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A -.A jjewbesmian. Jtic Weekly Newipaper, (KB1 mi:"1' 11 , V" 1 ' jj, CARPENTER. .iaadvanrc... ..2.25 ..1.25 .-. ': .75 .. .25 ,rh.in advance Front and Middle Street, tfewbern, N. O. -IN- CI6K AND Tobacco Our Stock is now complete, emorac- ing every Article known In : a-- - a the Liquor line, j1: It is the Largest Stock ever A - A - - exhibited in the South. THE BEST SIiCT0 STOCK EVER PURCHASED. m - t The most Complete Assort ed Stock known. Bought DJreot from the Dis tillers In Kentuoky and OLlIo. ' '. KOR CASH We Guarantee'to Sell at Low as any -. f House North of Us. wi nclley Brothers raid Cigar Factory, C ERDMANN, Proprietor, opposite Episcopal Eknrdi tonftctnrei " choice HivaW and Domestio C I GARS of the following branda: li COnOXA. CHARMS, CROWNED. PRIZE. EH .. TIIF.V it T rr T-n tt. 'J-LY, FLOI1 DE ALMA, HARD -r v r tuENDLY COilPE "ITOU, SPOKTINQ, , LAST IDEA. FACtcrr ;h fineiT lo&acco Store under ' the I - Joha s Palmer UMi V" pr c,88r9 ni Tobacco at -..J . 1 nc es i'ay on hand. M. GATES. , DE&LERr IN Tinware, i Crockery, ALL KINDS OF I HouseFurnishing Goods SADDLES, HAMSSj 1 M and Willow Ware, PLOWS AND OTHER ficulturai Implements, Paints, ons and YaraiSuCS, MIDDLE STREET, Newbern.N.C. 8ond Store, Brick Block. arliLet. jLEI BROTHERS ; .The IJee - - . : ? ':'! .- ' " T" T 1 1 r - ; - - : : ; j "1 ; VOL. VII. Winter. Who does not love the winter, The hop, the eong, the play ; The Jolly, joyous winter, ; y The Jingling bells and the sleigh V Who does not loye the winter, ' The white and beautiful enow j The gay and festive winter, Where we can pay as we go? Who does not dread the winter, Its nSisery, cold and gloom $ The bleak and dreai7 winter, , The fireless, comfortless room ? ; j Who does not hate the winter, Its frost, its cold, and its snow ; ' Merciless, cruel winter, . When we can't pay as we go ? ! THITNEW HAND. I had been asbore on liberty at Val paraiso. Oar ship, the EndymioD, ct Nantucket, was nearly filled -with sper maceti oil, and, as the crew had in pros pect a good swag at the end of the Toy age, there was little fear of desertion. That peril had been encountered earlier in the voyage, and several of the crew had made good their retreat though vigorously hunted, at the islands and at Payti. The moon was up, and I waB walking leisurely on the margin of the wooded valleys back of the town, indulging in such reveries and glowing anticipations of the future as the moonbeams and shadows of foliage engender in ' the imaginations of those who are still too young to realize that all is vanity." At length I began to fancy that I was not alone. It seemed to me that I could perceive a dark body which might be man or animal moving stealthily among the trees and underwood at some distance below. I came to a halt, not caring to be taken by surprise, and endeavored to penetrate the gloom and ascertain whether I was followed or not ; for I had heard many stories of robbery and assassination in that neighborhood. I had scarcely come to a stand when a voice came np from the deep, dark hol low, which sounded like " halloo J," , OwiDg to the multitudinous echoes which seemed to accompany the hail, it was impossible to determine whether the language was English or Cholar. I had in my hand a stout cudgel, which I fancied plight do me good ser vice. , I waited long for the appearance of . the speaker, expecting to see. him come crawling tip from the thick um brage of the valley ; but I saw nothing till I was startled by a brisk slap on the shoulder, and as I turned to see who had so familiarly saluted .jme, my ears were greeted with a hearty lahgh. "Ha I ha I you are not so well ac quainted with these dingle and moun tain passes as I am," said stranger I have come upon you unawares. 1 1 1 had been a robber I would have Lad you foul." : f ." And a precious little you would have got for your ains," replied I, feel ing re-assured by the gentlemanly ap pearance of my interlocutor and by his mode of address. " You belong to the Endymioa?" queried he. "That you may be sure of. My shabby appearance " " Testifies that you are near tbe end of a long voyage, yhat usage do ycu have on board that ship ?" (" I will only say;" answered -I, that we are short-handed, the best part of theerew having deserted. . We shipped a few beach-combers at Oahu, but they left long ao." " All that implies that your men are dissatisfied with their treatment." .. - "I cannot deny the justness of your inference." . The young gentleman became thoughtful. I wondered at the interest which he took in the subject of our die course. As we walked along toward the lights in the shops of Valparaiso,' he be became lost in his reflections. At ast he seemed to remember that he was not alone, and turning briskly toward me, he said : " I take some interest in that ship of vonrs. When do yon sail t mm I confessed my ignorance,, but told the young man that it was not probable we would stay long, as port expenses were heavv. and the owners of whale- ships were stingy fellows. He turned again toward me, surveyed ' m m. n r i t m ii me cioseiy, ana x cnougnc inere was a queer smile on his visage. Ton think so, do you ?" said he, at last. " ' " I have always heard so." 'Well, I've not time to investigate the matter, as I turn off here, by the calaboose. Good-night." We parted. A few days after this event the cap tain of our ship brought on board a couple of men whom he had shipped for the remainder of the voyage. One oi them wore a neat blue jacket and pants the other looked as if he had slept with his clothes on among the shavings and sawdust of a carpenter's shop, or he might have been hidden in an oven, like Oatherina Alexowna, before she became empress of Bossia. ; -l : V As the plight of the latter was what might" reasonably have been expected, . I took no further notice of him than to perceive that he had a very large and crooked nose; but the spruce appear ance of the former led to the suspicion that he was some officer of a merchant man who had quarreled with his cap tain and deserted. Our mates seemed M r SHE OtD NORTH STATE NEWBEKN, X. to be of that opinion, for they eyed him closely, and for several days treated him With more respect than is generally shown, to a common sailor. ;j But after we had put to sea an event occurred which shook their faith iri hi respectability. In the morning watch, ust after daylight, a raft was discovered to leeward witn Borne lite object upon it. The captain was called, and. after examining it through his glass, he gave orders to port the helm. T " There is a man there from some wreck, likely enough' he said. Accordingly we squared the yards and ran down to the raft, j It proved to be a man wearing'nothing but a ragged; pair of canvas trousers and something; that passed for a shirt that is, fragments of green baize fluttering 'in the wind. He wore no hat, but his thickly-matted hair answered all the purposes of one, except that he eould not have lifted it in re spectful salute to a mermaid if one had chanced to cross his brow. A few ; f Mother Carey's chickens followed in his wake, and two huge albatrosses wheeled above his head as if half inclined to pounce upon him. We had on board a sailmaker named Baldwin, who had belonged to the navy, and as soon as his eves fell troon the stranger he pronounced the name of " Mauley 1" The lone voyager was taken on board, and said that he had been cast awav in a brig." ' . 1 " Baldwin smiled, and afterward told our second mate that this man Mauley was a noted beach-comber of Callao, whom no captain would ship, and who, having visited the frigate to which Bald win belonged, had been ignominiously driven on shore, and' forbidden ever again to set foot on' board that vessel. " He has a very bad name," added the sailmaker, " and he is suspected of hav ing murdered the carp enter of cur frigat at Valparaiso." In fact, the personal appearance of Mauley was much against him, and so no one believed that he had been wrecked. It was thought that in putting o sea on his slight raft he had taken hat desperate method to get onboard some vessel. ' " Keep an eye on him," said our cap ¬ tain to his first mate. The mate did keep an eye on the deso ate wretch, and soon detected him in close and confidential "conversation with Johnson, the spruce seaman whom ho had shipped just before leaving port. It was the mate's watch, while Johnson belonged to the watch of the second mate; yet Johnson had come on deck for the special purpose of speaking w i.u.auioj'. i The two men stood forward of the windlass, under the shadow of the fore ; mast, apart from the rest of the watch and conversed together in s t tone. The mate got as , near to them as h could without beiDg observed, but he caught only, the words : . . - " Remember this must be a dead secret between you and me." j It was but a year before that the terri ble mutiny on board the ship Globe had taken place, and when the mate heard the words which I have quoted, he passed softly down into the cabin, end findings the captain awake, told him what he had overheard. "That man Johnson ! Are you not mistaken ?" demanded the ! captain. " Why, Johnson seems to be quite a gentleman. Must have been somebody else." --. " Yes, sir," replied the mate; "but what secret should anybody have with that Mauley, whom all the crew keeps clear of in broad daylight ? Whisper ing with him in the dark that's the pint, sir. Baldwin swears1 that the fel ler's a murderer, sir." I'll have no plotting and whisper ing in the aarK on Doara my snip 17 It-VI 1- ill cried the captain, suddenly and unac countably breaking forth into a tower ing passion. "Now I recollect that this Johnson has once or twioe shown a rebellious temper when Mr. Pease has ordered him to scrape topmasts or slush them down, or tar rigging; but I thought it was only because he'd never been used to such dirty work. " "If we don't look out he'll- be en gaged in dirtier work than slushing top masts or tarring down rigging,v jsaid the mate. ' " Cutting our throats, eh ?" " It's unaccountable, sir, this plotting Tind having secrets with Mauley; it's so much like the way that Smith says the mutiny begun aboard the Globe." " That's true," answered the captain; " I've a great mind to put them both in irons." " Mebby we'd better wait a little, and see," returned the mate; " and 111 keep a sharp lookout on both on 'em. The captain was silent, but he shook 1 his head threateningly, and the mate went on deck to stand out the remain der of his watch. a a. : Before morning there was a " gale of wind." Sail was shortened, and we lay to under close-reefed main-topsail and storm-staysail. But, spite of wind or weather, the first mate was observed all day running bullets in the cook's ca boose, greatly to the surprise, of the crew, some of whom asked: j " Have there been any pirates heard of on this coast?" ; In the meantime there was something about this Johnson, especially his voice, which reminded me of somebody I had seen before. I noticed that the captain looked sharply at him, and observed all his movements attentively, as if he, ahio, C, SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1879. had some recollection of him. I knew nothing of his conversation with Mau- ey, ahd the mate's surmises. All these matters were related td me afterward. Up to this time Johnson's ignorance of seamanship had been regarded with much leniency, and the mates had taken some pains to instruct him; btit after his consultation with Mauley, under cover of thd darkness, & suspicion was harbored by the captain and mate that his awkwardness in handling a marline- spike and rolling up a top-gallantsail was assumed, and that he pretended to be a green hand only to divert attention from his schemes. i Accordingly, when Johnson made a mistake, or bungled in the performance of any duty, the officers or: the captain reprimanded him sharply. He showed surprise at this change in j their deport ment toward him, and at length he mani- ested feelings of resentment. " I do the best I can, and I am only working my passage home, said he; " I expect no pay." j - ' " Do you answer back,! you rascal ?" ciied the captain, who had overheard the words of Johnson, which were ad dressed to the mate. " Mr. Russell, can't you preserve better order among your men?" i. "I am no, rascal," said Johnson, throwing down the rope which he had been trying to" splice, and confronting the captain, i j Several of the crew Mauley among them were standing near Johnson at that moment, and all but Mauley turned pale. The latter looked steadfastly at the captain, i j " You, too, I suppose," said the cap tain, between his teeth, and with a coun tenance turning pale and red by turns. Mauley fell back, but Johnson smiled contemptuously at the captain's boiling wrath. I " Have you not heard,'! said the lat ter to Johnson, ".that months before you came only a few on . board I triced a hand up in the rigging . and gave him. two dozen lashes for only looking at me as you are doing now ?" "Never heard of it .until now," an swered Johnson, compressing his lips and shaking his head. "It is a useful piece of information." j " The man's a fool,' said the captain, turning away. "Mr. Bussell, put him in irons, land feed him on bread and water for the present." j ' Johnson submitted quietly to be handcuffed, and was fed j on bread and water for several days, by which time we had approached Cape Horn, and his services were needed m working the ship. He was set at liberty. His or derly conduct puzzled the officers, who began to be curious about his antece dents, i He told them that he fell down from Jupiter at the same time with the great goddess Diana, of theEphesians." e"s crazy," said the mates to each other. a j Soon after I hinted to him that 1 l;e lieved hq was the same man whom I had seen one evening, iu a far different rig, among the hills, in the rear of Valpa raiso, i I " What if you did ? You don't know my .name, 1 j suppose t demanded he, rather impatiently. I Nothing important occurred after we doubled the cape until we reached the equinoctial j line, when our captain knocked the cook down with a hand spike for some trifling offense. " Captain Bunker, you'll be sorry for that," j remarked Johnson, who was standing near at the time!. "I'll serve you the same way, you mutinous rascal !" cried the captain, with flashing: eyes. j But Jie didn't. He ordered the mates to put Johnson in irons again, and to diet him as before. j We reached Nantucket, and anchored outside the bar on a fine afternoon in July, j The anchor was j scarcely down when j the owner of the Eadymion stepped on board. Seeing Johnson sit ting on the windlass, thei merchant gave an exclamation of surprise, rushed to ward him, and grasping his manacled handsj cried: j "Why, Edward, my son, what does this, mean?" j "Oh, this is a trifle, father," replied the son of .the owner (known among us by the name of Johnson); "this is nothing compared with knocking down men with handspikes, seizing them up in the rigging and flogging them for looking at the captain, with many other pleasant performances of the - like na - ture." .'!"" . ! " It is true then, what I have heard," said the merchant, turning to the 'cap tain, who was at his side and seemed bewildered by what he had seen and heard ; "it is true, Capt. Banker, that you are a cruel, tyrant toward your 1 crew.'' ! I " I-r-I I didn't know that this young gentleman was your son, sir," stammer ed the captain, as he hastened to knock the irons from the wrists of the young man. .-'( ' I i: " He did not intend that you should know it, replied the owner ; you it," replied I the knew, I presume, that a son of mine had been several years with a merchant of Valparaiso. This is he. When the time We for him to return home. proposed ta him, by letter, that he should work his passage in the Eody mion, for I had heard strange stories about yottr; cruelty toj the crew ; but other shipmasters and mates had assur ed me tnose stones were zaise or ex aggerated, and I was determined to investigate the facts. My son tells me FOREVER. that (he sailors under your command had just cause of complaint." Capt. Bunkor murmured something abotit the necessity of maintaining dis cipline on board Bhip J bttt, it wm ob served that the next time the End jmion put to sea she bad a new captain. " Hunters" at an English fehow. The show of horses was very large and very fine, no fewe? than three hun dred and fifty entries appearing iti the catalogue, and hardly one absent from the stalls. In the hunter class alone there were over eighty; and eighty such horses, it is' quite Safe to ey, as were never seen together out of Ungland high-bred, mettlesome, clean-limbed, strong-boned, glorious-looking animals, in the finest condition and the finest spirits. There were twenty-six ; fouf-year-olds in the ring at one time, and their examination occupied nearly four hours; first nine were thrown out, and then ten, and then came A contest of nearly two hours, between the remain ing ones, at ail paces, under different riders, and with the most careful and critical examination, and evidently very far from an agreement in tbe minds of the judges. When, at last, the colors were assigned, and the winners rode out of the ring, it was plain to see that the successful animals were quite worthy of their honors, but by no means clear that injustice had not been done to their equals; To one having a real fondness for fine saddle-horses, the temptation is strong to go on and fill column after comn with descriptions of individual animals where there were so many of astonish ing excellence, but my purpose being rather to give the impression of the agricultural show at Bristol upon an American farmer, as a farmer, I must leave this branch of the subject with the simple remark that the breeding of the hunter is, with many farmers, a regular branch of their business, suo cess in this breeding producing a capi tal profit. Even an ordinarily good hunter is sure to be worth from &500 to $700, and $2,000 or $3,000 for perfect, strong, weight - carrying horscs.well trained and with good temperis by no means unusual. Incidentally, the farm er gets out of the breaking and training of his young horses a great deal of good' riding whichhe otherwise could not afford, for to succeed well in this busi ness one must be a good crossveountry rider, and show his animals in the front flight of the field. Harper's Maga zine. ' ' Sew York's Churches. New York has not so many churches as is generally supposed . The common notion of the number is about 500, which would not bo many for a city containing over 1,000,000 ptople. Whilo churches have steadily increased here, it is thought i by many of the orthodox that they have not increased nearly so rapidly as they should have done; not, indeed, in pro portion to the growing population of the metropolis. The churches at present number 375, divided among the follow ing sects: Protestant Episcopal, seventy-three; Roman Catholic, fifty-four; Methodist Episcopal, fifty; Presbjte rian forty-one; Baptist, thirty-one; Jews, twenty-five; Lutheran, twenty- one; JJntca iieiormea, twenty; Airicaa Methodist Episcopal, nine; United Presbyterians, seven; Congregational, six; Beformed Presbyterian, five; Uni versalist, five; Unitarian, four; Friends, three; miscellaneous, twenty-one; among the last, one True Dutch Reformed, one Swedenborgian, and one Greek Catholic. It often has been said that ih re is a mosque here, and also a j jss temp'e to which Mohammedans and the Chinese resort; but this seems to be one of the facts of imagination that so abound now- days. There may be, a plaee where the Manhattan Celestials worship, but it is not worthy the name of a temple. The churches give, according to the population, about one to every "2, 800 in habitants; but a verv large proportion of these do not attend church at all. It is said that there are v in the city well nigh 2,000 licensed J liquor or beer shops, or one to every 500 of the popu lation, which would go to show that bodily thirst for alcoholic or malt liquors is nearly six times as great as hanger of the souL But in great cities the worst is always on the surface, and appear anoes frequently fail to represent reality. New York Paper. "Pith and Point." A compositor becomes a pressman -whenever he hugs his sweetheart. Why is half a pie like a natural vacuum in a pine board? Because, it is knot Mi hole. The fellow who "makes no bones about it " is evidently not a prof esaional grave robber. Now who can tell how much the horned horse gnu ? Nobbs says that whenever he goes to harness his mare, he takes a bridle to her. 41 Thus runs the world away," but our landlord sticks like shoemaker's wax. ; I , When the mountains strive for prizes, the Alps will draw a Blano. Of. course you never saw anybody swallow a barn, and yet you probably often saw a barn-swallow. New York News. NO. 2. . Items 01 I a teres t Did you evf het a peachblow f j ' Always in fashion The lettw V. Always ".at home "The life prisoner".. There is ia the Ohio lunatic asylum a young lady who Is beireas to $700,000. 1 Fashion item: This season, as; last, lamps will be trimmed with shears. A river is the most sensitive of tb-ings It runs; away from even its own source. Up to the present time over 20,000 silver mines have been located in Ari- - - i i zona. ' ; ; An exchange says that 4 ' on an average a man eats annually eight bdshels of wheat." ' ! If there be " no foundation for the stories," what's to become of he rest of the house ? 1 V Is crreen wall paper healthy ?' asks ax medical journal. Not if lit is eaten fried. Nothing is healthy that is fried. A correspondent explains why he hadn't written before by saying hecould not " get money enough together to buy a postal card.", ! The total endowment of the public schools of the United States is $8,000,- 000, and it is estimated that the average daily attendance is 4,500,000. j "My dear," said ar wif e to her hus band, " I really think it is tipe we had a greenhouse." " Well, my love, paint it any color you please redj white or green will suit me." j ' A very curious plant is the desmqdium gyrana, or moving plant. It is a .native of India, and is curious from the rotary movement of the leaves, which during the heat of the day, are in constant mo tion. a a-' ' - ' . A" Man may be the noblest work of crea tion, bat he doesn't think about )t, and he, doesn't look it, when, on hearing his name called in the street, he turns and finds that it is only somebody calling his dog. - t- The sun Shines every day in thSyear at Denver, Colorado, according to a newspaper of that city, which states that an old resident, who has kept a record of the days when the sun was visible or invisible for a number of years, finds one period in his accounts where there had been unobscured sun shine for 365 consecutive days, j " Ah, by George," groaned young Mr. Lethered, sinking wearily into an office chair, "ah, by George, my head; aches fearfully." " Possible?" asked his em ployer, old Mr. Hardfax, with a look of curious interest and sympathy. " Pos sible ? Something must have got into it." And then for a long time nobody said anything, and the room! seemed to grow about fifteen degrees colder. .Washington Corresp indents. Newspaper rowthe short pqriare oh Fourteenth street between F street and the avenue, where the correspondents offices were once all located has passed into history. The gregarious impulse that. brought them together m close proximi ty no longer exists. Perhaps it was rn impulse, of self-protection and niu , aal assistance that gathered these men in s lozen contiguous offices, and that sur- vived from the time when the press was weak and the politicians strong ; but however this may be, it is felt no longer, and the -correspondents have One by . .. mm m . . 1 ' L one lelt tne row ana louna quartern elsewhere, until the only Bigns that still adorn the buildings of the row t are those of the New York World, the Cin cinnati Gazette and the Boston Herald. The corner of F and Fourteenth streets is still the central point, boweyer, and none of the offices are more than two squares distant Formerly it was thought necessary that . a correspondent s omoe should be on, the ground floor, but the New York Herald violated this tradition ave years ago, and other j papers fol lowed its example from motives of econ- - t ii L omy. .now nearly a aozen nave quar ters up stairs in Corcoran s fine new building facing the treasury. j Without stopping to count them, I should say that there are about thirty correspondents' offices within $ight of the Fourteenth and F corner. There is scarcely a daily paper in the country of any prominence that does not J have representative in , one of these offices during a session of Congress. In- the recess not a third of the men remain in Washington. The others scatter some to work in the home offices of their pa pers, some to travel as specials, and some to rusticate at the sea-shore or in f Via nnnntrv. Less than a dozen papers 1 . ..- keep their correspondents here the year round. A Washington correspondent's offioa is a much more attractive place than most lawyers' offices. There are usually two or three connecting j rooms, well carpeted and furnished, with walls hung with maps and pictures. In the first room are files of the principal newspa pers of the country, which visitors are free to make use of. A colored messen ger is on guard here, ready to answer the bell of the correspondent, whose work-room is adjourning. 1 Often there is still an inner sanctum for consul ta tion or for work that will not admit o; interruption. Most newspapers feel pride m making their Washington of fices attractive. The editors will work in dingy dens. at home, and will spend money liberally for Brussels carpets and handsome furniture for the branch establishment at the capital. Mr. Smalley, in Cleveland JlerahL 1 , The Newbernian. MATES OF ADVF.ttTlHlXd : .., ...,. r . - . . ., One Square, one inaert ion... ...... . . ..... 1.00 One 8iare, two inMTtion; l.VI One Square, one month. . 2.50 One 8q aw, three months. .0O One 8qmre, six tnontha. 10.00 . One Square, twelve month. 15.00 For larger advertisement liberal contract! win be made, j i - Ten cent per line obarpsl for fir4 inxertioa for advertisement not upwiallj contracted fur. Advertisement mrA routined Mrktly to the buftineM of the advertiser. BLANK & ULR1CH, Foot Of IVXldc&l OtX- A NEWBKRN, N.-C. JFeir mI Fresh Fmmitw SuppUem - , ; ' A THEIR LARGE; SALES COMPEL TSUI TO EETLKillSH THEIR STOCK DAILfT FLOUR OF ALL GRADES. . Meal Free twm, the Mill, r SUGARS, COFFEES, TEAS, BACOH, HAMS. SHOULDERS, SIDES, SYRUPS and MOLASSES. Fresh Butter,-Cheese, Lard, SODA, BTAKCH, SOAPS, LTE, V 8NUFF8 and TOnACCO, PORK, MACKEREL, CODFISH, Solar and Ground Salt, EARTHEN, WOOD & WILLOW WARE, 1 - ' 7 v Spices, Canned Fruits, Crackers, . EVERYTHING IN THELINE Olf QROCEaiX SHIP CHANDLERY. ' Rope of all S1ms Twlna, Ceppwa Iron and Galvaalaed If alia Spike, Blocks, Hooka Oaknm, Oila, Palst. DRY GOODS. Cloths, Homespuns, Shootings, Tick ings, Flannels, Calicoea, Ging hams, Muslins, Yarns, Tapes, Threads. BOOTS AND SHOES, i HATS and CAPS, GLOVE?, SOCKS, STOCKINGS. Tkair goods sre bought t the lowest cash prloaa, nd being alifled witb small profits, thy confi dently assert their prices to be evon lower UUU& the lowest ia tbe City. V Call on them and see for yourselves how much you can buy for a Small Amount of Money. BLANK & TJLRICH, Foot of Middle Street GATKS," FOY & CO., South Front Street, Opposite th0 Q union llouno, NEWBERN, N. C. WHOLESALE GROCERS X AJfP DEALEES IJT General Merchandise, ir.E RECEIVINOFRESH GOODS BY EVERY STEAMER. ? , Their Stock is Large and Complete. Prices Very Low. CLOSE CASH BUYERS WILL FIND IT TO THE IB IKTEBEST TO CALL AND; EX A, M 1 5 E BEFORE PUR-CHA8IHG EL8EWHEBE.' OUR PURCHASES OP BAGGING and TIE3 Are Largre and From Pint Hands, OnrSEES ASD DEALEES WILL BK At Wholesale Prices. Strict penoMl fctUoUon (jrttoala ibimmattmi. glTea to tkm 1 m to tUilmou Mmw YorS. A T
The Newbernian [1876-18??] (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 11, 1879, edition 1
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