Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Aug. 16, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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IF YOU ARE A HOSTLER rou win ADVERTISE TOOB ' Business. o Send Your Advertibemeht ik Now . If ?o P n : I fj c Q WHAT STEAM IS TO Machinery, o -j , j -,t f'KE.VT rROKLLIVG POWER. iMONW: Q E. E. HIL.LIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE i.oo. VOL. XVI. Sew Series-Yol. 4. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGrUST 16, 1900. NO. 33 TT teC-i2s3; -.3 i-uis or 3? bave thin II l& hfir. Per- 5 P8 tnglr P "ii parents r Jmmvs& au in in t-3 ft 8. A hair : t?er- jsnjfeifli hans their "I cr.jinrcn nave tnin ?j -S T-. i t:S? ; r.rr. iiui mis Goes fi ri net rrir.ke it necessary LB 'J issues the hair healthy f 4 fit grow thick and I long. It cures dan- druit also. 1 it always restores i color to gray hair. W -at 7 i, i L L U(l IV. 11V.1I V.IJIIJI I of eariv life. There is fhno longer need of w vour iooKing oia De ll fore your time. J 51.00 a bottle. All druggists. s a rr-medv for restorina: color i i - the hair I believe Avers Hair ?3 t. itr lis no pmiaL Tt has alv;avs i rveiv w.i'-." A i : j Mrs. A. 21. Stkeiii,, p ; Acg. 13, 1SSS. Luiuaondsport,2T.Y. R; i Writs the Bacto. Jt Hair and Si'alp" tree, vpon reqtiest. If you ta not obtain all the benefits i Ton expected from the use of the i Vigor vri;e the Doctor about it. Arfilrfc:'- Ds. J, C. ATER, J.oTell, Mass. PK0FESSI0N,iL. bcE-0 S- the Staton Building. i:e Loivrs from 9 to 1 o'clock : 2 to SCOTLAND XECK, N. C. . J. P. WIMBERliKi, OFFICE HOTEL LAWRENCE, SCOTLAXD XECK, G. E. JOHSOX, AT rOHXEY-AT-LAW, WlXDSOK, X. C. ffraccice in all Conrts. Special at k'ion ffiven to Hnllpf tinna. - W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, X. C :e over Harrison's Dru? Store. f A.UUXX, ATTORNE Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Xeck, X. C. r.ictices wherever hia servicea ar buirfid 'WARD L. TRAVIb, ttorney and Connselor at Law, HALIFAX, X. C. fFlhupji Loaned on Farm Lands. pL V. MATTHEWS, A TTORNE Y-A T-LA TP. "Collection of Claims a specialty. WHITAKERS, X. C. 8 are prepared to furnish telephone tL.. public and solicit patron- HATES FOR SERVICE. 1 "'aess Phones, $2.00 per month, ence Phones, 1.50 " " ' " euoer for 3.00 " " 18 our purpose to give good service to this end we ask nil snlwrihprs to 0rt promptly any irregularities in fUur slened Ront.rantn nrohibit u of phones exnent hv subscribers. ,Je request that this rule be rigidly Cypress Shingles. shall keep a nice lot ol Press Sliinsrles t!ie If ar. 'ricesto8uitpTudia3er . W.H.WHITE.. I upon x tttoOGffiA TdJi EDITOR'S LX1SUS3 EOUEf. Points ani Paragraphs cf Thingi Fro3iitf last &nd FutTire. Xow let cveir man get down to business end Joss no more time talking ;bcut politics sutd the "development of future cvnh." Z.Iany thirga now need our attention. Every man Sown to personal business, with a reel manly desire to do the tno?t possible lor himself, those depen dant o; him .iivl for the world g(er aliy, will have more to df towards brmgicg general prosperity than any thing else. It has gone out that Marion Butler is to manage Mr. Bryan's campaign in Xorth Carolina and for other southern states, with headquarters at Washing ton. If Mr. Bryan la wise as we think he is he will cut loose from Butler nd have nothing more to do with him. Tnere are many good Democrats in this State, ardent supporters of Mr. Bryan from the first, who will be made lukewarm in his cause if Marion But ler has anything to do with it. The records in Washington show fast the therraomfcinr registered high er last week than since 18S1. This hai bean a remarkably hot summer, espec ially during July and thus far in Aug ust. The crop prospect in Xorth Car olina has bean greatly changed during t b 'j pa3t ten daya. Up to that time it was fine, but the extreme heat, with the drought, has cut oil the prospect a great deal. Cotton has been losing considerably lor more than a week, ana at present writing there seems no indication oi rain. The Cair-tre troubles are world-wila that has commercial relations with China is affected by the war there ; and while there has been no declara tion of war between jChina and this country, it will not be long before our trade with that country will suffer. Seme think that it may all turn out a special interference by Providence for the final undoing of the heathen ai such and the letting in of the gospel of Christ. W hatever may be the outcome th contemplation of war is awful. It is surprising how many person loosely regard their financial obliga tions. They seem to feel like all that they can keep from paying out is clear gain. But such is not the case to the individual who follow such'a course, to say nothing of the general conven ience or inconvenience of the 1 public. For instance if Mr. A owes Mr. B five do liars and fails to pay it when he can, Mr. B la perhaps compelled to disappoint Mr. C who in turn disap points Mr. D and so on around the circle to a number almost beyond calculation. The truth is, when one man pays his just debt be may thereby make it possible for a dozen others to do likewise. There is danger that some supersan guine people may be disappointed in the results of the great Democratic victory and the passing of the con stitutional amendment. To be sure, all adherents of Democratic principles and all advocates of white supremacy share in the common joy at tne peace ful turn things have taken, and at the prospect of brighter daya m Xor th Car olina. But whoever thinks that be cause the amendment passed and we are to have a white man's governmen he can find an easier time in making bread or winntng mccess, will be wo fully mistaken. Personal effort and persistent work are the only things that tell for success of any kind ; and who ever depends on luck or good fortune of any kind apart from what come a the result of honest labor, will find himself left and lost in the race. There is reason to believe that com petition will be tsharper than it ever has been in Xorth Carolina in certain things. If you think of aspiration to public office, in the future the man and his character will have more to do with the question than ever before here. In a word, personal preparation for the proper discharge of whatever duties one seeks to assume, i to be the square and plummet by which candi date for public fayors are to be measured. The One Day Cold cure. cold in the head and saM Ul. PETER THE GREAT. EXS WILL IN CHINA. The Singular I)o:umnt Translated. What will be the result of tha great upheaval of eoeiety in China to-day? What is Russia's real purpose, and what t dvantages will she realize from the terrffic struggle in which so many nations are involved? Ia a timoly article in The Xational Magazine lor August Cpt. Charles Winslow Hall glvea a transition of mat eiuaiular document known to European statesmen and historians as "The Will of Peter the Great," and generally acknowledged to embody the great and persistent policies which have extended the dominion and increased the power of the Rus sian empiie. The principal events of the career of each of Peter's successors are clearly and forcibly depicted, and the prediction made that the present social upheaval and revolution In China have been forseen, if indeed n ot incited by Russia, who In any event must immensely and materially profit thereby. Two centuries ago, or to be more ax act, in 1690, Peter, since justly sur named The Great, succeeded to the throne of Russia. A burly, robuet, half civilized, uneducated boy-prince, handicapped by bigotry and strong an imal passions, and in his early reign menaced by intrigues of the most dan gerous character, he had, nevertheless, a strong intellect, a stronger will and a full measure cf that practical common jensa, whioh now and then in the world's history has been known to characterize a mler of great provinces. Peter had neither fleet nor army worthy ot the name. Xo nation in ail Europe, except the English nation, prized his friendship or feared his en mity ; his troops were undisciplined and restive under control and his re sources wera uncertain and the prey of hereditary officialism and deep-rooted ooiruptioi". iul ii-o tiiuaL.i wwugiii lii Eng lish and Dutch shipyards, to seoure a practical knowledge oi naval and com mercial shipbuilding, has been often told ; as well as the story of the peril, intrigues, prejudices and ancient abases which he averted or overthrew. Suf fice it to say that at the date of hia de cease, February 10, 1725, he had de stroyed the military prestige of Sweden and secured much of her territory on the eastern shore ot the Baltio sea, es tablished ports upon the sea of Aiov and the Caspian, and created large and well appointed armies and fleets. lie had been solemnly crowned at Moscow, "Emperor of all theRussias," and been hailed by his nobles and people as "The Father of his Country, Peter the Great." Dying, he leit to his descendants and successors a paper embodying the im mense purposes which during his checkered career had sustained and impelled him. This ancient testament, pregnant with wars unending, and in trigues and disloyalities, without scru. pie, must be read and remembered by everyone who would understand aright the past history, and comprehend in some degree the trend of Russian policy, and it probable results in the orient. Tke Hang of Your Hand. Salcct ed. There is a great deal in the hang of your hand when free and at ease. A man drops his hands to his sides by purely unconscious action in the majority of cases, and all unconscious actions are important to a would be judge of character. Sit by the window and watch the passersby. The man whose first and little fingers are stretched straight down, with the two others curled Inward, is endowed with accurate judgment and precise fore sight. II a long and well formed thumb hangs paraellel with the outstretched fingers, all his actions will be the re. suit of thought and his words well weighed before spoken. Unless the up per phalange ot his thumb shows a tendency to turn outward, he will be too grave to be good company. Another, whose forefinger alone points downward, is by profession a teacher1 possibly a preacher. The same man, when listening intently, will have a habit of resting the finger on his -temple. The forefinger and second finger, if seen hanging down close' together, might denote the judge's clerk, whose business leads him to torn over pa pers .with a hand constantly ready for the pen. This instance might be brought for ward in corroboration of the theory advanced by professors of palmistry who say that . the seat oL the will lies in the thumb. Poultry Yard. Farm Journal. Blaok pools in th e back-yard are poor watering plate3 for the fowls. Work is the main factor in success ful poulty raising. Don't shirk. A good game cock is about as good as a guinea for scaring ha,vks and crows, and not so noisy. The hens that molt early are the ones . you should keep, for they will lay in winter, when eggs ar most In demand. Xow, beware of rotten milk and ppciled messes, borne people eem to think that fowls belong to the buaxard family. What pisses for cholera is often the result of exposure without shade, to the intense August heat. Brahmas and Cochin and all big, heavily feath ered fowls are liable to heat . iirostra- tion. If the early chickens are to lay be fore cold weather sots in they should be well cared for at this season ; give them plenty o! food, plenty of room, and good air. Sell of! the old hens before they begin to molt. The summer season is a good time to erect necessary buildings. Build ol seasoned lumber. Keep windows and doors open, and let the house and the soil of the floor become thoroughly dry before the birds are placed in the new quarters. If by the smart tactics of the old hen you have a brood of chickn that you had not expected, don't coddle them, let them run. Throw the res ponsibility on the hen, and, ten chan ces to one, they will make a thrifty, hardy flock. We Should Stick To Simple food. "There was in the old days far lass wear and tear upon the nerves ; and under such conditions, digestion was more completely performed," writes Mrs. S. T. Rorer of "Why I am Oppos ed to Pies," in the August Ladies' Home Journal. "The mothers of to day must look more carefully to the buiMfo'g ol-'icii iodri and brain than their mothers and grandmother did. Indeed, at the pace at which we Americans are going we use our brains at full speed nearly all the time. What man can build brain and brawn on pies, layer eakes or, preserves, or any other mass of material which from Its very complexity requires labor and time for digestion, drawing the blood from the brain to the stomach during his working hours? Observe those who eat their complex foods carelessly and hastily, and you will see at a glance the conditions that necessitate a com plete rest every now and then, or an early nervous breakdown. "In my close observation in the last twenty years I find very few people in our common struggle for existence who can for any length of time eat carelessly of complex foods. At forty or fifty a man may perhaps have accu mulated wealth, but not health ; and of what earthly use is the first without the second? Many persons in the generation gone before have eaten pies at least once a day, but they hare not had meat three times a day, nor have they rushed at our pace. They gave more time to the digestion of the pie. People who recommend these rich foods rarely know anything of their complex conditions, and still less of the complexity of digestion." A lame shoulder is usually caused by rheumatism of the muscles, and may be cured by a few applications of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. For sale by K. T. Whitehead & Co., Druggists Stimulating Dreams. One of the latest theories advanced is that dream may be stimulated by artifical means, such as musical soands or perfumes, and that we may, after assiduous study, be able to produce such yisiona a we please. Having learned how to dream to order, we have also been instructed how to find ghosts. The process is simplicity it self. You take a globe fall of water and gaze steadly therein for the space of ten minutes. If yon see nothing wonderful, be not discouraged, but try again, and yet again. If on the third effort no supernatural revelation ensues, you will know that yow are not a "ghost-seeker," and that you naver will be. The One Day Cold Cure For cold in the head and sore throat tat Ker mott'a Chocolate Laxative Quiaikie, the "Om DayGold Com." The National Library in Pari has just acquired the 40,000 volumes that formed the famous collection of books ot M. Ristelhauber, the Austrian au thor. The testator was a rich man and spent nearly all his fortune ' on hia library. The One Day Cold cure. - For colds and tore throat aae bmott's Choeo. UtM Lamtimt fHmh. VtmmStm tmmm mm i mi HARKETINUOfflATOES. Methods In Vogue For Handling Distant Shipments. PICKED GHEEN. Concerning two methods in vogue for handling the distant shipment of tomatoes Professor F. S. Earle of Ala bama say : At most points in Flor ida the fruits are picked dead green as soon as they reach full size and at least a week before they would begin to oolor. They are wrapped in paper and are packed in the well known six basket crate, the same that is used for handling the Georgia peach crop. These green tomatoes are snipped by fast freight in ventilated cars. The wrapping in paper prevents them from shriveling, and by the time they reach market some ot the more mature ones are usually beginning to color. The greatest drawback to this system is that when picked in that condition no one can tell the exact stage of matur ity, and it is impossible to so assort them that all in one package will ripen together. When opened on the mar ket, some of the fruit in the basket will be fully ripe while some is dead green. Such uneven packages are less salable than where all are evenly ripen ed. Again, if the weather is cool dur ing transit, ripening is delayed so thai none is ripe on arrival, and the con- signment has to be stacked up in the store and held till ripening begins. In this way stocks often accumulate enormously, and if the weather sud denly turns warm, causing all to ripen at once, the entire accumulation must be forced off at once, or it will be lost entirely, thus causing a disastrous glut, In Mississippi the usual plan is to al low the tomatoes to hang until they are slightly tinted. The fields are picked over every day, so as to get as many a possible of them in this tinted condition. At the packing shed they are assorted into three grades as to color rl pes, mediums and greens. Usually fiirits and seconds are raide of each of these grades, thus really mak ing six grades, besides a seventh cull grade that is not shipped, but sold to canning factories or fed to stock. The tomatoes are packed without wrap ping in flat, four basket crates and are shipped in refrigerator cars. Where this plan is thorougly carried out it insures a yery even quality of tomatoes in each package, and, as the goods are ripe when they arrive, thev can be sold at once, thus avoiding the disas trous accumulation of stocks. The cost of refrigeration makes this meth od slightly more expensive than the other, even though the cost of wrap ping the tomatoes is saved. On the whole, however, it is more satisfactory, and there can be little doubt that for the latitude of Alabama it will on the average yield larger net returns. The growing of tomatoes on a large scale is an exacting business, requir ing constant personal care and atten tion from the time the seed is planted until the crop is harvested. It is not a crop that can be successfully handled by ignorant tenants. It has, however, proved profitable at many localities in the past when Intelligently handled, and there is no reason to suppose that It will not continue to be profitable in the future. Squinting Administration, Greensboro Telegram. We salute another reformer ; like all reformers a blessing to mankind. Hear : "President Harper, of the University of Chicago, is .greatly interested in the possibility of living on $300 a year. He remarked to friends that he was determined to try one week to see if he could provide for his family table at an expense of 15 cent a day for each member, according to the sched ule furnished by Miss Katharine Davis. He explained that he could not begin the experiment until after the cele bration of his silver wedding tomorrow at Concord, Ohio, as he did not want to miss the big family dinner supplied by Ohio relatives." We don't know which to most ad mire in President Harper, his desire to be a reformer and show people how to lire on fifteen cents per day (many already thoroughly understand it) or his intense human nature as manifest ed in the desire to eat a square meal at the expense of his relatives. The laws oi health require that the bowels move once each day and one of the penalties for violating this law is piles. Keep your bowels regular by taking a dose of Chamberlain's fclom ach and Liver Tablets when necessary and vou will never have that severe punishment inflicted upon you. Price 25 cents. For sale by E. T. White head & Co. Druggists. oAbroniA. - A'PaleFace ftrtminnt symptoixf of vitiated blood. If covered with pimples, the evidence 1, complete. It's rmture'e uajrofwarnlnc you of yourcondltloo. Johnston's never fails to rectify fr aisorder ft? the blood. Blight or severe, of loftg Ktandlng or recent origin, it thirty years record (uarantees its efficacy. Bold everywhere. Prloe 11.00 per full quart bottle. Prepared only by ' nxcuieAar uuio compacts', Detroit, Mich. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co., Scotland Xeck, X. C. Wehster And The Astor House. New York Sun. Mr. Parcell, who is in business at 127 Liberty street, is an old Xew Yorker who has known the city hall region of the city from childhood and he is a man well on in years now. He was born in a house that stood in Broad way, opposite the city Hall park, near Murray street, and his wife was born in another house near by, one that stood where now is the Chemical Bank. Speaking of the old times one day this week, he said. "When I was a boy I ran errands and helped in various ways in a haber dashery store that was in the Astor j House, corner of Vasey street, the place j now occupied by a ticket offioe of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Daniel Webster was at the Astor House frequently in those days and I remember him very well. He used to buy a great many things in our store and always had them sent in the hotel to be paid tor there. He never had any money. I have carried many purchases to him. He had a parlor up one flight, I think, and there always was a orowd of peo ple about him there. The champagne and other things ' that went to that room for him and his friends to drink would float a ship. We always under stood, and I guess it is true, that be never paid anything at the hotel, did not eyen pay for the things that ho bought and had sent to him there c. o. d. Coleman it Stetson kept the hotel then and I guess they made money enough by keeping- him free and pay ing his bills. There was a constant stream of wine going to his room which his callers bought and kept flowing. The hotel could well afford to make no charges against him In view of the custom he brought. He was magnifi- ciently indifferent about what anything cost. He used to buy bis gloves oi us for one thing white kids when he was going to lecture or speak in the even ing. He wore an 8 glove and he would split or ruin three or four pairs before he got one to suit him. As fast ts he tore or split a pair of gloves he would throw them on the floor. When he had selected a pair and got them on with out ruining them he would tell us to send them into the hotel and get our money for them. We always gathered up the torn gloves from the floor, put ting them in with the others and charg ing them in the bill. We always were paid without a word. The Astor House in those days was the chief resort for great men. Kossuth and Henry Clay and Edwin Forrest I have seen them all there. But Webster was the king of them all a thick-set, rather short man, as I remember him and very pleasant and affable. He used to call me 'Bub,' and one day he gave me a ticket to one ot his lectures. I went, but I might as well have stayed away He swam in too deep water for a boy like me. I don't believe there ever was a worse bored boy than I was at great Webster's lecture, and I never wanted to go again.' What most Deople want is some thing mild and gentle, when in need of a Dhvsic. Chamberlain's sstomacn ana ... . 1 . . lS.l A J Liver Tablets 1111 me om w n uui.. Thpv are easv to take and pleasant in effect. For sale by E. T. Whitehead &Co. Druggists. Minnesota 1 the greatest of all the wheat states. Last year her wheat fields covered nearly 5,000,000 acres and she grew upward of 78,000,000 bushels more than twice the entire production ot the continent of Austral ia, and more than that of Great BriU ian and Ireland. ! Bated shavings are a standard arti ftle of commerce, and are largely used for stable bedding and padding in svraw boxes, as it is finer and there is SaFOBDarilla rs waste. It is also more sanitary. XORFOLK, VIRGINIA. TTTHIS MODERN scwont. f A hand and Business Training raojTs among the foremost educational huaitak tions oi its kind in America. It pre pares young men and vouncr onn for business careers at a small cost, anJ places them In positions free. For further information send for our Illu. trated Catalogue and new hnhlirs entitled "Business Education." J. M. Ressler, President. WILMINGTON & WELDON R. R. AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LIN Ft RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING &OUTH. DATED f5-i 1 July 22. 1900. o eS -sae 6 ISf A. M. P. M. r. M. A. If. P. II. Leave Weldon 1150 8 68 Ar. Kocky Mt. 1 00 8 62 Leave Tarboro 12 21 e 00 Lv. Kocky Mt. ...1 05 "a ' 52 ' 'S'xi '"s'ilS 11 Ss Leave WIIboh 1 60 10 25 7 10 6 67 2 Leave 8el in a 2 55 11 111 Lv. Fuyetteville 4 30 12 22 Ar. Florence 7 i'fi 2 2-1 P. M. A. M. Ar. Goldabnro " 7 .W """ Lv. Uoldxboro S 45 S SS Lv. Manuolia 7 j 4 as Ar. Wilmington ; at P. M. A. 11. P. II. TRAINS GOING XORTH. Sis- SfSa'Sfi? 4 &i dfl &i I is ......... ......... ......... .. A. M. P. M. Lv. Florence 50 " 7 S5 Lv. Fayetteville IS 20 41 Leave Helm a 1 60 10 54 Arrive Wilson 2 35 11 33 a."m." p."m". aV'm! Lv. W'Uninfrton 7 00 t SS Lv. Magnolia S 3t 11 IS Lv. Goldaboro 4 CO 37 12 SB p." m" a."m! p."m". f."m" Leave Wiltion 2 35 6 S3 11 33 10 45 ) 1 Ar. Kocky Mt, 3 30 10 12 CT 11 M 16 Arrive Tarboro 6 4 Leave Tarboro 12 21 LvV Rocky Mt." 8 30 1207 Ar. Weldon 4 32 1 oti P. M. A. M. P. M. I mf " ' " T af cept Sunday. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Yadkin Diyision Main Line Train leaves Wilmington, 9 00 a. m., arrives Favetteville 12 05 d. m.. leaves Favette- ville 12 25 p. m., arrives Sanford 1 43 p. m. Returning leaves Sanford 2 3C p. m., arriyes Fayetteville 3 41 p. su., leaves jvayetievine a io p. m., arnvee Wilmington 6 40 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennettsville Branch Train leave Bennettsville 8 05 a. m., Maxton 9 10 a. m., Red Springs 9 40 a. m., Hope uruia 10 32 . m.. arrives Favetteville 10 55 a. m. Returning leaves Fayette ville 4 40 d. m.. Horje Mills 4 55 n. m.. Red Springs b 35 p. m., Maxtou 6 16 p. m., arrives Bennettsville ia p. m. Connections at Fayetteville with train No. 78. at Maxton with the Care- Una Central Railroad, at Red Springe with the lied springs ana liowmore Railroad, at Sanford with the Seaboavd Air Line and Southern Railway, at Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Scotland Neck Brnncft Road leaves Weldon 3 :55 p in., Halifax 4 :17 p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 5 :08 p. m., Greenville 6 :57 p. m., Klna- ton 7 :55 p. m. Returning leavee Kmston 7 :50 a. m.f Greenyille 8 :52 a. m., arriving Halifax at 11 :18 a. m., Weldon 11 :83 a. m., daily except Sun day. Trains on Washington Branch leave Washington 8 :I0 a. m. and 2 :30 p. in. arrive Parmele 9 :10 a. m. and 4 00 p. m., returning leave Parmele 9 :3b a. on. and 6:30 p.m., arrive Washington 11:00 a. m. and 7 :30 p. m., daily ex cept Sunday. Tram leaves Tarboro, w.t;.f aaiiy except Sunday 5 :30 p. m., Sunday, 4 :15 p. m., arrives 1'lymoutn :u p. m., 6 :10 p. m., Keturning, leaves ny mnuth dailv exceDt Sundav.7:50a.m k and Sunday 9 :00 a. ro., arrivesTarbore 10:10 a. m., 11:00 a. m. Train on Midland X. C. Branch leaves Goldsboro daily, except Sunday. 5 :30 a. m., arriving Smith field 6 :40 a. m. Returning leaves Smitbfield 7 :S5 a. m. ; arrives at Goldsboro 9 :00 a. n , Trains on Nashville Branch leave Rocky Mount at 9 :30 a. m., 3 :40 p. m , arrive Nashville 10 :20 a.m.,4 :03 p.m , Spring Hope 11 :W a. m., 4 :zt p. m Rnttirninir leave Sprine Hone 11 :20 a. m 4 :55 p. m., Nashyille 11 :45 a. m.t 5:25 p.m., arrive at Kocky Mount 12 :10 a. m., 6 :00 p. m., dally except Sunday. Train on Clinton Branch leaves war saw for Clinton daily, except Sunday, 1 1 :40 a. m. and 4 -.25 p. m. Return ing leaves Clinton at b :45 a. m. and 2 :50 a. m. Train Xo. 78 makes close connection at Weldon for all points North daily, all rail via Richmond. H. M. EMERSON, Geul Pas. Asrent. J. R. KEXLY, Genl Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. FOR MALARIA Use nothing but Macnair'i Bod and Liver Pills. W. H. Macnaib, Tarboro, N. C. or E. T. Whitehead A Co., 9 22 tf. Scotland Neck, V. C ' T a-T ror Drui ror Drunkenness and Drug Using. PlHue writ na. CorrawMid f confidential. THE KEELEY MSTITUTC Bee. K Our ' Illustrated Handioek Sen! Free Oa f.eque - N C Greensboro, JV. C. ff l like aMMpyfo; j, 'MflfVi
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 16, 1900, edition 1
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