Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Aug. 23, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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v - J fx ' 311 IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER rou WILL ADVXBTI8JE TOOB Business. o 8bhd Your Adykktisciimt Hew . IB TO BUSINESS WHAT STEAM IS TO Machinery, o iH U GREAT PeOPELLISG POWER. 0 EALTH v m E. E. HIL.LIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE Si.oo. VOL. XVI. New Series Vol. 4. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C., THURSDAY. AUGUST 23, 1900. NO. 34 .-4- COMMOMW Wfc&$ of hair is If raMS wealthM Vg indeed, Ri VljiS woman, fl especial ly to a woman. Eve ry other f physical attraction is E X have a " book" we will j gladly send you that iwia juoi xivvy iu vaiv for the hair. If your hair is too thin or los- i ing its )G r o wt h j becomes 6 vigorous and all . dan- f druff is removed.' f It always restores 1 color to gray or faded $ X hair. Retain your I j youth; don't look old before your. time. ?J Sl.OOabottls. A?I druggists. "I havo used votir Kair Virror C 1 now for about -5 years and I have if J? found it splendid, aud satisfactory spieatUd aiid satisfactory 3 i:i every -way. I pclieve I haTe reccjnuieadea tliis Hair Ti.or to It il 9 to them iii3t ihv, strong-Iy 8 I j ran that tStey get a tattle of Ayer'fl 1 3 Hair Yiirnr." t 3 Sirs. 3. E. HAMltTOS. ... (i r "i : a.- - -a a aa 2 'J Weiio i&o Dost sr. i 3 If yon don't oitaia ail the benefits j ymi desire rrora tlia ue of the Vigor, l a write tie Doctor about it. Address, t 1K. J. C- AYEK, 5? Lo-reil, Mass. PROFESSIONAL. A. C. LIVERMON, Dentist. Office hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 tc i o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. D R. J. P. WIMBERLE1, OFFICE HOTEL LAWRENCE, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. . W, R. JOHJNSON, ATXORNEY-AT-LAW, WurosoR, N. C. Practice in all Conrts. Special at teation given to Collections. JJR. W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, N. C Office over Harrison's Drupe Store. A. DUNN, ATTORKE Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services art required E DWAKD L. TRAVIo, Attorney and Cwatsclor ct Law, HALIFAX, N. C. t'Money Loaned on Farm Lands. P UL V. MATTHEWS, ATTORXEY-AT-LAW. it -Collection of Claims a special. WHITAKESS..N. C. MM MMori Mm We are prepared to furnish telephone service to the public and solicit patron age. -' . ' :y ' RATES FOE SERVICE. z Business Phones, f 2.00 per month. Residence Phones, 1.50 " " Two ot either for 3.00 " " It is our purpose to give good service, and to this end we ask all subscribers to report promptly any irregularities in the service. . V SX)ur signed contracts prohibit the use of phones except by subscribers, and we request that this rule be rigidly enforced. ' : Cypress Shingles. I shall keep a nice lot of " - Cypress Shingles U the ytar. " Price to suit purchaaer. - - W. H.WHITE. J MMtP VBgtWP Scotland TXtok, N. 0 J tux suiToa-s lksusb eouec. FolntB anl Paragraphs of Thing. Prmnt, Fast and Future. Almost-forgotten Tom Wateon, of Georgia, is said to have written and published a most attractive and in structive history of the French Rev olution. Mr. Watson is said to have looked at life with great sincerity and earnestness all through ; and the con fidence which even his political oppo nents had in bis character, commends to good consideration anything ha might speak or write. William Jennings Bryan is without doubt a wonderful man. He has been before the American people for five years. " Almost every day his came, his speeches or his writings have been in the public prints, and t here is still a freshness about whatever he says or writes. Hs is truly a student of pass ing events and loses no opportunity to mlcrm himself oa whatever will be helpful in placing his views clearly aad forcibly before the people. The riot reported from' New York rjcently over the killing of a police man by a negro, gives the world a sort of birds-eye view of how empty and Meaningless are the pra'tmgs of some northern people about their peculiar love for the colored race. - If that police man had been killed by a white man the hue and cry would not have been half so fierce. And it may be that the same would have been true if it had occurred in North Carolina, or any other Southern State, but the North ern prees would have made much more ado about it than it has. The truth is, the South is the best home for the colored people and the I.; -2 ttIjHc rple are their, best, friends. Some intelligent and observing gen tlemen were discussing in our presence a few days ago the power of money, and how people generally regard the man who is gifted at . money-making alongside the man who is not so gift ed. These gentlemen all agreed that the tendency to make money the stand ard of a man's excellence is growing. Many people who ought to haye better sense have come to regard men purely by their power to make money. This is true with many people who stand high in church circles. They forget many nobler qualities when the spec- ial gift at money-making is lacking inmates national character, and the Eng- j a man's make-up. Now and then a man without the money-making power holds his own in but tbebroad estimation of all but where you find one such case you will find hun dreds ol others who are just as worthy absolutely disregarded by the crowd that is called the "business world." A mong the most widely known men of the tiffucs is Cecil Rhodes. He has grown upon the world with develop ments in South Africa, and has done mora there than is permitted to one in ten thousand to do in a life time. Cecil Rhodes has been a most unique character for years. He was a dream er at first, but many of his dreams have come to be realities. ' Once we heard a great preacher speak to a great audience on "the dream ing; young man," and the speaker said that the brighter the dreams the f more will the young man accomplish. Ceail Rhodes had bright dreams, and from his first possession in diamond mines in South Africa he saw his hori zon Jift ; and It has continued to ex pand until he is now a man of world wide fame and great posseesions. He ia said to be a close reader of the Bible. .-. Peanut Threshers. The greatest thing on earth for the grower of all kinds, of grain and peanuts is the Ellis Champion Peanut Thresher and Cleaner. Any lniorma tion wanted apply to B J. J. MITCHELL, State Agent TRAITS OF JJHARACTER. TW Tendency of All People to Pol low Ancestral Lines. SUGGESTIVE THOUGHTS, London Spectator. We wonder from an acute interest in history, whether the character of any nationality strong enough to have one ever has changed. It is a most perplexing question. On the one hand the people who are best known, and who have kept themselves most seclud ed from the world the French have scarcely changed at all. They are the Gauls as Caesar knew them. Our peo ple, too are in all essentials yery like the Saxons, though more receptive as men become when they are educated and prosperous in life. We seem to see also that the Greeks of to-day are verv like the Greeks of the time of Pericles though the extinction of the aristocracy of Attica, with its perfect ly separate mtellectural powers and the perception of the beautiful, such as has never been granted to others of the sons of men, confuses and bluns the vision. On the other hand, it is diffi cult to discern the fierce energy of the Norsemen, who conquered Western France, Britian, and Sicily, and Con stantinople and probab'y Russia, either in the sentimental Scandinayians or the solid Germans of the Baltic shore. And there are keen observers who maintain tne late Mr. Mutton was one of them that the Jew having be come from the least impressionable of mankind the one who takes most readi ly the impress of those among whom he dwells. For ourselves we doubt that opinion perceiving all throngh Jewish history a tendency in the peo ple to be unduly Impressed by foreign feeling first by the Syrians, then by the Babylonian, then by the Greeks and now by a!I the nations of the world, yet retaining amidst it all the deep and aaparate'stamp which divides them from mankind. On the whole as he looks at the facts aid remembers how completely some faces have been swept away or absorbed by iLelt inferiors the Roman patri archs, for example, and the brilliant slaveholders of Attica we incline to the belief that wherever the blood is tolerably pure national character is nearly unchangeable, the belief that it alters arising like the Boer belief in British cowardice from a misreading of temporary circumstances. There is an exception when religious belief has charged. Christianity, Mo hammedanism and eyen Protestantism modify the very roots of character, so that Saul deyolops into Paul and Pa gan pirates throw up saint and scholars j but nothing else much effects a race , which is not crossed.. Study a little the Eoers families which came from the Hugenots, or the Dutch families of New York, and you will, we think, be convinced no external pressure howeyer aharo or continuous, ever quite eradi- lish haye for centuries been subjected to no pressure at all. They have been coddled into softness, you say, but read any true history of the suppression of the Indian mutiny or of the present war and you will reconsider that opin ion. Iron can be hardened, and pol ished, and melted, and wrought, but wben all is done it remains iron, and neither becomes putty nor gold. Pie Carried Life-Line. Boston Herald. . The Australian coasting steamer Kameruka, while going from Eden to Sydney, travelling at full speed, struck on a reef at Moruya Head. There be ing no rockets on the ship the captain tied a, life line ; to some pigs which formed part of the cargo, and had the animals put oyerboard. The pigs swam to the' shore, taking the .lines with them, and by establishing com munication every soul on board was rescued. . . , To Get Eid Of Rial. New York Tribune. - . People in the country who are an noyed by flies should remember that clusters of the fragrant clover, which grows bundantly by nearly every road aide, if hung in the room and left to dry and shed its faint fragrant perfume through the air, will drive away more flies than sticky "saucers of molasses and other fly-traps and fly-papers can ever collect. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Ha Kind Yea II3T3 Always Crfat ' Bears the Csaatnreof Two College Boys. Selected. Two boys leit home with just mon ey enough to take them through col lege, after which they must depend entirely upon their own efforts. They attacked the collegiate problems suc cessfully, passed the graduation, receiv ed their diplomas from the faculty, also commendatory letters to a large ship-building firm with - which they desired employment. Ushered into the waiting room of the head of the firm, the first was given an audience. He presented his letters. "What can you do?" asked the man of millions. "I should like some sort ot cleric ship." "Well, sir, I will take your name and address, and should we have any thing of the kind open, will corres pond with you." As he passed out, he remarked to bis waiting companion, "You can go in and leave your address.4' The other presented himself and his papers. "What can you dr.?" was asked. "I can do anything that a green hand can do, sir," was the reply. The magnate touched a bell, which called a superintendent. "Have you anything to put a man to work at?" "We want a man to sort scrap-iron," replied the superintendent. And the college graduate went to sorting scrap-iron. One week passed, and the president meeting the superintendent) asked, "How is the new man getting on?" "Oh," eaid the boss, "be did his work so well, and ngver watched the clock, that I pat biu over the gang." In one year this vr an had reached the bead of a department and an ad visory position with the management at a salary represented by four figures, while his whilom companion was "clerk" in a livery-stable, washing harness and carriages, Solid Growth Of The South. North American Rarit1! Only a decade ago the south suffer ed as no section ever suffered from a boom craze. It was said that there were enough corner lots laid out be tween the Potomac and the Gulf of Mexico to supply every man, woman and child in the United States, and even to-day it is possible to find the remains of avenues and the sites of proposed great buildings on farms that have quit the dreams ot city life and settled back to agricultural life. Of course, the usual reaction eame, but the effect of the organised exaggeration long remained. So, wben - the more drastic consequences of the boom era passed away, there remained a disposi tion to use some of the old boom methods in announcing the new re sults. In course ol time the state ments had to be discounted, but gradually the trade papers and busi ness organizations of the south have come to present the facts more reliably and with better satisfaction to the country at large. The consequence is that the reports of great gains In south ern industries are now reliable. They mean a vast increase in the Wealth and activity of that maryelously rich section. The new enterprise combines northern capital with oOUihern Co operation, and : the southerners them selves now have the money, to build mills and the experience to operate them. Many of the southern states have increased their riches several times over since the war, and at no period in all their history were they making one-half as much money as they are today. Along with this in crease is the betterment of the school system, which means additional impe tus to the new generation. Thousands of churches are being built, cities and towns are being .improved, new and larger residences, with all the modern appliances, are being constructed. The south is not only realizing a new life, but is thoroughly enjoying the prosperity that goes with it. If people didn't put up -the pawn broker would have to shut up. ? ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND There is no kind of nalnf or ache, internal or exter 'nal, that Pain-Killer t will 1 not ' relieve. LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS AND SUB-: iSTirUTES. THE GENUINE BOTTLE . BCARS THE NAME. PERRY OA VIS A SON. OA6rOIlXA. Bean tli Tto KM Vw Haw Always flog A DOG'SJAGACITY. How He Obeyed At Onci. CONTEMPT OF COUBT. Mr. Rawley walked In and close at his heels stalked Bitters. Both seated themselves ; the one on a chair, the oth er on end, directly in front of the sur rogate. Mr. Jagger looked at the dog with the solemn eye of a surrogate, and shook his bead as only a surrogate can shake it. "Are you the witness?" inquired he of the dog's master. "I am, sir," replied Mr. Rawley. "I was aubpoenated to testify." "What's that animal doing here?" demanded the surrogate. "Nothing," replied Mr. Rawley. "He comes when I come. He goes when I go." "The animal must leave the court. It's contempt of court to bring him here," said Mr. Jagger, angrily. ''Re move him instantly." Mr. Rawley had frequently been in attendance at the police courts, and once or twice had a slight taste of the sessions ; so that he was not much struck with the surrogate as he other wise might have been ; and he replied : "I make no opposition, eir ; and shall not raise a finger to prevent it. There's the animal ; and any officer as pleases may remove him. 1 Bay ntiffiu ag'in it. I knows what a contempt of court is ; and that ain't one." Mr. Rawley threw himself amiably back In his chair. "Mr. Slagg !" said the surrogate to the man with a frizzled wig "remove the dog." Mr. Slagg laid down bis pen, took of! his spectacles, went Up to the dog, and told him to get out ; to which Bitters replied by snapping at his fin gers as he attempted to touch him. Mr. Rawley was staring abstractedly out of the window. The dog looked up at him for Instructions, and, receiv ing none, supposed that snapping at a scrivener's fingers was perfectly correct, and resumed his pleasant expression towards that functionary, occasionally casting a lowering eye at the surrogate as if deliberating whether to Include him in his demonstrations of anger. "Slagg, have you removed the dog?" said Mr. Jagger, who, the dog being under his very 11086, saw that he had not. "No, sir ; he resists the court," re plied Mr. Slagg. "Call Walker to assist you." said Mr. Jagger. Walker, a thin man in drabs, had anticipated something of the kind, and had accidentally withdrawn as soon as be saw that there was a pfospgdt of diffi culty ; so that the whole oourt was set at defiance by the dog. "Witness I" said Mr. Jagger. Mr. Rawley looked the court full In the face. "Will you oblige the court by re moving that animal?" said Mr. Jagger mildly. "Certainly, air," said Mr. Rawley "Bitters, so home." Bitters rose stiffly and went out, first casting a glance at the man with the wig, lor the purpose of being able to identify him on some fu ture occasion , and was soon after seen froth the window Walking up the street with the most profound gravity. John T. Irving. The laws of 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 Stom ach and Liter Tablets when necessary and vou will never have that eevere rmnishment inflicted upon yon. Price 25 cents. or saie py X. a. wuiwj- " a 1 m ftTL 11. head & Co. Druggists. No, Maude, dear, a clearing house baa no connection with Philadelphia's waterworks. A lerriA nhnnlder is nsualiv caused by rhnnmntism of the muscles, and may be cored by a few applications 01 Ph.mrutrlsin'a Pain Balm. For Sale by Jfi. T. Whitehead & Co., Druggists CATARRH CANNOT BE CURED rtih lAn.r. applications, as they can Tf lU w nnt Mh ihn Mnt ot the disease. Ca- i.k in Klnnrinr constitutional disease and in ordei to cure it you must take internal remedies. Halls Catarrh Cure i .vAn infamnllv and acts directly on la wbu J TI 1T the blood and mocous surfaces. Man s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best ntivrfeians in this "country for years, ard is a regular prescription. I is Mnaoji of tha best tonics known, MkirKul ith the best blood purifiers, ae ting directly on the mocous surfaces. Te perfect combination oi the two ina Tedients ie what produces such won tr.1 MMnlrn In Anrinsr Catarrh. Send UCM. vea ,uv -w F. J.CHENEY A CO., Props., Toledo. rv--. HnXA kw ifrnnristlL twice I DC. . ft HaUV Family Pills are the best. AtPale Faco it a promlnsnt symptom of vitiated blcwwl. Tf orvrmi With nlmnl.. t h. evidence Incomplete, ft'a nature's way of warning you ofyourcondltlon. tSofinGton's m atr-ekeieeS a never falls to rectlf all" disorders at the blood, aught or severe, of long atandlng or recent origin. IU thirty years record guarantee ita efficacy. Sold everywhere. Price 11.00 per full quari ooiue. rreparea oniy oy MICHIOAZV DKIIB COMFAJfT", Detroit, Mich. For sale by E. T. Whitehead A Co., Scotland Neck, N. C. The Art Of Talking Well. Ladies' Home Journal It is better to be frankly dull than pedantic. One must guard one's self from the temptation of "talking shop" and of riding one's "hobby." Whatever sets one apart as a capi tal "I" should be avoided. A joke or humorous story is depen dent upon its freshness for appreciation. Some emotions will not bear "warm ing over." It is no longer considered good form to eay a word against any one. All III natirred criticism is a social blunder. Gossip, too, is really going out ot fashion. True wit is a gif, not an attainment. Those who use it aright never yield to the temptation of saying anything that can wound another in order to exhibit their own cleverness. It is natural and spontaneous. "He who runs after wit is apt to catch nonsense." Talk that has heartiness in it and the liveliness and sparkle that come of lightheadedness and innocent gayety, is a fairly good substitute for wit. Offer to each one who speaks the homage ot your undivided attention. Look people in the face wben you talk to them. Talk of things, not persons. The best substitute for wisdom is silence. It is a provincialism to fcay "yes, sir," "no, ma,am" to one's equal. Have convictions ot your own. Be yourself and not a mere echo. Never ask leading questions. We should show curiosity about the con cerns of others only so far as it may gratify them to tell us. Draw out your neighbor without catechizing him. Correct him, if nec essary, without contradicting him. Avoid mannerisms. Strive to be natural and at ease. The nervousness that conceals itself under affected vivacity should be con trailed, as should the loud laugh. FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS. Mr. Window's Soothinsr Svrup has hppn iisfid for fiftv Years bv millions of mothers for their children while teeth ng, with perfect success. It sooths the child, set tens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world." Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be H. nnd unit for "Mrs. Winslow's Sooth ing Syrup, and take no other kind. THE FARMER MAN. Atlanta Journal. What think you, that the farmer man Comes to his leisure now ; And in his hammock, at his ease, Has time to cool his brow? Ab, no ! the summer boarder Enjoys his hammock there ; A city cousin is his guest, . And takes his easy cnair. And he, the poor farmer man, Must play the thoughtful host, And take bis rest upon the grass Or leaning 'gainst a post. KeepQool GOT. nrii . w w I keen a supply of ICE and also nuantitv of wood all the time. Simriav hniirn inr ice: from o iu . . o . 10 a. m. From 5 to 7 p. m. a " - W. M. GRAY. Scotland Neck. Of two evils, the average man chooses the one he has neyer tried be fore. .. mi NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. m H1B MODERN SCHOOL of She tV nana and RualnAoa Train! Mees-f "''SJSS among the foremost educational i Demo tions of its kind in America. It are pares young men and young worse for business careers at a small cost, as9 Dlaces them in rmaitmna fn ! further information send for our Illss trated Catalogue and new publicatios, entitled "Business Education." J. M. Ressleb, President. a WILMIK6T0N & WELDON R. R, AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST T.fTCR RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING frOUTH. DATED S iULk July 22.1800. 61 . .fgeg sew -- Leave Weldon 11 SO 8 8 Ar. itocky Mt. 1 00 62 ...... .............. ...a.... ......... a........ ... Leave Tarboro 12 21 i to Lv. Rocky Mt. ...1 06 " "52 " t 'iV " 'lt'sl Leave Wllfton 1 6U 10 25 7 1 ft (7 e Leave Selma 2 f5 11 10 Lv. Fnyetteville 4 30 12 22 Ar. Florence 7 V6 2 24 P. M. A. M. ""'"! w ...... ...m... ......... .. . ...... Ar. (tolilxboro j 55 Lv. (iuldHboro 41 g g Lv. MaKiiolia 7 j 4 as Ar. Wilmington ' t W eg P.M. A. M. P. St. TRAINS GOING NORTH. a if if il if . ..,,.... ,. A. M. P. If. Lv. Florence 60 7 15 Lv. f aypttevllle 12 20 41 Leave Selma 1 60 10 64 Arrive Wilson 2 36 11 S3 a."m." " P."m'. iiTaf. Lv. W jilnjrton 7 N SI Lv. Magnolia IM 11 It Lv. Goldsboro 4 60 17 II M P. M A.M P "if PM Leave Wllnnn 2 S? 6 3 11 88 It 1 li Ar. llocky Mt. 3 30 6 10 12 CT 11 Ml 1 M Arrive Tarboro 6 40 Leave Tarboro 12 21 Lv.' Rocky M t. 3 ! SO " "iToY Ar. Weldon 4 32 1 0 P. M. A. M. P.M. t Daily except Monday. J Daily ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Yadkin Diyision Main LineTrain leaves Wilmington, 9 00 a. m., arrives Fayetteviue iz uo p. m., leaves rayeue. ville 9 25 p. m., arr-v.. Saplcrd 1 IS to. Returning leaves Sanford S it m nrrivmi FnvnttnviJla 3 41 n. an.. f J - - j 1 K a leaves Fayetteville 3 46 p. m., arrives Wilmington 6 40 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon ltallrosa, Bennetteville Branch Train lea yes Bennettsville 8 05 a. m., Maxton 9 10 a. m., Ked springs v u a. m., mops Bin's 10 32 a. m., arriyes Fayetteville 10 fif. n. m. Returning leaves Favatte- ville 4 40 p. m., Hope Mills 4 56 p. m.. Ked springs o p. m., uazton o it) m., arrives uennettsvme 10 p. as. Connections at Favettevllle with train No. 78, at Maxton with the Care. lina Central Railroad, at Ked Springs with the Red Springs and Bowmore Railroad, at Sanford with the seaboass Air Line and Southern Railway, aft Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Sortland Neck Branca . . - a CP TT. t(f.. Koaa leaves vr eiuon :oo p utjiiwuu 4 :17 p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 5 :08 p. ro., Greenville 6 :57 p. m.. Kins- ton 7:05 p. m. Jteiurniug leaves Kinston 7 :50 a. m., Greenyille 8 :52 a. n . nrrivinsr Halifax at 11 :18 a. m- Weldon 11 :83 a, m., daily except Sua- y- ..... , Trains on w asniogion urancu iev nr..k!ni.inn 8 -Tfi a. in. and 2 a.m.. arrive Parmele 9 :10 a. m. and 4Lff)p. at., returning leave Parmeis V and 6:30 p.m., arrive Wtsbinfeoa 1:00 a. m. and 7 :30 p. m ., daUf ex cept Sunday. x Train leaves Tarloro, n.i;., oaiiy except Sunday 5 :30 p. m., Sundsy, 15 p. m., arrives J'lymouin i :u p. r -10 n. m.. Returning. leaves Ply mouth daily except Sunday, 7 :60 s. sa j md Sunday ) :UU a. m., arrives i arrow 0:10 a. m., 11 :UU a. rrt. -Tmin on Midland N. C. Brsoeh leaves Goldsboro dally, except Sunday. :30 a. m., arriving amitnneia o :u a. . Returning leaves Smlthfield 7 :3f tn m. ; arriyes at Goldsboro :UO s. a , Traim nn Kaahvilla Branch lea Rnlrv Mount at 9 :30a. m.. 3 :40 n. n . arrive Nashville 10 :20 a. m.,4 .-03 run Spring Hope 11 :W a. m., e :zo p. sia Returning leave spring nope ax -v aw m.. 4 :55 p. m., Nashyille 11 :45 a. m., i :25 p. m., arrive i Jtocsy mount 2 :10 a. m., 6 :00 p. m.f dally except Sunday. . w Train on fjlinton urancn leaves war saw for Clinton dally, except Sunday, 11:40 a. m. and 4:26 p.m. Return ing leaves Clinton at b :45 a.m. ana :50 a. m. Train No. 78 makes close connsctlea at Weldon for all points North daily, all rai' via Richmond. H. M. EMJSJ&HUI?, Geul Pass. Agent. n. TTFNLY. GenT Manager. T. M. EMERSON. Traffic Manager. FORMALAIHA Jiff notbinc but IlAcnair'a B1m4 and Iirer Pills. W. H. Macnaib, Tarboro, N. C. or E. T. WHITEHEAD tX IO., 9 22 tf. Scotland Neck, M. O if ror Drunkenness aad alUJWl THE KIEL IT teamruTg. Our Illustrated Handbook ft fit K.M eedeaees. Greensbcro, N.C. v:, i 51641 Seouatid 1-19-tf - -: - 7-v i
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 23, 1900, edition 1
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