Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / April 25, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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IF YOU ABE A UUSMB rou wilI -i ADVESTISF rot'ir Business. EM; rrTT H K E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE SJl.oo. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1901. Sekd Yotte Adveetisement in Nc- Tftvi Gxeat Peg pellixg Power. VOL. XVII. New Series Vol. 5. NO. 17. , ADVERTISING 1ST" BUSINESS ..- - WHAT STEAM IS TO- Machinery, COMMONW Ever have them? Then ve can't tell you any thing about hem. Y ou know how dark thing looks you are about ready to give up. Some how, you can't throw off the terrible depression. Are things really so blue? Isn't it your nerves, after all? That's where the trouble is. our nerves are being poisoned from the impurities in your blood. IA purifies the blood and gives pover and stability to tne nerves. It makes health and strength, activ ity apd cheerfulness. This is what ' Ayer's " will do for you. It's the oldest Sarsaparilla in the land, the kind that was old before other Sarsa pariilas were known. . This also accounts for the saying, "One bottle of Ayer's is worth three bottles of the ordinary kind." 1 . $1.03 a bottle. An imafMtt. Writs the Doctor, If you hare any complaint winterer and desire the best medical advice Ton can possibly receive, write the doctor freely. You -will receive a prompt re Div. without cost. Address. Dli. J. C. AYEK, Lowell, Mais, g ft t A A A fr PROFESSIONAL. A. 0. LIVEEMON, Dentist. OFFicE-Over Hew Whithead Building Office hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to i o'clock, p. in. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. fUl. J. P. WIMBERLJSx, y . OFFICE HOTEL LA WHENCE, N SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. Ttti 7. J. WARD, u Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, N. C OfHoe over Harrison's Drue Store. 531 a. dunn, A TT OENE Y-A T-L A W. , Scotland Keck, N. C Practices" wherever hia services arc rcauired E DWARD L. TEAVIb, Attorney and Connselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. . f,Money Loaned on Farm Lands. Buy Your ' .. . V- BUGGIES, UNDERTAKINGS AND PICTURE FRAMES ' from JOHN B. HYATT. R. C Brown's old stand, Tarboro. FiHt-:jlsi33 goods at low prices. R VITA PILLS Restore VitaHty, Lost Vigor and Manhood Cnrr Tm potency, Night EmissionsLoss of Mem- f&3b. ory, all wasting diseases, effects of self-abase or 60 PILLS 50 CTS. (excess and indiscretion. A nerve tonic snd I blood builder. Brings tho Dink tlow to Dale cheeks and restores the sfire of youth. By mail iwrixw. i Viota for $2.50, with onr bankable guarantee to core or refund the money paid. Send for circular aud erpj of oar bankab ible gua le guarantee bond. EXTRA STRENGTH (TELIXJW LABEL) ' "-u...-w w Positively guaranteed cure, for Loss of Power, Varicocele, Undeveloped or Shrunken Organs, Paresis, Locomotor Ataxia, Nervous Prostra tion, Hysteria, Fits, Insanity, Paralysis and the Results of Excessive Use of Tobacco, Opium or Liquor. By mail in plain package, 9l.OO a lex, 6 for S5.0O with our bankable gvar- antee bona to cure in so days or refund money paid. Address NERVITA MEDICAL CO. Ointondt Jackson Sts CHICAGO, llli Forsaia by E. T. Whitehead & Co'. Scotlan I Neck, N. C. FOR MALARIA Use nothing but TffaCliair'S BlOOfl aud Liver Fills. W. H. MACitair, Tarboro, N. C. -or E. T. Whitehead fc Co., -22 tf. . Scotland Neck'N. C; , 1 1 I i TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine." All druggists refund the money it it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on ach boc. 25c. v - r This signature is on every box of the genuine u.s Biguacure is on every isoxw cue goon in Laxative Brrcso-tfaisise Tablets 3mm uuia THE EDITOES'3 LEISURE EOUES. Paints and Paragraphs 'off Thing3 Prssent, Past and Future. "Leas work for more pay is the tend ency of the times of late," said a close observer of "passing events" In- The Commonwealth office a day or 4wo ago." And sometimes one really feels like it is a correct conclusion to reach. Oae Is inclined to ask. the question, Is there as much genuine, hard down labor and study these latter days for an equal remuneration and consideration aa there was a generation or two ago ? It is to be feared that too many per sons are looking for easy places and fit jobs. What is the difference between a pair of young horses and a young pair of horses? We stood near an admirer of fine horse flesh recently who seeing a pair ot horses pass remarked, "Thera goes & young pair of horses." We noticed carefully how he worded the sentence, and then the question which we have propounded came up : What is the difference between a young pair of horses and a pair of young horses? Will some of our conundrum ans wenng contemporaries tell us the dif ference? Perhaps also some of our readers who handle horses much could enlighten us. ' ' ...... The latest project for rural delivery ij a scheme suggested by a western inventor. The plan is to string wire to poles along the postal routes through the country. Charge the wire with electricity, and hang tt basket to the wire and have them to run on grooved " propelled by a motor. More Hicularly it is discribei thus : . "With , light baskets hung to the wire by grooved wheels propelled by a small motor sot to ran at" "six "bif "eight' miles an hour, with suitable trips from each, apartment ot the basket to engage with like trips where the mail is to bs left and other mail taken on, different sized baskets tor each " kind of mail started out at different times. Should one basket get disabled the one follow ing would bring it around." The Commonwealth! has all the while belieyed that Hazing of aay serious nature is brutal and ungentle manly. The developments by hazing investigations for the past few months have made many a cheek flush with pent-up indignation. About the best so lution we haye seen at all is the following concerning Bishop Cheshire's method of dealing with the brutes who thought they would "lift" him : Baltimore Sun, 12th : Major William M.Pegram, ot Baltimore, tells a good story illustrating how the nerve devel opecTin the Civil War enabled a young Southerner to defy hazers in a North ern college. . . The young soldier was Joseph B. Cheshire now Protestant Episcopal Bishop of North Carolina. At the close of the war, in which he served with distinguished gallantry, he was seventeen years old. "Deciding to enter the ministry, he went to Trinity Co!-.! lege, Hartfqrc, Conn., taking with him hi3 well worn gray overcoat and his army revolver. - . While alone in his room at the col lege one evening not long after his arrival Mr. Cheshire received an un usual number of visitors. One by one students dropped in till nearly a score were in his room. lie divined their purpose, but received them courteously. Finally one remarked : "I suppose you know what we have come - for?" At the same time he locked the door and put the key in his pocket. - While this was going on Mr. Cheshire . had basked quietly to his dSsk. Raising his revolver, he gave the command with military terseness: "Unlock the door, file out one by one " The young men, seeing the stripling student sud denly transformed into the trained soldier, knew there was nothing to do but obey the man , they bad - come to humiliate. As the fast one left Mr. Cheshire said politely : "I hope yon have had a pleasant evening, gentle men. ,t?aii again." JNo further - attempt was made haze him. to I have been so troubled, with In digestion tor ten years, have tried many things and spent much money to no purpose until I tried Kodol Dyspepisa Cure." I have taken two : bottles and gotten more relief from them than all other medicines taken. I feel more like a boy than I have felt in twenty yeara," Anderson Kiggs or ormny uane, im. i tjuttft&ff - iifrSr as oia Mr. Co. -rr ; Tells How Eussia Compstes With. Tie Southern States. . . t AN INTERESTING PAPER. Hon. T. B. Jernigan, ex-Consul gen eral at Canton, China, under President Cleveland, wrote recently to the Char lotte Observer : In 1891j;he, value of American cot ton drills sold in Newchwang was $572,007, ad in 1899 it was $2,023,616. There was scarcely any trade in Ameri can jeans in 1891, it amounted to bnlj $l,i09, but it had increased in 1899 to $88,890. In sheetings the value in 1891 was $1,19X136, and in 1899 it had increased to $3,910,916. The proportion of American trade at New chwang to foreign imports by China, at the port of Newchwang, stands thus: Total of . all foreign imports, $21,775,930, and t'otafc from America, $6,474,895.; , - A. J.. It will be seen lrom the above figures that the trade between the United States and China in Imports from the former country has been yearly in creasing in value, and that a compari son of the total shows that the north China trade at Newehwang alone, is nearly a third in value ot the whole foreign trade at the very point where Russia claims to be supreme. To the above figures should be added the fact that nearly all the cotton goods from America is sold in the markets which the delegation accurately repre sented were endangered by Russian ag gressions, and it must be clearly evi dent that if Russia, under. the. cover ol Belgium, controls the building ot the Hancow and Canton railroad, the source of that danger will grow until the force of arms alone can uproot it ; and it ought certainly to be clear that no valuable quantity of railroad mate rial would be purchased in America if either Russia or Belgium builds the road. Besides, the increased production of cotton in Russian Central Asia does not leave a doubt that Russia is mindful of the value of the" Manchurian demand for cotton goods, and although the time is distant when theproduction of rlnseian soil can supply that demand a few figures will indicate its approach. Last year the cotton crop ot Russian Central Asia is estimated, in a German consular report, at 144,440 tons, being about one-fourth larger than in 1899, and supplying halt the demands of the Russian spinning mills. Ii is further estimated by an American authority that during the five years ending in 1899 we sold to Russia an average of nearjy$4,000,000 worth of .raw cotton every year, showing that two-thirds of-r the raw cotton used in the Russian mills came from the United States and one-third from Russian territory, and it Is reasonable to conclude that the development of cotton growing in Russian Central Asia means the grad ual exclusion of all foreign cotton lrom the Russian mills. It further means that Russiawill want the markets of north Cfiina for the product of her. own mills and Russian statesmanship is open-eyed enough to see it. The progress ot Russia In textile in dustries, and particularly . in cotton "manufactures, has been rapid, and Russia now holds the fourth place in cotton spinning, being surpassed only by Great Britain, the United States and. Germany, and supplies the entire demand for cotton-fabrics, except tor the finer qualities, among the 100,000, 000 people of European Russia. - And while it is true that the staple of Russian cotton has heretofore been inferior, it h'as been in recent years im proved materially by the American up land variety which has "thrived finely in Central Asia. The irrigation plans for the stepped of Asia will reclaim a still larger cotton area, and with cot ton lands developing, in Caucasia, It is no random prediction that Russia will become independent, if not a competi tor, as a cotton growing country. When . this writer -first arrived In China, the prediction that Russia would be as far advanced into the Em pire as she Is at this date would have been received as-thoughtless, but Rus sian diplomacy, lrke . the incoming tide, although seeming to recede with the outgoing wave, 'steadily advances notwithstanding the noise along the shore. : The complications in. which China has involved the world has pre sented . the aim of ' Russian 'diplomacy in a light not heretofore so generally comprehended. After China was de feated, in the war with Japan, the ap proach of Russia toward Port Arthur . "Last' winter I was confined to my bed with a very bad cold on the lungs. Nothing gave me relief. Finally my wife bought a bottle of One Minute Cough Cure that effected a speedy cure. I cannot sneak too highly of that ex- fiellent remedv " : Mr. T. K. Houeeman, Manatafrifay, Pa. E. T.! Whitehead & was made with similar protestations of innocence as is the Russian'occupancy of Manchuria, but the flag of Bussia waves over Port Arthur and there it will wave ; and Russian sentinels stand guard on the long, line of China's northern boundary. A few days ago it was flashed around the world that Russia had proposed to China that Manchuria should not be considered in the negotiations now pending at Pekin between China and western power?, and this means that Russia, proposes to annex Manchuria- The protest of Great Britain, Germany and the United States to the policy indicated, by the Russian proposal will -doubtless be answered in a tone a?' innocent as that given to the Inquiry by Great Britain when the hand of Russia was 'uplifted over Port Arthur, China Is powerless to preserve tfie integrity of her territory, and a mere protest against dismemberment or the infringement of present treaty rights will not defeat the policy of Russia. A protest may delay the execution of that policy, but when Russia completes her railroads through the territories of China and Siberia, all converging to ward the Pacific, she will be prepared to make northern China impregnable and command the markets of that part ot the Chinese empire for -her mer chants. The navies of Great Britain, Germany and the United States may anchor In the waters of China, but their cannon cannot reach the Cassach as, in thousands, he concentrates into northern China by Russian-owned railroad, and now that Russia will in fluence the policy of the railroad to be built from Hankow to Canton, she will control the most valuable trade that goes to those two open ports ; and Rus sia now owns the railroad from Han kow to Pekin. AjPOOR MILLIONAIRE Lately starved in London because he could not digest his food. Early use oi Dr. King's New Life Pills would have saved him. They strengthen the stomach, aid digestion, promote assim ilation, improve appetite. Price 25c. Money back it not satisfied. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co., druggists. Itho Cost of Liquor. Selected. The New York Tribune is authority for stating that the liquor-traffic costs more every year than our whole civil service, our army, navy and Congress, including the river and harbor, and pension bills ; all we pay for local go 'ernment ; all national, State and coun ty debts, and all the schools in the country. "In fact," says the Tribune, "this country pays more for liquor than for every function of every kind of government." And the Union Signal adds : "Two millions of our own boys, the boys of this nation, must be select ed out of every generation to go into the saloon hopper. Sixty thousand boys are drafted every year into the army of drunkards, to take the place at the saloon bar of sixty thousand bloated drunkards that have been drawn torth from the street and buried with the bullet of a beast." UNION CENTRAL LIFE INSURANCE GO., - . - AorAnveA tho . JU 11 1J x-ww--. v C3 - . and olit-classes all its competitors in conrtesy to its policy If you .wish the best insurance, call on" - E. HILLI "GO IT, TOE" Why The Chamslon Failed. BE READY TO ENCOURAGE. Florence Milner. Tom belonged to a settlement school and the school had furnished most, if not all the real happiness he had ever known. Here the good in him was developed until somehow he began to forget the bad. He was a sturdy little athlete and won most oi the races and other con-s tests of strength. . Through various winsome traits he had found his way to the heart of his teacher and she (was always interested in hie success. One day arrangements had been made for a foot "race. Several boys were to run, although everybody was sure that Tom would win. The preliminaries were settled, race started, and the boys were off over the course. Tom led clear and free for about half the distance, then, to the surprise of everyone, Johnny began to gain upon him. Jim was just behind Johnny and running vigorously. Tom's feet seemed to grow heavy and Johnny steadily decreased the distance between them, until finally he shot past Tom, and, with a sudden ' spurt, gained -the goal fully five yards in advance. Jim was close behind, and he, too, sped over the line a little ahead of Tom, but enough to give him second place and to leave Tom out ot the race. Why, Tom, what was the muter ?" asked his teacher as the defeated boy came toward her with the teais stream ing down his face. His only answer was a sob. v "Tell me what happened, Tom." Tom dug his knuckles into his eyes to dry his tears and tried to tell his story. "I siarted all right, you know "Yes, you led them all." "But when. I got half way there the boys began to call, " 'Gp it, Johnny, you're second.' 'Hustle, Jim; you're gaining.' 'Ruu, Johnny, run, you're mcsft up to him.' ' But nobody said, 'Go it, Tom.' and somehow it got into my legs and they wouldn't go ;" and Tom, dropping to the ground in a heap, cried as though his heart woul J break. Moral : Many have fallen in life because there was no one to say, "Go it, Tom." SEVEN YEARS IN BED. "Will wonders ever cease?" inquire the friends of Mrs. L. Pease, of Law rence, Kan. They knew she had been unable to leave her bed in seven years on account ol kidney and liver trouble, nervous protration and general debility ; but, "Three bottIesbt Electric Bitteis enabled me t$ wallr," she writes, "and in three months 1 felt like a new per son." Women suffering from Head ache, Backache, Nervou3nes, Sleepless ness, Melancholy, Fainting and Dizzy i SdoIIs vill find it a priceless blessing. (Try it. Satisfaction is guaranteed, E. T. Whitehead & Co. Only 50c. - . . T,nrffst Dftvidftnds ' Can't N j jjfj COMMENCED ffl nTTI . Tho Hsart Doth Never Grow Old. DEDICATED TO ONE WHOSE HEART CAN KEVEB GKOW OLD. Greenville Reflector. In 1860 Rev. A. D. Betta met a very old woman In Bladen county, N. whose aged husband had lately died In her grief she said : "The heart don't grow old." March 31, 1901, Le told the faculty and students of Little ton Female College ot the incident, and said he had for 40 years wanted some one to writa a poem on that thought. Next day one of the teach ers, Miss Lillian Lynn Morton, daughter of Rev. J. B. Morton, of Tarboro, read to "Uncle Betta" and his wife the fol- lowing : Though the pitcher be broke at the fountain, And the years their tale have to'd, ' And the golden bowl ba broken, "Yet the heart doth r.ever grow old. j Though tbe locks are turning whiter .a iub suver units me goia, Yet the hope of life grows brighter In the heart that never grows old. And when some old faded rose leaf In a booklet's dusty fold, Calls to mind a little romance Of the heart that never grows old, Then tender, recollections And old love dreams unfold, And the whispered words are breathed as;ain In the heart that never grow old. When the scroll ot loving memories Has slowly been unrolled, 'Tid a little tear that tells the tale Of the heart that never grows old. , A 5e th,J?k f lhesS "l .teS3gS Now called to another fold Then a sweet and hopeful longing , Fills the heart that never grows Old. But ah 1 wbea the years are ended And the talo of life is told, Then eternal Youth bears her new born babe : Where the heart can never grow old. j You cannot enjoy perfect health, rosy is sluggish and your bowels clogged DeWitt's Little Early Risers cleans tbe whole system. They never gripe. E. T. Whitehead & Co. "It's habd to strike an average ia dis life," said Uncle Eben. "Mos' folk? goes so slow dat dey doesn't get nufnn done or else dey hurries so" fas' dey falls down." , BOUEL If von haven't a recmlar., healthy movement of the bowels every day, you're III or will bcf. Keep your bowels open'and k well. Force, In tho i.hapect vio lent physic or pillpoison, 1 dangerous. The sniootl' est, easiesVmost perfect way of keeping tbe bowel clear and clean ia to take i CANDY EAT 'EM LIJCE CANDY Pleasant, r-alatable. Potent. Taste Rood, Do uooa, Kover Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10, 2. and DO cents per box. Write for free sample, and booklet on health. Address STEBMKa UKXF.9T COSIPASY, CHICAGO or KKW YOltK. KEEP YOUR BLOOD GLEAN OF CINCINNATI, OHIO be surpassed in its contracts : holders. ARD, ScQtlandNeok, W. O. BEST FOB F trt. i ii AtTUnTm ai Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially d igest9 the food and aids Nature in strengthening and recon structing tho exhausted digestive or gans. It lathe latest discovcreddipest ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach ib in efficiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Sick Headache, Gastralgia Cramps and all other results of imperfect digestion. Price 50c. and ft. Large sise contains 2K times small size. Book all t,tyatdyspepsiamauedlree P-epcrcd by E. C. DeUflTT A CO.. Chicago. For Infants aad f-bJLldreu. The Kind You Have Always Dought Bears the Signature of WILMINGTON &WEL0GN R. R. AND BRANCHES. Land Atlantic coast line RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CON15ENSEIT' SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING feOUTH. 18 f & 5i Cep ft DATEO Jan. 13, IU01. , o S 1 V . J a. M.;r. m. 11 no1 s r.s 1 1)0 i 61! I. M. A. M. P. M. Leave Wold on Ar. ltocky Mt. f" Leave Tarboro 12 21 n no Lv. Kocky Mt. Leave Wilson Leave Holm a Lv. Fn.vettevillt' Ar. Floreuce ...1 or. 1 f.: 2 nr 4 so 7 'i'l r. m. 10 01! 10 bs 11 is 12 :ir. 2 40 A. XI. :t- 7 10 6 1! 6 f.; 12 fii 2 40 Ar. Ooldnloro Lv. (loiMloro n 45 7 M 3 . 4 :ib G 00 P. M. Lv. Wnpnoiia w r.M. A. M TRAINS GOING NORTH. 6 Raid's 6 e T? X ... . . ....... .. A. M P. M. Lv. Florence 9 W 7 Lv. Faycttevlllo 12 15 II 41 Leave Solum 1 Bl II "5 Arrive Wilson 2 35 12 111 a"'m.' p."m! a,"m. Lv. W'i.ninrton 7 o ::s Lv. ynpnolia K no 11 1 Lv. Uoldshnro 4 ."0 i(7 12 20 i"."M.' a'."'m. p."m". 1'7'm". Leave WIIhoti 2 :f. r. 3:i 12 1:1 10 45 lis Ar. Rocky Mt. . 3 3(1 6 10 12 45 11 2H I 03 Arrive Tarboro l 4(i Le vve Tarboro 2 .11 Lv. noiVky "sit. ?:Yo ii j ' " " Ar. Wohlon 4 :2 1 S i P. M. A. M. P. M. fDaily except Monday. JDaily ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and Weldon Railrord, Yadkin Division Main Line Train leaves Wilmington, y uu a. m., arrives Fayetteville 12 05 p. m., leaves Faytio- ville 12 2j p. m., arrives 5anIora J i.i in. Jieturniug leaves tsanlnrd 6 C m., arriyes Fayetteville 4 20 p.m., leaves Fayetlevilic 4 20 p. m., arrives Wilmington 1) 25 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Rennett?ville Branch Train leaves Bennettsville 8 05 a. m , Maxton 9 05 m.. Red .Springs U 50 n. in., Hope Mim 10 55 a. m., orrlves Fayetteville 11 10 a. m. Returning leaves Fayette ville 4 4; p. m., Hope Mills r- tJ,- Red Springs b ? p. m Jlfon v 1 m., arrives Bennettsville 7 1' p.m. Connections at Fayetteville n:Lh train No. 73, at Maxton with I he Caro lina Central Kailrond, nt Bed firings with the Red Springs and Uowmore Railroad, at Harford with tLe Hecboard Air Line and Southern Railway, at Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Scotland Neck JJrancn Road leaves Weldon 3 :55 p in., Halilx :17.p. m.,irrives Scotland Neck at :Q8 p. m., Greenville C :57p. m., Kins- ton 7 :o& p. m. Keturning inrea Kinston 7":50 a. m., Greenyille 8 :52 a. m.. arrrvmg Halifax at 11:18 a.m.. Weldon 11 :S3 a."m., daily except Sun day. Trains on washingson ijranp.fi leave Washington 8 :I0 a. m. and 2 u'f n. m.t arrive Parmele 9 :10 a. m.' and ' 0') p. m., returning leave Parmele U:3: .in.. and ( -JiO p. m., arrive V ashington 11:00 a. m. and 7 :30 p. rx.,dfiy ex cept Sunday. . Train' leaves Tarooro, x.i;., aaiiy except Sunday o :aU p. m., bunday, 4 :lo p. rn., arrives rivmoutn 7 :iv p. m., 6 :10 p. m., Returning, lea vets Ply mouth daily except Sunday, 7 :50n. w. and Sunday 9 :00 a. m., arrives Tai'boro 10:10 a. m., 11 :00 a. m. Train on Midland N. C. Pianch leaves Goldsboro dally, except Sunday. 5 :00 a. m., arriving Sinitbfio'd G :10 a. lo. Keiiiining leaves SuiitLlioU- 7 :t0 a. m. ; arrives at Goldsboro 8 :25 a. n Trains on Nashville Branch leae Rocky Mount at 9 :30a. m., 6 :40 p. m arrive Nashville 10 :20 a. m.,4 :03 p.m,V Spring Hope 11:00 a. to., 4 :2o p. m, Returning leave Spring Hope 11 :20 a. m., 4 :55 p. m., Nashville 11 :45 a. m, 5:25 p.m., arrive t 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 ing leaves Clinton at b :i5 a. m. sr.d 2 :50 a. m.. Train No. 78 makes close connection at Weldon for all points North daily, all rai' via Richmond. H. M.EMERSON, ' Geul Pe-a. Agent. J. R. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. 1I EMERS0H. 7r Manarr. Ue remedy th. -- It mmm 4M0F.. " - T', t'. ' -. v "... . ' - H. .- -. j
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 25, 1901, edition 1
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