Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / Sept. 24, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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.' '.' t. $!.50 Per Year. INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS. Single Copies 5 Cents. VOL. XIV, NEW BERNE, CRAVEN COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA SEPTEMBER 24, 1891 NO. 27. Ll'i.'i'JI! '"''i''('flW"W"1'" p 1 1 , . M1jMMnrmjLMMMLj - - -. - for Infants rfc MiCrMM'kMBNnJ as. hMXltMlIbMllMMtlMfi w Bwiimtmilimit raareratti ' linlMitifciaikii Cham ntOTSSSlOITAl DR. C. K. BAG BY. Surgeo.n Dentist " W. D. MclVER, Attorney-at-Law NEW BERNE, N. C. H. L. GIBBS. ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Cr. -, aM JmmI OvWaa. NIW BCRNC. N. C Tv i lh CMi Otm, Cuin4. ""HM UM Sagrsaa ua Faveeal suts C-. R.THOMAS. 17 2iil Soasfl-T-ar-lj?, tOaW, Oafaa Sirs. tWr 8iMlac, ntw asaaa. h. c, . hMtn U IV. Carta. Ca, Ortenl. J ". Oaaiaw LaaMir Ba4 FtalMateuUM , W MpmM iMrt Nartfc Caratiaa. aa-d Ual.al)MfiMMaQmiiCMf. iVrU ; p. h. pelSetSS; ATTORN EY-AT-LAW. AND MONEY BROKER. . jear-A lywmy saaoa U matiLn fctO ftar linia - M ..1 iprBtM la tW Cotjatiaa Omfaai, C. Jam OmIw aa4 Pvmliook. - var-t 9UM IMn m diav liava'tM DR. J.D. CLARK, , NEW BERNE, tt. C". The National Bank OF NEWBERNE. N. C- CapiUl, : :: . : $100,000 Surplus Profits, - 86,700 DIBXCTORS. Ji4.A.Bwis. Two Daxitu. . Caxa. 8. tax. J. 11. ILacxMnui. U.lU. Itouara. Jlux. Millu. ... L. narnvrr. OREEN. FOY &. CO;. BANKERS, 1 a lsartl lull us. NSW BAN KINO HOUSE, MUX SK IXWaaW Ukd AOmi. WCW tCBWt, W. C N EXT! Prof. W. H. SHEPARD aaii a. la li mrW art anU Jim a MatrOrtfoe 20 Catta. - ao 10 I CUT01 1:3 IE 1133 J13F. . .HIW BCANC n. c 3 2la BKOTVN, BARBER SHOP.! tial aa ha Ami aat a atyW Bail' aaaaa wa Bo4a4 aaal Wr. ' JSHICK BLOCK MIDDLE ST. K. R. JONES, HEAVY A5D iiairr GROCERIES. , UtCirt ul Itfl A is Sin. - && lfaytrfaW Prism. Diy Goods & Notions, Fall &Ukad Carta AaMrtmaat. ! PiM aa low ac tfca Uawaat Call aad IiialN 7 Staak. -,... .... TTl aro makkn eiaity tn.a aawn of wu.or PARAS8H HARNESS. I Mado tva piNCST STOCK and a vary a. V 3 ECST WORKMANSM1P. Scn a hamaaa JV cawMMt bo bont for loaa than t28. V' I ratalU But wo aro wUn. yjT 1 In ordar to Introduoo it. to O V V? U. aaa on a. a XfV0 1 v-n and Children. ftr Biail yan I have ra i iaaa I t xsvim r. ruMa, sl. MBS. J. M. HINES' Boarding House REOPENED. Mtt. J. M ULN'ES hu reopen-vi a First-Clas Boarding House in the citv, opp. le Baptist Church. Tfcs Pinner Dam itmi Macnnie Can tm had at the place. J. M. HINES. Agent. TOIS Is the machine that Is used ia the Office, Court-room, and for reporting lectures And sermons. Woila it apd is irtm.tex thaji bjij otkar kaows method, it ia ao simple Hat My itttcHiccat praoa cms ap4 of too or mora words per min bU, ia tr or aiz wek, wilhovt the aU aa iastroctor. CirraUra aad taatiaaoauais aeat to aJ who neatioo thia paper. L T. F1IETTE, BE5, Vol Ant for U. S. and Canada. THE NEW LEVER SAFETY Tha PERFECTION of SIMPLfCrTY and ECONOMY of POWER. ?ro C?IIA.I?CH. o OEAIW. VARIABLE STROKE, only two ata of Rovolvlnc Boarlnca. Bt HlO Cllmblna; and ail around Safaty mad. H. B. SMITH MACHINE CO. SMITHVILLE, N. J. Cliiis'u N. C Freight Liu. Straff! 6. H. Stoat, Deflaacc i Ycrper On aad aftr February lt, 1331, (hi Lo will make rrgulax SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS llTW't.1 Baltimore and New Berne v4C BJtiaMr. frr Nw (Vnt.. WED SESDAY. SATI RD AV. iKPU. Lrariaf 5 Brn. (or Hlilmor., TUE DAY.SATCRDAY. u P UT . Itrdni ill Eki.n. Tk I.Uee. TX U t Mlr DiKF.CT I. out of - Urn. r BiK ivv whKo.i ru. .,. .u-rp.n xil (I AMi!k, mn tinf tba ti.r IValoa. Prrtr.. Phi !.! IpK ia. rii?ir.n.l. aJd all in Jforth, Et nt W.t- (.k'n( rlo rwwrtw. tor all 1--.1t.b7 A. A N. C Ra!l ntai anrl Rit.r ou( of Nf Il-ern. Afnia tn a folo Cleats Forraa, G.o'1 Uint(w, ai) UjtitSL, BalLimora. Ja VT. UoCAtntct.. Afiil, SorhJk. Va. W. P. Cljd. a Co., PhiLalpiiia, 11 SoaU Nr York tad Ealto. Traaa. UDfiHtr North rtrw. K fiii.ru a, 6a)oa. 33 C.ntml wharf. H. IWkvali. ProTWiroer, K. I. Sataa War. Boto, Tamiaja aa-J Satardafa. - fw York daily. " Blta., Wlndin A Satardara. da TV, Bturd T- Tnwf Wit lJia( gyrm nJ fini rau itlnd to aJl potau at tb. diSrt oSm o( la. Mandn. fta .V C. It. ft. H. QRJLY. Arret. N.w B.r N. C ' THE NEWS. i ire rain'! ifio .-n-ryin .l.-pnr(n-nt of I lie ; I ."Po Tanning Cnmp.Tiy 'k r:.) nhnit n n r I rortlanl. Mr : na $J.S,a 1 John I MeCaffrrty, a Vr!rTn I ninn linrmsn, n killrd by a heavy Yolta-e Irotu iin rlrctric ir on a trlrgrapn polr. I L n tare xni arir.o 'urned black, and hr hun? forsrvcrsl minute Ix-forr he could be removed. Secretary j John P. Suttoa, ol the Iri.h National League I of America, i in receipt of private telejframj ; akiQg the condition of President Kiti-craUi, I and atating that a report ia current that h- ia inaane.anU thai the League convr: ti n .alhl for Chicago, October lt and 2l, ould conse- qoently be poaiponed. fr. button emphati cally deoiea both report.. Mr. Fitzgerald ia daily gaining itrength.and the coorention will b held on the date appointed. -The Teiaa cotton crop report for September ahowa that the bottom orop waa faur, the middle crop ' light, and the proapecta for a top crop very ', paw T)i arerag ia 76g A paagevger ( train aa the M iaaouri, Kaoaaa and Texaa Rail ' road waa held op at Leliatefta. I. T., and the ripreaa car a mhbed of -.,; V50. The Kn- rhah ateamer Mounalow haa reached 8an nieo ir,ni Chili. She had carried flcrnr and wheat to Chili, but fonnd the markela glutted. A freight tra n eraahed into the rear of the Ix Angelea exprraa just west of (iirard. Cal. The exprrta had been compelle-i to atop on t account of a landalide. Col. William Har ney, manager of the Golden Gate Wooden Mills, vaa Handing on th- platform, and waj ranght between two cara and inantly killed, -t. C. Baldcmn, of In Anifelea.wai cut abont ibehcad. Mra. Healy, of I,oe Angelea, had her bnek hurt, and M iaa fprong, of Illinois, was aeverly bruised. John J. (iorman, aireTeigu grand commander of the Scottiah PJte Maaor.a in the Cnited States, has i&sued from hia office in N-w York a proclamation against an oppoa ti 'u grand lodge that baa Seen organneO In Ohio, and warning subordi nate bodiea against it. The robbera who h.ld up the Central Railroad traiu five milea from Savannah, Ga-.wrre captured at Motley Hill, seventeen miles from Ma ILvon, Kia , alter a sharp rebalance, by the detective'! p.se They will be taken to Savannah. Albert I.ongaker, a director in the Montgomery Trut Otnpany.at Norri.-.town, Ta., has canacd the irrrtofW . S,inglnft, formerly treasurer f the eompnny, on the eharge of the misap rropriatinn of 1,0(X of the funds. KJahUan'a wheat crop will U orer M.OOO,- w uuabala. The Gilliland brothers were lynched at Somerset. At Camden, N. J . the larg. foar-atnry brick manufactory and warehooae of 8. B. Goff, the p.atcnt medicine manufacturer, waa entirely deatroj ed by fire, I tofether with ita content.. A large amount 1 of anaaaCaelnred goods, beaide. a larpe qnan- ttty of lamb be'oogLng to Sheriff Fredericka and several haaJred loads of furniture be ! loogiag t J. B. Vanscriver, were stored in the , bollding. Tha loaa ia from 135,000 to (40,000 : on which there ia a partial insurance. , Rabert Gltuximnlng and George II. Ilahn, wtapoalnf (h. Arm of Olendenning A Co., of PhUaOalpklav, wwr bailed in ItO.CW for eonrt, i thaaaarta af awMng illegally in their ! traoaasctioaa arfth John Banlaley. No case : aa aaada agmhaat Iha asdlt4r general. Sute ; CaahJw rraacia VT. Kennedy and Henry H raaaTaacw'i tj 3aaaBut1er,"'o? taT'TnTreil RLalea Csart, b tea years in priaon for Crimea sssamaaiiteaUaaaiiag the Spring Garden Bank. Was. IXoopor, a convict, eecaped from Stag priaon. Ua was serving a fifteen yewra antrsMa aad had more years to ty. 'At Baatao, Chares O. Parker, aged forty Ira, sraa arrswxed, charged with obtaining jowtlry by pretense.. He has juat aTaataawwear'a Imprisonment iu Philadel phia, it hi amid. The Colcine Window Glaas Works at Vootoori, O., the largest in the l'n ttast Slatr with 000 exception, waa lamed. Thw boala (U.00O; no insurance. The same vsarko arrre bamed about seven months ago. of the Treasury F.ter waa the I owner. At Cincinnati the hosiery ttotar of Kleta A Hons, at John and ltetta aoraarsa, was burned. The loas is ." with tasasxrance aoreriog the loea. Chief Hughes, Oaf (ho Ire department, a aa bidly rut in the acs) by fa! ling glaas and was removed to his home. Mrs. CoL Wra. Sellers ) left ber hoaae near by, (earing that her huaband would barn, died suddenly of heart d:sease,ag rava trd by the exc.tement. The Albatroa ar rived at San Kra.nci.ro and went direct to Mare I aland- The AlLatroaa ia to proceed at one to anak. aarveys for a cih trom an Kraneiawotn Honolulu. An exst-bound train on the Georgia Pacific Railroad jamped the track, an I rolled down a high embankment, near Pay 's Gap, Ala. F.nglnrer John F. Whitewor' h, waa instantly killed, and Fireman Prrwairr, Conductor Hiiton. n.-V.rro-n BeverlT, Crawford and Gamble were slightly bruivrd The reprc- sentaiivea of the coming Augusta Ga itx poaition, who are visiting Maa.'achairt:a in iia iotereai, eipreas great please'- it the cordial reeert.on which they aro everywhere rneet-lng.- Fire at Bruuawiek, Ga , did $J0,CM damage - -While aetinr aa a peacemaker in a domestic fight st Chicago William Hsealer rai stabbed ten timra. Near midnight he was rrtarning home, when hi attention was attracted by Daniel David, his wif. and Charles Meyer, the latier a b-othrr in law, qaareling. All three were exchanging blowa, when Hara.'er stepped ia their midst, an 1 or dered them to atop fighting. Mrs. David drew a poeketkoifo, and plunged the blade into H sealer a aeek, aliasing the jugular vein by aa eighth of aa ineh; a second time she sever. ed an artery in his right arm. The Harnern Peak T a mines in South Dakota, aaid to be very rich, will be worked by au Kngliah com pany. Th Mena ha Wood Split Pulley Company, the floor mill of James Jones and the warehouse of the Menaaoa Woodrn-ware Company, wrre burned. Ix- IAV00; inaured 133, W. Several fi emn wrre injured by falling wa la. About 1 men wrre thrown oat of employmnt by the firr The schoon er Mary 1. lioba n and the briuah atramrr Rir-on C;iy, from Shield., collided in the Ie!aware river oil Greenwich The Hobecn, which was bound to aJllfoni, Del., with phos phate, had a hole knocked in her starboard aid. and filled She Bank immediately after being lowed t hore. No damage done to the Rlpon City Pr Georgr ft. Ixiring, ex- miniatrr of Portural, and former . ommiasion rr of Bjrrv-niturr. died at Sal, m Mass., sge 1 awTenty-iVJur, of heart trouble John Bennett, of New Albany, Ind., during the absence of hia wife, criminally amultrd two thirteen year-cld girla 111 t hcuv. The rhi.dren toM their mothers, who, with c uh and atonea, gave the villain a terrible beaun::. iubqaently a mob of men hauled him t ree and rnidle.1 h a body with bullela. llowari Ward'a large barn, on lh-: West J--r-.-y Railrn.d. near Milivil.e. N. J , with it.- -ontenta, five horses, four cva and a lare quantity of hay and grain, wa deatrtyr.1 by ore. Iw.f.S,'1". J- P Amnn.a nirrrhant residing near Saliahury, N. C , waa arrente.l in Ilichmond, "a , charged si;h raising a rheck of . to f:i.'"Vi snd anemptin? to pas it opoei the wholesale cr-ery firm of K .. Sanoders A i "o. The chr.-k was lra--. nn the Pjvia A Wiley Hsnk of Sali.hury. Thr ork ifrauing u was porly executed. The Ivlawarr Iron Works, at New ( a.llr, Pr:. 'rr burreil I . '1 t Hon. I.-'t oi i. Jones, judge of ihr ( rimtiial ourl ot ,-ord of Puval ctintr. Kla , and ii"te-l ;;, h'lorhla politic. H;r. m Jack son llle. prrasrolbers held tip s train on thr Georgia t n ral Railroad, and ohta itiol aU-ut 1 William Starr, of K.ufanla, Ala-, suirid.-.! by tying brieka lo hi. body m l jumped into itie Chattahoochee river. " TWO THOUSAND PERISH Gre-at L-s'.ra:tion cf Lifd and Prop erty in Spdn. The Province of Toledo Devastftted--tn-able to Krarli tin- Stt rrlvnr-A 11 CoinninnJratlnn 'ut OfT. Ofnei-1 : n lorn'.a; ion ha. been rtceivrd in Madri'i Ir. m the ne. e of thu terrible tlools now ih v .i trit n' the ptovinee of Toledo. Accord ti. to news r c. n d, 2,0 1 people have alreadv p.rikiu-d, nnj a:i imuiei-se amount of d: mace hat brn done by the awolleu vi'trv A' present it s utterly im possible t s- nd n v i-itat.t e to 1 l,e aur vi vors, a a all road and railway communication with the a ene of the disaster hc 1 een rut oil. Jatcr oflic:al telegrams report that fifteen hundred persona peri.-hel in the destruction of Onanegra tf the overflow of the Amarguillo. Hundretls ol nil - r were injured by falling buildings, and i 1, f.ums nuinhers of csttle periahed. At other places many p raona were drowned and much property uas damaged. The cabinet haa decided :o take measures for the reli.f ol the d-atitutf. Fresh Hooda are reported in Aiii.eria. aleucia and Badajor. Foiir hundred houses have been destroved m Almerifl, and many families madehome.es-. Five hundri d liousea are In rulna at Cot. Mirers, anil the occupants are boricd under the debris. Two hundred bodies have alrendy been recovered. Many persona nre dying ot hunger. Ti c ytieen has fclven fKi.lO.' to start a relief fun . The provi. re of Toledo is located about in the middle of the Spanish kingdom, with an area ot A.Wri square nnlea. The surface is generally mouiitaiiioua. Towards the centre, indeed there are extensive plaina or table lands, nut the whole ot the touth and eHst is occupied by the Monte cte Toledo. Th Be mountains are ol no great height, and they were once densely covered w i : h loresta, which of late years have been almost entirely cut down, though there are still grovea of con siderable extent on their lower slopes. The Tagns river liows aeros. the province, and the Giguela and its afiliieiila, Mowing into the Guadiana, wat-T the eastern part of the province. 1 he soil is poor lor the most part, but in the centre and towards the suutii the quality improve The country ia rich In minerals, though the mlnea are as yet very little developed. Gold ilver lead, iron, tin, copper, alum, coal and cinnabar are fonnd. Beea and silk worms are reared by the country people in considerable number. Manufactures once flourished, but, of late, have been in a very low state. The province ia traversed by three lines of rail way. Some of the most brilliant ngh.ing of the Peninsular War in 1809 took place 111 the Province of Toledo. The only town of any aize in the frovince ia the capital, Toledo, situated on the Tagus, fbrtT-two miles from Madrid. It stands on a circle of aeven hills, around which the river, in horae-shoe shape, flows in a deep and nar row channel. The atreeta are ateep, crooked and narrow and the bouaea are of quaint Moorish architecture. The place is still par tially eocloeed by walls in a fair state of pre servation, and the gates are numerous and picturesque. Tradition has it I hat Toledo was founded by Jewish colonists six centuries be fore Christ. It was taken by the Romans in , 192 B. C, and by the Gotbs 4o7 A. !., who made it the capital of their kingdom. It at one time had a population of :00,000. The ; celebrated Toledo bfadea are made in the rovnl sword manufactory, two miles from the city. The only other town of importance in the province ia Talavera de la Reina, the scene . of a terrible battle during the Peninsular war. WORK AND WORKERS, THK Penn Iron Worka, at Lancaster, Pa., have resumed, after ten week's t-uspvuaion. They give employment to 3u0 hands. Despatches received in Charleston indi" cate that the cotton pickers' strike has been ordered in South Carolina. The plantera arc determined to reaiat it. A. P. T. ELDKB and II. L- Barber, compo aing the Elder Publishing Company, in Chi cago, have been arrested on the charge of im porting laborers from Canada. TuE Secretary of the Spinners' Cnion at Fall River, Mass., haa called a special meet ing of the spinners to consider the decision of the manufacturer to reduce wages. Abovt 3J0 carpenters, who have withdrawn from the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, organized the Phila delphia Carpenters' Association. A. B. Kerr was chosen i'reaidenL TilE freight Conductors on the Nashville and Decatur Division of the Ixmisville and Nashville Railroad have gone on strike be- 1 cause of a refusal by the Superintendent to reinstate H. B. Ridley, who was discharged for refusing to take a train out. The Lastera' Union in Lsnn, Maw., has decided to sever ita alliance with the K irghu of I-abor, because the latter refused to call out K nights employed in Hoi lis A Co. 'ushop w hen the fasters were discharged lor refusing t ac cept a reduction of wages. A mm of atrikers, at Lebanon, Pa., at tacked Officer James W. Johnson, his son George G- Johnson and two non-union men employed at Light'a Roiling Mill an I nearly , killed the first two. The special ottii er nliot i one ol the strikers in the shoulder. The fr!ht aoiount'-d to a not, which the who'e police force In; I difficulty in quelling. K. Mrl.nucli lin, Jesse Ue.ller, Lewis A. Rickert and Isaac Reed were arrested and locked up. EUROPE AND THE FAIR. Tb tlon Task a I lntcrf-t In ft and oKi-jwct lo Heap (.rmt Hen-fit".. Rrprf. ntali vc Ji u t : rr w ort n , "ho w itii the olb?r World ' Fair t onin.in ;tti, has ju-t returned from Kurort, nay".: "I cannot think of anything in connection with 00 r rrc?ption by our brothers mi the other iide of the w iter which I nutild have had different from w hut it wns. I 'ann-H c-'n-reiTe of any one t.rins; rerrivrd more cord in I y than we were. Our Kin;lili brethren did eTerythinz in the wnrld tl.y rould Tr us, honing the deepest tnter-r-f ; u the prent un dertakinj: which w rppn-M-nifd. and every other out of the br.rhrh' ) f n ifions re ceived im in the hi me spirit. Tlie all tnke ft dep interest in thin uniJertki" l' :-tid are l:-i iag to aviit it to their titim-M. They rr ird it aa an errnt of the prentett iinp'rttnce. in.t to thia country alone, but to ail t ht ei i li zed nations of the world. They utidrrMiu.d thnt it ia lo brinjf us rloer togrtlier; ti nt we u ill meet together and how eah oth r io e are, what rnre :or. and what we nre dmnc: that we will dia u- lhte things nhielwnre interent to all nati-uis en 1 t- r thev:nKlo: n an kind Rcnerally, and that w will stren . i lu-n the tie ot brotherlirsod nii'l t""r--er he el..s, r toother with more of -nr 1 1 1 ; c - f s in eniu- Xn every hand and at every point of our journey we found evidence ot the universal feeling of friendship tow ard the I'nited S Rte-. The nations of Kurope are poinc to take pert in the World n Kair in n way to snow that i hey exprct (Crest benefit from it to all nations. They are a enthusiastic over it as we are, and regard it as an event of the preatt st )uij.r taavnee to the civilized world. The quest ion mcom mend : n p to ( 'otipres certain chanpes in the tariff law thit obatrucj the tre5 entry of Kor-ipn x hi bits inTemb-d 1 r the World "a Fair exposition nnd hiupii iin;' certain treasury repnlaiions applyiu.: to tiie same, will b considered at a eonterenee t" be held at the Treasury Ocpartnit nt. WRECK IN COLORADO. A Traln-I.osvd of Knighta of Pythias .Sinavslietl I p. A diipat'-h from IVnv r, I ol., toys, r.iwrntrr drain No. oil, Uund toward Denver, on t e Graymont district of i.o l iiion l'aeitic Railway was wrecked about II n iliM-k, near lieaver Brook Station, and 'J.i pswengers were injured, o of whom will probably die. The tra:n wty late nnd riiiiuiiii: vrry rapidly when rounding a sharp eure. Ihr nin. cor lelt the track and roll'il down u 1 ,-i..ol em tian k luent. It was to. lowed by the mail and two p-asengrr coaches, one of which turio'd over twice Uf .re reaching the inittoiii. T tie tram w a ioa. ic 1 w 1 1 n pn ivncer., tin n y of w In ill W r re K It Ik; h s i 1 1 'y t h las, w No tT" return. ng tiouitl.e knll.l ul I'y thins Mute t olt t'lltii'Tl, w h;e!i mis held at Apcll. ll is not known c.vai t-y u hat cuused the wrwk, but ss the tram w as a narrow giiugu and the eosches very lopheavy it s thought that tne ;r ..n '.us running too rapidly tor saicty. SOUTHERN ITEMS. SOMK IXTKKKSTIXO NKWS COMI'ILKi) !'KOM MANT SOrKCKS. A. C. Haydon, of Iron Gate, Va., was struck i'T a freight train and fatally injured. The Indies of Lynchburj, Va., arc organiz ing a society for the prevention of cruelty to animals. i David Bibb, an old citizen of Caroline county, Va., died uf lockjaw, caused by a cut on his tinker. Reports from the tobi.ceo sections cf Vir ginia, represents the crop as having been s -riously injured by t Je recent heavy rains. The fruit inspector at Norfolk, Va., has F"tind''d a warning to Baltimore shippers nirninsi sending unsound fruit to the lorincr city. The ten-year-old 6oti of Benjamin Kenyon, of Vienna, Fairfax county, Va., whs drov neil while attempting to cro-s a stream near his home. John Blown, one of the oldest citizens of I'Hylor county. W. Va. , struck by the j Chicago express, on li.- h. & O. lload, and kil.ed. --A letter from Saluda. M iddh sev county, N a., says the prospect for a good oy ster trade in that section is very pood lor the incoraintr casou. Bettie Pawson and Sissy Home, both white woinen, were run over in Richmond by a freight train on ihe York River Railroad and kill. tl. Work has been commenced on the new Academy of Music at Roanoke, Va. It will cost -fr.i.ut.K) and will have a seHtinsr capaeity of l,.si. At the meeting of s:oc!holders of the Roanoke and Southern Railroad Company at Roanoke a report was read showing largely increased net carni::. Henrietta Murrcll and Catharine Jackson, both colored, who w ere to have been hung in Charlotte county for murder, were reprieved for thirty days by Gov. McKinney. George C. White, a well-known wharf builder and contractor, was run over and killed on the Atlantic and Danville Railroad at the crossing on First street, in Portsmouth, Va. WilliRm W. William?, a Nansemond county Va., was farm hand in found dead in the wwkIs, shot through the head and an empty shotgun alongside the body. Will iams left his home logo gunning. Moses Baumgarten, ag'd thirty-six years, a proof reader for a Charleston, i S. C-) news paper office, committed suicide by taking cyanide of potassium. He ha.il lout his situa tion and was disappointed in love. The Buena Vista (Va.) Glass Works beg.in turning out its pnKlucts last week. It is an elegantly equipped establishment, with thirty three glass blowers in line, and the special pursuit will be mineral water bottles. Sora have begun lo make their appearance in the marshes near Petersburg, Va. Mr. Gall lij, f Norfolk, went to his father's farm, on the Appomattox river, and in a short time killed over one hundred of these birds. Rev. James T. Dickinson, formerly of Richmond, Va., but now of Orange, N. Y., has declined a call which oilered a salary of H.tHXi in excesa of what he is now receiving as pastor of the North Orange Baptist Church. Wilaon Schoolcraft, aired twenty, shot him self at his home, near Handley, W. Va. The bullet entered his body near the left uipple and passed into his lung. He cannot recover. Schoolcraft did not know the pistol was loaded. At Boydton, Mecklenburg county, Va., Misa Annie Mason Hcd lerly, aged eighteen, was shot and almost instantly killed by the accidental discharge of a gun in the hands of her brother, Ernest Uedderly, fourteen years of age. Over 5,000 people atten led the dedication T: euator jonu it. i'uin..j -t ludfonl, eloquent address. At night the'K'i. display of fireworks. The bridge proper is 1 460 feet long, 40 feet wide, and apans the river at a height of 8-1 fee. its cost has been upwards of $!A),000. Chris Coxe, nn employee of the Norfolk and Western Railroad Company, was found lyin under the third span of the new bridge just opened at Radford, Va. He had been struck two or three times with some sharp instru ment and then thrown to the earth below, a distance of 90 feet. It is supposed that he was instantly killed by the fall. J. D. Austin, a merchant residing near Salisbury, N. C, was arrested in Richmond, Va.. charged with raisinz a check of $30 to f3,lXX) and attempting to pass it upon the whole sale grocery firm of E. A. Saunders A Co. The check was drawn on the Davis & Wiley Bank of Salisbury. The work of raising it was poorly executed. At Clarksburg, W. Va., announcement waa made of a compromise of the celebrated Cam len will esse. This case was to have come up for trial at the present term of the county court, but the attorneys arranged a compro mise on the basis of the marriage contract, uhich gives the widow $100. UC0 in lieu of all ither claims, and divides the balance ot tli jotr ;e among lhe heirs nt law. CABLE SPARKS. .1 father, mother and four adult children hinged themselves in Paris. The Hungarian govirnment will suppress ail emigration agencies in that country. Twenty thouain French woikingmen will , make a pilgrimage to Rome this mouth and i will be addressed by the Pope. The Royal Dublin Society, for promoting husbandry and other useful arts and sciences, w ill takeateps to have Ireland worthily re presented at Chicage. The steel works of Bolikow, near Middles borough, Yorkshire, are idle, owing to the ab sence ol orders. The resu.t is that several thousand workmen have been thrown out ot employment. The Paris police searched the houses of aeveral of the promoters ot the Panama Canal Company, w ith a view of obtaining further evidence in the investigation being made into the aliairs ot that organization. A m it her of American engineers, who ar reported lo be agents of a wealthy firm w hich proposes to make a tender for building the Siberian Railway, have arrived at Vladivo stok to ascertain the conditions of the con struction ot the line. The Russian government has accepted the invitation of the L'nited States to send a repre sentative lu a conference to be held shortly, where the formation of au international bureau tor the exchange of intelligence as to j mercantile failures will be discussed. General Ai.ikhanoff, one of the most daring and astute men in the Russian service, whs arrested at Cabul, the capital ot Afghanis tan, on the charge of being a spy. lie was disguised as a Moslem devotee when taken in to custody. The British East Africa Company's steam ship Kenia has navigated the river Tana, in Atrica.a distance of oVKj miles from the eastern coast, and thus opened to trade a fertile and populous district which has up to the present been supposed to be practically closed to cotn mtsree. Emperor William pardoned Mrs. Oneil, who was seutenced to four months' imprison ment in Wiesbaden for shooting her husband, General Oneil, who claims to be an officer in the United States Army, and who was found by Mrs. Oneil in the company of another w oman. It is estimated that 30,000 Germans have been naturalized in Russia this year. The motive is an apprehension that the govern ment is about to take harsh measures against loreignera resident in Russia by depriving iheni of the right to hold real estate and of other privileges. Cari.kton Graves, lhe American who was arrested at Mayeuce, Germany, on the charge ol being a spy, has been liberated, the goveru ui nt having nothing on which to hold him. Mr. Graves is iu the employ of the Pennsyl vania Railroad at the Broad Street Station in Philadelphia. He is an expert photographer, and is now on his vacation in Germany. He had his camera w .th him when arrested. The German police thought he had protographed the Mavence Fort. A DUEL lfT GEORGIA HegHii with Fista, Ended with ltevolvers One of the Participants Killed. A duel was fought in Albany, Ga., a day or two ago by Jesse Mooro, of Berrien county, and R. P. Fl-teller, of Irwin county, from the effects of w hich Moore ju-t died. There had been bad blood between the men for some time, aud when they recently met, each accompanied by a friend, they agreed to tight with their lists. Alter a lew rounds their hatred ol each other became too intci.s to be satisfied with such mil i method , and thev drew their revolvers. The seconds took to the bushes, while the principals advance! slowlv, firing as they w. nt. When live shots had bie:i exchanged Moore fell mortally wouuded. Fletcher was also wounded but not s riously, and tied trom the j State without delay. He has not been appre- bended. STATE OF TRADE. An Enlargement of the Volume Trade Reported. of Exports of W heat for the Week from tlio I nite.I States Aggregate 4,730, :3 i ISushels Bank Clearings. Special telegrams to Br nUtreft'n, from the few larger western and northwi stern com mercial centers, which have been reportin,' an enlargem nt of the volume of general trade , within a fortnight or so indicate that at Chi cago, Duluth, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Omaha. Kansas City, St. l.our., and Cincinnati, the previously noted activity in demand for stapie dry goods, footwear, hats, clothing, general produce, and fruit continues. Prices naturally are fairly well maintained as well a' lor rubijer, which manufacturers are still buying freely, for lard and pork and hogs, which have been in light receipt, and tobacco, Biignr.te.a, an I at some markets, lum ber, as well. Iron is steady, with producti n ashade heavier th in a month ugo, but simil arly less than one year ajo. I.AKOE EXTORTS OF WHEAT. Exports of wheat (including flour) for the week from United States ports aggregate 4, 7 2 'J -2-i- bushels.o r ind uding Montreal's shipments .r,ll.i.'S bushels; the total from the United States last week was, o, 441, 5'Jri bushels. In the like week of 1 -9 J (including Montreal) it was only l,4-i,fi5S bushels and in IHiO (ex cluding Montreal) 1,45,532 bushels; in 16S6, -,73;',4:4 bushels, and in liSi it was 2, 78.5, bushels for the week. For eleven weeks the aggregate ' including flour) exported (excluding Montreal; is 43, 5 l,uiio bushe!s;in 1SIW it was L'J,U3ti,uO0 bush els (including Montreal); in l.S-9 it was 21, -1 lo.isu bushels, in ISs.s, 2 1, 5-1 4, 1) JO bushels, and In 137, 4-', 4 '2,000 bushels. San Fran cisco exporters expect to ship from 2,500,000 to 3,000,1100 bushels of wheat per month lor the next eight months. The decline in the prieeof wheat which has continued several weeks, shows signs of being followed by a reaction. Some newspapers interpret the last Government wheat crop re port as indicating a crop of 54.5, 000, WJ bushels while others p-Tsist in the o'')o,o3i,x) J bushels theory. In spite of the ultra favorable crop outlook and a general increase of trarlic, the granger i-tocks were subjected to reactionary tenden cies, though the beliefuhat the corn crop was safe caused a rally at the close ot the week. The New York money market has been subject to some manipulation, call loans touching o'a7 per cent., though, in spite of large shipments of funds West, the supply continues good. Foreign excha ge has fallen ia per cent., and the reports of further gold shipments are current. Bonds cont'nue in increased demand, with activity and advances : in low priced issues. ( A llEt REASF. IX BANK CLEARINGS. Bank clearings at fifty-eight cities for the week amount to $1, 0411,245, oyi,a decrease from the like week last yearof5.b' per cent. At fifty-seven cities ( New Y'ork's total excluded) a decrease of 3.6 per cent, is shown. There were decreases at New York, $45,7!J 000; Boston, $4,3oJ,000; and at Philadelphia, $13,i47,Ooo, as compared with the week a year ago. At Chicago the increase was $6,445,0 JO. Gross railway earnings in August show a smaller gain over that month, lsyu, than do those for July. Grain carrying roads have done best, Southern and Pacific road earnings not being so favorable. The total for 134 roads last year over 1389 was 5 per cent. The gain in July this year over last was 8.8 percent. F'or eight Months gross earnings are $291,591, 9J1, a gain of 5.2 per cent, over eight mouths lait year. DISASTERS AiVD CASUALTIES. A fassenger train ran into a horse near Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and the engine was wrecked, Engineer Lynch was fatally scalded. While Arthur Hunt and his two sisters were rowing near Schenectady, New York, the boat was capsized and Hunt and one sister w ere drowned. A SKIFF, containing six joung men, cap sized near Port Homer, Ohio, and two brothers named Kinson were drowned. The others were rescued. C. W. Van Nostrand, a commission merchant of Ickaniah, Nebraska, was fatally eored by a vicious bull, which he was turning loose to pasture. Susie Zeai.y, 11 years old, was burned to death in Jonesville, Alabama. Her clothes caught fire at a grate. Her father and mother were fataHy burned while trying to extinguish the flames. At Dundee, Michigan, three children in the Gibson family and two farm hands have died during the last weekGfrom drinking water out of a polluted well. More than twenty other persons are effected, about half of them seriously. Two sections of a freight train on the Chicago and Alton Koad collided near Mar shall, Missouri, and an engine and several cars were smashed up. A fireman named Swisher was injured, perhaps mortally, in jumping oft'. "Bettie" Dawson at.d "Cissie" Horn, white women, were run over and killed by a train at Richmond, Virginia. They were seen lying on the track by the engineer, but the train could not be stopped in time. It is believed they were drunk. The trestle at ti e east end of the bridge over Red river, near Clay City, Kentucky, on the Kentucky Union Railroad, fell forty leet, carrying with it an engine and seven cars. Fireman Thompson Hall was killed and Engineer llanna was badly scalded. A telegram from Allant i, Georgia, saya that Jert I). Stewart and Mrs. Kennedy while boat riding on Lake Ponce de Leon, wera drowned. ''Their companions could give no explanation. The parties were both married and were out without knowledge to their partners." A violent wind storm struck Halifax, Nova Scotia, the other night. The storm blew down the shutc and part of the staging connecting the grain elevator with the deep water wharves. The yacht Youla, one of the fa.-tt st boats belonging to the Koyal Nova Scotia Yacht tquadron, and the schooner yaeh Wenonah were totally wrecked. The j nter-Colonial Railway bridge across the harbor was blown down. The death is reported in the San F'elipe Desert, Ixiwer California, of Benito Cesena, a young Mexican, and the narrow escape of a Chinaman. They became separated from a prospecting party, and wandered off on the desert. T neir mules died, and, alter enduring horrible torture tiom thirst, the men reached the Gulf of California. Cesena fell down, unable to pr. ceed further, but the Chinaman made a rait and reached a schooner lying off shore. When the crew landed they found Cesena dead. They were in sight of water, but did not know how to reach it. THE WORLD'S FAIR Makqi-is Imperiai.i, Italian Charge d 'Af fairs at Washington, has informed Dr. Verdi, President of the Italo-Ameriean Committee for the promotion of the World's Fair, that the Italian Ministry has acknowledged the re ceipt ot the re.-oiutions adopted at a meeting of I talo-Americans, requesting the Italian Government to officially participate in the ex hibition, and in answer the Italian Ministry says tint, in pursuance of a principle adopted long ago, the Italian Government declines to officially participate iu any international ex bibitii n. Lieftenavt Safford has secured two large lull-rigged balsas, such as are used by the Indians of Lake Titicaca in their commer cial peregrinations a long the shores of the lake. These balsas" will be sent to Chicago, together with an interesting collection of nusicrl ii s'ruments, weapons and wearing apparel of Titicacans. Lieutenant Safford found also most interesting material for an ethnological and agricultural exhibit, which v ill, it is claimed, quite equal that of any other of the South Amer can Republics. Of the .5.000,000 subscribed by the citi zens ol Chicago to the World's Fair, $2,960,000 according to Treasu rer Seeberger, has been collected. When $4 UXH in ire has been re ceived the $5,000,000 in bo.ids voted by the city will become available. It is expected these bonds w ill be piacfo on the market next month. The headquarters of the Pennsylvania, World's Fair Commission has b-en regularly opened in Harrisburg. The committee sent to Europe in the inter est ot the World's Fair returned on the steam ship Augusta Victoria. About noted1 people!. Secretary Proctor does not drink cold tea. RcdyarD Kipling is credited with (tn r.m bition to write a play. Christian Reid, the novelist, lives in on old-fashioned gray house near Salisbury, N.C. Queen Christina, of Spain, invariably displays the greatest reluctance tosign a death warrant. Bret IIarte says he can get three times better pay for his writings from English than American publishers. I'nited States Minister Thomas has written a book about Norway and Swiden, hich will soon be published. Leon Cladel is attempting to persuade his brother novelists in France to form a union and publish their own books. The Empress Federick, according to pres ent plans, will spend a part of the Autumn with Queen Victoria in Scotland. ' Mrs. Hannah Eistis and Miss Sarah Barr, of Wakefield, Mass., w ho were born in Salem on March 31, 1800, are probably the oldest living twins. General Maury is the third distinguished Confederate officer to have a desk in the War Records Office in Washington. The other two are General Marcus Wright and General Geo. Field. Mr. Henry Watterson, who has been flitting about between the seashore and New York during the past fortnight, evidently has tired of seashore caprice, and now is stop ping with the star-eyed, at the Everett House. Bishop Spalding, of the Peoria (III.) Diocese, shocks some of the good people at Newport by frisking about behind a spanking team of fast horses. The Bishop is a man of God in every sense, but he likes a speedy roadster. Mrs. Lucian Mayberry, of Little Rock, Ark., Is the mother of ten boys, all born within a married life of thirty-nine months. There are two sets of triplets and two pairs ot twins. Mrs. Mayberry is a pretty blonde, plump and hearty, of barely 24 years of age. Miss Helen Cloak, a pure-bred Indian of the Blackfeet Nation, has been appointed by Secretary Noble as a special alloting agent in the Nez Perces Reservation. She is a well educated woman, and in every respect quali fied to perform the duties that will devolve upon her. Judge John Martins, of Kansas, once or twice an unsuccessful candidate tor Governor on the Democratic ticket, and a leading law yer of that State, is as much addicted to wear ing a buttonhole bouquet as General Butler, and his courteous manners have won for him the title of "The Chesterfield of Kansas." The Crown Princess of Denmark, only daughter of the late King Charles XV., of Sweden, is a suberb woman. Her wit and in telligence have won for ber the friendship of many brilliant men; while her striking beauty is tire admiration ot Denmark, She and the ; Queen of Portugal are the two tallest prin cesses in Europe. TOLSTOI still continues to live and dress ' like a peasant, and when people of that class come to him for advice he receives them as politely as if they were ambassadors. Some- j one says of him that he learned the Greek and ; Hebrew languages after he was grown up; ; indeed, that the latter tongue was acquired i when he was already "an old man." He is or ly 62 years old now. 1 TEST CASE FOR CHINAMEN. Must They Be Sent to China Direct, or Where They Last Came From? On July 31 a United States commissioner at Detroit, in the case of a Chinaman f und unlawfully in the United States, ordered him to be returned to China, as being the country from whence he came. The ease was appealed 0. Tillman, the special deputy collector at Detroit, saying that Judge Swan had reversed the decision of the commissioner, and found that Canada was the country from which the man came, and had directed his return there. The deputy collector asked if there were any instructions, and in reply Acting Secretary Spaulding telegraphed that in case the Chiua mau referred to in his telegram came before the court on habeas corpus proceedings, to rtquest the district attorney to take an appeal. If the proceedings w e e under the Exclusion act of September 1888, the decision will be regarded as final. At the Treasury Department, with the in formation now before it, the decision is re garded as one of great importance, and it is said the practical effect of it, if the proceed ings at Detroit w ere under the inclusion act, will be to render inoperative the provisions of that EC . The Attorney General has hereto fore decided that under the provisions ot the late Exclusion act the country w hence the Chinaman came means "China," and the de partment has been sending all Chinamen con victed of being unlawfully in the United States back to that country. The Canadian government levies a head tax of .'f.'iO upon all Chinee arriving in that country, and there is nothing to prevent them when once in Canada from coming over the unprotected border into ti.e United Statis in large nu mbcrs. HANGED BY A MOB. Gillilaiul Brothers Suffer Death for the Murder of Sheriff McCargue. The Gilliland brothers, Jas. H. and Josiah, were lynched in Somerset, Ky., by a mob for the murder of Sheriff McCargue, of Pulaski county. The mob is supposed to have come mostly from Whiteley and Laurel counties McCargue was raised in Laurel county, and had iimnv friends in thnt section. At a late hour there was a great crowd of men gathered in front of the court house and the ominous words "one o'clock" were whis pered from one to another. Wrhout any con ference they filed down to the jail, only to be repulsed by a guard of ten men in charge f the chief of police. The guards stood at their post until they saw it was use!es nnd then came the demand for the victims. Jailer Shepheid was called to the door nnd was overpowered by the mob and forced to give up the keys to the jnil, when the prison ers were taken out and hanged. The Gilli land boys were game to the last, and no con fession could be procured: they only asking to kneel and prsy and protest innocence. Their groans were only answered by angry curses from the mob. James protested innocence tothe last and his last words were: "I in dying for another's crime." He uttered a short prayer, but was interrupted by one of the mob, who told him ' to "die telling the truth, don't di with a lie j on your lips." lie is the one ihat is suppose 1 to have fired th fat-il shot, and many crimes ; have been laid nt his door. i Josiah protested his innocence, but acted ns if he wanted to tell something. MARKETS. Baltimore Flour City Mills, super, $.3. 20 fu.3.4.'. Wheat Southern Eultz, 1.00(0,1.01 Corn Southern White, 6!)(i7tc., Yellow, 7273o. Oats Southern and Pennsylvania 32(o,M7ie- Rye Maryland and Pennsylvania ?7(ft.!r.,c. Hay. Maryland and Pennsylvania flL'.UOfu, 12.5ti. Straw Wheat, $7.5O(o;8.00. Butter Eastern Creamery, 24(Oj25c. near-by receipt 15(a! lo'c. Cheese Eastern Fancy Cream, l(t,c., Western, c9c. Eggs 18 (a.20e. Tobacco, Leaf-Interior fl.txjtyl.o ) Good Common, i.(Xi(i,.5.00, Middling, ri.U J dtX.OO, Good to tinered, &.UU(tjiU.U0. Eanev, $l2.ou(a-i3.0(.i. Vork Flour Southern Good t choice extra, i.oofqjtr). Wheat No. 1 Whit-l.(i-.'fg.l.. Bye State 1 01(0,1.020. Corn Southern Yellow, 72ftM-Jc Oats White, Mate Sorfi.'i'ijc. Butter State, 15(u2.ic. Cheese State, 7(aPe. Eggs 2u(Vi,21c. PitU.ADKl.rniA Flour Peniisylvani i Fancy, .i.2.3oT,4..SH. Wheat, Pennsylvania an I Southern KcF, I.imi.i.ClI.iiI. Hyc I'eiinsyl- vania, Vifa orn Southern l ellow, t,.! :;-Ac. Butter Stiitc, l.sf.i f'KKtc. Mil: 1 :-. Chei-s E s - Mat. N.-w 2 -ot 21c. Factory, 1 JV, !.. CATTLE. Beef $2.."iif(, l.7". Sheep igs-".4.lKlf'l l.oll. -Beef--.-t.r,'i,.-. I I. Sheep B.U.TIMOKV fo.oCOl -ho'l. Ni:w V"i:i f 4. ''; ."..2-".. Ilo-s -1 East l.t !i:i;ty -!! I 'd li.lH. f 4l.7ofao.tl0. Sheep f-!.n.iM ,-,.m. 1 logs . :(u, :.: i. Tun steamship City of New York, having on board the mail ol the Canadian Pacific Railway Company's steamship Empress of Japan, iroi;i Japan, made the run across the At. antic ocean, irom New'iork to Queeus l.o.vii, in five days twenty-two hours and fifty minute, iqualiug the best previous eastward passage. The Japanese mail was carried from l jKou.iiiia lo Queenstown in twenty dava. IiOM Pedro, the ex-Emperor of Brazil, has not lelt bis rooms at Vichy for some weeks. The chrou.c heart disease from which he suf fers is now complicated by a state of profound melancholia from which it is impossible to rouse him. NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. hi Educational Institution for EASTERN HOBTH CABOLIIA. MALE AND FEMALE. ESTABLISHED ISSf. Eight Distinct Departments. Pri-nur I)ilrniir:i(i'r, Aciubmic, Col lnjiale, Ail, Music, Industrial and Uwsinrss. TEN EXFERI KXOEI) AND COM PETENT TEACHERS. Vocal and I iwtrumrntU Music Prominent Feature, under the direotitm of a male pre fessor, with efficient assistants. Special Course of Initruction for those desiring to become leacners. Expenses very moderate. Board from l8.00 to $10.00 per mouth taeilitie.s-good. Special inducements to indigent students. Fall Term Opens Sept. 7 1891. For further information or for catalogue, apply to G. T. ADAMS, A. B., (Trinity College), PRINCIPAL, jttlylldwtf New Berne, N. C. GEO. HENDERSON. (Successor lo Robrrti Sc Henderson.) General Immcg Apt, Represenling Insurance Companyof North America, of Philadelphia. Home Insurance Company, of New York. iueen insurance Company, ot England. Hartlord F'ire Insurance Company, ot Hartford. North Carolina Home Insurance Company, of Raleigh. Grecnwitch Insurance Company, of New Y'ork. Phoenix Insurance Company, of Brooklyn. United Underwriters I nsuranoe Company, of Atlanta. Boston Marine Insurance Company, of Boston. july2dwtf We THE BEST MEDICINE CHILL CURE. CHEAPEST MKDICINE KNOWS CONSIDERING QUALITY AND SIZE OF D06E. IT WILL ALSO OTJH.K BILI0USNES3, DYSPEPSIA, AMD CHRONIC CONSTIPATION. New Berne, N. C. "WANT A WAGON?" We have wagons, buggies, surreys. High grade ; 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., Binhamton, N. Y. "BUILT FOR BUSINESS." $65 OUR SILVER QUEEN $65 Is It possible a first-class Buggy with 9llver-plated Daah Rail, Baat o Ul r- J UJ O O Q Q Z 2 a CC Ul u z D m o u. o Write for our New 80 page Catalogue of all kinds of hlolee. Address SOUTHERN CINCINNATI, - - VAUGHN PATENT SPRING VEHICLES. IIllHT-OlIXjrEVllY RESPECT. LIGHTEST, STRONGEST AND EASIEST BIDING VEHICLE OH EARTH BUGGIES. ROAD WAGONS, PHAETONS, AND SURREYS On this Wonderful N. -.XI A T V 1A V BABCOCK & VIELE CARRIAGE COMPANY si Proprietors and Manufacturers, . ., (Trite or Catalogue. Mention this Paper. WE ARE IN FOR FINE QUALITY AND STYLE OF SPRING VEHICLES THE HOST FOR THE MONEY IS DDH 10ITD. BEST MATERIAL AND WORKMAN SHIP WINS. SMALL AND LARGE ORDERS A SAMPLE JOB WILL CONVINCE YOU THAT OUR WORK IS THE WORK TO BUY. BRIDGEWATER CARRIAGE CO. BO A TTOTrTTi, Fast Passenger and Freight Line betwaam NEW BERNE, Eastern North Carolina Points, and all OflaW nectiona of the PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, '' INOLUDIHO New York, Philadelphia, NarfMk, BsUVa, tlaiara and Boatoau Th. Ola LY Trl-WwUr Lisle Oat mi New Herat. y New and Elrgantly Equipped Steamer USTIETTSEL r Sails from Now Barn soffDiTs, wioimiTs, rxisiTS, AT FIVE P. M., Btosjiing at Boanoke Island each war v1 forming close connection with th Norfolk Southern Railroad. The Eastern Dispatch Line, oouatatinf el, the Wilmington 8. S. Co., Norfolk Bontharaj R. R., New York, Phils, and Norfolk ami Pennsylvania R. R., form a reliable and regular line, offering auperior facilities fori jiuck passenger and freight transportation, i - No transfer except at Elizabeth Citv.Jat which point freight will be loaded oa ears ta g" through to destination. Direct all goods to be shipped rla Eaatara , Carolina Dispatch daily aa lollowgi Erom New York, by Penna. R. IL, Pier 17,1 North Ri rer. . I From Philadelphia, by Phlla., W. and Balta.1 R. I!., Dock St Station. , From Baltimore, by Phi la., Wil. and BalW R. R. President 8L Station. ; From Norfolk by Norfolk Southern R. R. , . From Boston, by Merchants A M inert Traasw portation Co.; New York and New Knrlaad' R- R. t - i i .i i i .i a. iAiea ns low auu time quioaor inaua vji any other line. For further information apply to t W. H. Joyce, (Oen'l Freight Trafflo Afent! P. R R.) General Traffic Agent. Qp.o. Stei'HENR, Division Freight lAgeatJ P. W. A B. R R., Philadelphia. B. B. COOKE, Oen'l Freight Agent. X. T P. A N. R. R-, Norfolk, Va. 4 - II. C. Hcdoins, General Freight Agent N. fl. R. R., Norfolk. Va. GEO. HENDERSON, Aorr, Newberne. W.CU Boot and Shoe Maker- All Stylee of Boots and 8ta mad to order and on Short notloa. ' I REPAIRING A SPECIALTY N. ARPEN, CBAYII ST., ippttltfl ftinul CHen Li S. WOOD. Formerly 18 years with Geo. Allen ic Co, ' ' DEALER IX " ; " General Hardware and Cutleiy; Harness, Saddles, :.'. Pollock Street? neil to latlenal la&k, NEW BERNE, N. C. 11 - o o H n o E 5 " 5 o S o z z z a y 0 0 P 1 2 m 58 Z BUGGY CO. - OHIO, U S. A. WAySVIT.I'E. IWTtlAWA. - 'T ' ' ' THE LEAD ONE OF OUR CATA LOGUES FULLY IL LUSTRATES OUR LINE. RECEIVE BEST ATTEKTIOH. 0
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 24, 1891, edition 1
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