets of Bomba', there are hundreds of famine children wandering about. With sunken eyes, hollow cheeks and indented temples, with weary weak skeleton legs, they totter by the dozen in the footsteps of the European crying "Salam, Sahib" which is their way o! saying "Peace to you." Then slapping their hollow and naked stomachs to emphasize their need of food, they Con tinue their piteous supplications, beg ging for enough food to keep them alive just another hour. Sometimes a mother accosts one, a babe in her arms, trying its little best to get food from the dry parched breast and this mother will entreat you saying : "Give us something to eat and God - will bless you with mtsny children." The group of waifs about her cling as if by in stinct to her scant ragged skirts as if they felt that since this- woman is a mother to the babe she will act also as a kind mother to all who snuggle up to her. Hundreds of orphan children may also be seen in the Government poorhouse and hospitals. Saving the children in famine time is one of the most encouraging phases of relief worK, while to see children starve, to know that the helpless ones cannot be helped, that they must die by inches for want of food, is knowl edge that wrings the haart of every christian mother and father. Thous ands of these orphans are now in the hands of American missionaries having been plucked by them from the jaws of the famine. They must be turned out. to starve unless the missionaries re ceive the means to purchase food for them. . Send money for these and the other famine sufferers to this paper and it will bo forwarded to the India Famine relief fund and will be cabled at once to Tne Christian Herald Inter-De nominational Committee of American. missionaries In India lor the aid of tbe starving. What most people "Want is some thing mild aud gentle, when in need of a physic. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets fill the bill to a dot. They are easy to take and pleasant in effect. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co. Druggists. r ' - Pleasures are like, poDpies spread; You touch the bloom the flower is shed. A lam? shoulder is usually caused by rheumatism of the muscles, atd may be cured by a '. few applications ' of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. For - fate by JS. T. Whitehead fe Cow.Drnjcgifta. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the blood in your body passes through your kidneys once every three minutes. The kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are sick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, aches and rheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working in pumping thick, kidney poisoned blood through veins and arteries. It used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning in kidney trouble. If you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is soon realized. It'stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits by all druggists in fifty cent and one-dollar siz es. You may have a sampie notue Dy man Home of swuDp-Root. free, also pamphlet telling you how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. ' Shifting Sands of Political Favor. The "other side" of political prefer ment the side about which we hear jo little is shown by Joe Mitchell Chappie in The National Magazine for July : There are many tragedies under the Orighter and more imposing scenes of Washington life. In one of the cheap ar restaurants in Washington, where -'1 tgg a roll and coffee may be secur ed ior nine cents, an old man was speaking. "I slept in the paries last aight," he said to a companion, "I could not sell much yesterday." Twenty years ago he was one of the most prominent public men in Wash ington. His signature, perhaps, re mains attached to many important public documents. Now forgotten and forsaken, sleeping in parks, peddling medicines ail this among the scenes of his prosperity he awaits ah obscure death. Few of his old friends and acquaintances remain at the capital, and he is one of many po litical "derelicts." When' the old rasn's companion told me of the mis fortunes ot this man, there was nothing in the recital to inspire a desire for a political career. Tho death of his wife and two children was the blow that crushed him, and the proud spirit was broken when an unjust political perse cution followed ; and now' ha is simply called "queer." During the war he rendered important aud valiant service for the government, that called for even more heroism than that required on the battlefield, but the fact that he did not bear arms, and defied his perse cutors in a political embroglio later left him an object of public charity. The laws of health require that the bowels move once each day and one cf the penalties ior violating this law is piles. Keep your bowels regular by taking a dose of Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets when necessary aud vou will never have that severe punishment inflicted upon yon. Price 25 cents. For sale by E. T. White head & Co. Druggists. She Can Talk Again, Lancaster. Pa., Dispatch. After having been unable to talk for six years, Miss Sarah Landis, 21 jean old, of Ephrata, has had her speech re turn to her as suddenly as it departed. In the summer of 1893 the subject, then an attractive, well-educated girl, was prostrated by illness, and has never since been able to leave her bed,' ner vous and spinal disorders complicating her original complaint. Finally her speech suddenly left her while she was engaged io conversation. Skilled phy sicians were not only unable to help her, but were puzzled to account for her sudden affliction. , As time passed the victim became reconciled to her lot, and through ne cessity inyented an entirely new sign language, by which her family speedily came to learn her every want. The once iobust girl passed into so frail a womanhood that she is now reduced to a mere skeleton. "Yesterday, while ly ing in bed, she bad some want, and on the spur of the moment called to ber sister, who was in tbe next room. In spite of her years of silence she spoke clearly, andN since then she has been able to speak as well as she ever did, but tho effort tires her. She was greatly overjoyed at first over the return of speech, but now ap paars to feel no emotion whataver over it) recovery.' I ' , r-i a - r tr- m I Bears tbe - 9 NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. TTTHIS MODERN SUHnm. f hand and Business Training r.n among tbe foremost educational Initio if . - w uons 01 ua Kind in America. It pre pares young men and young wonw for business careers at amnll rw places them in positions free. 9m further information send for our Ilia trated Catalogue and nnw niiMifafin-. entitled "Business Education." J. M. Ressler, President. WILMINGTON &WELD0MR.R. AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LIW RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDKKSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING tOUTH. DATED Jnly 22, 1900. Si 1 SK-JX A. II P. M. 8 68 S 62 Laave Weldon P. M. A. M P.M. 1160 1 00 Ar. Kocky Alt. Leave Tarboro 12 21 e 00 Lv. Kocky Mt. Leave v ilnon Leave Seluia Lv. FayettevHl ...1 0i 8 62 10 25 11 10 12 22 2 24 A. M. 6 37 7 10 16 t 67 ii'iS t 4 1 6 2 5.- t. 4 30 Ar. Floreuve 7 26 P. M. Ar. Uoldnboro Lr. tioblxboro 7 66 Lv. Mairnolia Ar. Wilmington 46 7 ! t 20 A. II. 4 36 M P.M. P. M. TRAINS GOiXU NORTH. dfl 3 i is ...... V.. -5-oos A. M. P. If. Lv. Florence 60 7 S6 Lv. Fa.vei.tevllle 12 20 41 Leave Selma 1 611 10 64 Arrive Wilson 2 35 11 33 "' ' a.'m'.' p."m" k',"u. Lv. W' ,ninp-ton 7 ot IN Lv. Mapnolia (Id 11 10 Lv. Ooldsboro 4 60 t 7 12 Sf V'm" a."m" p."m". r'."ii. Leave Wilson 2 35 6 3:t 11 18 10 46 111 Ar. Rocky Mt, 3 30 0 10 12 0T 11 IN Arrive Tarboro (i 4C Leave Tarboro 12 21 Lv."noy Mt'. 8 30 lToV Ar. Weldon 4 Si 1 00 P. M. A. M. P. M. t Daily except Monday. JDaily ex cept Sunday. Wilmington aud Weldon Railroad, Yadkin Division Main Line Tral leaves Wilmington, 9 CO a. m., arrives Fayetteviile 12 05 p. m., leaves Fayette ville 12 25 p. m., arrives San lord 1 4C p. tn. Returning leaves Sanford 2 21 p. m., arrives Fayetteviile 3 41 p. v., leaves Fayetteviile 3 46 p. m., arrive Wilmington 6 40 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennetteville Branch Train leay Bennettsville 8 05 a. m., Maxton 9 10 a. m.. Red Springs 9 40 a. m., Hope Milte 10 32 a. m., arrives Fayetteviile 10 55 a. m. Returning leaves Fayette viile 4 40 p. m., Hope Mills 4 55 p. m., Red Springs b 35 p. m., Maxton 6 II p. m., arrives Bennettsville 7 15 p. at. Connections at Fayetteviile with train No. 78, at Maxton with tbe Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with tbe Red Springs and Bowmor Railroad, at Sanford with tbe Seaboard Air Line and Southern Railway, at Gulf with tbe Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Scotland Neck Branca Road leaves Weldon 3 :55 p in., Halifax 1 :17 p. m., arrives. Scotland Neck at 5 :08 p. m., Greenville 6 :57 p. m., Kins 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. m., daily except Sua day. Trains on Washington Branch leave Washington 8 :10 a. m. and 2 :30 p. m., arrive Parmele 9 :10 a. m. and & 0$ p. m., returning leave Parmele 9 :3ixu. a. and 6:30 p.m., arrive Washington 11 :00 a. m. &nd 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 Plymouth 7 :40 p. m., 6 :10 p. m., Returning, leaves Ply mouth daily except Sunday, 7 :50 a. m t and Sunday 9 :00 a. m., arrives Tarbor 10 :10 a. m., 11 :00 a. m. Tram on Midland N. C. Branea leaves Goldsboro daily, except Sunday. ' 5 :30 a. m., arriving Suoith field 6 :40 a. m. Returning leaves Smithfield 7 :3fi a. m. ; arrives at Goldsboro 9 :00 a. as. Trains on Nashville Branch leav Rocky 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. at. Returning leave Spring Hope 11 :20 a. m., 4 :55 p. m., Nashville 11 :45 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 daily, except Sunday, 11 :40 a. m. and 4 :25 p. m. Return ing leaves Clinton at b :v5 a. m. and 2 :50 a. m. Train No. 78 makes close conneetiea at Weldon for all points North daily, all rail via Richmond. H. M. EMERSON, Geul Pass. Agent. J. R. KENLY, Genl Manager. T. M. EMERSON. Traffic Manager. FOB MALARIA Use nothing but Macnair'f BU4 and Liver Pills. W. H. Macnaie, Tarboro, . C. or E. T. Whitehead & Co., 9 22 tf. Scotland Neck, N. Q ror Dmakeaaees aad Drag Using. writ . THE KCO.IT Greenaborov H C; aaBiar aaaaa a. ; ; ... 11 lltoslrato I HairfB4wk SmIFim V OaC jwat, 25c. and Oc.,, ;-, Y-.. c;. . :.'."' : 1 u 'Ma
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 2, 1900, edition 1
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