Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Jan. 10, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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I a A r r IF YOU ARE A HOSTLER VOD V1I.L ADV32IiTISE VOL R Business. Commonw: n S. v i li '., v ' vj la j. sr:..:,i is to E. K. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCR1P HON PRICE $1.00. Sexd Yocr Adyektiseml-st IN XC, Tiim Or pat i" VOL. XVII. Sew Series Vol. 4. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1901. NO. 2. 4 6 f3 -1 ESi .1-. M ! 1 ' :' V 7 i: -3 lffi? Ths father? J:r?? Gone for the P. snssi motnerr Aione p vlth her surfer rT in?: child. 0 J-fe? Will the doc !p."ryf.iii.vvij never 3c?'2 ccme ? IJ. hen there M' " is croup in Mi7 the house "rf you can't 3 i-, re the doc- A f r Ji t ter cuick enoaph. It's 1 . i Don't make such a mis- f "a r4 a hie. Always iieep en ki hand a dollar bonis of (4 It cures the croup at once. Then vhen any one in the family comes dovn with a hard cold or cough a few doses cf the Pectoral will cut short the attack at once. fWs T4 a miserable cold; the 50e. r I size is better for a cold that has been nar.2in2 on. 'Al'out "5 ypars ajro I came near a cur-id with Ayer's CUerry Peotona, jr tiaco vhic2i tin ic I have kept Ayer'3 L H mead tliaja to il aiv friend." g i CD.ilAiaT:. , I j Jan.lC.180D. r.ristol.Tt.-:, t 2 Wrire the Tortor. If vott taw as? feVl I romp! Tviiut-jver RU'l dfEiro tho I j 1.1 fceeiy. AU,;,.-- ID'"'" A 9 f "OffiCK-O tha Ht;uon Building. Oihce h.jnrri !rori !'!.)! o'clock : 2 to o'clock, ; m. " SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. JpK. J. P. WDU3EKLK1, OFFICE HOTEL LAWRENCE, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. s B. JOU.:srfON, I f J a I ATTOP.MEY-AT-LAW, I WiND.soi:, N. C. I Practice in Jill Courts. Special ttenf.ion given fo Coileciioas. I surgeon Dentist, 1 Snfielt. IT. C f; Ofiice over Hai-risoa's Druf Store. h$Jj A. HUNK, j A T T 0 R N E Y-J T-L A W. I Scotland Neci:, N. C. I rrficises wherover his services jure s E DWARD L, TIcAV fa, Atiorucy end Coni2?r.lcr at L-'i-w, HALIFAX, N. C. Y&"tfonry Lo-tned on Farm Lands, pE. F. II AliTIIUS, I PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. I OrFJCE IX IIotkl Lawkkxce. Scotland Necf, N. C. Rf slors VitaHfy, Lost Vigor asd Manhood Jnra Impotcncy, Nifrlit Emissions, I ory nil wasting disease 'MtT all Cilects of seif-aburso Loss of Mens. es. or v. Ttli3 i.iuk plow to pale n-ZrJ cheeks und restores the Ei Sfcis.tii-e oS youtb. Jv mail : ? 5Gc nfr box. O lioxf5; for S2.oO,vitli our banka'bla g-aurantee to care cr refund the money paid, tiend for circular lenacpycl our bankaoia guarantee socd. In EXTRA STRENGTH I (VELLOW liABEI.) Tositivcly Biiaraatp-cl cr.re for IiO?s of Power, aricocele, Lndevelopsd or Shrunken Ors-raas, Paresis, Locomotor Ataxia, Nervons Prostra tiou, Hysteria, Fits Iasacitr. Paralysis arid tho Kesnlts of KxcrsMvc Use of Tobacco, Oiinm or Liquor. By mail in plain package, $1.00 a ox, 6 for $5.00 witli or bankable g-uar-utee bond to cure in SO days or refund roney paid. Address NERVSTA MEDICAL CO. JJijnton&Jackscn Sts., CH2CAGO, tUi For sale lv E. T. Whitehead & Co. feaotland Xe.-k. X. C. tan sail spi s Use nothiivi but Macaair's Bleofi rral Lner I'm. W. IT. nrPNAiE, Tarboro. X. C. Dr i. T. V HITI.'HEAT) ifc CO., Tl tf. Scotland Neck X. C. TO CURE A COLD IK ONE DAY - ake Laxatiye Bromo Quinine. All ruggists refund the money if it fails o care. E. W. Grove's signature h on cn box. zoc. e isi "vcu -Uf $&j K-M e. - , .1 . .. . 6 FILLS CTS. THE SDITOE'S L3SISUEE HOURS. Points and Paragraphs of Things Present, Past ana Future. Half-cent coins will doubtless come into use. as the demand for them is growing. The Saturday Evening Post makes the iollowing observation : "Ths profits of fill business are now largely in small fractions. It is the volume multiplying these fractions A'Lich produces the great returns. So genuine r.nd general is this tendency that a demand has arisen for the coin age of the half-cent. Tne conduct of business oa the finest lines is even splitting the penny. 'One of the leading banking author ities puts it this way : 'To add tne half-cent to our coins would increase (he profits of small dealers and the pos si b!o economies to that class cf people who ars obliged to make small pur chases. To save a cent each day amounts to 5p3.G5 a year.' "On the one side we have the half cents and fractions of cents making he millions, and on the other side we have the millions calling for the half cents. Surely th 3 is a great genera don, and money U its profit." "There might .be some charity In such treatment, but is there any mer cy 9" Such is the comment of the William ?to:i Enterprise on the condition of the county home, or poor house, of .Martm county, and the treatment of the inmates. The statement is made :hat where the colored inmates are Lept there are large cracks under the doors "where the cold, biting winds of the winter season can pour in on the occupants, subjecting them to rheuma tism, pneumonia, and other fatal disease;-1, thereby causing more expense Jor the county ' rr' Etr " ment is made th-i the bedding is not fit for ue, and that the beds are scan tily covered. Ths Enterprise makes a plea that the county ought at 'east furnish the nged, poor and infirm with a much comfort as the Stats pro vides for its criminals. Tho writer said that on his way to town he met 1 he keeper of the house well loaded with his drams and in no condition to have charge of the poor people there. Wherever there is neglect of such per sons as the county assumes to care for, it ought to remedied. . The Xorfolk Landmark, in a single pr.ngraph under the heading "Xorth Carolina," says : "The decrease in the volume of the liquor trafhc in many sections of North Carolina is remarkably great." And it is indeed a cosummation greatly to be wished that the decrease m the traffic should grow and grow and grow, until the great and devastating curo should be unknown with in oar borders. Many people who formerly have been slow to speak with disfavor concerning the liquor business are gradually changing their attitude toward it; and would be glad to have it wiped out for good. Only a few nights ago, smca Chiist mas, details were being given to a com pany of several men in Scotland Xeck concerning the killing of a man else where in the State on Christmas day, when a gentleman of fine business ca pacity and who seldom remarks about what he does not feel concerns him, said, "No doubt whiskey had something to do with it." And so it baa come to be regarded by most peopla. When ever and wherever trouble occurs of fussing and shooting and the like, m ;st people think at once that it grew out c! liquor selling or drinking in some way. And in too many instances it is tine. Oh, that the blighting curse of the -traffif. were known in tho good State of Xorih Carolina no more ! "' HOVTS THIS? We oiler One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cureH bv Hail's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Trops., Tol edo. O. We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Teaux, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Waldikg, Kinnax & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. ' Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blooi and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. . Hall's Family Pill are the best. NINETEENTH CENTURY. A GLIMPSE AT ITS WOSE. Wonderful Things Indeed. Charlotte Observer. Hand in hand, they die together two aged beings, the Year and the Century ; both venerable, but one im measurably more time-worn than the other ; the one th& child, the other its great-great-grandsire. And with their death is born twin brothers, but one destined to far outlive the other the New Year and the Twentieth Century. A century one hundred years is a long period as man counts, but to God, Himself from Everlasting to Ever lasting, and to Whom one day is as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day, a century is but a email thimbleful dipped from the Ocean of Time. But from our human point of view it is a century of wonderful progress. If there were a fair in honor of the Ases of Time, and the Centuries should come to it, exhibiting their jewels aud crowning glories, the blue-ribbon should go to the Nineteenth (A. D.) next after the o"ier the Century, in deed, that all ' Loth era of time date forward to or bacfc to, that Century of the Star and th-4Wiso Men, of the Shepherds and the Angel Song, ot the Manger and the Cross ; that heaven kissod Century that gave an Ark to a sic -wrecked world, a Redeemer to the planet Earth and its people. Two nations which have made ladders ot opportunity and climbed highest toward the pinnacle of progress are our own country in the Occident and Japan in the Orient. The United States in 1800 numbered 5,000,000 in habitants; in 1900 they number 76, 000,000 a gain of 71,000,000. In 1800 the United States occupied 827,814 square miles of 'territory ; In 1900 they extend over an area ot 3,537,000, not counting some islands of the tea, the title for rational possessions of which is yet in dispute. In 1826 there were four miles of railroad track in the Uaittd States ; in 1909, 243;0CO miles. In 1800 the majority of the people of our country lived along the Atlantic seaboard within 50 miles of the coast. There were no great cities and the far mer and planter were tbe men of in fluence. Tibere were a few country mangion's like George Washington's Mount Vernon and Thorna3 Jefferson's Monticello, out tbe average farm house had only one large room serving for kitchen, dining and sitting room. This room had a gaping mouth in the shape of a huge fireplace, which ate up wood by the cord. Over this the daily meals were cooked. The kettle hung from tho great, smutty crane and sang to contented sleep the house cat that coiled upon the rag carpet woven by the thrifty housewife and her dau ghteis. The wooden trencher was in evidence on the table, for china dishes were still scarce, and ths napkin was a useful institution, because the folk had not come into general use. They ate breakfast at nisrht, in those good old days of yore, by candle-ligbt or fire light, and dinner at 11 12 o'clock was. a little late for the midday meal. A writer in Everybody's Magazine des cribes a good dinner at John Adams' New England home as consisting of a pudding of corn meal with molasses and butter, vea! and bacon, and a neck of mutton with vegetables. Sugar, cut from a cake, was used when company was to dinner. Ordinarily a "long sweet" ot molasses or honey sufficed. Cider was a universal drink. Tbe women spun and wove, and clothed the household. Plant life furnished the needed dyes. The juice of the goldenrod, mixed with indigo and alum, made a brilliant green, the poke berry yielded its crimson blood, and petals oi the iris violet. The lighting plant of those pioneer days was the tal low candle mould. A few have lapped oyer into the twentieth century and many of us have seen -them keeping company in the garret with the dis carded grandfather's clock and grand mother's spinning. Flint, steel and tinder made the fires; it was slow work to start a ilame, and a family disaster if it ever went out. Matches came later. In 1800 families of from twelve to twenty children were common. The forefathers had enough arrows in the quiver to transfix a whole troop ot ad versities that might come m old age. The generally existing present dread of a large family came along with the rest of the progress of the eentuiy's end. fashion, however, was a simpler, stranger and le3S fickle tyrant than to day, and daughters were not so ex pensive as now. Only one boy out of a family went to coliege the one of Cut this out and take it to E. T. Whitehead & Co's. drng store and get a free sample of Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets, tbe best physic They also cure disorders of the stomach biliousness and headache. studious tastes who was cut out for a minister or lawyer and boys were lees expensive than in these days of the nation's luxury and comfort. In 1800 to go from a North Carolina village to Philadelphia or New York would be like a trip across Russia and Siberia or to the North Pole in 1900. Letters were written when somebody died or was born, as the lowest rate of postage under 40 miles was 8 cents and it took- about a month to get from Maine to Georgia. The stage cosch was the means of transportation and roads were bad, whenever there were any. It was a simple, isolated life the peo ple lived then ; but it was a beautiful idyllic, bucolic, pastoral life, enchant ing to us in its dim distance down the colonnades of the past. With the advent of the railroad, which annihila tes distance, and tho telegraph and telephone, which annihilate time, there has been born in human kind a sad, serious tendeney to flock together : The nineteenth century has been mar ked with an exodus from country to city, and it has not proved an exodus to a Promised Land, From the Bab el of Nimrod and the Babylon of Dan iel, the Sodom of Lot, the Nineveh of Jonah, the Rome ot Nero to the great municipalities of today, cities have been comfortable, convenient, conviv ial, affording the greater opportunities, producing wealth, but tending to be bad. And the worse they get the more they draw upon the ruddy, sturdy youth of the country to repair their depleted manhood, bat these, too, or their children soon feel the effects of luxurious environment. The century has been marked by wonderful strides in methods of trans portation and in invention in general. In the last three-quarters of tbe cen tury the globe has been girdled with an iron net work of 450,000 miles of track. The locomotive is the most magnificent engine of power. It is the realization in iron and steel ot the fabled Pagassus of the Greeks and Ro mans. From Fulton's little Clermont has evolved the modern liner, the ocean greyhound, the Oceanic, the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, the Deutchlacd. The inventions of the period are al most countless. Among the greater ones are the sewing machine, tne Jacquard loom, the blast furnace, reaping, harvesting, binding and threshing machines, the Hoe perfect ing press, the typewriter, the match, the Roentgen ray, a pefected telescope that brings tbe moon within one hun dred miles and renders the discovery of a new star a marvel, celluloid, il-1 luminating gas, electric lights, electric motor, aluminum, India rubber, the telegraph, the telephone, tbe stetho scope, the spectroscope, the car coupler with variations, the Zeppelin airship, the producer ot this editorial the linotype etc., etc. Truly the nine teenth century must have been that time on which the vision cf the ancient seer, overleaping centuries and millen niums, rested when he wrote : "Many shall run to and fro, and krowledge shall be increased." A hemisphere has been chopped in twain at Suez ; a hole bored through the Alps with an auger at Mont Cenis and St. Gathard ; the widest rivers crossed oyer with suspension bridges and under with tunnels; houses built 30 stories high veritable modern Babels and their tops reached with elevators. Marvelous things for enor mity of achievement have been accom plished by the actiyity of the human ants that swarm over the globe. But more wonderful still for marvel has been the search after tbe discoyery of the little things. The science of bac teriology has been established. The microbes specific diseases have been found to exist in an army of hostile, amphibious germs, swimming In Red SeaB of blood or crawling about on the dry land of muscle and tissue, bent or murder. By inoculation with antido tal lymph, another army of unseeable, infiuitessimal germ-soldiers, is sent to the rescue, and awful Thermcp yla?s, Marathons, Sadowas, Waterloos, Get tysburgs and San Juans are fought al! at once in the in'aidt oi folks, and yet the only way to see the raging battle is to glue one's eye to a 10,000 power minifying microscope. Lister, Pasteur Koch and their schools have become famous in medical science, in the nineteenth century. In 1800, atheism and infidelity were rampant and attacked the strongholds of religion. Christianity was of a rigid kind, the Puritan aud the Presbyterian and the Wesleyan being some of the strongest types. The influence of tbe French Revolution led to much of the infidelity of this country, but this has, during the one hundred years, grad ually died out, and a new type of in- If troubled with a weak digestion, belching, sour stomach, or if you feel dull aiter eating, try Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. : Price, 25 cents. Samples free at E. T. White head & Go's drugstore. V fidelity usurped its place in 1900. Ex ternal infidelity has given place to in ternal infidelity. Christendom is as sailing its great Book, eliminating its inspiration, its infallibilty, its super naturalness. Faith's enemies are of its own household. But it still has its defenders, as in 1800 and in all ages of time, but their battle is a harder one as their foe i3 a subtler one. We have barely touched the outer edge of the nineteenth century transactions and happenings in the above pen marks. It would take until the end of the twentieth, perhaps, to do full jus tice to the nineteenth. And as we make an ending here, we bid farewell to the old and hail the new. The King is dead ; long live the King. Tanger From Overeating. Physical Culture. It is well known to few medical men that many cases of insanity are direct ly due to overeating and the consequent absorption into the circulation to toxic mitters from tbe intestinal tract, and melancholia.whether in mi!d or severe form, is generally due to thiis cause. Violent paroxysms of temper, whether in children or adults, are olten proper ly referable to a bad state ot the blood from this auto toxemia, as aie indeed tbe exceedingly exuberant spirits of old or young at times. Just as we observe in alcoholic poisoning, some indivi duals are made temporarily jolly and good natured ; others are made ugly and unreasonable. In view of this condition of affairs isn't it rather a wise plan for us all to consider rather tbe needs of tbe or ganism for food than the mere ques tion of palate tickling, to aim to eat good instead of bad food and enough of it that Is, not too much to have the conditions about right when we take our meals ; in brief to try and treat our bodies decently even though we act from a purely sensual point of view? In nc other way can we secure the highest possible degree of pleasure on the average, while by acting thus sensibly we may enjoy practical im munity from disease. Tbe more exercise we take under proper conditions, the more we are ex posed to cold, and the clearer we keep trom excess in clothing the more we may eat ; hence, in order to enjoy the fullest measure of table pleasures, we must live actively, wear as little clothing as is consistent with comfort and do considerable "roughing" some times called hardening. With all this we should take our meals at times wben tfae bo(jy or orain ia not oyertired, and when we "have leisure to digest," and, of all things, we should never eat unless we are hungry. To eat without aa appetite is self abuse of the mo :t Uipid sort, since it affords no pleasure and is productive ot disease. NIGHT WAS HER TERROR. "I would cough nearly all night long," writes Mrs. Cbas. Applegate, oi Alexandria, Ind., "and could hardly oad that if I walked a block I would cough frightfully and spit blood, but, wheu all other medicines failed, three $1.00 bottles ot Dr. King's New Dis covery wholly cured me and I gained 58 pounds." It's absolutely guaran teed to cure Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe, Bronchitis and all Throat and Lung Troubles. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free at E. T. Whitehead & Co's drug store. BEGINNING EARLY. "Shall I have to get married when I grow up?" asked little Flossie one day of her mother. "Just as you please, dear," answered her mother, with a smile. "Most wo men do however." "Yes ; I suppose so," continued the little girl musingly, ''and I think I'd better start and look out for a hus band now. They say that Aunt Jane has been at it for 20 yean and hasn't caught cue yet." Exchange. WORKING 24 HOURS A DAY. There's no rest for those tirelfiss lit tle workere Dr. King's New Life Pills. Millions are always busy, cur ing Torpid Liver, Jaundice, Bilhous ness, Fever and Ague. They banish Sick Headache, drive out Malaria. Never gripe or weaken. Small, taste nice, work wonders. Try them. 25c at E. T. Whitehead & Co's. drug store. The Ieyees of both sides of the Mis sissippi are of sufficient extent that if they were built in a single straight line they would be about 1,300 miles long or long enough to 6tretch the greater part of the distance between New Orleans and New York. SAYS HE WAS TORTURED. "I suffered such pain from corns I could hardly walk," writes H. Robin son, Hillsborough, Ills., "but Bucfe len's Arnica Salve completely cured them." Acts like magic on sprains, bruises, cuts, sores, scalds, burns, boils, ulcers. Perfect healer o! skin diseases and nifa3. Cure guaranteed by E. T. i Whitehead & Co. 25c. ?E Eappsnings IToted In A Weei. CULLED FFtOM EXCHANGES. The South port Standard says that a Menhaden factory will soon be oper ated there, employing 100 persons and that the enterprise will be valued ! $100,000. The Standard says : "The Menhaden fish is commonly calied 'fat back' in this locality, and is not considered good for food, but tLe product is oil, and the fish is manu factured for this product and the scrap which is giound into a fine fertil izer highly esteemed by tanners." Tbe Chatham Record, moralizing on Chistmas excesses properly and point edly ssys : "More crimes were commited and more casualties occurred last week than during any ether week of the whole j'ear. And such is the case dur ing tbe Christmas holidays every year, it is so strange and so inconsistent that the week, during which is com memorated the nativity of the Prince of Peace, should be so desecrat ed. Many persons, who at other time are temperate, indulge at Christmas in excesses ot which they should be and doubtless are ashamed." A BOY ACCIDENTALLY KILLED Henderson Herald : Mr. William R o w e, aged about 18 years, accidentally shot himself Satur day hunting near Louisburg. The load of shot passed into his head under the right jaw. He lived only a short while. A Young Lady Shot by Accident. Union letter to Roanoke-Chowan Times : On the 20th of Dec. a very sad tragedy occurred near our little town Miss Bessie Holloinan, daughter of Mrs. Bettie Holloman was accident ly shot by Mr. Dot Hoggaid while tampering with a pistol. After linger ing a week she peacefully departed this life. The entire community extend their despest sympathy to the bereaved mother and relatives. COURTSHIP BY CORRESPONDENCE. Graham Tribune : Last night Mis? Saltie Ray left Graham for Bisbee, Arizona, to bacome the wife of Col J. M. McCoy. Mis. Ray had never met her intended, but through correspondence formed such a close attachment for her fianc9 that she decided to heed his many callings and travel across a long geography les son to enter a now home. The exchange of photos just pre vious to Miss Ray's departure resulted in mutual favor, and her many friends here hope to learn of a happy union. Col. McCoy is a prosperous railroad man. Paid a Salary to Whistle. Wilmigton Star Mr. J. Keener Weslbrook, of this city, who is a mar vel at whistling, has recently received a very flattering offer from Keith, the. Boston theatrical manager, and wii) likely accept it, dividing his time with a chain of 'play -houses in the North and the Edison Phonograph Company, for which ho will make records for re production on machines. Some time ago Mr. Westbrook whistled "The Mocking Bird" for one of the mana gers of the Edison Phonograph Com pany who was stopping for his health at Southern Pines, N. C, and recogni tion ol Mr. Westbrook's talent led to the engagement noted above. Historic Church. . Wilmington Star : A Star representa tive was told yesterday of the comple tion for the third time o' a new house of worsnip for the congregation of Keith Presbyterian church, on Samp pon road, iu Pender county near the residence of Mr. A. C. Wrd. TLe Church was established in 1817 and its one ot the oldest in Pender county and this section of the Sute. A new house of worship was dedicated in the year of the founding of the church : another in 1848, and now still another at tbe beginning of the new year and century. Through the instrumentality of Mrs R. W. Collins, ot Bisrgaw,a new Cornish organ bas been installed for use in the church and through her per sistent work it bas all been paid for. Eev. D. P. McGeachy is pastor cf the congregation. A FIREMAN'S CLOSE CALL. "I struck to ray engine, although every joint ached and every nerve was racked with pain," writes C. W. Bel lamy, a locomotive fireman, of Bur lington, Iowa., "I was weak and pale, without any appetite and all run down. As I was about to give up, I got a bot tle of Electric Bitters and, after taking it, I felt as well as I ever did lm my life." Weak, sickly, run down people always gain new life, strength and vi& or from their use. Try them. Satis-' taction guaranteed by E. T. White head & Co. Price 50 cents. 5? indigestion dyspepsia biliousness and the hundred and one simi lar ills caused by impure blood or inactive liver, quickly 3rield to the purifying and cleansing properties contained ia i? rasa? 5 W QUART DOTTLEJ. It cures permanently by acting naturally on all organs of the j body. Asa blcod-clcanf-t-r, flesh- builder, and health-restorer, it has no equal. Put us in Quart Bottles, and sold r.t $ each. "THE MSCHIOAN DKUCi COMPANY," Octroi:, IV.ieh. Take Llvereltts lor I.ivcr I! Is. 35c. For sale by E. T. Whitehead it Co. Scotland Xcek, X. C. WILMIKBTON&WFLDiJ; R.II. AND Bi! ANCilES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE railroad company of south' caj.olina. coxd:;nvki h irsmn.r:. TRAINS GOING . Ol TIf. dated ;H July 2-'. v.wo. id: , c ' won . 1.1.11'. M . Leave Weldou Ar. Rocky Mt. Leave Tarboro Lv. Itcrky .'.i !. Leme Wilnou Leave. Seltmi Lv. Kii.vettevi'li Ar. Florence f. I .-1 5 f.7 is f.J 2 -10 Ar. GoI'IkIx'to Lv. (Jolilslioro Lv. MmhiiiiIUi Ar. Wilmington ; -f. 7 f 1 ti t'11 u no (1 u A. M.lJ'. M. a. m. !. 1.'. . i, r.:.' 1 1 rii; s ,'),, j 1 (hi ji : I 1 i 1 I ! ...1 ' : 'Vffr 1 r:i hi 7 in 11 4 :: 1 I 7 it. -,r. m. a. 7 Tn'i ,1'. M. 1 TK.A 1 N S ifi i i Is ; "no 1 ; 1 i ! . A. M. I V. M. j Lv. Florence '.i ir" 7 Lv. KiiyeLtr-viiii; : . LM !i I Leo ve Kcliii.l 1 60 j l'l.VI Arrive Wil.-'.oii ;:: j ji :;:t j iv."m'' Lv. W..niR?rton 7 t o. Lv. VuyT.oH.a s 1 1 HI Lv. MlilK!ir j J .j ."tij li :;7; iv.".M .' I i .T." m '. ! iv. "m". Leave VI'.v(.n 2:1.".. t, a: 11 ::t, 111 1 H Ar. Ko.ili.v lit, 3 : 1; 1 l ' .; 11 1 Ki 1 ; Arrive Tnrlioro 1,.l Leave Tarboro 12 21 I Lv. itoek.v Ml. :; :V.'i "l j"i;V' Ar. Wobion 1 if.1 I I (.11! M J i A. M. I'. ?.!. fDaily except Monday. iDaily ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and W-Jlon Uailrocd, Yadkin Division Main Line Train loaves Wilmington, 9 00 a. in., trrivea Fayetteviiio 12 05 p. n;., h-aves Fayette ville 12 25 p. in., ar.ivos San!.. : d 1 43 p. m. Returning leave Saiiford 2 3C p. m., arnyes Fayei IcyiKo 3 11 p. ii., leaves Fayetteviiio 3 AU p. n;., airlvns Wilmington (J 40 p. in. Wilmington ai d Wt lnon Rallroitd, Bennett-villa Br.-.nc!; Train l-?;iyps BennetlsviHo 8 05 a. tn., Maxton 9 10 a. m., Tlr-d Spring 9 10 a. in., Hope Mii1 10 32 a. in., arrives FayMtovillo 10 55 a. in. Returning leaves Fayeltc ville 4 40 p. ro., Ilpe Mills 4 l p.. m? Red Springs h 35 p. m., Mr.::ton 0 15 p. m., arrives !!o 7 15 p. in. Connections ;t F.vyoitovilJo v,:th train Xo. 73, nt Maxk.n wilh tl;e Caro lina Central Railroad, :.t lied Springs with the lied Springs mid li.,wmoro Railroad, at San ford v.iih (lie Seaboard Ah Line and Sonihc-rn Railw.iy, i:t Gulf with tbe Durb.un tad C!.s,'rl;,Uo Railroad. Train on tbo Sc "t'and Xeck Bnincft Road loaves Weldon .) :55 ; in., Halifax 4 :17 p. m., arri ves Sootiand Neck at 5 :08 p. m., Greenville C :57 p. tn., Kins Ion 7 :55 t. in. Rc-turning leaves Kinston 7 :50 a. in., Grconyillo 8 :'2 n. m., arriving Halifax atil:lS a.m., Weldon 11 :U3 a. in., daily except Sun day. Trains on Washington BrcLch leave Washington 3 :I0 a. in. and 2 3.m., arrive Parmele 0 :I0 a. m. jind 1 ) p. ni., returning Icr.ve i'arsv.ole ') :' ... :j. and 0:0 p.m., jiirivc Washington 11 :00 a. m. and 7 ;. m., daily ex cept Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro, X. C, daily except Sunday 5 -Mi) p. tn., i-unday, 4 :lo p. rij.,j.irivf s I'lyiro-.-th 7:10 p. m., C :I0 p. in., Uttt.rnnvr, leaves Ply. mouth dally except Sui:-!ay,7 :")) :. m and Sunday i :K i!. ; riiv; Vi.il oro 10:10 n. m., 11 :-0 a. m. Train on Midland X. C IVanrh leaves GoIoVboro dsily e?c?pt 'm-dny. 5:30 a. in., arriving SttiithlisM 0 :40 a m. Returning &ais SmitM:!.1''! 7:5 a. in. ; arrives r.t Jo'rM.-'-ro 'J : ') .i. n , Trains on Xashvillt, Branch h.r.M Rocky Mount r.t 51 :'!::. in., li'.U) p. in , arrive XruvlivLic? 10 0 a. ni.,4 :0:i p.m., Spring Hope JI.'.'O a. in., 4 :25 p. n;. Returning leave :'prin.' Hope 11 :.0 a. in., 4 :55 p. n., XashyiJIe 1 1 :45 a. i". , 5 :25 p. rn., anivo tt Rocky Mcvi.t 12 :10 a. re., i :?'0 p. rn., daily except Sunday. Train on Clinton Branch leavr v. War paw for Clinton rirtSly, r::cc; t I'nariny, 11:40 a. ni. and 4 :25 p. in. INrtui:. ing leaves Cii'.ton at b n. r.i. o:A 2 :50 a. m. Train Xo. 78 u.r.kiv c!o:o c.s!i.-ikn nt Weldon i-v ail points N.'.-rtl.- tt,:i'y , all rai1 via RScbrrifLd. II. M. HULiON, "oii'i I'm. AiiUtl. J. R. KEXLY, Gen'l M. r. T. M. E51ER30X, Trall'io Ma. atr. - j
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 10, 1901, edition 1
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