Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / April 11, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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ADVEBTISXKG IF YOU AREAHUSMR rocr witL ADVERTISE roc JS T- 1H BUSINESS WHAT STEAM IS TO- Maemnery, Common wealth. E E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. " 'EXCELSIOR' IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $i.oo. 0 . ; 7 ' ; ' " 1 VOL. XVII. New Series - Vol, 5. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C., THURSDAY. APRIL ,11, 1901, NO. 1 5. Send YorB advebtisem est is nc. . Th.t Great Propelli so Powkp.. If you have it. you know it You imiwsnov all hnift the heavy feeling in the stomach, the 'formation of -gas, the isea, sick headache, general weakness of the whole body. You can't have it a week without your blood being impure and your nerves all exhausted. There's just one remedy & for you There's nothing new about it. Your grand- 4 parents took it. Twas J an old Sarsaparilla before known. It made the word " Sarsaparilla " famous over the vhole world. There's no other sarsa parilla like it.. In age and power to cure it's " The leader of them all." $1.03 a bottle. Ail iresfjsta. Ayer's Pills cure constipation. "After suffering- terribly I was induced to try your Sarsaparilla. I took three bottles and now feel like a new mat.. I would advise all my follow creatures to try this medicine, for it lias stood the test of time and its curative power cannot be ex celled." I. D. Good, Jan. 30, 1899. Erowntown, Va. If yon hsve any complaint whatever and desire the best merliral attvice yon cm cosslhly seceive. write the doctor freily. icuv.ill receive a prompt re ply, vlthont cost. Address, 13. J. C. AYES, Lowell, Haas. PROFESSIONAL. OFFics-Over New Whithead Building. Oflice hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to i o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. jK. J. P. WIMBERLEx, OFFICE HOTEL LAWRENCE, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. D1 W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, N. C O files orer Harrison's Drup- Store. V JjJ A. DUNN, 5 I A TTORNE T-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services are re.mired DVVAB.D L. TRAVIS, Attorney and Connselor at Law, HALIFAX, IT. C. Honey Loaned on Farm Lands. Buy Your BUGGIES, UNDERTAKINGS AND PICTURE FRAMES from JOHN B. HYATT. R. C. Brown's old stand, Tarboro. First-class goods at low prices. file VITA PILLS Restore VlialUv I net Vlonr anil Mnnhrwul Cure Impotency, Night Emissions, Loss of Mem. ory, all wasting diseases. ail effects of self-abuse or eo PILLS 50 CTS. excess and indiscretion. A nerve tonic and '.blood builder. Brings the pink glow to pale cheeks and restores the .fire of youth. By mail tfiOa nflrhnr. f3 hnxAa for $2.50, with our bankable gaurantee to cure or refund the money paid. Send for circular and cpy of our baukabl )le g guarantee bond. Nervita Tablets EXTRA STRENGTH (YELLOW LABEL) - Positively guaranteed cure for Loss 6f Power, Varicocele, Undeveloped or Shrunken Organs, Paresis, Locomotor Ataxia, Nervous Prostra tion, Hysteria, Fits, Insanity, Paralysis and the Besults of Excessive Use of Tobacco, Opium or Liquor. By mail in plain package, 91. OO a kox, 0 for SS.OO with our bankable guar antee bond to cure in SO days or refund money paid. Address NERVITA MEDICAL CO. Clinton & Jackson Sta, CHICAGO, lULi For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Col Scotland Neck, N. C. : FOR MALARIA Use nothing but Macnair's Blood and Liver Fills. W. H. Macnair, Tarboro, N. C. or E. T. Whitehead & Co., 22 tf. Scotland Neck N. C. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine. : All druggists refund the money it it falls to care. E. W. Grove's signature is on ach box 25c. . , . - felT- If you have it. vou L There's nothing new 1 4 1 M Best v4!h Iu THE EDITOSS'S LEISURE HOURS. Points and Paragraphs of Things Present, Past and Future. Perhaps the little "you're-another" quarrel that has been going on be tween the two excellent morning daily papers at Raleigh, might be regarded as a "passing event ;" aud The Com monwealth, as the good friend of .all the disputants, believes that the peo ple of the State don't care to have any more of it. Let the talented editors of these papers shake hands, be good friends, and then they can better help ns country editors develop the thous ands of resources that lie around us all through the State. Much is being said throughout th3 South about the probabilities of ;i large cotton crop. There is a general impression that farmers will plant a heavy crop, and the fear is about as general that the large crop will be the cause of low prices next tall. The following paragraph by the Roanoke-Chowan Time3, strikes The Commonwealth as being to the point : "Farmers are undoubtedly, in this section, preparing for a big cotton crop. We iear a mistake is being mde in that other important crops will be neglected. It strikes us that the farmer who has beans, peas, corn, hay, meat and lard to sell next year stands the best chance of remainins happy and independent." Aguinaldo has taken the bath of allegiance to the United States and h;is sworn to renounce all relations with revolutionary movements in the Phil ippine Islands. He' accepts the authority of the United Stales as su preme oyer the islands. This looks like hostilities in the Philippines new might be at an end. The surrender of a number of other insurgent leaders would indicate that the feehng.of subjection among the Filipinos is becoming general. A'guinaldo will not be given any place of trust whereby he could be tray American interests until he is fully tested and until there is no room for suspicion against his sincere alle giance. Col. A. K. McClure has severed his connection with the Philadelphia Times, an influential paper which he established years ago. Thare seems to be some difference between his person al views and the policy of the paper now ; and for this reason he thought it best to retire. Col. McClure has been a great power in Pennsylvania for about half a cen tury, and though he is now approach ing "the time of bending years," he still retains much of his strength and vigor. He has been a great friend of the South and a firm believer in the possibilities of this great section of the country. The Atlanta Journal refers to Col. McClure in the following man ner : No man of the north has taken a deeper interest in the industrial devel opment of the south and it is doubtful if any one has aided it more fully. "In the early seventies he predicted the rapid development of cotton and iron manufacturing in trie southern states. He acquainted himself thor oughly with the "Vast resources of this section and advertised them to the world as no one had ever done before. "He has never been a rich man and could not invest to any great extent in the work whicn he knew would prove profitable to others, but his eloquent tongue and his powerful pen have caused many millions of dollars to go into southern industrial enterprises in the south. He has watched this prog ress with increasing interest and it has had constantly his sympathy and en couragement. ; "He considered the Atlanta cotton exposition ot 1881 the beginning of a new industrial ' era in the south and events have fully justified his high pre dictions ot its effects. - , 'The south for more than thirty yeare past has had in Alexander K. McClure a firm, hopeful and very help ful friend and it is but natural that the south should honor and love him' "I had piles so bad I could- get no rest nor find a cure, until I tried De- Witt's Witch - Hazel Halve. Aiier nsing It once. I forgot I ever had any thing like pUe3."i5. C. Boice, Somers Point; -Em XJUQOJt ont io imisawoiB. MUCH ABOUT. THE JEWS. A WONDERFUL PEOPLE. No People Can Outmatch Them. The Baltimore Herald. The tri th of the Book is proven by the history of the Jews. The persis tence of the Jewish type is remarkable, Heredity is emphatic ; environment never overcomes it. There may be French, Spanish, German, English and Russian Jews, still there is that pecu liar trademark which reveals the Jew. And yet no people have been more in fluenced by environment than the Jew. Without homeland and national life, and without friends, but driven from place to place, subjected to persecu tion and banishment, they have ever been wandertrs. Why, then, his great vitality? Tne life insurance compa nies tell of the expectation of life. Experience shows that the Jew's is fourteen years grea'er than that of the Christian. This is a surprise. Why is it ? The longevity of the Jew is due chiefly to the "Law of Moses" a law which touches the morals, and also the body. A Polish Jew writes : "Moses dis covered the trictinae ; that is wtiy he forbade the eating of pork." Science is in this latter day giving attention to the important question, What foods are clean and what unclean? The Jew was more temperate and observant of hygienic laws than the rest of the race. Ali animals that showed the slightest symptoms of disease were discarded and careful inspection characterized eyery part cf the killing of the animal. Because of his scrupulous carefulness Ihe Jew is the possessor to-day of the greatest amount of lile-force. The Jewish mind is wonderful, and no peo ple when numbers are taken into ac count can outmatch the Jew. How small a race and yet how potent his influence ! Only about a century ago did he achieve his lreedom in France ; while half that number of years is too long to ireasnra his enfranchisement in the rest of Europe. Note the atti tude of Russia. He was without a home or friend ; no institutions of learning open to his steps ; no social or political preferment for him. He knew how to measure events and men rith accuracy. He saw that wealth alone opened up the way to in fluence and power. He would, seek this and hold the Christian in his power by the mortgage he would hold against him. As a result of his environments he developed a passion for gold, for in this he found his only passport to power and influence. He became the world's pawnbroker. But this is not all there is to the Jew. He is a student. We at first wander that such is the case when so little opportunity had been given to taste the sweets of knowledge. But the old Rabbi rises before us. How he is revered and honored ! The Jewish youth always reveres the .aged. He is a teacher. He reveals the hid den beauty of the "Law" and of the Talmud. The youth wanted to be like the teacher, and by questions and eyery effort they sought to know all that he knew. . This fire, kindled by the first sparks of learning, flamed into burning en thusiasm for knowledge in every child's mind. The result was that all the Jews became educated. Hi!1 genius rose from the gloom like a sun out ot the darkness of . the night, and ever since it has shone out in brightness upon the world's history. Let history give back to us a Tew names, that we may see some of the leaders. There is in music the incomparable Mendels sohn, who is loved by every heart, whatever Lis nationality, if his soul is not dead. In finance, there stand the Rothschilds, who have been the bank ers' for all Europe and on whose de cisions even political failures and suc cesses have depended, while even the destiny of a nation has been held in their scales. Heme rises high in the realm oi poetry, while Gambetta has aroused the world by his eloquence and daring. If you would know the place Disraeli occupies in English history let the proud position of Great Britain as a world power to-day pay a large tribute to bis wise statesmanship.1 Maimoni des in theology. and Spinoza in philos ophy, who has so greatly affected the metaphysical thinking Germany, rank high, while m astronomy we stop with reverence a t the name of the great Herschel, who has uncovered for us the thinking of God in the vast heights above our heads until we have said : "The heavens declare i the glory ot God ; and the firmament showeth His handiwork. No speech nor language ; v Skin troubles, cuts, burns, ssalds and chafine nnicklv heal bv toe use of Ue. Witt's -Witch Hazel Salve. It is lmi tatad. Be sure ton est De WittTti JE. their voice is .not heard." Silently they reveal God's beauty. The Jew rightly then -may well be proud of the achievements of his people. The fu ture is bright with nope. The past history, with eo many hindrances, has demonstrated his superior qualities, which shall shine more and more in the clearer and brighter light of to morrow.' The world Is getting better, more just in its measurements of men and the races; manhood is the new standard, and the question will not be who is he? or where did he come from ? but that other question, What is he in character, and what can he do? Enyy, prejudice, superstitution, are giving way under the influence of the new light that brings faith, hope and love. Yes, the better day is coming : I doubt not thro' the ages one increas ing purpose runs, And the thoughts of men are widen'd with the process of the suns. The Unmatcd Wcman of and Yesterday. To-day Anna Farquhar in "The National Magazine." Reasonable doubt exists as to wheth er or not the latter day feminine Inde pendence has produced anything finer in womankind than was known at all previous periods of human history. Considered as a wife and mother, there is small proof of average superiority in the women of this century over those of any other century ; but looked at as spinsters, as "old maids," women have developed within the last fifty years an entirely new and admirable type, owing to the recently acquired freedom and extension of female thought and action. When men have failed in their mat rimonial intentions or desires, their singleness has born no stigma ; but the disgrace and aroma of worthlessness surrounding the earlier woman who failed to enter matrimony were the mainsprings of her forlorn condition. Modern revelations now warm the blood of single females ; there is no reason for them to dry up ; avenues of industry are opened wide to them. In that last statement is embodied the most convincing step toward final de velopment democracy has ever made. Industry levels humanity ; it places all human life on one platform of equality, and removes contempt, the devil's gtillet, from human hands. Life Is What We Make It, "Our lives are what we make of them ourselves," writes Edward Bok, in the April Ladies' Home Journal. "If we are weak and accept the artifi cial our lives will be so. And just in proportion as we make our lives artifi cial we make them profitless and un happy. A happy life cannot be liyed in an atmosphere surcharged with artificiality. That is impossible. No hope is defeated unless we defeat that hope ourselves. No life is thwarted unless we thwart its highest fulfillment and development by our own actions It is with us, and with us only, wheth er we allow the 'swift currents of pre vailing customs' to make our lives com plex. They do, unquestionably, and they are dwarfing the inner lives of thousands of women, and killing thousands of others. But it is coward ly and unjust to lay the blame and the responsibility upon those 'customs.' It is optional with us to accept or reject them. There are certain social laws which seem to make these 'customs' right, but every phase of a higher law, the Divine law, proves tbem wrong. There must be certain laws and cus toms for the protection of the social body. These are likewise for our ovn individual protection and are right, and ordinary common-sense teaches us what these are." Those famous little pills, DeWitt's Little Early Risers, will remove all im purities from your system, eieanseycur bowels, make them regular. E. T. Whitehead & Co. ' Gates of the Land cf Promise. Scribncr's. No one can , watch a load of immi grants land without being struck by the astonishing signs of hope and con fidence about them all. Thsre has never been any exaggeration ot this. Incredible as it may seem to one v. bo knows how grim is the struggle for life among the masses m America, it is evident that this is still the land of promise to the poor of Europe. TOT CAUSES NIGHT ALARM. "One night my brother's baby was taken with Croup," writes Mrs. J. O. Snider, of Crittenden, Ky., "it seemed it would strangle before we could geta doctor, so we gave it Dr. King's New Discovery, which gave quick relief and permanently cured it. We . always keen it in the house to protect our children from ' Croup and. Whooping Cough. - It cured : me of a chronic bronchial trouble that no other reme dy, "would - relieve." Infallible for Coughs. Colds, Throat and Lane troubles. SOe and 9L.00. : Trial bottles OH, TM MICROBES! A NEW DISCOVERY. Disease and Death Lie in the Wake of The Broom. Atlanta Journal. The mental picture of a woman broom in hand as one "who looketb well to the ways of her Household" must be abolished. Dr. Elmer W. Firth, of New York, a fellow of Columbia university, has proven that the common b?oom is a great menace to public health. The metropolitan papers are venti lating the matter. They tell how Dr. Firth has been diligently -on trail of the broom and has tound that its use whisks up into the air countless mil lions of microbes otherwise out of reach of the human being. Armed with a machine for collecting the germs, Dr. Firth went into court rooms, school rooms, churches, railway trains, street cars, ferry boats, etc., aud procured samples -of the air in each, in most cases before and after sweeping. These samples of air be took to his laboratory, and under the microscope he counted the germs. The result was, to say the least, re markable, and points a significant moral in the matter of public sanita tion. Far instance, on a single fiber one and a half inches long, taken from the cocoa matting of a train Dr. Firth counted nearly two million bacteria It was an inner fiber, however. On an outer fiber, which had been exposed to the feet of the multitude, there were found between three and four million germs. In an ordinary room, previous to sweeping, the investigator found an average of .600 germs per cubic meter ; after dry sweeping he found an average of 18,000 germs per cubic meter, show ing that sweeping increased the num ber of bacteria thirty times. In a well known churcb, from which Dr. Firth obtained specimens of air while the building was being dusted, he estimated the number of microor ganisms flying through a cubic meter of air (that is, a little over a cubic yard) to be 18,139. That was the number he obtained in his cultures. Twelve hours later, when the dust had settled, his samples of air showed only 5,857 organisms per cubic meter, or less than one-third the number. When sufficient evidence of micro organisms had been secured, Dr. Firth made a report to the College of Physi cians and surgeons of New York. Some of bis conclusions were startling. He eays carpets should be abolished from theatres, churches, and court rooms ; fiber mats should be prohibited from cars and boats; non-absorbent flooring should be used in all public places ; dry sweeping should not be allowed in the presence ot numbers of persons ; damp cloths and wet sawdust only should be used in cleaning houses and public buildings, because the lat ter are settling basins tor microbe-laden dust; no attempt 6houId be made to conceal dust and dirt, as is the aim of certain absorblent floor materials now commonly used, and disinfection should not be substituted for the re moval of accumulated dirt. "Numerous, investigations," says Dr. Firth, "have demonstrated the presence of micro-organisms In the air every where and under all conditions, except over the opsn sea, On mountain sum mits and in the polar regions, but they are found in greatest numbers in the vicinity ol large cities, especially where poor hygienic conditions prevail. "The cleaning in public schools re ceives too little attention. The class rooms are swept with a dry broom eyery afternoon, and the dusting is done in the morning before the school opens. Where twenty or thirty rooms with their seats and desks, have to be dusted by two men before 9 o'clock the process must be too rapid and is usual ly accomplished by passing up and down between the rows of desks with a feather duster in each hand and brush ing the dust in the air. Water is sel dom, it ever, applied. As a result the cracks between tne floor boards become filled with dust, which is stirred up at least twice a day during the physical culture which each class is obliged to take. Thfsexerci begins with march ing in single filo round the room and back and forth between seats, after which the pupils are instructed to 'take long and deep ; breaths' of the dusty air." All of this is sufficient demonstra tion of the fact that the housewife must take to herself a new insignia ot power. Instead of the broom as her scepter, behold the up-to-date woman with a cloth of generous proportions and a pail of water. You cannot enjoy perfect health, rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes if your Jiver is slnggisb and your bowels clogged. DeWitt's Little Earlyi Risers cleanse the whole aystem. They never gripe. Our Servant Electricity. "The earliest use of the electric cur rent in bouses was the common . push button for street doors. To-day a varie ty ot contrivances on the same princi ple enable the householder to protect his property from the spread of fire, from damage by an overflowing tank, from the explosion of a boiler whose water level has fallen too low," says George lies in Everybody's Magazine. "Of like design are the alarms which sound continuously when a protective wire is tampered with, when a door or window is wrongfully opened, or a mat is trodden upon by a marauder. All these tell-tales may - ring a bell at a distance, at a police or fire station, if required, and summon aid in the hick of time. Less important, but stiil use ful enough, are the electric clock which, at any desired hour, day after day, for a month or year, will call a sleeper. To avoid calling anybody else, the alarm sounds at the head of a bed, and continues its appeal until the victim gets up and switches off its current. Clocks without alarms, and electrically actuated from central sta tions, are steadily gaining favor in household use." Spring coughs are specially danger ous, and unless cured at once terlous results often follow. One Minute Cough Cure acts like magic. It is not a common mixture but is a high grade remedy. E. T. Whitehead ?. Co. More in Sorrow Than Anger. Baltimore American. ' , "Judge," said the lady who was ae- cuaod ol battering her husband, "it is trne that I struck him, but the weapon I used proves that I did so more in ' sorrow than in anger." "What did yon hitTiim with?" j "A sadiron, your honor." l If troubled by a weak digestion, loss ' of appetite, or constipation, try a fe.v doses of -Chamberlain s Stomach and Liver Tablets. Every box warranted. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co. Druggists. Be a'Man First of All. Success. Quite beneath all discussion of elect ives and vocations, as whether I will be an engineer or a clergyman, is the certainty, for every youth who would be truly successful, that he must be a man ; that be ought to be a "full grown man," as the old version read squarely and none too strongly ; to be a "per fect man." "Last winter I was confined to my oed with a very bad cold on tbe lungs. Nothing gaye me relief. Finally my wife bought a bottle of One Minute Cough Cure that effected a speedy cure. I cannot speak ton highly of that ex cellent remedy." Mr. T. K. Houseman , Manatawney, Pa. E. T. Whitehead & Co. YOUR FRIEND'S INCOME. Do you know bow to discover a man's income? Ask him what he thinks a comfortable income should be and div ide his answer by 2. This is the rule given by a Harvard professor ot eco nomics, a shrewd man. Boston Jour nal. A DEEP MYaTEKY. It is a mystery why women endure Backache, Headache, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Melancholy, Fainting una Dizzy Spells wheil thousands bave proved that Electric Bitters will quick ly cure such troubles. "I suffered for yeais with kidney trouble," writes Mrs Pbebe Cherley, of Peterson, la., "and a laui back pained me so 1 could not dress myself, but Electric Bitters wholly cured me, and, although 73 years old, I now am able to do ail my houseworK." It overcomes Constipa tion, improves Ar.petite, gives perfect health. Only 50c at E. T. Whitehead & Co's drug store. During tbe past year the' Eastern Shore Produce Association A Accom ac and N ort b am pt' m cc-un tiea, Virgi nia, bandied 550,000 rack ages o' goods, rep resenting $500,000. The association operated at thirty-four points, and, be ginning the year without a purchaser on tbe books, it now has 125 regular customers. This y6ar the association wiii handle all classes of farm products. Farm magazine. BEST -FOR THE B0UELS If you haven't recalar. healthy movement ol th. Snt ohTWc or pill poison, ia dneron. The nnootr. ert, ewTert, mSrt perfect way ot keeping the bowo Clear mm ew - - CANDY CATHARTIC EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY Fleaaaat, PalateMe, Potent. farteOood. IJoGood. KeeTlMeSen, Weaken, or ttripr 1 d ner box. Write for treo saapM, 1 beoklotoB Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in sirengthe'iiiug and recon structing the exhausted digestive'or gans. It is the latest discovereddigest. ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It in stantly relievesand permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence. Sonr Stnm9rh "Knn Sick Headache, Gastralgia Cramps and an ubuer results oi impeneci digestion. snail site. Book all aboutdyepepsiaciailoutree rreparau cy t. c. cawiTT A CO CfclC9ao CASTOR 1 A For Infants a ad f-kildrcu. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signaturo of itc24 WILMINGTON & WELDON R. R. AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING ;-OUTII. DATEn Jan. 1.1, 1901. 1? Ids Il-te lei? A. M. I'. M.;l J . il. Leave Weldon 11 50 s As 1 Ar. Itocky Mt. 1 oo U re Leave Tarboro 12 1 is uo Lv. kcrk.y Mt. ...I OS! "lo ic' "":;Y " Tis "is'bi Leave Wilnon 1 iiilt 1(1 lis 7 10 6 57 2 40 Leavis (Selma 2 ar. 1 11 IS Lv. Fuveitovltle 4 30. 12 :t.r. Ar. Florence 7 5 2 40 P. M. A. M. ....................... .....a... ... ...... Ar. OoldHlioro 7 fi5 Lv. liolilrtburo fi -ir S itO Lv. Magnolia 7 Mi 4 TI5 Ar. Wilmington '.' 0 ctf T. M. A. M.jl M. TRAINS GOING NORTH. A. M I. M. Lv. Florence 9 Co 7 :ir Lv. Fayetteville 12 15 41 Len, ve ShI rn n 1 50 1 1 :I5 Arrive Wilson 2 :tr 12 1.1 " A.'ii.' v'. 'm. a'."m. Lv. W' ninirton 7 o it Hf. Lv. Magnolia h :iti 11 10 Lv. Oollboro 4 50 .17 12 26 m" a'."m". iv."m. v'Tk Leave Wilson 2 35 ft 3.1; 12 1.1 10 45 1 IS Ar. Kock.v Mt, 3 30 0 10 12 45 11 S3 1 1.3 Arrive Tarboro 40 Leave Tarboro 2 31 Lv.' Rocky Mt.' 3 30 lis'iVi Ar. Weldon 4 32 1 P. M.' A. M. V. M. fDaily except Monday. IDatly ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and Weldon l.iUiroRf., Yadkin Division Main Line Train leaves W ilmington, 9 00 a. m., arrives Fayetteville 12 On p.m., leaves Fayette ville 12 25 p. m., arrives Sunlord 143 p. m. Returning leaves Sanford 3 05 p. m., arriyes Fayetteville 4 0 p. m.r leaves Fayetteville 4 20 p. m., arrives Wilmington 9 2i p. m. Wilmineton and Weldon Railroad, Bennettfville Branch Train lenyPS Bennettsville 8 05 a. m., Maxton 9 05 a. m., Kea springs v u a. m., nope Mil's 10 55 a. m., arrives Fayetlovllie 11 10 a. m. Returning leaves Fayp'.te- ville 4 45 p. m., Hope Mills 5 5." j . m.. Red Springs 5 35 p. m., Maxton (' 15 p. m., arrives Bennettsville 7 in p. m. Connections at rayetrevi.:.? nitti train No. 78, at Maxton with the Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with the Red Springs and Bow more Railroad, at Sanford with the Seaboard An Line and Southern Baihvay, t Gulf with the Durham and Cb&rlotte Railroad. Train on the Scotland Neck Brpiicit Road leaves Weldon 3 :55 p in., Halifc-r. 4 :17 p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 5 :08 p. m., Greenville G :57 p. m., Kins ton 7 :55 p. m. Returning leaves Kinston 7 :50 a. m., Greenville 8 :52 a. m., arriving Halifax at 11 :1S a. m., Weldon 11 :83 a. m., daily except Sun day. Trains on Washington Branch leave Washington 8 :I0 a. m. and 2 n, m., arrive Parroele 9 :10 a. m. and X) p. m., returning leave Parmele 9 :3i w. jo. and 6:30 p.m., arrive Washington 11 KK) a.m. and 7 :30 p. m., daily ex cept Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro, Pi.C, daily except Sunday 5 :30 p. m., Sunday, 4 :15 p. m., arrives Plymouth 7:40 p., m., 6 :10 p. m., Returning, leaves Ply--mouth daily except Sunday, 7 :50 a. m. and Sunday 9 :00 a. m., arrives Tarloro 10:10 a. m., 11 :00 a. ui. Tram on Midland N. C. Branch leaves GoldKboro dnily, except Sunday. 5:00 a. m., anivin S.i.ii2.uM C .10 a. m. Returning leaves Sin itb field 7 :IQ a. no. ; arrives at Gnldsboro 8 :25 a. n . Trains on Nashville Branch leae Rocky Mount at 9 :30a. m., 3 :40 p. ro., arrive Nashville 10 :'20 a. m.,4 :03 p.m,, Spring Hope 11 :00 a; in., 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 :25 p. m. Return, mg leaves Clinton at b :5 a. m. arid 2:50 a. m. - .... j Train No. 78 makes close connection at Weldon for all points North daily, all rai' via Richmond. . .' ' . . V,-"-v';:;.v:: EMERSON, -' V Geu'l Pa?s. Amnl. i j. a. uen'i muctr. .
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 11, 1901, edition 1
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