Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Sept. 27, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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A f Z ; ADVERTISING tS TO BUSINESS -WHAT STEAM IS TO- Machinery, PTIA IF YOU ARE AHMTIIQ YOU WILL ADVERTISE YOCB Business. ! - ttatttt LL JJ c E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $x.oo. Tn vi Great Propelling Power. VOL. XVI. New Series Vol. 4. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1900. NO. 39. Send Your Advertisemkkt jx Now, Commonweal U Look in your mirror today. Take a last look at your crav hair. It sure- t ly may be the last if T4 you want it so; you needn'tkeep your gray heir a week longer than ) uu Hisu. iuv.it a 11 u IV 1 guesswork about this; Y u s sure every time. lo re store color to gray hair use Af te r using it for two N or three weeks notice how much younger you ap pear, ten years younger at least. - Aver's Hair Visor also 4 cures dandruff, prevents falling of the hair, makes hair crow, and is a solen- 1 did hair dressing. 4 It cannot help but do J these things, for it's a .1 hair-food. When the hair A f t F 1 !. i "a is wen tea, u cannot neip f J but grow. 1 It makes the scalp healthy and this cures the disease that causes dandruff. $1.00 a bottle. All druggist. " My hair was coming out badly, trot Ayer's Hair Vior stopped the falling and ha 3 made my hair very 1 tick and mucli darker tnan before. 1 think there is nothing like it for S tlio hair." Coba M. Lea, f g April 25, 1899. Yarrow, X. T. f4 Wrlta thts Ooottsr. ' & J If yon do rot obtain all the benefits 1 you desire from the use of the Vigor, k Da.J.O AYES, Lowell, Mass. PK0FES3IOAL. HR. A. C. LIVEPOION, Dentist. 0F1IC2-O - the Staton Building. Office hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to I o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. R. J. P. WIMBERLE1, OFFICE HOTEL LAWRENCE, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. 5Jj E. JOHNSON, Mi AT TOENE Y-AT-LA W, Windsor, N. C. Practice in all Conrts. Special si terJ.ion given to Collections. (IE. W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, N. C Off.ce over Harrison's Druf Store. A.DUNN, 32 I A T T O RN E Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services are reauirod DWAED L. TRAY lb, Attorney and Connselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. Honey Loaned on Farm Lands. pAUL V. MATTHEWS, A TTORNE Y-A T-L A W. 2?"Col!ection of Claims a specialty. WHITAKEES, N. C. Compare our Work with that of onr Competitors. ESTABLISHED IN 1865. CHAS M' WALSH' WOEKS, Sycamore St., Peteksbxjkg, Va. Jlonuments, Tomb3, Cemetery Curb ing, &c. All work strictly first class and at Lowest Prices. T ircrrv rTTtvToti twYW FENCING. VASES. &C. Designs sent to any address free. In writing for them please give age of de ceased and h mi t as to price. I Prepay Freight on all Work. Cypress Singles. I Bhall keep a nica lot ol Cypress Shingles ali the year. Prices to suit purchaser. W. H. WHITE. ScotltndNeck, N. C mm JL THE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOURS. Points and Paragraphs cf Things present, fast ana Future. The senatorial contest is made more interesting in North Carolina by Gov ernor Jarvis declaring his candidacy, fie has many admirers throughout the State. With Simmons, Carr, Wad dell and Jarvis in the field every Dem ocrat ought to be able to get the man of his choice ; and The Commonwealth believes that tlie great choice ought to fall on Simmons. It seems to us incon sistent for the Democratic party to choose any other than Simmons. The death of a child in New Berne same two weeks ago under the practice "Christian Science", has brought that delusion prominently before the public and a vigorous denunciation of the practice has followed. The child is said to have died of fever from neglect because its parents and others placed faith in a young woman Miss Hattie Harris Dn who claimed to be able to cure through her "science." Some of the best and most eminent phy sicians in the State have given expres sion in the public prints against the practice ; and the public has grown indignant as the enormity of the evil has been exposed. Marion Butler is still practicing what Carljle would call "vulpine sharpness.' Ho has been in Washington recently trying to make people believe that the Democrats of North Carolina are rene gades. He says that the only way to stay the high-handed outrages of the Democrats is to resort to a shot-gun policy ; and adds that he would not be surprised if "the people" should do so. Who are "the people," pray? Butler tries to Icaye the impression that the Populists and Eepublicans (all one now) pre the people ; but here in North arolina some other folks regard them selves as "the people." Butler talks very glibly about these things at Wash ington, but in North Carolina he is a 'small potato," and everybody knows t, and he knows that everybody knows it. Every one deprecates a serious strike and the one now on in the Pennsylva nia coal mines promises to be quite serious. Irdeed, at this writing three days before we go to press, the news has come that liyes have been .lost in it. President Mitchell, the leader of the strike, has given out a card charg ing the blame upon seven railroads. He says they charge three times as much for carrying a ton of anthracite coal to tidewater as they do for carry ing a ton of bituminous coal ; and this works down the profits so small to the mine owners they can not properly pay the coal diggers for their work, and hence the strike. It Is indeed a seri ous thing to have a hundred thousand people thrown out of employment, and perhaps more than that number are affected by the Btrike. It is hoped that matters will soon be adjusted and the miners can resume' work. A very wise and thoughtful man, one VYXJir sum m. remarked recently that there is too iuch antagonism between ine peupie , tka trtwna and cities and people in the country. The city and town people do not take as mncn miereei, -nnnt.rv neoDle as- they formerly did ; and this in turn has caused the country people to feel indifferent tow ards town people. By some means tne country peopio in some places have come 10 eaier uu a KoiiAl that the town people are th9 "down on them," and the town people have also come to believe that the country people do not entertain me best of feelings towards them. This is all wrong, .xne.cuy town and country are mutually de- .if mn each other. When the country thrives the town and city iL nflln. thrive ; and what is in wb j- ful to one is also neipmi w i The Kt nf feeling ougnt to pre- between the people in the country a. in the towns and citie3 vail and , mintained bv the proper rnis cau w - treatment on all sides. It us al do our best to keep np the best of feeling, for in this is happiness and prosperity for all. y ' ' m . V4mi4 cure. The ono aj w kci , cold in the head Jm matt Chocolate k DajCold Cow." Do Cows Cry ? Robt. A. Mills, in South Florida Sentinel. Dumb animals are said to have a "sign" language of their own by which they make known the emotions of pleasure or pain, and a limited cata logue of wants and sorrows. Recently I bad occasion to dispose of a five-months-old calf, which was taken away about noon and butchered a short distance from my residence. When (he cow came home at night she missed her calf, and although an orphan calf was permitted to suck, she continued to call it by affectionate mooing and look ing. The cow, however, only gave about one quart of milk, instead ot a gallon as formerly. During the night she lowed frequently for her calf, and the next morning when it did not ap pear she exhibited unmistakable signs of grief. The orphan calf was no solace to her. She was driven to the woods with her mate bnt came back and continued lowing until noon. She came inside the enclosure but would not eat grass. Just after dinner a' great commotion was heard in the direction ot where the calf was butchered, made by a number of cattle I awing haying scented the blood. The grief-stricken mother-cow ran to the closed gate and looked be seechingly toward me, as much as to say : "Please open the gate," which, being done, she started on a run to where the other cattle were lowing. In a short time the came walsiog slowly back to the house and was again permitted to come inside the enclosure, when she deliberately took up a posi tion at the kitchen door, wistfully looking, in mute despair, at each mem ber cf the family as they happened to pass her, the tears flowed copiously from her eyes, and there she stood the balance of the afternoon weeping in cessantly, with the same apparent grief that a mother would for a dead child. It really caused me to shed tears ol sympathy lor the poor animal. Wfl raited the cow and she bae always been a petted favorite it may account for Ler grief on this occasion, which evidently must have been more than mere animal instinct. Does it not clostly approximate to reason? We 8re assured by the writer that the above ia true to the letter. When you want a plaasant physic try tbe new remedy, Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are easy to take and pleasant in effect. Price, 25 cents. Samples free at E. T. Whitehead & Co's drug store. LOVE YOUR BUSINESS. Selected. A man can no mora be successful in a business he does not like than a man is happy with a wife he does not love Enthusiasm is the power which im pels men onward In any and every vo cation. Without it men are lethargic. They will drift. But to pull against the tide they are as unable as they are unwilling. Drifting, however, does not win tbe race, either in business or aquatic events. There must be the long pall, the strong pull and the pull with vigor. The antidote for despair is enthusi asm for or pleasure in that business or vocation in which you are embarked. Therefore, if you would succeed, get in love with your business. The quicker you stop a cold or cough tbe less danger there will be of fata) lung trouble. One Minute Cough Cure is the only harmless remedy thai gives immediate results. You will like it. E. T. Whitehead & This year's apple crop in .North America is expected to be the largest ever known. The horticultural experts predictfrom 800,000,000 ttfl.000,000,000 barrels, which will be a supply of more than one barrel for every inhabitant of the United States. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Tto Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of EVEN WITH THEM. The Youth's Companion. An old man's wit is apt to do ary, and that of an old soldier is no excep tion. A vataran who was boasting of his prowess during the civil war was asked, - -1.1 How many of the enemy aia you kiu, anyway?" "How many did I kill? Jlow many did I kill?" repeated the veteran slow ly. "Well, I don't know exactly now many, but I killed as many of them aa they did of me." ThU signature is on everybox of the genuine Laxative firofflo-vunsae -awe. the remedy ttet SENATOR The New Senator From Indiana How He Has Steadilv , Risen Through a Fixed Purpose Formed in His Early Youth. (Concluded from last week.) Uncle Billy Browning's Mistake. On one occasion, Bloomington was to have a meeting of the voters of three counties to close the campaign. It was to be one of the most important events ot tbe contest. The committee sent young Beyeridge. At that time tbe executive of Illinois was Governor Bev eridge. The people of Bloomington thought it was he who was to address them, and they so advertised on sheets of circua size. The morning came. The committee, representing the great ness and dignity of the town and head ed by "Uncle Billy" Browning, went proudly to the station. The train ar rived and from it emerged a slender, white-faced youth. He carried a big valise. Not a soul spoke to him. He approached the first man, who happen-, ed to be Uncle B'lly Browning, and asked for the best Republican hotel. Uncle Billy told him and inquired if he had seen Governor Beyeridge on the train. Just then the youth looked across the road and saw tbe posters an nouncing tbe speaker for the great mass meeting. A case of stage fright was the result and he would have j umped on tbe train again bad it not already moved off. Then he faced the ordeal. "My name is Beveridge," he said, "and I was sent by the State Commit tee to make tbe speech down here to night." "You ?" asked Browning, not be lieving his own eyes ; and tbe other statesmen echoed the inquiry, "You?" The situation was too strong for words. They all formed in lme and marched uptown, nobody saying any thing and the whole line looking like fuqeral procession. Finally, the young man got to a room in the hotel and spent two hours in miserable un certainty, bnt so long as be was there he was determined to - see it out. He went to tbe meeting, which was a large one, but there was no interest in it for him. Browning absolutely refused to introduce him, but some kind soul took pity on the youthful stranger and got bim before the crowd. Browning declares it was the great est speech ever made, and since that day there has never been a Republican campaign in that city during which Mr. Beveridge has nt been the chief orator. .Numerous stories are told in Indian apolis of Mr. Beveridge's struggles to become a lawyer. He tried very hard to get in tbe office of Benjamin Har rison, but did not succeed. Finally, he secured a foothold with another firm. Those first weeks were full of hardship. Literally he lived on one meal a day for more than a month, and it was not until tbe end of three months that he received any pav. Twenty dollars a month was his first salary. During the campaign he gave his services to his party. The legislature was to meet and there was a contest for the position of reading clerk. Young Beveridge was desperately in need of money to live on. A certain editor was to become chief clerk and be would have the appointing of this reading clerk. He did not like Bever idge and said that he would not ap point him if elected. Two others were after the position and each expected to get it. Nobody thought for a moment that Beveridge was in the race. He drew up a paper and went per sonally to every member of the Legis lature whom he bad helped to elect, and secured the signatures of a major- ty. This paper was simply a notice to the prospective chief clerk that if he would not pledge himself to appoint Albert J. Beveridge reading clerk they would vote against his election. The consequence was that the editor quick ly reconsidered his decision and young Beveridge was made reading clerk. And, to quote one who was in the Legislature at that time, "Beveridge read to beat tbe band all through the session." A member of that Legislature was Charles Major, the author of "When Knighthood Was in Flower." Although a leading Democrat, while Beveridge was a Republican worker, they became very friendly- : mr. beverioge's genius for organiz- ATION. With a natural aptitude for public life, it is not surprising that the young lawyer should have extended his pow er and ambition. Those who know Mr. Beveridge best say that though he is an able orator his real forte is organis ation. In one of the recent campaigns The One Day Com Cure. Krtnntt'a rhnralalr Laxative Ouinine for cold in the bead and sore tbroet. Children tak like candj. BEVERIDGE. in Indiana he carried this to a point which has probably never before been reached In American politics. It was a kind of endless chain scheme for every county, by which tbe candidates were kept going over the ground, one after the other, until not a spot or a subject - remained uncovered. It would take considerable space to ex plain the method fully, but it simply kept everybody working systematically for the party, and it not osly reached every voter but it pounded Republican politics into'him from morning until night. In this campaign, from Sep tember 16 till November 9, Beveridge averaged only three and a half hours in bed each night. He was able to show this remarkable endurance large ly from the fact that he has made it a point to lake two months' vacation, in which he dees absolutely nothing, every year. When the opportunity ot reaching tbe United States Senate came the con ditions were not altogether favorable. Tbe other United States Senator, the United States District Attorney, the Attorney-General of tbe State, the Col lector of Customs and the Minister to Austria all lived in tne same citjr as Mr. Beyeridge, and every precedent demanded that the Senator to be chos en should come from some other part of the State. But Mr. Beveridge's or ganization was perfect. The young men worked for it. Business leaders and workmgmen gave up their duties and devoted their efforts to his candid, acy. .Tbeie was no accident whatever in his election. It was all arranged for and thought out from start to finish, and it ended in complete victory. A close friend ot Mr. Beveridge is Mr. GeorgrW. re; kin.', a prominent official ot a gre .t iiftj iasur.me o com pany. Like the .?'cn-v.ir, hn has won a high position e;y i 'Mo -aik! hum a low round of ih j Luiir. "I met Mr. Beveiido thirteen or fourteen yc.ir in Indianapolis' said Mr. Perkim. "I went down to that city from Chicago on business and accompanied a parly of men under the direction ol Volaoy T. Malott, on a trip on the Belt Line Railroad. Bev eridge was on the train. '"You two youngsters ought to know each other,'" said Mr. Malott in intro ducing us, 'and you ought to get along together first rate.' "And we have do ne so ever since While I was in the West and si nee I have been in the East we have corres ponded regularly and met frequently. I was in Chicago when the Senator was chosen by the seperate branches of the Legislature and be wired me to come down and see him elected by tbe whole body tbe next day, and I did bx alter he was elected tbe Senator made one of the nerviest speeches I ever heard a man make. It was thorough ly characteristic. He said to the legis lators that he was not the Senator of Indiana, but that he was a 'Senator of the United Stafes from Indiana' ; that he would serve the country first and the State next. When he said this, you could tec shivers chase themselves up and down some Legislators' backs. Then he went on to esphia that one State depended on tbe others, and that ne served his State best who best served tbe Union. This made everything all right and the fuuetion ended as it be gan, with an ovation. "I was probably the first man to whom tb.3 Senator mentioned his plan of a trip to the Philippines. He had been staying oyer night at my house in New York and we were walking across Twenty-third Street on our way down town. THE REASON FOR THE TRIP TO THE - . PHILIPPINES. " 'I am gcing to the Philippines he said suddenly, 'I have thought it all over. Every Senator who can go ought to visit those islands. I know that very few of them can do so, but I can and I shall. I want to understand the situation when I take my seat in tbe Senate.' "With in a week be was on his way there. When he returned, he finlshad writing bis now famous Philippine speech in my house. I had been down town late and when I got home I was not surprised to see a light in his rooir, j " 'Get out of here he shouted ; c me back in an hour "I came back and he had finished writing the speech. In addition to h'.s industry, which is appalling, he is a very serious man. I ' came to realize The Kind Yon Have Ainjs Ecg 'his in a rather amusing wry One night at a reception which IheSenstor and I attended soon after his election, the hostess said in mock stirpriwe : " 'Are you Senator Beveridge the Senator from Indiana?' "The Senator bosved modestly. "'It hardly seems possible 1 Why, you are a "mere beardless youth !' "'Madam replied Mr. Beveridge without a smile, 'I shave.' "There is an incident connected with the Senator's legal career that never has been written. The lh insurance companies were fighting tbe Indiana tax law several years ago and had able lawyers looking after our iri(e.e?ts But it was an important matter and I asked Mr. Beveridge's opinion. One day I got a letter from 'Mr. Beveridge inclosing a brief. He sa'd he was con vinced that the course we were con sidering was not the easiest that could be devised. The brief hit me hard, but I was afraid to trust my owu judg ment, so I sent it down to an official lu another company, Baying that 'It seemed to me it was a strong brief, but I was too close a friend of the lawyer to give an impartial opinion.' "Half an hour later I was called to the telephone. The insurance man was at the other end of the wire. " 'I don't care he said, 'whether that Indiana lawyer is a friend of j'ours or not. We've got to get bim into the case as quick as we can do it.' "We did, and he won it, too. "Perhaps another little story, not known to half a dozen persons, will illustrate a different phase of Mr. Bev eridge's character. I was present when the incident took place. It was after his fame as a constitutional lawyer bad come East. "Mr. Beveridge was iu my office when one of tbe best known lawyers in New York came in. Ke called to offtr the Indiana man a partnership in his firm. Tbe offer meant wealth within a few years. "What did Mr. Beyeridge do? "He laughed at him. 'I don't want to be rich he said '1 h ive other am bitions I' " . In India, the ! udj;' ,' ':!?e, thous ands die became tti c..iiut obtain food. In Amej icm, the Inn 1 of plenty man' suffer and :-ie t.enatiMi they can not digest the 1 .! they eat. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure dmflriw what you eat. It instantly relieve-" mid radically cures all stomach tiooMes. lu. I. Whitehead & Co. J'TfU KM! A newspaper can say nice things about a man and bis whole family for two long years, and then incur their lifetime enmity in one short week by a seeming slight. Yes, it's a fact ; and you can hurrah for a candidate, back his friends, cuss his enemies and make a big fool cf yourself all the way through, without a Ihanic in the end. only to find that when you are a candi date that he is "out o' pol'tics." But there is one man that does not forget you, and that's the man you opposed. Anderson Intelligencer. Have you a sense of fullness in the region of your stomach after eating? If so you will be benefited by using Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets. They also cure belching and sour stomach. They regulate the bowels too. Price, 2o cents. Soid by E. T. Whitehead & Co. Druggists. The advertising dentist may not fill a long felt w tnf, but be fills many en aching void. Chinefe are dangerous enemies, for they are treacherous. That's why nil counterfeits of DeWitt Witch Hazel Salve are dangerous. They look like DeWltt's, but, instead of the all-healing witch hazel they all contain ingredients liable to irritate the skin and cause blood poisoning. For piles, injuries and skin diseases use original and gen uine DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. E. T. Whitehead &. Co. 3 NERVOUSNESS, An American Disease. Dr. S. Weir Mitchell is au thority for the statement that nerv ousness is the characteristic mal ady of the American nation, and statistics show that nerve deaths number one-fourth of all deaths recorded, the mortality being main ly among young people. Johnston's Sarsaparilla QUART BOTTLE. is the grand specific for this great American disease, because it goes straight to the source of the weak ness, building up health and strength by supplying rich, abund ant food and pure Wood to the wmuwt tissues, rouainff the liver to activity and regulating all the organs ox we Doay. "TheHeUgaa Dn 0s." n UvtrettMthefamouHttUUvwpUla. age. For sale by E.T. Whitehead & Co., Scotland Neck, N. C. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. TTTHIS MOIIRRV SPlinni. ni t.A.. - -w."v v t;nui hand ami Business Training ranks mong the foremost educational !ostita tions of its kind in Americn. It pares young men and young woman for business careers at a mall cost, and places them in nnnition fn Htm further information send for our Illus tr.ited Catalogue and new publication, entitled "Busine?s Education." J. M. Resslfr, President. WILMINGTON & WELDOFR. R7" AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING rOUTH. DATED i July 22. 1900. 6S o . e e e'5 56 850 A. M. V. M. p. M. A. M. P. If. Leave Weldou 1160 s bs Ar. Rocky Mt. 1 00 9 62 Leave Tarboro 12 21 0 00 Lv. Rocky Mt. ...1 1)5 " "52 "fl"7 " i'i'5 "lS ft Leave Wilson 1 69 10 25 7 10 6 67 3 4 Leave 8olma 3 65 11 10 Lv. Fnyettevllle 4 80. 12 22 Ar. Florence 7 25 2 24 P. M. A. M. Ar. Goldnboro " 766 "" Lv. GoldHboro 4 45 g 39 Lv. Magnolia 7 m 4 m Ar. Wilmington g e g P. M. A. U. P. M. TRAINS GO I NO NORTH. S if SJ i 55 S'i if.?.85 . A. M. P. M. Lv. Florence 9 60 7 ! Lv. Fnyettevllle 12 20 V 41 Leave Selnia 1 50 10 64 Arrive Wilson 2 35 11 33 a ym p'."m". ATM. Lv. VV .iilnprton ; 0 35 Lv. Jatrnolia 8 30 Lv. GoldBboro 4 60 9 37 1 2 M v'. m a'."m" p."'m. p."m" lave Wilson 2 35 5 33 11 33 10 45 1 18 Ar. IJock.v Mt, 3 30 0 10 1 2 07 11 23 1 53 Arrive Tarboro U 4(J Leave Tarboro 12 21 Lv. rtociVy M t.' :V".io iTitV " Ar. Weld on 4 32 1 00 P. M. A. M. T. M. fUaily except Monday, cent Sunday. JDaily ex- Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Yadkm Division Main Line Train loaves Wilmington, 9 00 a. m., arrives h"ayn-tovillo 12 05 p. m., leaves Faylt ville 12 2) p. m., arrives San lord" 1 46 p. in. Returning leaves San ford 2 3f p. m., srriyes Fayetteville 3 41 p. m., leaves Fayetteville 3 46 p. m., arrives Wilmington 6 40 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennetttville Branch Train leaves Bennettsville 8 05 a. m., Maxton 9 10 4. m.. Red Springs 9 40 a. m., Hope Mil's 10 32 a. m., arrives Fayetteville 10 55 a. m. Returning leaves Fayette ville 4 40 p. m., Hope Mills 4 55 p. m., lied Springs b 35 p. m., Maxton C 11 p. m., arrives Bennettsville 7 15 p. m. Connections at Fayetteville with train No. 78, at Maxton with tbe Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with tbe Red Springs and Bow more Railroad, at Sanford with tbe Seaboard ir Line and Southern Railway, at Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte llailroad. 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 G :57 p. m.. Kins ion 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 Sun day. Trains on Washington Branch leave Washington 8 :10 a. m. and 2 :30 p. m.( arrive Parmele 9 :10 a. m. and -.1 09 p. in., returning leave Parmele 9 :3t ... tn. and 6:30 p.m., arrive Washington 11 :00 a. m. and 7 :iu p. m.,daily ex cept Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro, N. C, daily except Sunday 5 :30 p. m., Sunday, 4 :1a p. m., arrives J Ivmouln 7 :40 p. m., 6 :10 p. m., Returning, leaves Ply mouth daily except Sunday, 7 :50 s. tn i und Sunday 9 :00 a. m., arrives Tarboro 10:10 a.m., 11 :00 a. tn. Train on Midland N. C. Branch leaves Goldsboro daily, except Sunday. 5 :30 a. m., arriving Smithfield 6 :40 a. in. Returning leaves Smith field 7:34) a. m. ; arrives at Goldsboro 9 :00 s. n , Trains on Nashville Branch leae Rocky Mount at 9 :30a. m., 3 :40 p. ra , 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 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 dally, except Sunday, 11 :40 a. m. and 4 :zd p. m. Return ing leaves Cilnton at b :45 a.m. and 2 :50 a. m. Train No. 78 makes close connection at Weldon for all points North daily, all rai1 via Richmond. H. M. EMERSON, Geu'l Pass. Asrent. J. R. KENLY, Genl Manager. T. M. EMERSON. Traffic Manager. ror urar :eHev ror Drunkenness and Drug Using. PIM 1 writ aa. . Ci 11 1 in im it mm 1 1. m If eonftd lil. THE RKLKT INSTITUTE, 0or Illustrated Handbook Sent Free tin t:equei. Greensboro, IN. C TO THE DEAF. A rich lady, cured ot her Deafness and Noises in tbe Head by Dr. Nichol 8nnV Artificial Ear Drums, gare $10, COO to his Inst'Lute, so that deat peo pie unable to procure the Eur Drum may have them fire.-' Address No 9467-c. The M -holson It s Hole 780 Eighth Ayenur. Nw v-rir it. a 11 u I if M m 1: - 1 -if 1 - At. 2 V
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 27, 1900, edition 1
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