Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / June 26, 1902, edition 1 / Page 1
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IF YCU AC3 C3STIC3 THE GO HMON1 - rouwiit - ADVERTI63 -room-. uoinec3. 0 SlXX fOUE ADYIETISBlfBMl IK 5 W DUSIuESS WHAT STEAM IS TO- Machinery, E. E. HILLXARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE ti.oo. Thai Great Propelling Power. VOL. XVIII. New Series Vol. 5. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1902. NO. 26 "My hair was falling out and turning gray very fast. But your Hair Vigor stopped the falling and restored the natural color." Mrs. E. Z. Benomme, Cohoes, N. Y. Q It's impossible for you not to look old, with the color of seventy years in your hair ! Perhaps you are seventy, and you like your gray hair! If not, use Ayer's Hair Vigor. In less than a month your gray hair will have all the dark, rich color of youth. Sl.lt fertile Ail oregzMa, If your druggist cannot supply 'you, genu us one aouar ; 1 and we 'will duress you a bottle. Be sure and clve the name of your nearest express office. Address, J.-C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. Dyspepsia (Cure Digests what yon eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds of food. It gives instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat an the food you want. The most sensitive stomachs can take it. By its use many thousands or dvsrjeDtics have been cured after everything else failed. Is unequalled for the stomach. ' Child ren with weak stomachs thrive on it. First dose relieves. A diet unnecessary. Cures all stomach troubles Prepared only by E. C. De Witt 6 Co., Chicago The L bottle contains 2 times the 50c sire. PROFESSIONAL. Dentist. OFFics-Over New Whithead Building. Office hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to 4 o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. D R. J. P. WIMBERLKi, OFFICE HOTEL LAWREHCE, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. DR. H.I. CLARK, -Office formerly occupied by Claude Kitchin. Main Street, Scotland Neck, N. C. A. JLlUNN, ATTORNE Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Practices wherever his services are eenuired R. II. SMITH. STUART H. SMITH. JjMlTH fc SMITH, ATTORN EYS-AT-L AW. " Stalen Bld'g, over Tyler & Outterbridge, Scotland Neck,N. C. DWARD L. TRAVIb, Attorney and Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. $F 'Money Loaned on Farm Lands. CLAUDE KITCHIK. A, P. KITCHIN. KITCHIN & KITCHIN, ATTORNE YS-AT-L AW. Practice wherever servieesare required Office : Futrell Building. Scotland Neck, N. C. Buy Your ... BfJGGIES, UNDERTAKINGS AND PICTURE FRAMES from JOHN B. HYATT. R. C. Brown's old stand, Tarboro. " First-class goods at low prices. Compare our Work with that of our Competitors. ESTABLISHED IN 1865. -CHAS' ll WALSH Stea Mi Hi hii WORKS, ' . Sycamore St., Petebsbdeg, Va. Monuments, Tombs, Cemetery Curb ing, Ac. All work strictly first class and at Lowest Prices. X ALSO FURNISH IEON , FECCD. VASES, &C. - Daaisrna sent to any address free. In I m r i writing for them pkaae tt g3 of d THE EDITOBS'S LEI5UBE EOTTBS Points and Paragraphs of Things Freiont, Past and Future. Congress has at last passed a canal bill - . .. The majority was afraid of the volca noes in Lake Nicaragua, and so passed a bill iii favor of the Panama r oute This is much shorter than the Nica ragua route, and so at least has that aspect of earlier completion. It Is a matter ror serious doubt, as we see it, whether the canal will L-e built soon notwithstanding the bill has We are not speaking here any opiu- ionpro or con on the temperance question ; but it might as well be said now as any time that the "people o North Carolina are getting ready for a great revolution 'in fayor of temper ance and . aganist the open saloon And there is no ill feeling in it towards the saloon-keepers or those who patron ize the saloons. The wave of temper ance influence that will soon sweep over the State is the result of a strong impuke to help those who suffer and save those who are in dauger. .temperance womers are tne most unselfish people in all the land. The make effort to save those whose habiu are such as to lead to utter ruin, and these same people often bear ill will against the tern perance peopIaThi advocates of temparanca know that their agitation of the question wil render them mora or less unpopular, but their love lor humanity and pit for the suffering Impel them to tbi work. This is the season when the claim of the candidates are persistently put before the public by the friends and supporters of each. . The local newspaper comes in now as a valuable institution, but it is toe- often forgotten by those whose inter ests are eougbt to be advanced tbrougL it. Newspapers have put many t man on the road to political success, who but for them would have remain ed a private citizen out of office. Sometimes paj ers which fail to pub lish every communication or card sent to them are unfairly and unjustly criticised. Generally newspapers would like to please all the public, both their read ers and those who are not their read ers ; and to heap criticisms upon them for not doing what would please the public is to cast reflection on the com mon sense of tneir management. The truth-is, cards and communica tions which put newspaper editors to enconvenience to publish them ought to be accompanied by a eash considera tion commensurate with the value of the service. CURES BLOOD AND SKIN DIS EASES, ITCHING HUMORS, EC ZEMA, SCROFULA, ETC. Send no money simply : write and try Botanic Blood Balm at our. ex pense. A personal trial ' of Blood Balm is better than a thousand printed testimonials, so don't hesitate to write for a free sample. If you suf fer from ulcers, scrofula, blood poison, cancer, eating sores, ltcmng skin, pimples, boils, bono pains, swell ings, rheumatism, catarrh, or -any blood or skin disease, we advise you to take Botanic Blood Balm - (B. B. B.) Especially recommended lor old, ob stinate, deep-seated cases ot malignant blood . or diseases;1 because Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) kills the poison in the blood, cures where all else fails. heals every sore, makes the blood pure and neb, gives the skin the rich glow of health. B. B. B. the most perfect blood Durifier made. Thoroughly test ed for 30 years. Costs fl per large bot tle at drugstores. To prove it cures, samnle oTBIood Balm sent free by Uvntlnir Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and fires medical .-a vice sent in eafcd IrtttT. fTfcU AUTHORS AND CLOTHS How Some Writers Drasssd. EVEBY ONE EI3 WAY. Selected. ... . : Many writers, composers,, painters and sculptors have believed that their flood of ideas was helped by the adop tion ot some peculiar style of dress. Dumas, ior example, used to take off his coat and vest, unfasten his shirt collar and turn up his sleeves to the elbows before beginning to write Probably he would have preferred to dispense with clothing altogether ii he could have had his way. . Buffon, on the other band, when writing bis "Natural History," attired himself in full court dress, ruffles, frills and all, fitly to sustain the dig nity of the subject. Beranger used to g3t himself up to look like an old concierge, and he al ways wore a red rose in his buttonhole in order to draw v attention to the fact of his not being decorated. It is said of Scribe that he failed to grasp his subject unless he were fully dressed spick and span. Lam ai tine, with curious perversity preferred to be known as a politician, architect or financial authority, rather than as a poet, and he used to '. dress, in accordance with these aspirations, in a tightly buttoned frock coat. Vic tor Hugo, who was always bent on calling attention to his genius, startled the world at one time by taking as his model the figure of the "Creator" In Michael Angelo's frescoes. A fancy costume of black velvet was always donned by Wagner when he was composing, and a kind of Tamo' Skanter cap. A signet ring presented to him by Frederick of Prussia was worn by Haydn while he was working, and Beethoven would wash his hands dozens of times before begginning his compositions. Victoria Sardan composed La Tos- ca, as well as most of his other works, "clothed in a little gray jacket, tight trouser and a Scotch cap,", seated close beside a blazing fire, being the most chilly of mortals ; fires, summer as well as winter, were always in evi dence. Mascsgni. while working on his Japanese opera, arrayed" himself in a flowing robe of Eastern style, with all his surroundings Oriental in character, oceans of coffee being con sumed as necessary to inspiration. Cimarosa, the celebrated Italian composer, turns out his very best work when he is surrounded by a'bevy of children, making day hideous by their noise ' and clatter. Mendes is the most absent-minded of mortals, and often has three or four cigars alight at the same time while com posing, through excessive 'absent mindedness. Some odd tricks are also credited to Dr. Conan Doyle who is another absent-minded mortal. Red was a color detested by "Lewis Carroll," and a little girl who came to visit him was absolutely forbidden to wear a red frock ofbright hue while out in his company. Pink and gray were his favorite combinations of color. In personal matters he had a great Jear ot extravagance . and would only wear cotton gloves. He never wore an overcoat, and always wore a tall hat, whatever might be the climatic conditions. ' He was devoted to the cup which cheers, but not In ebriates, and while writing "Alice in Wonderland" he consumed tea enough tj iloat the Eaglisb nayy. While combing he used to. walk up. and J down the room, swinging the ' tea-pot back and forth, while the tea steeped. Edwaid. Fitz Ctiald, o Khayyam' fame, when he wrote, a 1 ways sat in a high-backed, low-seated red-covered 'arm chair, often in dress ng gown and slippers, and invariably kept his hat on, which, inddeed, he THIS WILL INTEREST MOT HERS Mother Gray's "Sweet Powders for Children, Cure Feverish ness, Bad 8tonaeh, Teething Disorders, Break up Colds, move and regulate the Bow els and Destroy Worms. They. never EL Vyct testimonials. . At all .r';-'7 "'oqUi tilery. They give liwly Uteri, seemed n9ver to -remove except when be wanted a rel handkerchief from the interior. In texture his clothes are described as resembling that worn by pilots his trousers were short, and he always wore low shoes and gray stock ings. He generally wore a stand-up collar, with a blac silk scarf care lessly tied in a bow, and his while shirt front, was unstarched, and did not suggest- resent acquaintance with the ironing, board. In cold weather he wore a large gray, plaid shawl round his neck and shoulders. He was n smoker, but 'the same pipe was never used twice, as he always broke it after the tobacco was consumed. While writing or dictating-, his stories, Thackeray used to walk up and down in his bedroom , pause at one find, pace'' oack once more and then step at the foot of the bed, where he would stand for some moments, roll ing his hand oyer the brass ball on the end of the bedstead. He usually dictated his stories his daughter be ing his amantrenaia, but when he came to a critical point, he would send his secretary away and write for himself saying that he could think best with a peiTin his hand. "A pen to the author is like the ward of the necromancer, it compels the spell.". Washington Irving was equal to Ht seven sleepers always being able to all asleep on the slightest provocation, while writing, or even when dining out in company ha usually fell asleep at the dinner table ; this occurrence in deed was so common with him that the guests usually only noticed it with a smile. After a nan of some ten min utes h 3 would open his eyes and take part in tha conversation, apparently unconscious of having been asleep. George E:l!ot alw'ays dressed with great care befora sitting down at her de3k. Hannah More was fond ol sea green silk, and most of her tales were written with the authoress garbed in a gown of this hue. George Sand, whan . writing, wore "pretty yellow slippers, smart stockings and" red pan taloons." . r What Frances Hodgson Burnett Townsend illustrates in her heroines as to clothes and surroundings she practices on herself. Faw writers, per haps, have spent mora on their gowns, and lew ' ara mora ssnsitive to their environments ; it is impossible jfor her to write at ease, whether at home or oa shipboard, unless surrounded by an atmosphere of refined luxury. A story is told that Mr. Edmund Bussell of Desarte memory, was , once con- suited by the author of "That Lass o' Lowries" regardi ng a . cer tai n go wn. The material chossn was a large fig ured brocade, which on her short person did not promise results that were alluring. "Which is the right side of this fabric?" asked Mr. Russell, This," said the novelist, indicating it to' him. "You are mistaken, madam," rejoined .Mr. Russell. "That side is prose, and the other is poetry." His hint or suggestion, however, was not heeded, and the dress was made up wth its right side turned outward to the world. Amelia Riyes, in the first days of her fame,- studied her glass carefully and spent much thought, time and money on her gowns, which were La Toscain design or directoire, or em pire, by turns. She could write most at her ease when clothed in a certain pale roee-clored gown with a Persian sash. Hex instructions to her modiste were usually wound up with the ad monition "make me look as slim as possible." Her gowns were stunning ; they amazed-Newport, and wrought confusion to the fashion writers when Amelie Rives was the sensation of the hour. Her clothes are also affairs of , prime importance to "Ouida.", She always dresses with elaborate care and usually in rather fantastic fashion, being able to oqmpose in more glowing style if FILTHY TEMPLES IN INDIAN , Sacred cowa often defile Indian tem ples; but worse yet Is a body that's pol luted by constipation. Don't permit it. .Cleanse yonr system with Dr. King's New Life Tills and avoid hn- attired in draperies like urfto those with which she clothes her heroines. Three spitz dogs are her constant com panions even when she is writing. The presence of animals is a source of in spiration to other writers Francois Coppee amons the 'number, also Gar- j tier, scscsini and tfandelaire. Mon taigne also kept his black cat beside him when writing, and whenever puz zled for a word would stroke it in fun. Questi oes in Arithmetic. Ohio State Journal. - - A. and B. are good friends, who liye next door to each other. A.' bought his daughter a piano for $500. How much would B. give if some one would steal the piano ; also how long will A. and B. remain on speaking terms? A man dies leaving a will. How many lawyers will be required to break the will and bow long will it be before the lawyers own the estate of the de ceased? A doctor calls on his patient three time3 a day. How long will the patient live and bow much will the doctor make out a tha patient before he dies? How long can a half-horse-power man run a lour-norse-power lawn mower? : Mary has three green apples and Johnnie has seven. If Mary eats ail of her green apples and Jobnn'e eats all of hisgraen apples, at what hour will the funerals take place? Didn't Dare to Bisk It. Among other things found in an old dcrapbook which has recently come to ight is an amusing anecdote of Wen dell Phillips, taken from a copy of the Richmond Dispatch at the close of the Civil war: -; "The distinguished abolitionist went to Charleston, S. C, once, before he was very well known, and put up at a hotel. He had breakfast served in his room, and was waited upon by a slave. "Mr. Phillips seized the oppoit unity to represent to the negro in a pathetic way that he regarded him as a man and brother, and more than that, that .. ... he himself was an ablitionist. The negro, however, seemed more anxious about his breakfast than lie was about his position in the social scale or the condition of his soul, and naliy Mr. Phillips became discourag- ed and told him to go away, saying that he could not bear to be waited on by a slave. " 'You must 'scuse me, raassa,' said tha negro ; 'I is 'bliged to stay here 'cause I'm 'sponsible for do silver ware." A Good Msmory. New York Tribune. At a little dinner the other night the statement was mad6 that the col ored race had longer memories than white folk. Mark Twain, who was present, agreed with the remark, and to prove it told the following : 'Some years ago, when South, I met an old colored man who claimed to have known George Washington. I asked him if he was in the boat when General Washington crossed the Dela ware, and he instantly replied : 'Lor', massa, I tteered dat boat.' " 'Well,' said I, 'do you remember whsn George took a hack afr the cherry tree? "He looked worried for a minute, and then, with a beaming smile, said : ' 'Why, suah, massa,- I dun drove dat back mahsell.' " SHAKE LN TO YOUR SHOES Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures painful, smarting, nervous feet and in growing nails, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. ' It's the greatest comfort discovery ot the age. - Alien '8 root-.case maaes ugu or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating callous and hot, tired aching feet.; Try it to-day. Sold" by druggists and ahoe stores. Don't ac cept any substitute. By mail tor 25e. in stamps. Trial package Free. Ad dress Allen S. Clmsted,Le Roy, N. Y. cure vom ?i trr3. FOR FREE ADVICE Every Woman Should Write Dr. S. B. Hart man, President of The Hartman Sanitarium. j j. jjl CfeciHy j : Mrs. c. L. Byron." L. Byron, of 5J Lincoln ave nue, Chicago, 111., Is President of the Chicago German Woman's Club. She has the following to say of Peruna, the great catarrh remedy, which relieved her of a serious case of catarrh of the bladder: Reruns Medicine Co., Columbus. O.: Gentlemen' ' was cured of n yen severe case ot bladder trouble which the doctors did not know bow to reach. I had severe hoadacho and dragging pains with it, but before the second bottle was used I felt much relieved, and after having used the fifth bottle life looked different to me. This was nearly a year ago, and I have had no recurrence of the trouble. I cannot praise Peruna too highly." MRS. C. L. BYRON. Free Homo Advice. . In view of the great multitude of women suffering from some form of female disease and yet unable to find any cure, Dr. Hartman, the renowned specialist on female catarrhal dis eases, baa announced bia willingness to direct the treatment ot as many cases as make application to him during the summer months without charge, q t Those wishing to become patients should address Tho Peruna MedioiiM Co., Columbus, Ohio. Joke Lsaas to a Bich Gold Find. Redding Cat., Dispatch. More than 100 mining claims have been staked within four days and scores of miners are hurrying to the district as the result of the finding of what promises to be a great gold ledge at the western base of the Shasta di vide, 10 miles this side of French Gulch. Not less remarkable than the ledge itself is the manner in which it came j to be discovered. A man told of the ' At. a - i t supposed ledge as a joke and a miner proved the joke a reality. One night last week in a French Gulch store a crowd of miners and others were spin ning yarns. Martin Foster, who is not a miner, told of a ledge which he knew must exist beside the county road at the base of the Shasta divide, because be had picked up a bit of quartz there 12 years ago which sparkled with gold. He meant the story for a joke. William Ellis, a miner, heard the story and set out early next morning for the spot which Foster had describ ed. He located the little gulch with out difficulty and before night he had located a ledge which cropped out at the surface. He returned next day greatly elated and opened up the vein. The pay streak is more than two feet wide and assays from $100 to $500 per ton. It has baaa opauel up for about 100 ieetand gives no sign of pinching out.'- Bx-Congresaan White to Found a Colony in New Jersey. Cape May. N. J., Dispatch. . George H. White, the last negro to sit in Csngress and who was a member from the second North Caroliaa dis trict in both the Fifty-fifth and Fifty sixth Congresses, is the head of a syndicate which has bought from Sen ator Robert E. Hand 957 acres not far from Burleigh, near the Pennsyl vania and. the Reading roads. On this land a colored colony will be founded from North Carolina. ' The name of the town isio be Whiteboro. Already several avenues have been laid out; Each colonist is to buy a house on the installment plan and is to be allowed ten years to pay for it. . This la to be an agricultural colony on the same plan as that of tbo Jewish colony at Woodbine, this county louses! by fe rron da Hirsch fuxd Mrs. C. KOSlfOLK & CAFOUA 0, 0. CON DE A BED SCHEDULE. Dated Jan. 19tb, 1898. No. 1103 No. J I No. I No. 49 J rations W48i;H02 A. M. P. M. I A. M. P. M. 2 20 9 00 Lv Norfolk Ar. 5 55 10 05 2 40 9 20 Pinners Point 5 39 9 50 3 03 9 46 Drivers 5 05 9 26 3 17 10 00 Suffolk 4 50 12 3 50 10 31 Gates 4 20 8 39 4 15 10 50 Tuns 4 00 8 21 1 36 II OS Abo, key 3 41 8 04 4 58 21 21 Aulander 3 27 7 48 5 35 12 21 Ar. Tarboro Le 2 31 6 45 Ar. Lt. 6 35 J 12 50 Rocky Mount 1 55-1 6 17 P. M. P. P. M. A. M. TDaily. t Daily except Sunday. Trains No. 49 and 48 solid train be tween Pinner s Point and Wilmington. Train No. 49 connects at Rocky Mt. with train 23 for all points South and No. 78 train for all points South and No. 78 train fir all points North. G. M. SEItPELL, J. R. KENLY Genr'l Man. Sup't Tains. T. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pas. Agent WILMINGTON & WELDOM R. P. AND BRANCHES. AND ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. DATED ? 4 Maya5.U02. o ogS 55 ..... ......... A. M. P. M. Y. M. A. ii. P. If. Leave Weld on 11 50 ns Ar. Rocky Mt. 1 01) 10 32 .mwiki Leave Tarboro 12 22 7 22 Lr. liocky Mt. ...1 on "ili 'oi " i "hi ""sTiri 12"m Leave Wilnon m 11 20 s 31 2(1 3 S3 Leave Kelinn 2 C5 I2 so -Lv. Kayettovllle 4 41 1 2s Ar. Florence 7 f( a P. M. A. M Ar. Uoldnboro 0 20 Lv. OoldHboro 7 SI S 15 Lv. Magnolia h f 4 '.Si Ar. Wllmitigton 10 10 OS P.M. A. M. P.M. TRAINS GOING NORTH. 6 Z el eg el .. A. M P. M. Lt. Florence 10 05 h of. Lv. Fayette vllle 12 40 10 28 Leave Sel ma 2 10 1140 Arrive Wilson 2 67 12 2o " a."m.' pT'm ! aV"m". Lv. W dilnpfton 7 00 H Lv. Vaffnolia 8 30 it IS Lv. (Jolilsboro 7 Si 9 37 12 20 im" a'."m". p."w". p.'"m" Leave WHxon 2 35 8 20 lt 0 10 3.i 118 Ar. Kocky Mt. S 30 00 12 10 11 23 1 b3 Arrive Tarboro ' 31 Leave Tarboro 2 31 Lv. Rocky Mt 3 50 13 43 Ar. Wcldon 4 53 1 37 P. M. A. M. P. M. fDaily except Monday. (Daily ex cept Sunday. Wilmington and weldon Kail road, Yadkin Dlyision Main Lino Train leaves Wilmington, 9 10 a. m., arrives Fayetteville 12 20 p. m., leaves Fayette ville 12 42 p. m., arrives Sanford 1 58 p. m. Keturmng leaves naniora j io n m., arrives Fayetteyillo 4 30 p. m., leaves Fayetteville 4 40 p. m., arrives Wilmington 7 30 p. m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennetteville Branch Train leaves Bennettsville 8 10 a. m., Maxton 9 05 a r or T a. m.. lvea eprines v a. m., none Mills 10 55 a. m., arrives Fayetteville 11 10 a. m. Returning leaves Fayette ville 5 00 p. m., Hope Mills 5 25 r. to , Red Springs b 53 p. m., Maxton 6 10 p. m., arrives Bennettsville 7 25 p. m. Connections at f ayetteville witn train No. 78, at Maxton with the Caro lina Central Railroad, at Red Springs with the Red Springs and Bowmore Railroad, at Sanford with tbe Seaboard Air Line and Southern. Railway, at Gulf with the Durham and Ch&rlotte Railroad. Train on the Scrtland Neck Branca Road leaves Weldon 3 :15 p m., Halifrx 8.-29 p. nv., arrives Scotland Neck at 4 :10 p. m., Ureenvuie o : p. m., h.ins ton 6 .45 p. m. Returning leaves Kinston 7 :30 a. m., Greenville 8 :30 a. m., arriving Halifax at 11 :05 a. m. Weldon 11 :20a. m., da y except Sun-, day. Trains on Waahir . on Branch leave Washington 8 :00 m. and 1 .45 n.m. arrive Parmele 8 :55 a. m. and 3 :10 p. m., returning leave Parmele 9 :lo ... ja. and 5 :22 p. m., arrive Washington 10 :35 a. m. and Q :15 p. m., daily ex cept Sunday. Tram leaves Tarboro, N. C, dally except Sunday 4:3s p. m., Sunday 4 ioo p. m., arrives Plymouth 6 :3o p. m., 6 :30 p. m., Returning, leaves Ply mo J .h daily except Sunday, 7 :30 a. m. and Sunday 9 :00 a. m., arrives Tarboro' 9 :55 a. m., 11 :00 a. m. Tram on - Midland ' N. C. Branch' leaves Goldsboro dally, except Sunday. .00 a. m., arriving Smitbfield 6 :10 n . m. Returning leaves Smitbfield 7 :00 a. m. ; arriyes at Goldsboro 8 :25 a. n.. Trains on Nashville Branch leave Rocky Mount at 9 :30a. m., 4 :00 p. m.. arrive Nashville 10 :20 a. m.,4 :23 p.m , Spring Hope 11:00 a. m., f :4o p.m. Returning leave Spring dope 11 :20 a. m., 5 :15 p. m., Nashyill 11:45 s. m, 5:45 p.m., arrive at iocky Mount 12 :10 p. m., 6 :20 p. m., daily except Sunday. , Train on Clinton Br ten leaves war- saw for Clinton daily, cept Sunday 8 :30 a. m. and 4:15 . m. Return ing leaves Clinton t 7.-00 a. m. and 9:30 a. m. Train No. 7r nakes el m connection at Weldon for I poto .North dally, all rai via Richmond. ,
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 26, 1902, edition 1
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