Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / Aug. 13, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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- Single Copies 5 Cents. S1.50 Per Year. INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS. NO. 21. vol. xrw : NEW BERNK, CRAVEN COUNTY, N. C, AUGUST 13, 181)1. wilt for Infants' and Children . ElUemlLA, avCssaX,isityitt.T. mm W . llf SSl.' a km. tau M i ati", tv i aai . n - J , .11.1 i. , r&orKssiosJL -' DR. C. K. BAG BY. Surgeon Dentist, CJ XLmUm Sw rr BapUM CWfAt Atto rn ey-at-Law NrW DERNC. N. C ra'ti --. ' H. L. GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. tHK. SS f J.W.I 0W. NCW BtRrtC. M. C ' rwlr t ta CmtI of Dtm, Carta, rtVt iMa. J i is. Isa.t aa4 twilt hJ a e.ini w r4m) C. R. THOMAS, . Sfrw. faj fay BauUUfc SW H. C. - rrawttraa t. iW CMrtMfOtfM, Carte, J-sawi. tJWsesr, UU mm halln MMK. ti .ji-m. Iran asf Nana; (.'wJlM, aJ I . tt WtHet u4 (U Coatr. jlj 1 1 P. H. PEUXTIEB, ATTO RN EY-AT-LAW. AND MONEY BROKER. rrA eittv mJ U mnUiiw Mil Juan. .r Mr !. H .J rrsctie ia lU C.. Crarass, vmM. Jm Qaialas mmd rah w JmrK. at3i (MM t'Hft at 2f , u4 fapram Uwt UM !. DR. J.D.CLARK, NEW DtRNE. N. C cart J! V o Oar Street, fcctrxa .a mw iav . The National Bank OF NEWBERNE, N. C. ixcraaLaTfta taoA. cipiui.. stoaooo Surplus Proflls, ; - 86700 DIRECTORS. Jaa. A. Bat a. - Tno. lujrinj. Caua. S. JDstas. 1. II. Hacxvji. o.tfl. ictam aui. Uiixn. ,. t If aaff T. GREEN. FO.Y & CO.. BANKERS, B a Iuril XjiUit txxUataV. , HW BAMK1NQ HOUSK. X"2 5fc bav 7M IAw. ' HCW 8 CRM C. M. C N EXT! , Prof. W. H. SHEPARD ta taaaimrlalart wui give 7TC M UtfCi fw 20 Cents. - JO - K ' UJT31 i:r! 81131 3?. NCWBCHNLItC Jm ru BHOWN, BARBER SHOP. - 9aulr ittoaaeieiWl? afatU. lu ' m.eta wfcTa W4 tW eaU wataa. - CHICK OLOCK, Ml DOLE ST. 7 Kr R.: J O N ES, iixirr A5i uoitt GROCERIES. - UrCut wt la A Ax ZaiX. SM irKfrm' Priem. Dry Goods & Notions, Tall Steak Larae Aaeanet. Mewa ae lew aa te Lawe. Catt a4 Caamlaw aay Steak. Satlafatea Ceera.teea. tt. m ammmm m .MB TraBaklM,0,,tSrtn, aaaaon of what V W ww oail ogr PAR ASOM HARMESS. aJX Made) f trt pmtST tTOCX anl tra very a J)ST WOAKMAM6HIP. SAch a hamaea JwS j caruwt bw bovjfrt for lewe than V at rwtaiX. But arw wminj, 3 trt order to tntrvdwew H. to rL. v Mmpte for yVx vkT.V T?t PARASOM HARMESS. irvd trta ' WOWKatAXSMlP, Hf V"iii t w. i m '.rywy. e. ; . ,.vJil' VflS .WBW s - . aiTOiIr. HE 3. J. M. HIKES' Boarding House REOPENED. Mm. J. M HINES bj rorn1 . FVu-Oaa tv.rduijr Uoom in the citj , Opfa ! Baptist Chureh. Ti5 PiaiJvT CarU efiu lac.iie, J. M. MINES, Agent. A QREA.T BARGAIN ! 327 ACRES WILL KU AT A GREAT SACRIFICE! a tfirniBf PM iVTlTTDV ntn htr, thr and-a half mi1 Irora the atrcrf JCtw IVro. N. C On. hundrrd ol twrntf-flT mctrm clvred. Gd LmU. mitmUm f Trmekim Tf Tb blae, two haodrpd a ad two merf, hilf timbered with pine, ok, tj i n . and oihr kinda of timber. It at JaO fia Onaio Lnd. Good dweller, ouibatidinxs. od 2m ortjvd. hu fiiM FISH EE Y frootiof hmll mti oa th botch, wher tbert ax tush banks of marl that can Mm b axhaosWJ. from which TeaeU ma loI with aaaa. It b a wj beaatlfal and healthy io ' cation, pt cam tiny a near view to the I pawing aaeii and the A. A N. C ' Eailroad. For terml appl to ! P. TRENWITH, oym, iut Aiurt, iiw inn, I. c. . " THE HEW LEVER SAFETY Taa PSWFECTTON of SIMPLICITY and ECONOMY of POWER. 1 VARIABLK STROKE, only two aets of ftevotvtnar Baarlnga. aWet Hin Ctlmbtna; arvd all around Safety mada. H. B. SMITH MACHINE CO. SMITHVILLE, N. J. ; cirfl8'sJJ.Freii6t Line. : tnim B. H. Stail, Dcflaaw & Yeer On and after Febraarjr It. IS91, tiii line will make rrfuUr SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS Baltimore and New Berne ht3DAY. BATIT.DAY. til r U. Iaa.i.f T. IWra f tl&iilcnir. TVE3 OA Y.SaTC RDAY.uSPU. IertAiij til Sk'.ri. Tiki loliee. TkWtaH.ooly PIOCT I! .otof r 1 r. fmt Dih eu uti ro, VH'P'Of f--', fitllrli.i 1: lrftBMM4. .Ml .)( cMWrtiM tor aM faint hj K. a X. C. Rail rwH mmA &txrr wit Se Il roc Afvats M. a. r.Mow ttxvaaa t'oerta, G1 Mutrr, a lifki .. BaltlmM- Ja. W. MoTAtairc. Apt, SorUik. Va. r. r. cr -s f.-iwip. ti 8oia Xrw York aa4 BaJto. Traaa Um.iTW , KmU rir. C Mmmm, BM(te. S3 Cntr.1 .Karf. . 11. Rek.f H. Pro.tarae. R. I. 8bla War. BMto. TaMdart aaJ SataHara. - ?T York Ut'T. PaJte., WWditt A Sat.rd.fa " rtla.IlpttU. Wla ear. Baturdafa " rnrdiMf. SaiaHira. TVreafk WU ladtac fir.n u l rl rr a.tawl to all peat tt " dilTrat A1m .( Ike MMiUi 9tfJroid Brrakngt of Duk and iAr; a jr. a iiw. & H. O&AT. Afot, N.w Dra, M. C very THE NEW i Pamnrl Ijiplin killed by rata ni-ar ; lwrcurcborf;, Ind. -The wife of Carotid ' (ton, uu 8t Jcarph, Mo., upbraided ! kitu for mat miaooodact. H immmJiatrlr drvw bia rTolTfr aud ho her throngo thr ( head, kt.l nf Kr inataoliy. lie then larnnl : iht weapon a poo hia babj, and thot hiiu ihroarh tb brad. Frremao tbro plawl the , rvTolvrr to bia right ear and blew hia own braina ooi. Th. raoae of the trajredr ia aup , poaad loaaT.ben Freeman'a jealoo.j of his wtf,wn mneh younger than himarlf. -Tie Ulwrala hire twelre Bipratxrs nt the I'tah lrjrialatnre, ooe-lhird of Ihe wli.ile, a larc gain orer the number io an.Tprriou ' l-xlatare- A cloodbunt otxuiretl betoot 11 Ilarriaborff and Rock rille, and nunr !,jv t ia 8oatk Uarriaburg were flooded. Nrr j Holla. 111., m tae Smnrh of the l'hi.-K-., a:l North. eat m Railroad, a apecial tram. atallng of aa engine and one coach, carrjinir offieiala of Ut. road, wbile running through a eat, eraaaed lata a burjy cnotaininfr three p.ranoa, reaoltiag la the almcxt inatant death o Blanch Marble, ared wrtn renr; John Kirk, ..Tent y-ooe year, old, was aenouslr in )arrd, and Joan raaamer, an cleren-year-old girl, waa slightly broiaed. The old g-ntlt-aiau ill probably reeorer. At Dayton, , 1 Heary Goetjther, a prosperous gardener, was .rr rated, charged with the murder of bit wife. Ura. (taenthr died ret-ently under suspicious eircaaoaaaiicea. thargea that iiueuther had poiaooed hia snfa were, freely made. The contents of th. stom&ch, when aualyaevl, dia eloaed atroog tram of arsenic. lleure the arreat. Th. dead wools n , wboae maiden name waa Sofla Winkler, waa fiuenther'i third wife. h. bad beea raiaed In hia farniir. -Mr. Meory Crookahank. Pasha, of K) pt, and Mia. Fjaua WaJraren t'omfort were married t I -ana; home, Pa. Ta. Chortaw ("oal and Mining Compviny baa been nrgamted at tpri Kfiekl, III., to do a mining bnainr. in the Indian Territory. Th. capital stork is UrtO.nop. There is a split among the Alliance men in Kansas over th. a lib-treasury arh.-me. Indian Agent 4'ola baa completed bia work of enrolling the Cor d'Alroe linliana who are entitled to a share iu the distribution of the half million dollar paid by the roTernment for lands re cntly ceded by tbern. It is found that Urt Indiana are entitled to a aharrof this money, and that each will rrrri re eler-n hundred dollars. Ahrani Shulla, a wealthy farmer. waa inatantly killed by tring strock by a Wert Short; train while drinni over a croaa iqg. Bear Fort Pla in, N. Y-- -Al Ihilton, Maaa., James Brewer Crane died, aged aeven-tj-foor. Ilia father. Senna Crane, establiahed In 17V9 th. irst paper m il 1 in Berkshire county ad deeewaed camcd oo Iheoriginal basinras alao a goremnieot mill, wherediatincti re liber paper for I'nit' d State, note and paper for ror eminent booda are manafactored. At Cabridgf, Mess.. Vrt. Suaau Narborrr, aged aerenay years, rommitied suicide by hanging Hrf joonrrat sou. Waiter, recently eloped with a married woman of A 1 ford, taking with bia the three ebilJren of the woman, leaving hia own wife and many creditor, and hi mia-cooda-C added to hia m:ther'a fevble health, caused b.r to take herTjarn life. -The court martial which tried Lieutenant Alexander IVajj for drnnkenneaa while on duty in Yoae amita Valley, ka. reroeame-,cki that he be reprimanded. Dean has been releaaed fcorn arrest and temporarily aligned to the Fourth CaraJry at Frraidio. Henry Roae, a rail road man, ia lying in a dying condition at Kirk wood, X. Y.. from a stab wound inflicted dariag a quarrel by Thomas IVrwire, a young rooga. The citis'ii of Birmingham, Ala., subscribed $"lf2,0CM to a mi II ton -dollar steel plant. The riniens were asked by the pro moter for $130. OW, and the other $-14,000 is ia tight- The Libera la carried Salt Lake City by ain bondrrd majority, electing full legialatir aad county tickets. -Two battal- iooa .f eaTalry left LI Reno, I. T., with iu stroctioos to drire the cattle from the ( liero ke Outlet. There ia a prospect of a collision betwewa toe caralry and the cattlemen and Indiana Ninety-fire out of one hundred aad alnrteea couotiea in Kentucky gire John Toang Brown, the Dfimrrslir n .cuine for goTernor, a aet plurality of 27,707, which would indicate a plurality for the whole state of about 25,000. The rote for the constitution wa large, and resulted in a majority of at lea 90, OK) foe the new instrument. Jsrnea Ovlfcey, one of the last of the tribe of Miami Indiana, is rrro"ted dying at Ins home, on the rodfrey rrserre, nsr Fort Wtjn-. InJ His father was a noted M ismi cl -f. sn I his mother was :he danshlhr of a --'ier. Years ajo -reral liandre-1 arres of v,T-u'd were giren t Chief (.odfrey, which hii since grown into great ralne. and his et4e t riite raloable. 1 1 is wife was the daurhtrr of I-ablonJi , a famous ciril chief of he Miaaus. He lo set era! sons and daujh ten Mrs. Ira I '. Kimbie. wife of lh pre. sidina; elder of the Muscatine Iowa. Metho. d:l t oo.Vreoca, wtule aalerp tell down stairs an 1 waa killed. Her husband was not aware that she waa np until he heard the fall He found h -r misaini;, and rnshed to the hall to find her a nrpe. She was aecrelarr of a I'fiim-h of the W onj-n t Foreign Missionary Swietr. ot I iwa Robrt Tankersly, ajr-1 t ere, died of hydrophobia atWichit . Ki. Kip-rimeuts of killin; chinch bngs with the tnca.iate-1 bugs are said to he successful iu Wiarcnsin Nathan Neat A to, manu facturrraand dealers in trunks, raliae., bas ec , of B-sitoti. bare male an asainmeut without prefrrrrioes. The liabilities are about qaally dirided between Boston and Nrw York Iunag a trrnhle thunder sl.irui st Pry Run, I'a.. four children Jenny. Harvey an-1 Annie Skinner and a colored boy - took refuge tu a barn belrmging to the father of ihe fk Inner children. The boiltiing waa struck by lightning, killing Annie and Hsrrey Suioer instantly and seriously stunning the ntner tw.v The harn cautfht tire snd was ttv 1 4 1 r de.t n-yel. H-r. Vm. C. Jivm, ps- t r of St. John 's Me h .list F.piaropal Church, attirange, N. J. was horaewh ippe.1 by Ade lanle Brown, a member of bia church, l-e cause he won I.) not lore hei . Walter II. Kill, a clerk of (he Alabama i ireat f-'oulhern Uoad al Itirmtnphain. .Ms . has been arrested on a charge of hiiriiin? the Irright depot. The President has siciied the ccmait:n of J Sl.-Kst t'sictt .n.. e-llcctor of the port of Si-w .rk - -Al Aberdeen, S P . Richard Nf.l.n his lwen arrested. charg ed with attemp rinff to burn up ( hicf f Police t'urtjs. A case of leprimv is r'-pirtel nt t'hicago. Fire stores in Kinirda!'-. the larg est suburb "f C lattaoix, were burne.1. Ies over fl,''. Three men hare been arrested, charged with im-endiarism and burelry. Fire at Miilrale. Pa . des-lroyed NN'atkins hoi fselory sod I.utr pickle fm t..rv adjoining, and daasagrd eight 'twell-ns hou-s Ttal 1"-j about eM-V' 1 Ti.e tire a ciused l v th explosion of a ho!r in ttie b.'t facto-r. N' one was irjurr.1 1 n an excursion train near F.lixaletht.- n. Ky . John Ijirnc. of Klitabethtown. shot and k.ii!.--l John Jl u !. -ardson, of Ixuisviile, 1ni h col-ircd. Thc appeared to bv intimate friend., and th .hiNii ing was the result of a sudden 'j'i.irr'1 1-in-is in jail. The hrsvi.-.t rain knn in many years frll al lu . tile. Ky Th-d n--sg. la est no ste.1 st f;ii,iti , The ra in cort 1 1 . ued in urr. n:s n.-arly tvoho;ir.. 1 . i three hours all ih water had gm:-. The trc-t in some plscis '.k.ti- left tat inches deep in mud. Mrs J. II. t ox. of St. Augustine. Fla., died sudden 1 y st ihe Atkins House, a .uin mer resi.rt nesr Mar!lorouirti, N Y. She s an artist ot a liity. no i ha-l t.iUen ninny sketrhta near Marlborough. California salmon bv-vj bern placed in the Seine, France. NINE KILLED IN BATTLE. A Cans of Thievp-s Attacked By Cattlemen. Hot h Mrlrn flr mi Mhrjrt Kamtf, n ml ihool K-arli Othrr Uown-A I-ar umbr Hurt. A d8patrli from IIo iMon, TctfA., sy: Th i,tsT ui u wir on ft uiurh inure ilian er liimry -xtruaiv- pina hsi rrnchru Lfre a, having vKcarrJ oMif irKe ur f u ' i r t i . milt"- from W rit I.ttiv, I u., on lh I. k. A i . .kjipjf tr.uu .i y. Iu Ua I h! t Tu. s.h rr'trtrwl here, Liue u-'n wi-ro k i ' Iri uu J n i tfn wyti;'.JcJ. The jxjiut nt wli;c!i ;ho rcuiuiiir wcvurrcd U just ati tiit. line of Tots wi t Lo'i f r!"n , Mmi tiio ri Li brhooil has ItniK ltx:U th i i 'atlquKr;cn of ft pftiitf, wlnno J-prelaUo;; liav? mvltt tiirm a t.-nor Io all sbv hftTe any prnnnnrut i teres t thi-ri'. It is luowa tliul sum of them rowldfl - n th" !.out:rja side snJ uflie-i In Texas, nird it hnn b rn h? Ua'uij. tur the .yrars Into ea'h r.tat to l"-o lune b .lior fx ui Tno other ;(, thus rssnj-in the ij-e:iiil : y of the law, anil nt t lit r.;e tiujc hiring t:.e unlkjwrul gain. Thl tC"i.C Ji avnnri as th "Ashwitrth frcuyle," fti el in luailc up mostly of n lot of Unlr bruJ-t, who take deltht p in'oipaUy in i e lti: cut llr sud hgh tin x. Tue on ttle-owiuT wf the ct ion hu e iivrj iu dread of t!i s-j insu and ulTt red srvrrelr ut their hands for n iu time, ftuJ at Itun tit? m climeu ha i pnt ih ra . tiotue that tury nnnt delist or t-aki- th oaejHiueiJcrs u t utilv thin, but thv must len Tt the country. I he deprcduf ions con (luasd, however, and so hmld did tli-'y heroine th; the cattleuien found it uecrBHary (o orjfaii Ia an J d rru iu order to profct tfu-insrl vea and proprty. Toe Hon arr t r Irii lrri (f th"1 rattlc- uicii, and rn it w.-u Itrirutil t'lat the K-W)j( waa ao-u a lora.v. thy falird (li'-ir men toifftiuT an i ?t en to lind tiio innraudrrH. TrieY eupctr-l a mm iudic I Morns bj the Jaaider of th tine v , and or trrd hin to !..r. Morris v. aa auppnr ed by the whoU :ruvl. of his faction, and d-fieid the -attlc-iri-n to bsuish him or coinp 1 him to leave. Th quarrel grew hitler, mid on? of the Ash wjrth crowd named Ward drew his gun and bol ft Kesl-Bonr - Peter Iysou. Then the hattle Sei;an. I'iriug rftniu g uerul and M riou Murkle and Tec Perkins, "( the KmJ Honest, were killed, and Will.ts i'upr e and L comb were wounded, llostil A :heu ceased for a nine, hut in the alter uonasQ nnother at fa' k was made on the railway jwsopla by the miil'm n, iu which William -wan, of the l-i Honrs, and John wen and llw.ry Air-jrtii. ot ihe o hr-r party, wer tw'llrJ. Jr ilt-rsand his brother, who had rvmo to atiend the wtm l-d, wrr tired on by "10 I ra In Iam n hut w ere ut li u rt. It Is 'inpowwtb!tf to fcr th- exact jiuiuImt of the jundivj. aa th- men were c-jrrie! away hy Ihelr friend. '(rd waa u'nt to Lake t'har ra for the aiieriT. a pove and the coroner, the Iraenre ul ih- latter, a-remingly, being the ia-vat itupor:aiit SAN DOMINGO'S TRADE. A rrarlinullon A nnou net n c R c c i pr -r 1 1 y Wlth the r.rpiililir. The President isaucd a -rv lanin t ion an nouncin ; reciprociry w ith San Ioinin, mi dr the ta ri (T art of Inst rfo!cr. m hich. ill) a view to sccurini; reciprocal tr de, emptt d from duty sugars, rrol a coiTe. a- d h :! imporTeAj to the I'ti il d State.. Iy t Lis trrnty the following articles, nnnu far t ured in th" United States, will be a Imi.lrd trc of duty into the republic from and after September 1, 11: Lire animals; meat of all kinds, excepting rmokexl; com; cru meal and starch; on:s, bar ley; rye and buckwheat; aud ti;nr of thr.e praiQ; hay; bran and t-traw ; trees, pl;'.nr. im s and hetl; col ton.eel oil and incal c;ike, piicli tr , t u ri-n 1 1 n and rosin ; eoa I ; in ; n r.i I writer; ice inaclnne ; mining maeh i nr ; a-:cn 1 1 u rH 1 iniplementt; r.ulway mrit-rnt!; wr-Miht and cast-iron, and steel in p"irs, lnr, r-l, beams, Ac, and wire naila, acren, anl pijws. zinc, tin, and lead and rooting material; copper tu bars, p utea, nails, Ar., and copjver mi l b'ad pip-; bricks, cement, lime, st"tir. marble, olid paTiiiK t i !r; fence wire, teh't-raph wire, and appa ra t us; wood and Iti'iiber of nil kinds material lor ship buiidinir; achisd furniture; books, pamphleta, printed matter, and paper tor newspNjH r?-; iuks, p-ld and stiver coin ami bu 1! ion. The fowinp nriieles are to te alnii'tte) into tlie Dominican republic ,,ta redu"ii"n of duty of 2-3 per centum; Butter, cheeae, am condenseI milk. Tish of all kind-s.fru iia and vecdablen f all kimN. t'otton, ma n u fact u rnJ , rpun or twisted, and in fabrics ot ail kinds, woven or knit, and the same fabric mixed wilii other vej table or animal tUwrs in which cotton is the equal or irreater component part. Hoots and shoes. W riting paper, bia k lookH, v al 1 paper, paper for wrapping and packing, for ciatettea, in card hoard Ihucs, and batw, aa nd paper, and paatebonrd. Tin plate, and tinware tor Hri, Industrie., and domestic ue-.. Cordage, rope, and twine of all kinds. Wooden ware impU Difnti, for household uae. The ppKdamatioii ehes with th fo 1 -,-, i n c las ru aire: And whereas the special plenipotentiary of the Tinted State haa hy my dipeeti.u, triveii aasurauce to the envoy extraordinary and min ister plenipotentiary of the Iomtnirsn repub lic at Waaninqton that this action of the i"ov Vrnraent of the Ioniinicau republic, in k'r.-iiil-ing exemption of duties to the product and manalacturcrs of the United Stat'a uf America on their importation into the I Kiini n iean re public, m aceeptel as a flue n ciprocity for the action of l'oii;rcs as set forth in ace: ion i of said art. Now therefore, be it known that I. Ben jamin Harrison, President of t lie Unite. States of A merica. have caused the aUive stntel modifications of the tariff la wf of the Ikmini can republic to be made puhlic for the infor mation of the citizens of the Unit ed States A merica. in testimony whereof. I hae hereunto ,er my hand and cauned the seal of the Un:ted S'atea to tx- atri te-i Pone at the city of Wo sh inert on, this lt day of A ufi-ii .t. IXM, ninl of the n. dependence of the Ur itet! States of America thrt ine hi;n dred and ttixteenlh. Hf.NJAMIN Ha KRN'N. Hy the President, W i i.l i am V. Wh a rtmn, Acting Secretary of State. SHOT FK0M AN AMBUSH. John I. Kppf M anlrred near Sn ITol k , -u-The (un Fonod. Suffolk, Va., fi qui t pr aperoua trie town mi thu Norfolk and We-tern Itailmad, fifty, eiht miles east of Petersburg, with a popula tion ol about five thousand mjuN, haa been in a state of the trr- aUrt excitement, by reason of the aaaasaination of one of its best-knunn and most jxipul ir citizens, who was shot to death alnut 1 13 o'clock P. M., by some un known man from ambush. The a vot s n' victim as Mr. John P. Kppea. who for many years past had leen the nianarer of tin Western Union Telejrraph office at SufTolk. M r. Kppea was about twenty-fi ve years of ace. ol alout build and rather handsome. Al the hour named he, in company with Mr. K. W. Allen, telegragh operator of the Atlantie and Imnville Kailr tsd Uoinpany at Suffolk, were alktncr along the railroad; about three hun dred yards west of the stati- n. w hen they were suddenly fired upon. Mr. Allen wan about five fert ahead of Mr. Eppcs. Th load, wh eh waa fired from a aim. -gun and consiste-1 ( of slues ami buck-shot, entered Kppes' right side, two of the sluirs pass in-,' ihroiiiih Ms bsxly He fell in his track-, and di-d foriy-eiht minutes after l-ini jhot. The gun with which the ghashfy dreii hs eoninnttnJ was f(und, and identified as be bng:nir to a negro. who name could not S.-l- ariie-l. The police are alter the negro. A GIRL'S CRIME. She I.Irs In Walt and Kills the Mnn Mini .Illleil Hit. M 1 M-n I'.uiehiT. n h-:nri1nl irrl, on y l vrsr. ol., of ,-lu .-,!, - I)n.I u;. slaiitiv kill--l A t '. .lotirv a sei-tioii reuiHii tn ihe l'lori'ln "on 1 rn I 1 imiMilur llailroail. She Inv in uaii fr hiiu nt a xtrert e -rner, and when ho ppronolu-J, hlew out hi bruins" with .'' enlihre revuhpr. lor nearlv yenr .I"ii s I in hn-n jmj inj. JcNotcil nUt-iilio t to Mit. Y i ni-lier, ami .cni.. inon rep-ri hMi;iifll 1 thi-in ms t ntfuetl to h.-ninrrit-il. Alm two iii xhIm ii'o, liovi--. r, Jom-s nlsrnnleil her nnil tiiarnel nun lu r i,'lrl. Since th- si. m, lint; she says th.it .loncs bt-rame intimate with her miller ttronii e ot marriage, aud she coiihJ slan t l.er Qisgrjice no longer. CABLE SPARKS. Tu FRF. is a movement on foot to hniM r i observatory on llie Miiiiinit of Mount lilm-.o. TlIK death raH.' l'roii' ( h ilerii nt Mitch is 140 j.er day at that jilac? and : ) daily nt Djeddah. The lord mayor of I.-'ini .:i believes that t -e "h:rai;o World's i'air will t xreed any exhibition ever held up to the pi sent time. The funeral of the victims of the railroad disaa er at St. Mande, France, was attended by 2o,'X) peisons and twenty-four hearbes were in line. At Kaaen, Germany, fourteen employees of the water-works were drowned while crossing the Kuhr, the boat in which they were cross ing having capsized. NoTWiTHSTASiiiNU all the economies intro duced by the lovui-irneat it is announced the .Italian deficltlor the year 1890-11 will anion-. t to about 15,000,i Mi. Owing to the strained relationship between the Welsh tin-plnte workers and the em ployers, it is teured that the latter will be torce to consider the advisability ot trans ferring the business to Anuricu. THE president ot the Manchester Chamber of Commerce say the trade of Kngland is bad, especially that of Manchester disirict, owing to the wretctie I condition of the South Ameri can republics and t lie cheapness of cotton. WlU'I.KSALF.custonis frauds connected with the smuvcjfliug of c.irn, rbmr aud brandy across the frontier hac been discovered by Austrian seeret service oriVinls, and as a result the director of the customs bu can at Uukowinu killtd himaelf. Two I inlians and one German were arrested at Como, Lombardy, for sketching and secur ing plans of t:ie torts of thnt city. It is sup posed that the n.en arrested were employed by foreigu governments to obtain the plans of a number ot important Italian lortiti ations. Two murderers w re guillotined in Pat is in the preseuc- of a great crowd of the worst, element of the city. While on the scaflold one of the men named Kerland fought des perately, and while writhing furiously was tli i beneath uprights of the guillotine aud his head cut oft'. Lord Movst Stephen, generally known as Sir ( leorge Stephen, former president of the bauk of .Montreal and now president of the Canadian Pact tic Kailway, who is the litst native of a British colony to be made a peer, has taken the usual oath and subscribed to the roll of peers. TlIK Registrar in the London Bankruptcy Court holds that Mr. I'arnell's objection to Captain O'Shea's notice to pay the costs in the recent divorce suit, on the ground that he was not a resident in Lugluiid, was untenable. It is rtill open to M r. l'arnell to app al; other wise he must pay the coots or be declared a bankrupt. THE foreign r-ommittee of the Columbian Fair commission ended its stay in Knuland with a luncheon nt th- Savoy Hotel where t t Americana entertained (he Kr.tish commis sioners nnd ottv rs previi us to departing for the continent. A uistinguishod company of guests were present, including the I'nited States m nister, the lion. Kobert T. Lincoln, Viscount Cross, Sir Richard Webster, Sir Edwin Arnold, Mr. Calvin S. Brice, Sir John Pender, Sir Charles Tupper Mr. Robert S. ilcCormick and Sir Henry Wood. WORK AND WORKERS. The strike of the Mix Four switchmen in Springfield, )hio, is ended. The men return ed to work at the old wages. Frits; r. No. 1. of the Cambria Iron Com pany, at Hollidaysburi.', I, nun., started up after several months idleness. It will give employment to 20 men. Thk Executive Board of the Iron Moulders' ( nion I ns decided to continue to assist the San Francisco niotibbrs iu their strike, nnd has voted them OjtVX AFTER a strike of nearly four months for mi eight-hour day, the shipcarpenters in Chicago have begun to rdturn to work. The men re turn without condition. Thk Labor Assembly of Chicngo has decid ed to issue a warning to the workmen of the world not to come to Chicago in expectation of getting work iu connection with the World's Fair. Secretary Foster does not fully agree with Superintendent Owen in the opinion that the Alien Contract Labor law does not prohibit the importation of skilled laborers for employ ment in tin plate factories. The eight hundred striking employes of the Pottsville Iron and Steel Company, in Potts vilie. lVnn., have been notified that unless they return to work within two weeks non union hands will be put to work. The lJiston Typographical L'uion has adopted a resolution endorsing the movement in the book and job branch of the printing trad'- for a nine-hour day, with eight hours Saturday. In the matter of the Rand-Avery t 'o., strike it was vcted to declare it an unfair hop and to order members not to work there. Five hundred coal miners in Puquoin. Ill i nois, marched in a body to the Quigley House and served notice on Robert Cuinminga nn nnti- Lalnir agitator, to leave town. Cuiimiings i n coal miner, but is against the lockeii-out in i n ens ' attitude in not resuming work. A c.sioN meeting of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Firemen, Conductors nnd Brakemcu will be held in Altoona, Penna, in September, to discuss the interests of the Ibder "and create a feeling ot harmony aud s inpathy among the different branches ofthe rsiiroud organizations." The sessions will be public. Allot T l'XO clerks out of the force of .t?K) who have been employed at various times in Washington on work connected with the E!o enth 1 ensiis have been discharged up to the present lime. These discharges are made neeessnry by the fact that the work for which thay were employ ex) has been completed, or hns reii' bed a s age where it can be handled by the rod u cd t iree. It is reported from Onmha thnt the railroad ni-.nngcrs in Nebraska intend to defeat the Eight-hour law of that State, which went into operitiion on August 1, by preparingtoemploy nnd pa y t heir men by the hour after that date. Trouble is expected in consequence, aslhelaw v. ;n pnwvl through the efforts of the organ i.mI laltor eople. "As crops are now being handled, a "trike would force the roads to it mis or result in great damage. The rail mad iniplovcs understand the situation." FACTS ABOUT COLUMBUS. 1 Series of O bjec t - Lessons to Be Pre sented ut the Valr. The purpose ofthe Latin-American depart ment of -ihe World's Fair is to present, by a series of object-lessons, that most interesting epoch in history from H'.' to l.'iju. This will include: The li'e hist ry of Columbus, beginning with a nio.bd of the house in which he whs born, and closing with a facsimile of the casket or urn in w hich his dust now rests. It will include nil relics uf Columbus that exist in private and public collections in Europe and America, so tar as they can be obtained; a complete collection of his portraits, and n complete col eel ion of nil the pictures of any anistic or historical value in which he ap pears as a figure. It will also include the originals or duplicates of the Nvoks aud map." which he studied and had in his possession. The story of the discovery. This will in clude a large picture of every place identified wiih the uvagc of Columbus, and photo graphs in an enlarged scale, of the present appearance of every place touched by him; maps an I charts showing his voyages and the growth of geographical knowledge from 14il to l.C'O. How the discovery became known. A col lection of original or reprints of books con cerning the New World, beginuing with the publication in La: in of the letter of Columbus to Rafael Sanchez, describing his first voyage, and including the various publications that were made concerning the discovery, as far as l.'ii'. with maps and charts showing the grow ih ot ircoraphical knowledge. The conuiiion of America at the time ofthe di. ovi ry. Shown by genuine archaeological and ethnological collections, and also by ropifs of pictures used to illustrate books concerning ihe new work at that period. , These show the ideas that were conveyed to the people of Europe as to the condition of the inhabitants of the New World by early writers. How the continent was christened; the origin of the word American, and how it be came i ttached to the continent. WIFE. DAUGHTER. AND BOARDER. i.i.ai- Mittoii !'hh a SMItto I'puii the -.H. iiibfrs cif Hl Household. I sane Simons killed Kobert Hasans, at Sri ;um;hIi (iji.. by stabbing him through the ' heart with :i Milolte. lie then stabbed his own i fe a n d i o i ; : i ir daughter. The w i fe will probably die. Simons escaped. Ha trills is boarding at Simons' house, and j as regarded as a member of the family. STATE OF TRADE. Autumn Expectations Make an In creased Demand in Staple Lines. i The Pecliiiin; Tendency In the Stock Mar ket Cll I in i II ;i t es ill a S pec ul lit i ve I.iltli ilat ion, unit Stocks Tumble. Special telegrams to llniilxt.-ret'. indicate a grow ing effect of the increased demand in staple liius, due to anticipations of wants during Autumn, chiefly for grain, provisions, hoots aud siloes, and groceries. There is also nn improved request at the East for leather, English buyers having been taking with some freedom. Hut hides have not recovered yet from the late dullness. Makers of boots and shoes report a still bet ter demand than a week ago. Manufacturer of rubber at last are buying raw material with some trcedom, though prises are higher. Raw cotton is no stronger, though crop re ports at New Orleans are a shade less favor nble. Iomestic wool is in better request at the East; sales at Western markets are con siderable heavier. Petroleum is a shade high er, but lumber is as heavy as ever. HllIl'I'INti WHEAT TO AUSTRALIA. Word com "S from San Francisco that 10,250 bushels of wheat were shipped to Sydney, and thtt the increased Alaskan salmon pack will probably offset the decrease in the Columbia River pack. Mercantile collections iu the gri:n growing country are beginning to improve, which is quite encouraging, in view of demands tor funds to move the crops. Sugar is ic lower on heavy receipts. Iron and coil remains as dull, and the former ns unprofitable, m for months past. Business failures in the United States num ber Lim, against . L'.32 last week, and 131 this week last year. Tlie total January 1 to date is 7117, against i!2ii last year. Bank clearings at fifty-eight cities for the week amount to f7",7 ii.-'iol, a decrease from the like week last year of l.'.ri per cent. At fifty-seven cities i New York's total excluded) a decrease of 'j. 1 jr cent, is show n. Jx"ew York City's total decrease I $10,838,000 ns compared with the week a year ago. Bank clearings for J uly at si xteen cities aggregate 10 per cent, less than in July, 1890, as did the total for six months of 1 S9 1 as compared with the first half of law. The d dining tendency in the stock market has culminate J in a speculative liquidation, prices of some prominent shares tailing below the panic level. Disquieting but unfounded rumors about the credit of leading banking bouses, aided in unsettling the market, while reports of trouble in European finnm-ia! circles were again current. The firmness of the time money in irkct and the difficulty corporations and ot her large borrowe s find in renewing loans, furnish legitiin.tte cause for the move ment, which is ass.sted by bear manipula tion. COLD EXPORTS HAVE CEASED. Railroad traffic is increasing, and current earnings show improvement, while gold ex ports have ceased, and foreign exchange tends to decline under the pressure of anticipated exports. The liquidation in stocks has par tially extended to the bond market. Exports of wheat (inciudingtiour) from both ' coasts of the I'nited Slates this w eek equal 3, ln'1,31 1 bushels, as compared with a weekly average of 2,2i"i,u0u bushels in the four week- next preceding, and as compared with 2,272. imi bushels in the last w .-ek of July, 13J ! Montreal exports includcil) and as contrasted with 1,.")72,!)')ii bushels in the like week inl88S an 2.2S2.O0O bushels in 1888. Galveston sends ;,IM.I more bushels abroad this r eek, and New York, Baltimore and San Francisco each export iu excess of tjOO.'HU bushels. DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES. yt'.-iE Mn.LF.K, aged 6 years, a mute, was killed by a "trip" ol min-; cars at Mahunoy City, Peniin. JrtllN Tl MASOS and Edward Caldwell were killed by lightning at Warreu, Penna., while silting under n tree. William Ne.sb.it and wife were thrown from a carriage iu Kingston, New York, and probably fatally injured. Lizzie Allen, aged 14 yezrs, and May Caples, aged IS, w ere drowned w hile bathing near M. John, New Brunswick. A NORTHERN Paejfic train run over and killed two drunken Indians who WL-re lying on the irack near Billings, Montana. Frank Wolf, aged 13 years, was killed by the bursting of an emery wheel iu the Monitor Iron Works at Sing Sing N. V. Ll'ct s Doi iiHEKTY and Jerry O'Brien, aged 1 "i aiid ii years respectively, were drown ed at Tilt-burg. A raft they were on was swept under a coal barge by ihe current. A Nl'MBKR of cuttle are dying in Lawrence county, Illinois, from un unknown disease. In fifteen minutes alter the disease seizes them they die. Inspectors have been asked for. Til F. engine of a passenger train on the Norlolk and Western Railroad fell over an embankment at Belspring, Virginia. Engi neer I'.O. Smith was killed. Xo other damage w as done. While the 7-year-old daughter of Joseph Porter was lighting a tire in Mount Vernon, Ohio, her clothiug became ignited, aud she w as burned so badly that she died shortly afterwards. Two freight trains on the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne anil Chicago Railroad collided near Salem, Ohio. Two engines and 11 cars were demolished. Several train hands were hurt, but not fatally. Grasshoppers are reported to be ruining the oats in twenty counties along the Ohio and Indiana border. The devastation is most marked around the head waters of the Wa bash. Miami and Mauraee rivers. W. S. PoLLETT, General Manager of the Western Coal Screening and Patent Fuel Manufacturing Company, was Killed by a train at Denver, Coiorada, while walking on the track. He was 40 years of age. AN explosion occurred in a new mill of the Lafltn Rand Powder Company, at Platteville, W isconsin, as it was about to be started for the first time A workman, named Lowrey, was the ouly onein the mill, and he was 1 1 wn to atoms. The building was wrec ked and the coucussion awoke the town. A small boiler in an oil mill at Vickburg exploded, fatally injuring Albert Spier and Albert Fisher. The boiler flew into the air and fell into the house of Marx Lowenberg, 300 feet away, going through the root, floor and ceiling, and landed on his breakfast table. Xo one was hurt, the family having lelt the table when they heard the explosion. Font boys, two of them named Laswell nnd the others named Houstman, were play ing with an old gun, near Springfield, Illinois, nnd one of them dropped a match into it. The gun was discharged and Gus Houstumn wa: latully wounded, several shots entering his heart. John Laswell was shot in the arm and Arthur Houstman in the shoulder. The boys w ro unaware that the gun was loaded OVER WENT"THE ENGINE. Two Passengers Fatally Scalded hy Es caping; Steam. On the West Virginia Central Railroad, be tween Harrison nnd Elk Garden, is a little station known as Switch Back, headquarters for the lumbermen of Whitmore tv. Sons. This station is the terminus of a tram road, running from Switch Back to the lumber re gions, a distance of seven or eight miles. The men seventeen in number boarded the tram road engine to go to their work. Just as the engine was about to leave the station, two women, named Jennie Durst and Alice Robin son, requested thnt they be allowed to ride out iu the mountains to a berry patch, w here they intended lo pick berries nnd return home bv the county road. Their request was granted, and the engine containing the nineteen pas sengers started on its journey. The train after going some distance struck a piece of timber that was laying on the track, turning the engine completely over. The occurrence was so sudden that none of tin: people on the engine had a chance to escape, and all were more or less injured either by the escaping steam or from the fall of the engine. I n nn instant everything was in nn uproar women screaming, men moaniiig, and the es c iping stenni trom the broken pipes ofthe engine presented a sight thtit was heart-rendering. As soon ns the men who were the least injured could manage to extricate them selves, they went to work torelease their more unfortunate comrades, whose condition was pitiable to behold. The first person extricated ; was Alice Robinson, who lives near the canal i tunnel in Alleghany county. The escaping steam had scalded the flesh on her face, arms, and hands in a horrible manner, and her in juries are considered fatal. John MoKcnzie, who lives near Frostburg, ! was caught under the engine nnd scalded so ! badly that he died in the evening of his in- i juries. SOUTHERN ITEMS. (SOME INTERESTING NKWS COMrlLKIl FltOM MAN Y SOl'KCKS. Silas Newhouse, aged nineteen years, was drowned near Charleston, W. Va., while bath ing in Elk river. There is decided opposition in Richmond, Ya .tothe extension of the franehise of the Richmond tk Chesapeake Railroad. - The Xorth Carolina fish and oyster com mission has decided to drotect tlie State's oyster beds, even if i.ece.ssary, with military aid. In a battle between negroes and Italian rail road workmen in Logan county, W. Va., two , Italians and one negro were killed and several wounded. Samuel M. and Allen Hlckson. brothers, of Danville, Va., died of typhoid fever within 24 hours, in Macon, Ga., where they had recently engaged in business. Lee Hughes, convicted of wife murder nt Houston, Tex., escaped from jail there and is still at large. He cut through the bars nnd then dug out the wall. Miss Ranea Mathers, aged seventeen years, of Wood county, V. Va., committed suicide by taking poison. It is said disappointment in love led to the rash act. 1 At Cynthiana, Ky., Mrs. Ann Milner Woods died aged ninety-eight. She was one of the original followers of Alexander Camp- , bell in founding the Church of the Disciples. Near Woodbine, Ky., Polk Williams shot and killed James Lanhain. Both were slightly intoxicated and quarreled over a horse. Williams surrendered, and claims self-defense. Stephen A. Ryan, the young merchant of Atlanta, Gn., who recently failed for $2,000, 000, has been committed to jail at Atlanta, Ga., for contempt of court in not surrendering all his assets. Some expert thieves blew open the safe of the Buenn Vista Saddle an I Harness Com pany and the Wise wagon works, at Buenu Vista, Va., but they obtained only a small amount of money. The grave of Col. John Dandridge, father of Martha Washington, has been discovered in the long-neglected old St. George's Church yard at Fredericksburg, Y'fi. The tombstone was sunk in the earth and was found by digging- The wife of Capt. J. II. Bradshaw, a prom inent citizen of Paris, Ky., drowned herself in one foot of water in Stone Creek. She tied n stone in her apron to hold herself down. Domestic troubles are supposed to be the cause. G. W. Harpold, a prosperous farmer resid ing near Ridley, W. Va., committed suicide a few days ago by hanging to a tree. Harpold had been s ck and despondent for some time, and it is believed he whs insnne when hf committed suicide. At Norton, Wis' county, Va., Knos B. Hilton, sergeant of the town, was shot bv a man named Hall, from Kentucky, and died in about seven hours. Ilf tin hail a friend of Hall under arrest, which seems tr. hnve been the cause of the 6hooting. Hall made his escape. At Balcony Falls, Va., on the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway, G. E. Dollman, a brake man of a heavy freight train, fell from a ear . making a flying switch and was instan ly , killed. His body was cut in two. He was a 1 native of Jackson, Botetourt coutity, was ! single and leaves a widowed mother. Fifty kegs of powder in the Alabama Great : Southern Depot at Birmingham, Ala., ex ploded, completely wreckingthe buildin,' and ' deniolishi g a number of cars on adjacr-nt j side tracks. The officers of the railroad j believe the burning of the depot waB in- ' eendiary. Myra Fancher, a beautiful girl, sixteen years old, shot and instantly killed A. C. Jones on the street at Zelwood, Fl'. Jon s, i who was section foreman on the Florida ; Central Railroad, courted the girl a year and discarded her. Miss Fancher was arrested and taken to Orlando for tria'. A syndicate of English and American eapi t 'lists has just purchased one hundred nnd sixty thousand acres of laud immediately north of Middlesbon ugh, Ky., in Southeastern Kentucky, and almost adjoining the property , of the American Association, limited. The land contains valuable coking coal, iron and other minerals. The average price paid is $11 per acre. President Harrison expects to shoot deer in West V irginia next fall, in company with Stephen B. Elkins, according to the Pittsburg Chronicle which adds that Mr. Blaine will probably be in the party, even if he does not join the hunt. The elub-hou-e at which the President will stay is on Cheat rn untain, near Beverly, in Randolph county, and fine sport is to be had there. A small boiler used in the repair shops of the Hill City Oil Mill at Vicksburg, Miss., exploded, fatally injuring Engineer Alb rt Sipes and Fireman Albert Fisher. The . boiler, weighing 2,000 pounds, flew into the air and fell into the house ot Marx Lowen berg, 300 feet away, going through the roof, floor and ceiling, and' landed on his breakfast table, but no one wag hurt, the family having left the table when they heard the report caused by the explosion. Wm. B. Dietrick, of Hngerstown, Md., i; growing a tree at his place that is a greatcuri osity. On a quince stock he grafted a Russian apple, and tne apples took kindly to the quince. There are nine fine apples on the tree now, although the tree stands but about three feet in height. The apples are well : formed and round, but show a certain leaning towards the quince form. i A comprehensive scheme to connect Wheel ing with Martin's Ferry, Bridgeport and Bell aire, O., by street railway has been set on foot. The Wheeling Railway Company is now building two immense bridges from Wheeling to Martin's Ferry. It is announced thnt a third bridge is to be built immediately from Wheeling to Bellaire. Over 50 miles of street railway track will be laid on the entire sys tern. The Westingbonse interests of Pittsburg are back of the enterprise. Fifteen masked men, armed with pistols, visited the house of a woman named Mary Green Allen, who lived alone with her son near Grisson postoflice, in Granville county, i X. C, a few nights ago, and carried her to the ; woods, where they whipped her nearly to death. There was at the time in the house ' visiting her a brother-in-law, named Henry . Merritt, and the masked men returned and ' beat him also, terribly lacerating his body. Governor Jones, of Alabama, has granted ; requisition papers for D. B. Whilden, of Bir- ! mingham, who was arrested in Portland, Oregon, at the instance of the Xew York Mutual Life Insurance Company, on a charge of obtaining money on false pretenses. Whilden had $40,000 insurance on his life and disappeared in March, 1890. He was supposed to have been drowned in the Tennessee river. The insurance claim was resisted. Five insurance companies are in t rested, and suits against four of them for $30,000 of the $40,000, brought by Whilden a wife, are now pending in the Birmingham : courts. i ANOTHER RAILROAD HORROR Cars Overturned and Dragged by the En gineMany Injured. Another horror has been added to the late I list of Railroad accidents in Ohio. j At about 10 o'clock the other morning pas senger train No. 4, on the Bellaire, Zanesville j and Cincinnati Narrow Gauge RailroaU, left : the track three miles south of Bellaire, two j cars being overturned and dragged some dis- J tance by the engine. There were 70 passengers j on the train, and the two cars that turned : over into the ditch were crowded with well- , known people of this section. j When they left the track someone cried out that everybody should cling to their seats, but ' the sdiock was so awful, many were hurled from one side to the other, those not badly in- i jured being terribly shaken up. Assistance was soon at hand from other passengers and the I rnininen, and when nil were taken out of the wrecked car it was found that 14 people : hud been injured, four of them seriously and one fatullr. The train was running, at the least calcula- , lion, Ht the rate of 35 miles an hour, and as it reiiehed a curve the curs were noticed to sway violently, and, unheeding the cries for pas- ; senders to keep their seats, a rush was made ' for the doors. Many ofthe frightened pas sengers had renehed the platform when the ears jumped the rails, and when they turned over in unorher moment these were hurled i'lto n ditch in an indiscriminate mass of men, women and children, the latter shrieking fear fully as ihey went down. Wmi.K Mrs. Huston, her daughter, Mrs. Pniith, and the latter's child were driving home from a visit near Xenia.Ohio, a dog ran out iu the road and bit the horse, which ran away. The occupants of the wagon were thrown out. and it is feared Mrs. Smith and the child are mortally injured. Owing to the recent heavy losses at tlie Vatican, especially in the 1'eter's I'ence, the lope has ord- red economic measures to he adopted iii order to relieve the pontifical j treasury. Furniture! Furniture! FURNITURE! ONE OF TH - LARGEST STOCKS j -.' dmi .iil!i CiiinUnn. COMPLETE v Every Department. Also, we now have the Agency f ir tlie re', ehratei'l W :i I'EI Ki: W I ..hi in anil Si ANDA r.P Sewim. Mai minis Tl.ey are the laiest no proved Light Running and arc unsurpassed by any machine ever placed in this market JOHN SUTER. Boot and Shoa Maker. All Stylos of Hoots and Shoes mado to order and on Short notice. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. N. ARPEN, CRATES ST., opposite Journal OSico. THE BEST LIVER MEDICINE CHILL CURE. CHEAPEST If EDI CI KE KltOVH CONSIDERING QUALITY AND 8IZE OF DOSE. IT WILL ALSO CUBE BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA, AND CHKONIO CONSTIPATION. R. BERRY, New Berne, - N. C. a T AFla aL WXm'M "WANT A WAGON?" 1 We have wagons, buggies, surreys. High grad; as light, strong, durable, stylish, as beautifully finished as modernized manufacture can produce. Built on honor by men of life experience. Honesty is our policy; prompt shipment our specialty. We want to know you. Write us. Costs you nothing. May lead to business by and by. Send for our catalogue. It is free to every reader of this paper. Bing hamton Wagon Co., Binghamton, N. Y. "BUILT FOR BUSINESS." $65 OUR SILVER QUEEN $65. Is it possible a first-class Buggy with Silver-plated Cash Rail, Seat Rail, Handles, Hub Bands, and Shaft Tips, for above prloa? ' Z u a 2 Ui Z X D O O Ol Write for our New 80 page Catalogue of all kinds of Vahloloa. Address ' SOUTHERN BUGGY CO. CINCINNATI, - - - OHIO, U.S.A. VAUGHN PATENT SPRING VEHICLES. FIB8T-CLA88 IN EVERY 11E8PEOT. LIGHTEST, STRONGEST EASIEST E ID ING VEHICLE ON EARTH. BUGGIES ROAD WAGONS, PHAETONS, AND SURREYS OntMsfontlerM . v v w x v y BABCOCK & VIELE CARRIAGE COMPANY & Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers, Write for Catalogue. Mention th it Paper. EVAff SVJ TjIjFI, TNDIAJfA, o I fV" MK a- WE ARE IN THE LEAD FOR FINE QUALITY AND STYLE OF SPRING VEHICLES. THE MOST FOR THE MONEY IS OUR MOTTO. ' BEST MATERIAL AND WINS. SMALL AND LARGE ORDERS RECEIVE BEST ATTENTION. A SAMPLE JOB WILL CONVINCE YOU THAT OUR WORK IS THE WORK TO BUY. BRIDGEWATER CARRIAGE CO. NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. ii Educational MitatioMor E1STEEI I0BTI CABQUIA.' MALE AND FEMALE. ",. LhTAUIIHIIKD 1889. Eifkt Dlitioet ItopirtntBl! 7 ' V' 'rininri, Inlertncdiaie, Academic, Col InjiiUe, Art, Mwric, Jnduttrial nnd Iiumnem. TEN EXPERIENCED AND O0M I'ETENT TEACHERS. I'oco nnd 1 tut rume.nlal Music Prominfnl 'rat urn under the direction of a malt pro- lessor, with efficient assistants. Special Course of Infraction tor thaM desiring to become Teacuer. Expenses very moderate. Board frota $8.00 to $10.00 per month tacilitieaigood. Special inducement to indigent (tadaata. t s Fall Term Opens Sept, 1 1891; For further information or lor catalogue, " apply to , G. T. ADAMS, A. B. (Trinity College), PBINCIPAly ' i julyiidwtf New Bkkkb, N. C j GEO. HENDERSON. j (S'uxeuor to Hobrrtt & Henierton.) ' ' ; . j General Insnrancs Agent, j Representing Insurance Company of Korth I America, of i'niladelphia. .- ' j Home Insurance Company, of New York. - ' I Queen Insurance Company, of England I Hartford Fire Insurance Com pas y, sf Hartford. ' , North Carolina Home Inturanoe Company, ' vi jvaieign. , .t Greenwitch Insurance Company, of KW ' York. . . , , . Phoenix Insurance Company, of Brooaiya. . United Underwriters Insurance Company, of Atlanta. v . Boston Marine Insurance Company, of Xkifiion. jolyZdwtf a o H PI 30 cs -J 3 i z o z 25 y 0 o ? ? pi rn. z ? 2 Jo f -Of ' c o 2" 5 ., 50 ' n i: pi . - AND Perfectly Simple - Simply Ptrftct THE IMPROVED WARM AIR FURXACES APPARATUS or THB BENNETT A PECK v Heating and Ventilating Co. The only Manufacturer ra this city (trlna; entire attention to ihe WARMING AND VENTILATION or Residences, Churches, Schools, Etc. 1 noRRBsjposroinana aoucmcD ) it skni) roa paiimcD staTTaa V ( BanauTEB CHKurvu.r urn ) 245, 247 and 249 W.Vth St., Cinclntdtl, 8. ONE OF OUR CATA LOGUES FULLY IL LUSTRATES OUR-LINE. a -y
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 13, 1891, edition 1
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