IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER rouwirt ADVERTISE toi;k' Business. ADVERTISING BUSINESS WHAT STEAM IS'TO- Machinery, rrA imonwea: TTVmr I BO o E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR-MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE Si.oo. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1901. NO. 23. Send Your Advertisement is Now, Thai Great Propelling Power. VOL. XVII. New Series Vol. 5. Co p4P iill . Wealth of hair is wealth indeed, to a wofh an . Every other physical attraction is secondary to it. ' We have a book' we, will gladly send you that tells just how to care for the hair. If your &air is too t hj n or 1 o s- ing its luster,' o-et G r o w t h k becomes vigorous and " alL dan druff is removed. It always restores color to gray or faded hair. Retain your youth ; don't look old before your time. $1.00 a bottle. AH druggists. "I have used your Hair-Vigor now for about 25 years and I have found it splendid and satisfactory in every way. I believe I have recommended this Hair Vigor to hundreds of mv friends, and they all tell the same story. If any body wants the best kind of a Hair Vigor I shall certainly recommend to them just as strongly as I can that they get a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor." Sirs. N. E. Hamii,tox, Xov. 23, 1893. .. Norwich, X. T. h Wrltm thm Doc. It yon don't obtain all the benefits yon desire from tbe use of the Vigor, write the Doctor about it. Address, Dr. J. C. ATKR. Lowell, Mass. ; PROFESSIONAL. 0 4 R. A. C. LIVEBMON, Dentist. OKFicE-Over Kew Whithead Building Office hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 tc I o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. D R. J. P. WIMBERLE x , OFFICE HOTEL LAWRENCE, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. JjR. W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, N. C mm t Office orer Harrison's Dru?" Storo. w. A. 1UNN, A TTORNE Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services ar featured DWARD L. TRAVIS, Attorney and Connselor at Law, HALIFAX, N.C. H& Money Loaned on Farm Lands. Buy Your BUGGIES, UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMES from JOHN B. HYATT. R. C. Brown's old stand, Tarboro First-class goods at low prices. NERVITA PILLS Restore Vitality, Lost Vigor and Manhood ' ("uro Imnotencr. Nicht Emissions. Loss of Mem iory, au wasting aiseases, all effects of self-abose or excess and indiscretion. A nerve tonio sad blood builder. Brings the pink glow to pale cheeks and restores tbe 60 PILLS 50 CTS. i-vnre of youth. By man K ROn ikf hni. ft hnzKt for ii'i.50, with oor bankable guarantee to core or refund tbe money paid. Send for circular and cpy of oor bankable guarantee bond. NervitaTablets EXTRA STRENGTH Immediate ResnHa (YELLOW LABEL) Positively guaranteed cure for Loss of Power, Vnricoeoln. TTndAvnlotwHl or Shrnnknn Onraas. Paresis, Locomotor Ataxia, Nervous Prostra- ioirpHysteria, Pits, Insanity, Paralysis and the Results of Exeesmve Use of Tobacco, Opium or Liquor. By mail in plain package, $1.00 a box, 6 for $5.00 with our bankable sTuar antee bond to cure in 30 days or refund aioney paid. Address . N En VITA MEDICAL CO. Clinton & Jackson Sts CHICAGO. ILL; For sale 'by E. T. Whitehead & Co. Seotlanl Nesk, N. C. - FOR MALARIA Use nothing but Macnair's Blood and Liver Fills. W. 11. Macnair, Tarboro, N. C. or E. T. Whitehead & Co., ?V 22 ti.- - Scotland Neck N. C. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine. All druggists refund the money it it falls to cure. Fj. W. Grove's signature is on ach box. 25o. . Th'a signature is on every box of e geauta THE EBITORS'S LEISUBE HOURS. Points and 'Paragraphs of Things Present, Past and Future. ; ; Senator Dolliver in the Saturday Evening Post gives a strong paper on stump speaking and oratory. He thinks that the political campaign furnishes the most inviting field, but makes the clear-cut observation that no public speaker can afford to appear before hia audience without the best of preparation. It is true that there has been sr. much public speaking in the centres o5 population and in the rural district; as well during the past decade that ont has to be bright and original to keep from "thrashing straw" which some one else has handled before. The truth is, the public mind, i. more enlightened than formerly and he who would instruct or entertain the great crowd must prepare himself. . The latest political sensation it South Carolina is the resignation o. United States Senators B. R. Tillmar, and J. L. McLaurin. In a warm de bate between them at Gafney, S. C, a lew days ago, lucLaunn cnargec Tillman with being over-confident ir his positions and remarks because In was speaking from a bomb-proof, a si. years term in the United States Senate To this Tillman proposed that both should resign and go before the people. McLaurin agreed to the proposition and the result wad the following duui resignation sent to Governor McSwee- ney : - -"We hereby tender our resignations as senators for the State of South Car oiina in the United States Senate, t. take effect pn November loth next. "Yours respectively," etc. McLaurin has two Years yet in th:! Senate, and the result will be that iJ Tillman wins out before the people McLaurir's seat will be vacant and if McLaurin wins he will succed to Till man's long term. "Someting for Nothing" is the, sis nificant heading of a clear and strong article in,The Outlook on gambling It is pointed out that history doen not tell how early tbe gaming sense began, but it is traced back to the early ages of the Egyptians, the Greeks and the Romans ; and its trail is traced through the Middle Ages in Conti nental Europe. . Great and overwhelming vices come as the logical result of the game of chance, and the desire and effort to get something for nothing is declared to be the most demoralizing tendency and the most dangerous temptation o! our time and country. Two very striking paragraphs ara the following : ! "From the newsboys playing crapr, on the sidewalk and the messenger boys buying jiumbers in the policy shops, to the fashionable" men and women playing bridge-whist -in 'so ciety;' from the negroes and small clerks and 'sports' buying pools on horse-races which they never see, to the dashing investors and unfaithful cashiers 'taking a flyer' in stocks, the same shameless lust of getting soma one else's property with out renderiuy an equivalent--something for nothicg is the badge of all the gambling tribe. " ' . - - ; ' "Drunkennes is hideous; but as ii people we aro not given to it. Unch- fit.tr -is an abhorrence: but in thi-t coup try pure home life is the general ideal. - Tbe-vice which does beset tn Amnnon " rAnnln"" from noorest to richest, .from the most ignorant to the shrewdest, is the gr6wing epidemic of trying to get something for nothing mnkine hste to be rich, without earning. It Is dangerous from every point of view. It gaps the moral char antAr. Tt tnds to induce the other great vices, by association and increas ing shamelessness. It weakens indus- trv nndArmines honesty and enter- j prise, debauches manliuess and woman liness, and if there is any one thing which more than another violates the fr.wimr service to others, this twui w w . - - - V:'. is it. The gambling spirit is the pe culiar danger of American life to-day The Great Remedy of tbe day - Is unquestionably Pain-Killer, . for the motarit relief of all burns, scalds, h-ufaa ati : mid - for Dains in - the bowels as well as m... sud ion attacks of cholera morbus. ; No family should pretend - to keep house .thnnt. it alwavH bv them; .Avoid .KotitittMi. therfrtit feut one BaiA-Ktl SERMON ONWHITE LABOR BOTS MAY SISE. The New Life in North Carolina. Charlotte Obseiver," " North Carolina is at the beginning of new era in the development of which the white laboring man is going to play an important role. The movement is revolutionary in its tendency, but by proper training ,and attention will work great good to those who. take part in it and to the State. The labor rally held in Charlotte on the 20th instant was significant. It meant much more than the casual , observer would believe. Many saw nothing more than 1,200 to 1,500 men marching in a procession. I saw more than that. I felt the grow ing power of a class of people heretofore of little consequence' iu this and other Southern states. As I moved among the enthusiastic crowd I saw new hope and fresh ambitions in the faces of the men and boys who coin posed it. A de cade ago such a meeting would have been impossible; one hundred white laborers would have almost exhausted the supply. Most ot that class was scattered through , the rural districts, where they worked small - farms. With the adyent of manufacturing enterprises they moved to the towns. They had neither money nor influence. But to day those who will are earning com fortable livings, and some money be sides. In addition to "this they are rapidly becoming a power in politics Tbe white laboring man must be- reckoned within North Carolina be fore any man be elected. He holds the balance of power. The vote .of 15,000 cotton mill operatives can either elect nor defeat. Truly, they have made progress. As the South has risen from the destruction caused by the civil war, so has tbe white working man lifted himself from the burden and curse of 6lave labor. Slavery was a ban to him and for the first time that institution fastened itselt upon the South be is ree 9 compete for the emoluments of honest labor. Is he going to make the best of his opportunities, or'will he chase rainbows and lose what gtound he has already gained ? What will be the ultimate outcome? Will the State profit by tho progress of white labor? The demand in the South is for re liable and skilled labor. The cotton mill, the wood shop, the iron foundry and the clothing factory need both. Will the native born white man grasp the opportunity and fit himself for the work by becoming efficient, or will he seek it through the labor unions and secret orders? That is where the dan ger lies. If he takes the former course he will prove a" blessing to himself, to his employer and to the State, but if be pursues tbe latter the result will bs disastrous to all. , Labor uuions are well enough in their place. They he'p the skilled and intelligent workmen but may ruin tbe man without the sufficient training and knowledge who sees them as a means to an'end. - - Knowing the people of North Caro- lirA and the conditions that surround them, as I do, I firmly believe that great good will come from the progress of white labor. - The conservatism of the people of this State, and especially the rural districts, will save the State from wild-eyed fanatics, base agita tors, blatant fools and cheap dema gogues. , The demand for a good class of un skilled labor is so great and the re muneration so attractive that reliable, sensible country boys are leaving the farms and entering the trades. In the course of time they will form the back bone of the" white, working force of the Smith. The home training ; at tne family altar; at the old field school, and at the country church, '. the abid ing place of the pure, unadulterated Christian religion, will ; make them think well at all times before they act. Under any -circumstances Vr peale to their senses and honor will ba heard. - . This was manifest to me at Belmout Park, on the 20th, when several toughs broke up the . labor celebration by starting a disgraceful fight. The Iron moulders, the carpenters, the plumb ers and - ot ner tradesmen who come from good, sturdy country stock were able and did control a lot of hoodlums and averted a general riot. Every day the personnel of the white labor of Charlotte is improving. The influx ot country boys is helping it. . Tho Rtreet car conductors an nao- tormen of Charlotte come from gooa f imihes and respectables home. They are without skill or special training but have horror, honor driven deep into thftir hearts. From what 1 know iney mke from $20 to $30 per mouth, ani fa not difficult. At times the Ilia KM You Havewways Ba BMritk hours may be Jong and tiresome but there is nothing unwholesome about the labor. Every man on the force has individuality and independence. If you do hot believe itj insult him ! Try his mettle ! You will not find it wanting, M don't know a better place to get a fight for real cause. These men will not remain on tbe street cars always. Those who have ambition, industry and real ability "will rise. No power could keep them down. They will be come merchants, tradesmen and prop erty owners. These are the kind of men thai give dignity to labor organi zations. I know many . such in the Charlotte unions, and 1 - shall 'dare say that' not a ' one of their ill: yelled "scabs" and "rats" at the conductors and motormen while lining up Tyron strest on labor day. I think irre sponsible boys and cheap hoodlums were guilty of that ugly' behavior. That is not tbe way for the labor un ions to win favor with the best people. Such misconduct should not be tolerat ed when there la no cause whatever for it. The labor union has come to tbe South to stay. It is well, as long as the conservative element is in control. But with all of its good features, there are bad ones. This is a free country and if a man sees fit to stay out ot a labor union he has a perfect right to do so. Many a laboring man of stroug individuality does not think it best to join unions, tie has no rignt to Keep his fellow-man from joining. It is with the individual. I am not inclined to join anything myself. I belong, by birth to a family and a State that I am proud of, and to a church by choice. That is all ; and enough. Friendship and positon that come from secret so cieties or brotherhoods are worthless. But about this, every man must follow bis own convictions. So it ia with the labor union. , Becentiy it seems there has been ex cited much interest in the State on the subject of organized labor. A great disturber in this matter is the Bey. J. F. Austin, now of Salisbury, who has done the cause great barm. He lectured for a while as a representative of the State Federation ot Labor. 1 have just heaid that he has been turned out of the la bor unions at Bandleman and Concord. I hope it is true for he Is a burden for decent laboring people to carry. He was proven a filthy libertine, a rascal and an all round bad character before the courts of Randolph county not more than two months' ago. But in tbe face of all of this, this same Austin is editing and circulating a labor paper from Salisbury. I saw him - at the Charlotte rally distributing his sheet. There is nothing in this man and the sooner the white working men find it out and suppress him, the better. He stirs'up strife and engenders malice Weed out such curses and tbe cause of honest labor unions will be benefitted ! Austin has caused trouble wherever be went. The opportunities for young men, with or without money, who are able, willing and ready to work are many at this time in . North Carolina. The demand for efficient men is greater than the available supply. The ener getic, sensible and sober man can en ter and climb high on the rounds of the ladder of success, if he will. He is not barred v Men of capital are hunting for young workmen who know how and are willing to do. v I have been out of college six. years and have kept an eye on a score or more young men of my acquaintance. I shall tell the story of the life of each ot two so far as 1 know it, without call ing names. I do it with tbe hope that it may help others. When atrthe University l met a young boy there who was struggling for an education. He obtained it and is now superintendent of a flourishing city graded school on a salary of $1,500 a year. Since leaving college I have seen tfiat young man's home. Hia widowed mother lives in a small two- roomed house on , a little farm. She was notfable to send her boy to college, but urged him to wojk his way through. He borrowed money from friends and ' accomplished what he started oat to do. The future is bright for him. ' He is a man in every sense of the word and the people of his com munity. are proud of him. Poverty did not cow him. He brushed it aside. Several years ago a friend of mine asked me to try and place his boy a fine specimen of young manhood, full! of brawn and muscle as a clerk in some store in Charlotte. He did not need the boy on the farm, as he had several more, and was not able to send him off to schobI7.I tried in vain for a place that would pay the boy enough to support him. The only offer I had for him was for a contract for two vicars at $15 ner month. That would not have boarded him.-- I found it im possible to better that bid. Boya who lived in iown and boarded at home could and did work for less.' The su perintendent of a force of telephone pole erectors offered sea dollar a day for faith. 1 did not consider that seri ously loir I feared the boy might tall Off a pole and meet deata. Later, however, I did land him. I secured? work in a cotton mill in a near-by town for.him. It was not a gentle man's job, but just such wors as any green hand could get there to-day. He swept the floor, cleaned and oiled ma chinery. For eight months he stuck to the wore like the man that he is. He boarded and roomed with men Who could not read or write, but who knew how to curse and drink. His father being a poor man was not able to fur nish him with more than the clothes he bad on his back and a railroad ticket to where he would work. There fore, the boy could not go to a first class house to board. He roomed with seyen others. The room had two beds. Four occupied them in the day and four at night. Board and room cost $8. The boy of whom I write made GO cents a day, or $16.60 a month. At the end of 8 months he bad saved a few dollars. He had learned a vast deal about mill life, much about the ma chinery, something of the world and had lived up to the moral training of his home. His superintendent liked him and told him so. He saw grit, determination and real worth in him. To-day less than three years since he entered the mill he has a position with a machine shop as a laborer who aids in the erection Of cotton mill ma chinery, that pays him $40 a month and all expenses. He has traveled oyer the entire South and has incidentally gained a liberal education. At home he got a common school training. That boy is made of the right stuff. Each day he will grow. I could give enough examples of this kind to make a book, but it is not nec essary. If there be any one who would like to investigate further let him go to High Point and look into the wood shops : or to Liddell's or Wilkes' or D. A. Tompkjns Company's, or the Park Manufacturing Company's shop and look in ; or to hundreds of other places in the State. The deserving ones are crawling, it may be slowly but surely. There is room at the top and pay at the bot tom in the factory is better than it is in the store. North Carolina is a State of small salaries and low wages. Tbe average salary paid a public school teacher amounts to less than 75 cents per day. Think of it and compare other things. Living is easy in North Carolina. You have more of the necessaries of life than in almost any other section ot country, at small cost. The young man who has the capaci ty and the desire and the energy can do well in North Carolina. If he be haves aa a gentleman should ba will have plenty of friends, The Platonic Lore Letters of Charles "Dicfcens. For more than fifty years an English woman (who is still living) baa cher ished a little sheat of letters written by Charlea Dickens. These charming letters show the novelist in a new part that of tbe successful matchmaker. They tell the story of another tnanV courtship and show how the writer spurred a faint heart into winning a fair lady. They will be printed for the first time in The Saturday Evening Foat for June 15. - What a Dreadful Thiso it is to wake up in the night suffering from cholera morbus, and yet cases of this kind are verv common, lhe trouDio however, will never become serious if you keep a DOttie oi jraiu-jviuer . . . . . ti - Tri 1 1 band, tor it is a remedy tnat never fails to cure cholera, cramps, diarrhoea or dysentery. Avoid substitutes, there is but one Palu-Killer, Perry Davis Price 25c. and 50c. Life Hints. . Find your purpose and fling your life out to it. Try to be somebod with all your might. The lucfclv man ia the man who sees and-grasps.hia opportunity. The world always listens to a man with a will in him. ; - . What is Dut into the first ot life U put into the whole of life. Start right A trreat opportunity will only make you ridiculous unless youare prepared for it. -.. v ... A RAGING, ROARING FLOOD. - Washed down a telegraph line which Chas. C. Ellis, of Lisbon, Ia., had to repair. "Standing waist deep in icy water," he writes, "gave me a -terrible cold and cough. - it grew worse daily. Finally the best doctors in Oakland. Neb., Siasx City and Omaha said. I had Consumption and , could not Jive Then I began uaing Dr. King's New Discovery and was wholly cured - by six bottles." - Positively guaranteed for Couehs, Colds aod all. Throat and Lone troubles by E. TrWbitehrad & C. ," Price 50c zi" : - 1" " Seep Tour Children Busy, Gertrude Okie Gaskell, in Woman's Home Com panion. - Keep your , children busy if yon would have them happy. When tbe occupation is some daily labor which has been wisely allotted, see that it is accomplished aa well aa It is possible for the child to accomplish it under existing circumstances. But whether it be in work.or play) let him - under stand that no matter bow well he may have done to-day and do not be chary of your praise he has within himself that which will make it possible for him to do still better to-morrow. This treatment, instead of discouraging, will encourage, by inciting the child to ward even better work and will early implant that spirit of divine discontent which allows ot no absolute satisfaction in that which has been accomplished until the achievement reaches, perfec tion. This Is the discontent which Emerson preaches aud which Is holy if doubt is not allowed to creep in to mar tbe aspiration. Call at E. T. Whitehead A Co's drug store and get a free sample ofCham- berlain s Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are an elegant physio. They also improve tbe appetite, strengthen the digestion and regulate the liver and bowels. They are easy to take and pleasant in effect. Suffering 's an accident. It dies not matter whether vcu and I suffer. Not enjoyment and not sorrow la our life, not sorrow any more than enjoy ment, but obedience and duty. It duty brings sorrow, let it bring sorrow. Philips Brooks - Dyspeptics cannot be long lived be- cause to live requires nourisnment. Food is nut nourishing until it is dig ested. A disordered stomach cannot digest food, it mast have assistance. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests all kinds of food without aid from the its natural functions. its elements are exactly the same as ttie natural digestive fluids aud it simply can't help but do you good. We can only give what wa bave Happiness, grief, gayety, sadness, are, by nature, contagious. " Biing your health and your strength to the weak and Bickly and so you will be of use to them. Give them, not your weakness, but your energy--so you will revive and lift them up. Life alone can re kindle life. Aniel. A GOOD COUGH MEDICINE. It speaks well for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy when druggists U90 it in their own families in preference to any other. "I have sold Chamber lain's Cough Remedy for tbe past bve years with complete satisfaction to my self and customers, says LJruggist J. Goldsmith, Van Etten, N. Y. "I have always used it In my own. family both for ordinary coughs and colds and lor the cough following la grippe, and find it very efficacious." For sale by E.T. Whitehead Co. The first thing to do, if you have not done it, is to fall in love with your work. Don't brood over the past nor dream ot tbe future ; but seize tbe in stant and get your lesion from tbe hour. Don't wait for extraordinary opportunities; seize common occasione and make them great. "A few months ago, food which I ate for breakfast would not remain on my stomach for half an hour. I used one bottle of jour Kodol Dyspepsia Cure and can now eat my breakfast ani other meals with a relish and my focd is thoroughly digested. Noth ing equals Kodol Pyspeps'a Cure for stomach troubles' H. 8 Pitts, Arling ton Tex. Kodol Dyspepsia Cnre digests what you eat. Every man is rich, or poor according to the degree in which he can afford to enjoy the necessaries, conveniences and amusements of human life. What is boagnt with money or gooJs is pur chased by labor, as much as what we acquire by the toil of our own body. A lam Smith. You may as well expect to run a steam engine without water as to find an active energetic man with a torpid liver and you may know that his liver is torpid when he does not relish bis food, or feels dull and languid alter e uing, often has headache and some times dizziness. A few doses of Cham builain'8 Stomach and Liver Tablets vi l'l restore his liver to its normal func tions, itujxf his vitality, improve hij ingestion and make him feel like a new man. Price, Zo cents. Samples free it If. T. Whitehead & Co'a drug store. Customer "And is thia chair really (an antique piece of furniture?" Deal er "Antique, madam ! There a ro doubt about that. Why, it was so worm eaten when I bought it that I had to have a new back and a new seat and three new legs made for it." Tit-Bits. - A POOR MILLIONAIRE Lately starved . in London : because he could not digest hia food. Early use ot Dr. King's New Lite Pills wonld have saved him. . ' They strengthen the stomach, aid digestion, promote aasitr. nation, improve appetite. , Price 25r. Money back it not satisfied. Bold . by E. T. Whitehead A Co. dntt. ' Dyspepsia Cure Diaests what you cat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in strengthening 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 relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Sick Headache, Gastralgia.Crampsand all other results of imperfect digestion. Price 50c. and f 1. Large stee contains 24 times maliaiBA. HookaHaboutdyspepslamaUedfre . Prepared by E. C. DtWlTT A CO.. Cblcaga. ..WANTED- Trustworthy mex awi women to travel and advertisa for old established house of solid financial standing. Salary $780 a year and ex penses, all payable in cash. No can vassing required. (Jive references and enclose self-addretwed stamiwi en velope. Address, Manager, .155 Caxtou Building, Chicago. "WiLMINGTON & WELDON r7r AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. DATED Jan. lit, 1901. Si:- I a p za 'it, A. M. II 60 1 00 V. M.!l' Leave Weld on Ar. Kocky M.t. Leave Tarboro 12 21 6 00 Lv. Rocky Mt. Leave Wtlaoll Leave Selmft Ltr. Fayetterllle Ar. Florence ...t or. 1 60 3 5" 4 .10 7 35 P. M. 10 i2 10 OS 11 is n sr. a 40 A. M. tt :i7 7 10 h ir. 6 07 ii! r.-j V 40 Ar. Golilnboro Lv. GolilHboro I Lr. Magnolia 7 65 4 r, 7 6! ai A. M. 4 :;r (IU r. M. r. m TRAINS GOING NORTH. 61 a 4 C A. Lv. Florcilitft 9 50 12 IS 1 r.o 7 a--. U 41 11 3 ". 12 13 Lv. Fayettevllle Leave Splnia Arrive Wtlsdn A. M. V. M. A, M. U :i5 11 10 12 2 Lv. Wunlnirton Lv. Varnolla Lv. GoldsbofO 7 oo X 311 37 4 no I. M. 2 sr. 3 30 A. M. P. M. 10 45 M. 1 IK 1 53 Leave Wilson Ar. Rocky Mt. 6 33 U JO 12 12 4". II 23 Arrive Tarboro tf 4 Leave Torboro 2 31 Lv. Rocky Mt. Ar. Weld on 3 30 4 32 P. M. 12 a: 1 3Si A.M. P. M fDaily except Monday. Daily ex- nan Snnilav. Wilmineton and Weldon Railroad. Yadkin Division Main Line Train loaves Wilmington, U 00 a. m., nrrivea Fayetteville 12 05 p. m., leaves Fayette vllle 12 25 p. m., arrives Sanlord 1 43 m. Returning leaves hamord s p. m., arrives Fayetteville 4 20 p. m., leaves Jfayetteviue 4 zu p. m., arrives Wilmington U 25 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennettsville Branch Train leaves Bennettsvllle 8 05 a. m., Maxton'l) 05 m., Red Springs 9 50 a. m., Hope Mil's 10 C5 a. m., arrives Fayettevllle 11 10 a. m. Returning leaves Fiiyele- ville 4 45 p. m., Hope Mills a ;. p. '" Red Springs b 35 p. m., Max ton G 15 p. m., arrives liennettsvine 7 lh p. m. Connections at xayeuevine wun train No. 78, at Maxton with the Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with the Red Springs and Bowmore Railroad, at Sanford with the Seaboard Air Line and Southern Railway, at Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Scotland Neck Brnnch Road leaves Weldon 3 :55 p tn., HalilVz 4 :17 p. nr.., arrives Scotland Aeck at 5 :08 p. m , Greenville 6 :57 p. m.. Kins- ton 7:55 p. m. Returning leaves Kinston 7 :50 a. m., Green il!e 8 :52 a. m., arriving Halifax at 11 :18 a. m., Weldon 11 :33 a. m., daily except Sun day. Trnlns cn nkliington rsrancn leave Washington 8 :10 a. m. and 2 ;f0 o- u.,- arrive Parmele 'J :I0 a. m. and ' ' p. m., returning 1 a e Parmelo v) n. and 6:30 p.m., airiv niHhiiirion li :00 a. rn. and 7 :30 p. m., daily- ex cept Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro, iN.;., duly except Sunday .uu p. m,, fruniay, 4 :lop. rr.., arrives rlvmoutb t AM p. m 6 :10 p. in., Returning, leaves TJy mouth dally except Sunday, 7 :50 a. m. and Sunday 9 :00 a. m., arrives TailjOro 10:10 a. m., 11 :00 a. m. Train on Midland N. C. Branch leaves Goldsboro dally, except Sunday. 5 KX) a. m., arriving Smithfie'd 0 :10 a. m. Returning !eaves Smithtield 7 :0 a. m. ; arrives at Goldaboro 8 :25 a. n Trains on Nashville Branch- leave Rocky Mount at 9 :3Qa. m., 3 :40 p. m., arrive Nashville 10 :20 a. m.,4 :03 p.m t 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 daily, except Sunday, 11 :40 a. m. and 4 -.25 p. m. Return ing leaves Clinton at b :5 a. tn. and 2 :50 a. m. w Train No. 78 makes close connection at Weldon for all t points North daily, all rai' via Richmond. - . . H. M. EMERSON, - - Geul Pass. Agent. J.Tt. KENLY, Genl Managers ' T. JItEaEBSOT. Trtr.n. tfariM. Laxative pTogaHftssare