Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / July 18, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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3 ADVERTISING IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER you wnt ' ADVERTISE rocs Business. IB T 1 k mmonwea: tt TrvvrTr Ir IT 11 BUSINESS - WHAT STEAM IS TO- Machinery, E. E. HIL.L.IA.RD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE Si.oo. Tirvr Great Pkopellixo Power. VOL. XVII. New Scries Vol. h SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1901. NO. 29. Sesd Yotte Adyerttsemfrt iw Ncwi Co l Long air About a year a&o my hiir was v c --iTiing out very fast, so I bought rl a bJtti ; of Ayer's Hair Vigor. It stoDeJ the falling and made my '" hr r arov.' very rapidiy, until now it v" j';'45iac!:es in length." Mrs. A. i ftyjditon, Atchison, Kens. i There's another hunger I than that of the stomach. I Haii" hunger, for instance. I Hangry hair needs food, I needs hair vigor Avers. Thi is v;hv vc sav that s I Ayer's Hair Vigor always Is hsir grow long and ? heavy $!,C5 a UiiU. ,-:ur druct ca.-not stipply you, 65 C n one Uoiiar ana e v.h express 53 3 -m i i.nttie. Ee sera r.nd eivo tl lame ' of ot iit.TPs t pxvr.ss o'.iice. Ailiircss, 2 " j . C. A V ER CO., Lowell, Jlass. Best For The South IP 5 Wood's Seeds ?Ji IH SSI are grown ai SI. UUU D selected wi and th special refer At s mi ence to their i adaptability to I our boutnern ' soil and climate and give the best results and satisfaction everywhere. If vour mer- I tl.:iiit does not sell Wood's Seeds I tmte for Special Price-list. s$ Circular givini; prices ami informa- ;..:! about Turnip Seeds, Crimson &' Clover. Late Seed Potatoes, German E Hiilet, Buckwheat and ail Seasonable H set-is. uailed ou renuest. I T. W. WOOD & SONS, Si Seedsmen. - Richmond. Va. j y.'OOKS FAIX CATALOG FE issued J; i:i V'.-ust. teils all alxmt Crimson f. Clnver, Winter Vetches. Rape, Rust Proai end Winter Oats, J Seed Wheats, Grasses, and Clover 5eeds. Vegetable Seeds for Fall Planting. jf nyuemms, iuisps, etc. Citalorae mailed free, 1'KOFESSl OX A L. entist. 0: 0:: 1' : rcE-Ovsr e.v Whithead Building ; -a hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 tc 'clock, p. ra. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. J. P. WIMEEKLJSi, OFFICE HOTEL LAWRENCE, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. RE. II. I. CLARK, L' 0;!';ce lormerly occupied by Claude Kitchin. yi tin Street, Scotland Neck, N. C- - W. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, N. C Ofoioyer TTarri sion's DrtiP- Storn. 7 A.L'UXN, ATTORXE Y-A T-L A W. Scotlaj;i Neck, N. C. rWtfcea wherever his services art ft:iuirftd f DWAIiD L. TKAVIS), i Attorney and Connselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. IT jt')ii.?ij Loaned on Farm Lands. Ydup BrGGIE3, UNDERTAKINGS AND PICTURE F R A M f: ;a JOHN B. HYATT, li. C. Brown's old stand, Tarboro. First-class good at lov prices. VITA PILLS Restore Vitality, Lost Vigor and Manhood CareTmpotenCy Night Emissions, Loss of Meat V. TSf. ory. an wasting diseases, f tyjfr4 aU effects of self-abuse or Kf --A excess and indiscretion. .''-"A nerve tonic nd , Jjkploci builder. Brines fc'-x j l"ie P"15 flw to pale p.OO.'w' clieeks and restores the f,NSfiro of Sth. By mail e. 50o per box. 6 boxes for 60 PILLS 50 CTS. ' nd the money paid. Send for circular KemtaTablets EXTRA STRENGTH Immediate Results (TELLOW LABEL.) . i -mjjy guaranteed cure for Loss of rower, . ncoceie. UndnvnloTwrl rr Shrnnknn Orimna. tfCnC u"' ix!,""otr Atazia, Nervous Prostra. v. ,fl'!!t'ria. Fits. Insanity. Paralysis and the t4nr.r. By Tnftil in nlnin Tin rlrn tr 4t1 .OO tetko v ,r a-oo with our bankable guar- tonLbcnA to cure in 30 days or refund E0?eyPaid. Address tERViTA MEDICAL CO. 't3n& Jackson St&, CHICAGO, ILL. Jwtle I, E. T. Whitehead & Co. bll'nlN3-skf-N.O. FOR MALARIA Ji?t .U;)thn- but Macnair's Blood a.sti Liver Vills. V. 11 rirwTi Topnnm W f Or ''.) r- Whitehead & Co., tL Scotland Neck N. C. TO CORE A COLD IN ONE DAY fea Laxatiye Bromo Quinine.' All a?Sl3tS refund tha care. E v. Grove's signature fa on 1 S66US. Write for it. J wm THS SDIT0H2'3 LSISUEE HOUES. Points and Paragraphs of Things Pre&snt, Past and Future. In the Press Convention at Greens boro last week something was said by one speaker about the wisdom of the press being more independent and self assertive. To one reading about it at long range it is hard to say just what W4s meant. But whatever was meant, there are few institutions in the land more dependent upon the whims of the public than the press. This is true as it applies to the local country week ly, at least. How" to please all and do right at the same time is a bard ques tion. W. II. Steele, a Confederate Veteran of Randolph county, upon receiving a pension warrant for $14, returned it to the State Auditor saving that he would not accept it, as there were others who needed it worse than he did. Some one has suggested that a medal be piesented to Mr. Steele for his gen erosity to those who are more destitute than himself. One remarked the other day that doubtless Mr. Steele was the first pensioner to do such a thing, and another promptly replied that he will probably be the last. Say, what you may, it was an act of unselfishness worthy a great hero, and it must have been prompted by the spirit of true love for his suffering fellows. Railroads may not expect always to hold down everything by their excrbi' taut freight rates. The following from tLe Philadelphia Record is quite sug ?e;;tiye of the possibilities of other methods of transporting oil: "The? have oil in Texas no end of itbut Texas is a State as big as four or five Pennsylvania ; the oil in one corcer of it, and the people who would like to burn cheap oil instead of dear 3oal are prevented by exorbitant freight, rates and the lack of suitable cars for transportation. Pipe lines furnish the solution of oil delivery by the most economical means of carriage, and wmer or la tor the railway companies will find it nece?S8ry to rdapt then q'jipment to the liquid exigencies of the situation. It tbe supply of cheap til shall prove constant it will be 'ound profitable to carry the produc' to consumers wheraver there may be n considerable demand for it. Oil may yen be piped to the Gulf shore and brought in tanK steamers to ail Atlan tic ports at such moderate cost as to out a competitive check upon the price of coal." Among the reasons given why young men could well afford to stay on the farm rather than yield to the dazzle and attraction of city life, we find the following pointed paragraphs in the State Sentinel of Indianapolis : ' "No element la gaining more lrom the matchless progress we are making thsn the man who tills tha soil if he will but cling to the earth. "And why not? There Is no life more independent than that of the farmer. He need pay obeisance to naught but God and nature. He is the commissary of mankind the one man upon whose labor the prosperity f tbe world depends. He has room in which to breathe and live and think. During tbe summer months he goes out into tbe field and wrestles with nature in the sunshine, until he half pnrsuades and half compels the harvest. Tbe pure, untainted air of field and forest adds a glow to his eheek, a sparkle to his eye, and elasticity to his step. To merely live is joy, and when, after the sowing and reaping, the har vest is safe within the granary, who will eay but that the minister of the soil, the hero of the harvest, is not the most favored oi human kind? Nor is farm work as severe as in primeval days. The genius of invention is rap idly reducing the labor to a minimum. Tbe most severe labor of today would have been mere play to the last gen eration' A RAGING, ROARING FOOD. Washed down a telegraph line which Chas. C. Ellis, of Lisbon, la., 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.,Sioax City and Omaha said I had Consumption and could not live. Then I began usin Dr. King's ew Discovery aad was wholly cared by six bottlee." Positively guaranteed for Cougha, Colds and siinrw Lung trottWe. by E. T, mittheadA HOUSEHOLD TALKS. tenia of Information That Stay Be of Value to Home Keeper. Canned rhubarb for pies is a con renience which many housekeepers' regard as a necessity to their pre serve closets. To can it, wash it thor jughly and cut into pieces somewhat '.ess than an inch long. Pack it into jars, fill with cold water, cover and put in a cool, dark place, says the New York Tribune. To avoid infection from typhoid fe rer germs in drinking water during summer jouVneys or in country ho tels or boarding houses, Mrs. Ellen H. Kiehards, of the domestic science Jepartment of the Boston Institute f Technology, advises her pupils to ?arry with them small vials of crys tals of permanganate of potash. This, she says, should be added in small luantities to the glass of . drinking jvater in hotels, on railroads, at the spring, well, etc. The water, after fche germicide has done its work, will oe of a pinkish color. The best way to prepare pineapple for the table is to shred it with a sil rer fork. First peel the fruit and re move the eyes. Then begin at the top and pick it apart. Cover it with powdered sugar and stand it on the tee for two or three hourls before serving. The Armenian restaurants serve between courses preparation that is particularly refreshing in hot weath er and which might with advantage be added to American bills of fare. Prunes, figs and dates, of the finest brands, are rinsed thoroughly and are then soaked in a quantity of cold water until they regain their original plumpness. The water is then turned off and saved, and boiling water, enough to cover the fruit, is poured over it. This is allowed to stand on the fruit until it is cold, when the water in which it was soaked and the juice of a lemon, and sometimes that of an orange, is added, and the mix ture is sweetened. It i3 then poured over cracked ice and served. The fruit juice is especially delicious, but the fruit will also be liked. Grapefruit marmalade is an excel lent dessert for the nursery table. Remove the skin and white pith, cut the former into shreds and boil it until it is tender. Meanwhile put into the kettle sugar equal in quantity to the weight of the fruit, and add to it all tbe juice that can be drained from the fruit. Iit this come to u boil and skim. Then simmer the sirup for 15 minutes. Put in the pulp and rind and boil again for 15 minutes. Put away in jelly tumblers. Nasturtiums are one of the few at tractive flowering plants that will thrive in poor soil. With very little labor anyone can have them if she owns a patch of ground or a window box. For the breakfast table espe cially nothing is prettier than a bowl of the spicy, rich hued flowers. HER OWN JOKEMAKER. How a Little Vaudeville Aetreaa Made lieraolf and Husband Popular. A bright little actress recently in Detroit was asked how she got the yokes that she and her husband use to brighten their team work, for it was noted that they were almost in variably crisp and fresh instead of the rehash so often visited upon the public, says the Free Press. "Don't say anything about it," and she positively blushed, "but here's where they come from. I never knew I had any talent in that direction, and none of my friends suspected it. Tom and I were bad actors when we start ed out together. Very bad. Our jokes had gone through the almanacs and we knew what it was to do our turn before an audience that never grinned and sometimes expressed its feeling with a hiss or worse. "We had a week in Cleveland that made us very melancholy and then we opened in Pittsburgh. We were so desperate that we ignored our lines occasionally and when nothing seemed to be doing1 so far as our tick ling our audiences was concerned, Tom asked me what we were going to have for breakfast next morning. " 'Eggs I retorted. "'What!' he shouted, 'eggs at 30 cents a dozen?' "There's where I first tried to be funny on my own responsibility. It was a poor little joke, but it was a beginning. 'Why, in Cleveland Satur day night,' I laughed, 'they let you have two or three dozen eggs for noth ing. Pittsburgh ought to do as well.' "Tom roared, the audience warmed to a little snicker and then a big river man in the gallery, who had not quite caught on, roared: 'And you kin bet she will do as well. "That brought them and that was what I had been needing all the time. I cut loose from my lines entirely. Even Tom got cute, for him, and ever since hat I've been our joke maker. Sometimes they are studied and some times they are impromptu, but we're been prosperous and happy ever since the bad egg break." Ground Rice Cake. For this take four eggs, eight ounces of ground rice, eight ounces f sugar, eijrht ounces of butter, four of flour, the juice of half a lemon, the rind of a lemon grated, and half a teaspoonful of carbonate of soda mix the sugar with the ground rice and flour and lemon peel; beat the butter to a cream; add it and the eggs well beaten. Next put in the lemon juice, last the soda mixed with a tablespoonful of milk; beat all together for a quarter of an hour, and bake in a tin or mold lined with buttered paper. It will require about an hour to bake. The oven must be very hot.-i-Ladies World.Ner York. This aeems to be an off-year for tbe ' PERSONAL AND LITERARY. I . : ! James Mortimer, the translator into j tnglish of Capt. Dreyfus' book, is a; ournalist, a dramatist and an author-; ity on chess. He is the author of the Chess Player's Pocket-Book and klanual of Openings." The. honorary degree of doctor of laws has been tendered by the TJnlver lity of Dublin to Hannls Taylor, of Mobile, formerly United States min ister to Spain, and author of the 'Origin and Growth of the English Constitution" and of "International Public law.". :. . A monument to the late Bev. Elijah Kellogg, he preacher and writer of oooks for boys, is projected in Maine, ncl three towns are laying claims to fts location Portland, the city of his birth; Brunswick, whexte he was edu cated, and Harps well, ha little sea soast town where he preached so oaany years and where he died. The "William Black Memorial Light," the beacon erected on Duart Point, Isle of Mull, by contributions from the admirers and friends of the !ate novelist, is now flashing over the Waters he so often and so beautifully described. It is a handsome castellated atructure, 45 feet above high water, and visible 12 miles away in clear weather. The cost was 800. "It is given to few men to be hon ored by so many literary memorials is Dr. Arnold (the famous master of Rugby) has been,"saysAnnarB.McGill, in the Book-Buyer. Coleridge, Arthur Dough, Matthew Arnold", Dean Stan ley, Thomas Hughes U these have recorded his wonderful personal in fluence, his beautiful loyalty to his friends, hia fidelity to great prin ciples. Mrs. Bobert Louis Stevenson, says he Critic, has taken up her perma nent residence in San Francisco. She has built a house overlooking: the bay, and filled it with memorials of her husband. Adjoining her, and forming jart of her house, is that of her son by her first marriage, Lloyd Osbourne, and his family. San Francisco was Mrs. Stevenson's home before she was married, and there she met her hus sand. Once in awhile the severity of m erific does an author a service. An drew Lang once performed an office of that kind for Barry Pain. Mr. Pain's first book, "In a Canadian Danoe," was a youthful and immature production, and was severely treated by the critics. It Is said "every editor in London felt the punishment too se vere for the crimo," and to express a practical sympathy, orders began to pour in on Mr. Pain, who presently; had more than he could do. ANTIQUE RUGS ARE RARE. Not More Than Two Hundred In This Country Are the Genuine Goods. One of the most experienced men in the rug business recently mada the assertion that there are not more than 200 genuine antique ruga in the country. Those who own them hold on to them, far their value in creases every day. To ba antique a rug must be at least 100 years old, says the New York World. Because it looks dingy and is high priced is by no means a guarantee that the rug is a genuine antique, and many who have prided them selves on the ownership of such an article would be sadly disappointed if they had it examined by an expert and were informed that it was the ordinary kind made in this country and had been "doctored" to make it appear old. The finest rugs come from Persia and are named after the provinces in which they are made. The manner in which the knots are tied is a guide to the province. They look so much alike it is difficult to tell the differ ence. The manner of making them, too, dates back centuries and the col ors endure forever. The people of India neither invent nor imitate, for the old methods are the best . and they stick to them as long as they live. The colors of these rugs never fade. While the dust may soften their original tints, the primal qual ity is never lost. They can be sleaned time and again without in jury to color or texture. The people of India are excellent at copying and will reproduce an or iginal rug so perfectly that it is hard to tell the difference. They al ways get the best effects. Antique rugs are vry expensive. They cost hundreds ai.d thousands of dollars and $8,000 or $10,000 is not considered exorbitant for a good sized rug. Nearly all of the old patterns are being repeated and are being used, with the exception of those in the mosques, copies of which are not per mitted. The Armenians have demoralized the rug trade' by bringing over a great number of counterfeit rugs in recent years. They use mineral dyes and the weaving is not as skill ful. . Ruined His Opportunity.' "Yes, there is no doubt he stole the hoss. But jest as we wuz goin to string him up he said somethin about playin'.th' concertina for- th' last time. Well, th' boys all liked music an' there wuz a concertina in Ike Hunken's cabin thet had belonged to a tenderfoot that passed in his checks a dozen year ago. The boys fetched it out an' Bill Stump told th' feller tfiet if he'd play 'Rock q Ages clean through we'd let him go. So we all sat round an' the f eUer started in." "Did he play it?" "Played it clean through. But; we hung him jest th' same." "How was that?, "Th' dern kiyote played it in rag time!" Cleveland Plain Dealer. With I C T O ART 11 IJV AUCHITECTWRE x. f re era hmii WW v a err m THE nine-room residence here il lustrated and described will cost $1,900 with a foundation of stone. The size of the parlor is 12 feet 6 inches by 12 feet 6 inches; sitting room, 12 feet 6 inches by 12 feet 6 inches; dining-room, 12 feet 6 inches by 16 feet, and has a bay window; kitchen, 11 by 12 feet; chambers, 8 feet by 8 feet 6 inches; 10 by 10 feet, 9 feet by 12 feet 6 inches; 12 feet by 12 feet 6 inchest 10 by 13 feet, and alcove, T feet 8 inches by 9 feet 0 inches; pantry, 4 feet 6 inches by 6 feet 6 inches; bath-room, 6 feet 6 inches by 10 feet. The three large rooms on the first floor are separated by sliding doors. A rear stairway leads to the base ment and second floor. The first and second stories are 9 feet 6 inches high. All floors are double, having building paper between finished floors and sub-floors. The sheathing is of fence flooring, having tar paper be tween it and siding. All siding is 4 inch face; studding, 2 by 4 inches; joist 2 by 10 inches; shingles, cedar; ornamental carving; art glass; press brick chimney; American glass; Geor- a FRONT ELEVATION. gib pine finish; exterior painting, three coats; galvanized iron gutters and down spouts; front door, glass paneL The doors are 2 feet 8 inches -wide by 7 feet high, 1 inches thick; thefront door is 3 feet 4 inches wide, by 8 feet high. 1 inches thick. Shingles are to have one coat of paint. The attio has a single floor. AU exte rior walls have one coat of brown mortar for back plastering, and all rooms are finished with two coats of plaster. Th hardware is of a sub stantial kind, and properly placed. The rubble stone wall is 18 inches thick, and the basement floor is ce mented. The house is piped for gas and furnace. There is a Georgia pine floor in the halL parlor, sitting and dining-rooms, maple floors in bath-room, kitchen and pantry. The sink in the kitchen is porcelain lined. There is a wainscoting in the kitch en, bath-room, dining-room and halls, made with cement plaster and capped with wood molding. Laundry, coal bins, fruit-room and other store rooms are in the basement. All rough ing in pipes laid to bath-room. Catchbasln and cesspool are built in the yard. Girders are 8 by 10 inches, and posts supporting girders 8 by 8 inches. Closets are provided with shelves and hooks. The front stairs, treads, newels and riser are of Geor gia pine. The Oldest Known Timber. f Probably the oldest timber in the world, which has been subjected to the use of man, is that found in the an cient temple of Egypt, in connection with stone work, which is known to be at least 4,000 years old. This, the only wood used in the construction of the temple, is in the form of ties, holding the end of one stone to another. When two blocks were laid in place an excavation an inch deep was made in each block, in which a tie shaped like an hour glass was driven. It is, therefore, very difficult to force any stone from its position.' The ties ap pear to have been of the tamarisk or Shittim wood, of which the ark was constructed. The Ideal Motor Vehicle. Everybody recognizes that the desi deratum in a motor vehicle is that it shall combine simplicity and durability with cheapness. Public favor is not won by complicated, heavy and cum bersome machinery that is liable at any moment to get out of order. On the contrary it is a demand of Amer icans that an acceptable automobile shall be reasonably light and durable. They want a machine that will last, and one that will be cheap enough to allow of its purchase by the class of people who to-day content themselves jrith a horse and buggy. ' Average Weln-ht of Oysters. There are 14,000 oysters in a ton of the bivalves, but in a good season when banquets are in order it does not take much time to get away with that meas ure of the prince of marine food, as tome are disposed to regard oysters. Boom in Railroad Building-. Over 8,000 miles of new steam rail wy will be constructed in the United States this year, i Oklahoma and In dian territory are in the list for 612 miles. Nr'SieW"sFsTyftraytwsp-C ygnwir wr m m Mfwr The parlor is tinted copper color; sitting-room, maroon; dining-room, peacock blue, dark; . kitchen, straw color; chambers, colors to stiit own er. The size of the house upon the lot' is 22 by 40 feet. The design is very neat and plain, and suitable for a city, suburb or M. 3 . . . PLAN OF FIRST FLOOR. country. The lines on which the resi dence is planned give a large number of rooms, and all of a fair size, as shown by floor plans. The. veranda ceiling is ceiled with narrow beaded ceiling of Georgia pine, finished with hard oil marine varnish. Veranda and porch floors are paint ed four coats good lead and boiled lniseed oil. The chimney is capped with stone. Chimney brace is of wrought fron. The outside cellar way leads to the basement. The height of first' story floor is 4 feet 6 inches above grade. Stone work above PLAN OF SECOND FLOOR. grade is random range block lime stone. Sliding door partitions are lined with one-half inch ceiling. All ma terial throughout must be of the very best. The owner will furnish bath-room fixtures, art glass and shelf hardware. GEORGE A. W. KINTZ. Ants as Mushroom Growers. The growing of "mushrooms" for food by a species of ants is interest ingly descried in the American Natur alist by Prof. W. M. Wheeler. The ants first cut leaves into small pieces and carry them into their under ground chambers, where they are re duced to a pulp and deposited in a heap. In this heap the mycelium of a species of fungus finds lodging, and the subterranean conditions favoring such a result minute swellings are produced on the vegetable mass. These are the "mushrooms" which constitute almost the sole food of the colony of ants that cultivates them. Paternalism ' in Japan. Japan has a postal telegraph and postal telephone system. Postal sav ings banks are also a part of the postal system of that country. In these banks deposits are limited to 500 yen. A sum as small as ten yen may be de posited, but no, sum greater than 50 yen may be deposited in a single day. The deposits are invested in the public loan bonds, consolidate-'! war bonds and war loan bonds. Interest is paid on all deposits. The Travels of a Pen. A fast penman will write at the rate of 30 words a minute, which means that in an hour's steady writing he has drawn his pen along a space of about 300 yards. Manila la a Lara-e Town. Manila's population is found to h 44,732, which- gives it place next be low that of Newark, N. J., or seven teenth from the top in the list of cities of the United States. . Pop Has a Silver Chair. The most costly chair in existence belongs to the pope. It is of silver, is worth $9,000, and was a present from a wealthy admirer. iMTi T at Hi ' i3 fai J Mtii' a Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in sirengtheniug and recon structing the exhausted digestive or gans. It is the la test discovci eddigcst ant and tonic. Ko other preparation can approach it in eilieiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Sick Headache, Gastralgia Craropsanci all other results of imperfect digestion. Price 50c. and $1. Larzesizecor.tains 2M times raall si. Book a U atoutdyspepsia toailedtree Prepared by E. C- DsWITT A CO., C6lcoso WANTED THi-iTvo:iTi3Y ii;x axd women lo travel and advertise lor old established house of solid financial standing. Salary $7S() a year snd ex penses, all pajable in cash. No can vassing required. Give references aud enclose soIf-addre?.;eJ stamped en velope. Address, Manager, Carton Building, Chicago. WILMWBTOH&WELDOS! R. R. AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSE!) GCHElJl'LE. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. DATEO Rf . tllfii Jan. 13, 1801. oS oS e(!o" eS 55 A A A. M. p. M. l. M. A. M. P. M. Loave Weldon 11 W X fs Ar. Kooky Mt. 1 (Ml 1) 52 .(a .. ...(... Leave Tarboro 12 21 (I oi Lv. Kooky Mt. ...1 05 lo ";' ::r " fi" ir. "li'fii l.ave Wilson 1 ijii 0 os 7 10 r !,7 S 40 Leave !Sel:na 2 nr. 11 1 Lv. Fa.re1.tevi lie 4 t 12 Ar. Florence 7 si"- 2 40 P. M. A. SI. Ar. Uolilslioro 7 .".! Lv. Uolrifhoro (I 4.". 8 M Lv. M;i!fi)ilifl 7 61 4 Ar. Wilmington h :o 10 1. M. A. SI. 1'. SI. TRAINS GOING NORTH. e ": si c3 eg ....... . A. Sf P. M. Lv. Florence f 7 Lv. Fayet.tevllle 12 1". t 41 Leave Selma 1 go II :r Arrive WilHon 2 12 111 A.' si'.' p."m". a."m! Lt. VVjnlnsrton 7 o ! :ir Lv. Magnolia 11 10 Lv. (iolilsboro 4 .10 o a 2 p."m.' T. 'ii. p."m". v"."y Leave WilKon 2 5 .Tl 12 l:. 10 4r. 118 Ar. Kooky Mt, ii .W 10 12 4.". 112". 1 M Arrive Tarlioro u 4 Leave Tarboro 2 -II Lv. itooky Mt. 8 :Yi Vi'Tr. "" Ar. Weldon 4 S3 1 P. SI. A.M. P. ST. fDaily except Monday. J Daily ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Yadkin Division Main t Line Train leaves W ilmington, t) 00 a. m., arrives Fayetteville 12 05 p. m., leaves Fayette vllle 12 25 p. ra., arrives Sanford 1 43 p. m. Returning leaves Sanford 3 05 p.m., arriyS8 Fayetteville 4 0 p. in., leaves Fayetteville 4 20 p. ra., arrives Wilmington 0 25 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennettsville Rrp.nch Train leaves Bennettsville 8 05 a. m:, jMr.xton U 05 a. m.. Red Springs 9 50 a. in., Hopo Mil's 10 55 a. m., arrives FayetteviJe 11 10 a. m. Returning leaves Fayette ville 4 45 p. m., Hope Mills 5 55 p. m., Red Springs b 35 p. m., Mnxtnn 15 p. m., arrives Bennettsville 7 13 p. m. Connections at Fayetteville with train No. 78, at Maxton with the Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with tbe Red Spring and Bowmoro Railroad, at Sanford witli the Seaboard Air Line and Southern Railway, at Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Sc "third Nock Brar.ep Road leaves Weldon 3 :;5 p w., Ha lifts. 4 :17 p. rr.., arrives Scotland Neck at 5 :08 p. m , Greenville J :57 p. m., Kins ton 7 .55 p. m. Reluming leaves Kins ton 7 :50 a. m., Greenville 8 :52 a. m., arriving Halifax at 11:18 a. ra., Weldon 11 :33 a. ra., daily except Sun day. Trains on Washington Ernnch leave Washington 8 :I0 a. m. and 2 :3d p. rr.., arrive Parmele 9 :10 a. in. and 4 CO p. ra., returning leave Parmele 9 :'.'.: . iri. and 6:30 p.m., arrive Washington 11 :00 a. m. and 7 :30 p. rc., daily ex cept Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro, N. C, daily except Sunday 5 :30 p. rn.. Sunday, 4 :15 p. m., crrives l'Mnouth 7 :30 j. m., ( :10 p. m., Returning, Ii-aves Ply mouth daily except Sundny,7 :50 . ir.. and Sunday 9 :00 a. in., ixrrivf Tarboro 10:10 a. m., 11 :00 a. w. Tram o:i Midland X. C. IVsinch leaves Goldsboro daily, esoept Sunday. 5 :00 a. m., arriving F;ritheld 0 :I0 . in. Returning leaves Sr;itbf.e!d 7 :.r0 a. m. ; arrives fit Onid-Loro N :2) n. a .Trains on Nnshviiie .Branch le.-no Rocky Mount at 9 :?hu in., 3 :40 p. m ., arrive Nashville 10 :20 a.m., 4 .03 p.rn , Spring Hope 11 :(i0 a. m., 4 :! p. rc . Returning leave Spring Ho; 11 :20 c. m.. 4 :55 p. m., Nashville 11 :45 a. in , 5 :25 p. m., arrive at Rocky Mount 12 :10 a. m., 6 :00 p. m., fiaily except Sunday. Train on Clinton Branch leves War paw for Clinton daily., except Sunday, 11 :40 a. to. and 4 :25"p. rn. Return ing leaves Clinton at 0 :i5 a. m. and 1 :0 a. m. Train No. 78 makes cIomj connection at Weldon for all point North daily, all rai' via Richmond. H.M.EMERSON, Geu'l Pass. Agent. J. R. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. tt, EHEU0& Tratfin Uauag
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 18, 1901, edition 1
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