Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / Oct. 15, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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Single Copies 5 Cents. $1.50 Per Year. INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS. NEW HI.RNK, CHAVKN COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, OCTOBER 15, 1801. NO. 30. VOL. XIV. for Infants and Children k as mS Uv toiSi m.- BL A. I sue . H. IX. Ul . Oa- IV. S"$ra K. T. orsssioxAL. DR. C- K. BAG BY. Surgeon Dentist, (V-, SW, y . Brut CWcA, nt-w tut. K. C Attorn ey-at-Law rrw DERNC. N. C H. L, GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Cr. .. t j.wnl Oft NEW BCNC. N. C r -r-. - lr l Covtt Cravm, Criwt, I!. p-sal Jn, OmIh, u4 Lsnarfr ...um t, a4 la the liiwi sawt r4il toaruk eaUkwtf C. R. THOMAS, i:::::2j tf cal:r-2t-Ly, QXt Cnm St. Susr 0-!a. MW (. C ... Prrt U li Cvwrta Craw. C-rtervi, --, Oasiow. ir 4 F-atltce stl ta ts ."aw. Cm N'artfc Crlt, sad ia l . d. I'uKfV u4 Circa it Charts. jlU P. H. PLLETIES;" ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, AND MONEY BROKER. iil.i ia.wl , Own X a-A .p-ty m4 I tajofe-f WiH (or tocrt Ui -s W ,.i tprsctM U the C-ewtfcM i Oa, CfTW. Jwei, Oaal at Fiali a, aitctt iuut Onrt Bares, as4 ii rmm Urt ml tka mn. DR. J. D. CLARK, ID-EHiTTIST, NEW DtRNE. N. C.: tCTOr.. oo 0s Street, between rx k and Broad. . 4 ak ttt W XataVsK IMf-WItt, The National Bank OFNEWBERNE.N.C. i.-ceroajiTxa isso. CapiUl. ' ;. 5100.000 Surplus Profits. - 86,700 DIBECTORS. J4S. A.- TUvkM, Tos. Pssisxa. CH4S. S. Sstaji. i. II. Hscssos. U..II. Kosssts. ' lui. MiLixs. ! lliSTCT. GREEN, FOY&CO.. BANKERS, C ft latril laaliig lulssn. NKW BAN KINO HO USX, lT-iir -rrf, 4& IW trsns idsrf .1 Art NCW fttWWC, N. C NEXT! Pror. VV. H. SHEPARD sl atipmal iilitiaf La tsa taasarla! art H.lr Cot for - - 3tCfta. t.v- tO cnTsiRHsiBiisii ji:?. NCW B CRN C H. C - I BARBER SHOP.' mtl ttwaa lataa W af atW BaU . paaaM -b aoaa4 ssU vsasr. m , rtf'fV nl rrtr iianifijt f DH1CK BLOCK. MIDOIX 8T. "t r n ' I ir IVI PC ! I. n. J W l CW. ! HEAVY iJtD LIGHT RnHFRIFS ' Aft ULllICi Oa , . Mruarv ut u a sx uu. stf XTaaatcrarm' Vvaa. Dry Goods & Notions, Tall Staakaas) Lara Assartmaat. Prlssa as law as taa Lawast. Call aa4 Citmlt my Staas. gjTlTaa Csawa. rnE ara maklnc spaoialty tni. -ey. ,fo a a-w-ew t-4 fwil TiIt.i. lil unMwrinnc''Hi"'' aaa mwTmaj. wcaJfovrpARACeti HARtabii. Madaof thai ItoEST STOCK and 13&8T WORKMANSHIP. Such a harnasa cannot ba bausM for laaa than S2S. at rataU. Srt wa ara wlllln. In ordar to Introduoa It. to SCU. OMS ItT OWLY to Orva aarson as svsmpta for C1C.50. 3 UBS. J. EI. HIKES' Boarding House - REOPENED. VM. J. li 1ILES baa mpod a FirM-CUa Hoarding Hoon in the city , opp le Baptist Cbnrch. Tls PiciJsr Dari Eefiix lacliis, Cm I had at U nn jfor. J. M. HINES, Agent. TTOIS Is the machine that is used in the Office, Court-room, and for reporting lectures and sermons. Wktl its tpcd U (rcAtcr ttum mnj Otkcr kaows Bcikod, it U ao simple tksi BJ iatQicat prsa cms: (sin s pd of too or ssors words pr mio Bts, t t or six weeks, without the sis' of sa iastractor. Orcalsrs sad tsstissosUsls seat to sll who mention tAis ppr. ET.na2,riiiTTE,Bnfl, Sot Axnt for U. 9. srxf Canada. f THE I NEW LEVER SAFETY TTva PCRPCCTtON Of SIMPLICITY and ECONOMY of POWER. ?(OCIIAI!(H. WO OKAIIM. VARIABLE STROKE, only two sata or RovorrlnsT Baarlna. Oaat Hill Ctlmbinar and all around Safoty mada. H. Ba SMITH MACHINE CO. SMITHVILLE, N. J. ClFfls's H. C. Freifil Liie. Vmm G. H. Stoat, Deflaacs 1 Yetper On sad sftr Febrosrjr 1st, 1391, thi. lias will make rrgulsx SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS ItTW'tH Baltimore and New Berne 'aala Bahiawr w N.w IVraa. WED- 5 13 DAT, 8ATCROA Y, ilirU. LaarlaS 9av IUtim nr Balilaxtn. Tl'ES L&ww innf for paiiiator, sY.sUTVRDAY. i P Ji. Imlim ul Silfn, Tik. Ittiee. Tk-ta ! aaly DI r.FCT I. at of New IWraa w Bahiavor. wtihoal t .nET,.!oTjx0 aaly at Kals. tartr thra .r Boion. prkia.PslWiw.i- l:!r.-..,aj . d .i, P" Nans, Eaw a VTn(. Makn ela-a raaaratiaa tar all catai. br A. a . C. Rail roavt aa4 Kixar aat ! Nt Braa. i " A fta ara M Wlo , Rsvsss FOSTSS, Oanl U.narvr. iA V. McCaSSICS, Araa4.Narfalk.Va. w. . Clja Ca, pBila4.lphia.lJ Soota wkarrta. Kartb rttar. E. Stajcaaa, Baton, M Oratral wrt S. U. Raeswall. Providaae. R. I. SaJaa laava Boaaaa, Taaadars aad 9nrdjm. - Ji York daJIr. BaJttv, Walaaadar Salardara " - PhllaJalphU. MoBdart, Wedaca- Oars. eat a rd j. " " PrrMo. SatarvUra. TkrvagS Wlla laJiaf rirn. and rata gutr aaaaail to all poiata at tt. diffar.ut ofloaa o( laa najpaalra. WSF" Avoid Breakage of Du.k and Shif ha .V. C. Lint. 8. H. OEAY, Arat, N.w Baraa, N C saason of what tba vary lC Xs -v THE NEWS. Ai Wirloo, Ini.. l: '.rj V ( .-.!t. te lorj.r, ku brn trnl in t to h-r jrurt In th pn Hen ! rr on pi - a rl go It t (. n hi t Kad id nir.ire ichtine for defriudn-.g ccl lot loiurin 'e companiM by forgme pap-ri In clainu for .luabi ices lie haJ pohcie. f,r io eighl companies, from w hich he bid aa inoorae of over $3)0 iwnk -In eetion. af laws, roach of the fill wheat will ba a fail ara. owing to the continued warm weaiher. Near Morris, 111-, W I. BaroeU killed hi - wile, sod then nade au an.oreeajfal attempt ata!etd. At 8crsmento. Cal . Kirhsrd ri O'inda, a blarkunnh. mi.rderetl hi wif. aad then killed himself. Ih w.fr had left i him au account of cruel irenloirnt. lie met j her, and aske0er la dtnp liie procredinei for diToree and live with him ssio She refused ' aad he .hrx her l.toe, kilnnf her in.l.nll llatbea fired lwaaJxaial himael f. n I died in a svart UrAa. 1Yb le sltempiing lo ford l he . UttlaBlaa rleer aear Fairburf, Neh., Allrt Herataaa araTe bis horses into loo swi it wsicr aad lbs sotft was esrrled down ths tirmn, the wijoa OTfrtarnlu VIrs Hermann and two children, who were in lbs w.roo, wers swept ;, aad Ihs children were drowned Hermsnn, with difficultf. im to lbs abors. aad, after a hard effort, aucc eded in brinping i his wife out of lh. wat r, bat sbe died ahorliy I afterward. tVpnty Sheriff Gatton an Is i harteadsr wers foood murdered in Glno'a aalooo at Arthur City, Tex., both m -n beiu . shot ia tha back. The can tc of lh. double narder is not known, but it it jrenerally be ' llered to be reTenge. The report I hsl Seers ; tare Biaias is srin ill is unfounded. Nrl LondstrutD, a lumberman. ras fooul abot Ihrongh the back and head upon Ihs rmi rosi track, at Repabi.c, Mich Jobbery , rideatly not Ibe moutr f ih rr:r.i s s considers bl 7 mm of nioner wat lo o ir '. . n hi body. TTie Journeyran Tsilora' I'nion of Toledo, Ohio, naoiberirjn men, slrnck for an ad a-a ia rates of pay which awersrrs about W Per crat. ahort the old rstn. Tb-j wort snlitaiy kry th. pieee. The merchsni tsilora' shaaa are all idle or runaine with but one or two swen.sa th- union embraces nearly all the. "arkna-n :n lb? city. The matter tailors say they raano: comply with thedrmind, which they ileelare aareaaooablr. They will wait three days for the earn to come ba-k, and if they do not, they will then send iheir work to other cities to be ma 1? up. Two freight were ran off (he tranafer steamer Charles Marian at Memphis, and foar m-n ia them ' wers drowne I. The ears were loaded with ' whea". aod floor. Two tramp were in each 1 ear. The train was backed with mora than ordiuary force into the boat, causing the hin l cars to beak orer th bumpers and pitch in lo the water. Tb. Chrlian steamer Itata, , which h ia been rclea ed on bond', furnished ! by local capitalists, left San Diego, Cal., for ! Valparaiso. Tha si earner had been tied up , anee July 4th. The plant of the Delaware ! Iroa Company at New Castle, Iel., operated ' by Uorr.a, TaikeT 4 Co., recently partially , deatroyed by fire, resumed work. The works ( whea in full operation, glee employment to about 1,000 hauls. A bloody Indian out break is in progress in the district of Tu!a- , mengo, Trxa. Steamboats between Point . Pleasant, W. Va., and Cincinuatl.are aground, the Ohio at this point bariug but one foot an l eighteen inches of water. San ford Dowd, an old Iowa soldier, is dead. He was the father of 31 children. Csptsin Eli Fosler, n soldier, who escaped from I.ibby pr.son dur ing ths war, died at Chicagu. A moTement ia oa foot to boy up ail the rice mills ia the Sooth, aad throw them into a pool. Ttu Standard Oil Company and English capitalists ara belie red lo ba behind the enterprise. The Irish Le.it, ae will work with the Irish Federation, but will remain neutral so far a." b. leadership is concern d. Cfcief Jusiics Greet! ot oklshom-x decided that wben a saloon is run enntr.ry to law, any person can d s'roy the bun new-. The Wash ington michine factory at York, Pa., owned by N. C. Baughinsn, m burned, loss J.h.iX'O. At Kairbur', Gs., Jovph Nimmo, an old citiien, was ah 't and kil'el by his son, S'. John Mmmo. Melbourne haagiren aphis rain eiperiment at the au rgeation of th? Citi sens' Coca 3i it tee of Go dlaud, Ki , which hsd the aialter in charge. If rain falla 1 efore a new teat is au ide Melbourne is not to hare th credit. Mrlloartic s not sstisfird w lh his tet sod will vsit until rain hssfslleu and the cloud, which Ihe coavraittee agree are of hia making, bare cleared away, before makinga new test. Krom the beginning to the end of h i experiments Ihe wind has rasints ioed a re'oc ily ot from thirty-fire to forty miles per I our. Mrlboarne is satisfied ihst s rsin can b' p e c piia:ei while the winds msintsina nuch s high Telocity, jmoc the rxperitnents begun it hssrstued sll sround lrodland. Time-keep-r George I toe. of the McK c A Milsn Pipe Works of Pattrrfjo, N. J., has left f..r parts uukaowo Willi, it is alie,-e-l. $t.4S of the cuocern'a miney. The telling schojner Edwani V. Vrbater, (.'apt. McLean, arrive-J a: Sjb Ersnc '-o, afur an absence of neren mootb. The aailors killed a lsrg. number of seais, when the Rorstsn authorities opened orsoo (hem, firing rolley sfter rolley. Ths captsin of the Webster, nererthelras ordered the crew out sgsin on the follow. nr dsy, snd wnen they refused to go, some of them wers put in iroas and fed on bread and wster for a number of days. The aaulora seknowleJgc they rr-ceired hard treatment duriug the en tire perioil. The msti of (hs rewsel says the schooner was n-t waraed against Bering Sea, bat the bmb state thai (he schooner Lilly L. I wa spoksa June '2). and that ahe announce 1 sbe bsd been ordered out of the sea by a rev -enae cutter. tVptaii Mrlan, o the sailor, gay, said that he wou d enter the s.-a dopm reTeaus reaae a T. e W bs.er brought b.clc ),3D0skina AnexpKsonof dynamite in lb Butte copper mine wrecked the shsft house snd kilied a number of people Win Houier and Spencer Cameron, t o Kenton, ... farmers, beat eacn other to desih. The want of proper sewers it the rauwr of an epidemic of diph ibena in Saratoga, N. Y. SHOT HIS SCHOOL RIVAL. John It TT rto.l nlfnrfH lo Sn ml II i I.tfta in (ta I'rlinn. John R V.v-x1 ho( mntl killfl Alnntlt-r Hrntrn in a !iipI In-t Mit, Tirnr !Iiwaasc Ci., inH finnrioi nf munlfr. The jury ir-rornrurndtM hnn in fh mercT of th court Wooii was urnlrncfti to life impritiiment Wc-fxJ antl Brown were fcllrw-sr uirr.l mul r!i rivi! in (he Hi ware I ntt 1 1 iw , M p hoH it r hroail Bot h wrr iiipni br infltifntt-1 tsnulie-s -.no mJrly rrintrii. Thpir riT!ry prTi to ihnr frifivin, nrrl nt ihe comnirnrs-nir-nf Pirrr-ss-n lat May thrir rplnijvr niarhall in forre At th rl'.tr nf thf e ifrciw fhf vountr rrfn. with half it ilorn w ilmiws. ,mi( t a clump of wood n'-sr the town nrvl ouht a duel n-orrlinc to lh- mrte Brown fell d-ad at (hp firt firr. T'pnn thp indjcfnirnt and trial of OnJ i hp r-fi i .-tt dtftif n it y w 3 9 f x pripr.ctd tn err 11 r 1 n 2 jurors Thirtrpn grnnd jurorn wrtP diprinslirird hfcsuic of tliPtr rela nmisii 1 p to WnnH or t . Brown. 01 lof II" men ilntn appttt ju rr on I t IT wptp found not dmuahfird eitlif r bx re lat toihtp or by opp-ca: "on !o capital p u n i h m f n f . The con luot, r, brnkpmrn and wltrimfn on the Ailnnt c yiteni of the Southern Bhci fic road asked for mi incrfs in watr, which vu df Difi them hy thdiviirtn Bupcrmton dent. A dents mi for an incre-K will now be mada; upon th jjrneral f.uperin(rndt'nt and m-uiagtjr. ALBKItT BlF.RTADT, ihe artist, naa Jurt returned from a fuur months' viail to Kurow. He i at work upon hia great picture of "The Lauding of Colambu" tor the World ' fair. BOULANGER DEAD. He Commits Suicide Over the Grave of Madame De Bonnemaln. Onee Called "Hope of Franco" Deserted by Friends and and HI. Party Gone Hs Seek! Relief In Death. Intense excitement j caused in Paris by ths report from Brue-ls that G?n. Bon'anger committed suicide on the tomb of Madame j Bonneniain, hit Iste niittr'ss, who recently die-! in that ci.?. Gen. noulangT went to Brussels from Ixindon a few months ao. He eeatly, owing to reduced means, he Ins been compelled to lire in a small hotel. Mv . dams Boanemain cccompanied him from En I land, ani early in July last died from con 1 anmption. It was greatly through Madams ' Bonnmiu'a faror that ihe general was en ! ablrd lo carry on hia political intrigues, for ahe had inherited a fortune of $1,500,000, all of rrh ch sum the derotcd to the ciuse of the popular Ica ler. Every day sines Mad snip de Bonncmtiin'a death, at Ato-it 4 in the attcrnoon, it has now bcume kuown, Gen. Iltulanger has gone to the ccraetrry at 1 miles, and has depo ted some hsndsome floral emblem, generslly a trown, upon her gi avc. lie would stay by the gra re for tome moments, sometimes lor sn hour together, either engaged in prayer or ia deep thought. A few d .ys ago the ur.for tunate general drr-ojited on the grave a band . so me crow n of flowers bcsring the words A bientof, Marguerite.'' Th. isruily uf the general and the serTanti in his ho el in lb Rue Montoyer were there fore somewhat surprised when they heard him order h:s landsu at a much earlier hour thtin usual, aiying that he was going o the Ixellrs t enietery a'. 10 in the morning ins:cad of at 4 in the acern on. The farany aod servan s at first paid but little attention tu the change in h s plans, and nobody seems to hare bad tha slightest idea ibat he intended to commit auicid'-. Eren'ually (he genersl accompanied by his Talef. lelt the Kue Montoyer in a landau drawn by two ho.-sos. lin nice?, a ter the general s departure lor Ixelles, seem to have reflected over the change be had made in the I hour of ris ting (he tomb ot Mnclanie tie Bonnemsin, anu she became greatly alarmed. Cren. Bo ul anger left (lie laudau at the gate af the cemetery and walked slowly and calm ly to the tomb of Madame Bonnemaiu. He remained there for tome time iu drep thought and was afterwards soon U be slowly wslking srounJ the cemetery, mil thinking deeply. The general mtiM have nalkedal oui thecenie tery tor nearly an hour and a halt before he returned to Madame Bonnemain'a tomb. All reports sgree in (he statement tbat aa soon a the general reached ihe tomb the second time he immediately placid the pistol to his henl aod ahot himieli. Ihe r. port of the revolver was heard by the coaohuinu wh was driving the general's lar.dau, and by the valet, who had accompanied the suicide to (he ceme(erv. They both rushed (o Madame 1! inneinnin 's tomb, c;- I here lound (he tcneral quite dead, lying sc. oss (be gra re. Death must have been instantaneous. The weapon was a re solver of large caliber, so it n a. I (he more cursor iDsry thst it tin uld have escaped the rigilance ol his ralet, relatives and Iriends. The dead man held tnia weapon tightly grasped m his riht hand, and it was seen that tne builrt had entered his head near the right temple, bsd passed through his hrad, and le:t it by the ieit temple. Madame Boulanger, the general's wife, liTrs in Paris. When the husband's fjithlessne6 became known to her, she reluse-i to seek a dirorce, and aporcutiy tas nerer cca-S"d to lore h m. Shortly aller Madame de Iionnc main's death, the g ncral's w ile wrote ottering to forgive b in and thare his exile, but her letter was le:t i;u:iuswer. d. George Orcett Miric Bo ila' gcr French ex minister of war, was bom nt Renncs in 1 H is de? cent on the in n terns 1 side .is We sb. In 1K.'5 Iloa'ani-er entered the military col lege rf Sr. Cyr, nn I ni made sub-lieutenant in 18o7. Ile f-ervrd under .MarsriBll Uinolon, in the Kabyb- cainpaigH. He nlso look part in the Krar.co-I talian war, and w.-.s wounded in the batllc ol l urbigo. In lSriii he obtametl hia full lieutenancy, and .wo years later was promoted lo the rnptaincy, hnving in the in terim seen service in Cocliin-Chma- Just be fore the wsr of 1S70 he b csme a ninjor. lie was with Baxaine nt Meu.hut by some means eac-aped the tale of Baxainc's nrmy Hnd mnde his way back lo Pari-. He was (hen promoted to a lieutenant- olone'ey by the government of nat ionsl defense and fugh at Champi. ny (November 3u to December .'l. In 1SMI he tc rarae brija lier general bring spp inted t the command ot the m my of occupation of Tnn a He next held the war olftoe npi oin -ment of director of the inf.intry div sion, and became minister of war in lNi. When M. De l"r ycinet resigned and a succeedei by M. Goblet i December, Kv l, tbe generel re tained his port folio, but on t ne tall of M . Gob let, riulanger's name d.d not apjearin the cabinet of M. P.ouvier. Soon alter this the general was despatched to Clermont-Ferrand to tske commajid of au army c Tps, receiving a grea( ova(ion at I'arit on his de.iarrure. When the Limousin scandal broke upon Taria like a thunder clap, Gen. Boulanger commented rrry freely upon the war m uls ter's conduct, snd was immediately ordered under elos arrest for thirty days at his ow n headquarters. The government having de- ided in March, lSSX, to cashier the general by plscing him on the retired lit, he inaugu rated a Tigorions carapsign agsint the minis try. Vacsnciea shonly stterwarl occurred in the Republican representation of the Bou logne and the Nord. Here he was returne-1 by 54-.SOO votes to 3-",750 polled by the Oppo: tun ist candidate. In the Nord, his triumph w s still more remarkable, the number ot vot s polled (or him being 172.5J8 again-t 75,0 1 lor M. Eoucart and 9,i47 for .IT. Moreati. Tbis wsa on the l.Kh ot April, 1 So8, which in a rnanifesto he isnied to the electors he de clsred would be marked in the annals of ihe country ss a date ol (rue deliverence. Sul se quendy his popularity wsned for a time. The fene al'a appearance in the Chamber ot eputie-", in July, liiUW, to demand a dissolu tion of the chsmber, gave rise to a stormy scene. M. Flcquet made a vigorous attack upon the general, and in the altercation be tween Gen. Boulanger exclaimed, "Voa lit '' This led M. Flopnet to demand satisfaction, and on July 13 a duel was lougbt between tcem.with the resgilt that the general receivid a deep wound in the throat. After hia recovery he appeared (l'W) t a candidate at bye-elections in Paris, at the Nord, the Somme, and t'harent i ufeneii re, and was returned by large majorities- The Patriotic Lengue. .I which he was the head, wsa subsequently suppress d, and the general was tried I y the sens te on a charge of havir., w nil. war minister, appropriated 10,(5 of public money for purtH-ses of his ow.i propa ganda. He was found guilty. To avoid ar rest, he fled first lo Belgium, then to London, where he srrived April 24. The general was elected at the general elect on ( September ) tor MoDUnartre by a small mnjor.ty over M. jol- frrin, but the election was annulled"." The gen-ral then retired tn the island of Jersey aud later removed to Bru sc!i. THE WOMAN MOONSHINER. Lucy Met lure No linger Defies 1 he Au tho 1 ie In West Virginia Mountain.. A ter years of f. it t ss s. ;.rch the L'niteii S:ates auihorin- s have suc-'-e led in capturing Luey Mci'lur -.the .lahiug moonshiner, whose operations in 'n ne, l.t neol n, aud adjoining counties in West Virginia, have beeu both e.x tetiaive and pt. htub.e. Ever since 1-vs this woman has been one Of the mist extensive inanulaeturers ol lllici: li'l'.ior lu this pnrt o; the Mate, and has ainass-d a large amount o! money. In addi tion to being yuung and nth. i tic, of grout nerve aud presence of uiai 1, she is a tine sho: xh either rifle or r? ol er. Siie wai the owner of a beautiful Sv:rei imts- thai ninnv a lime has -anil tier Lie. Whenever i i a - Mar shals were on her trueK her rb. ct-looted horse bore her swntiy away. a..d at nigiu sue was secreted by h-i nien.e. t 1 he Marshals have hunied n-. r recently, and she went tol.mC'ln r. unity. Ihe orticers "got tlie drop1' on her, an i she surrendered. W hen arraigned beiore the I'nited Mates t omul ssio .er at thari'ston it as with a smile ami a ' h w lye" .that -he greeted hnn. I he Coniinissioner plHcel her under $1,ihki tsond-, winch she I'uriiishe 1 and then departe'd tor her home in Linco.n county. She says that the ease against her lor selling illicit liquors will ie fought by the best counsel that money can lurnish. .Tfas Im.ki.ow is now a gray-haired little old woman of oi years. She is a kind friend of the poor and at regular intervals gives them what she calls "copyright dinners" from the proceeds of her books. SOUTHERN ITEMS. SOME INTI.KF.STINO NETTS COMPILED I ROM MANY SOCRCES. A derided enrth-quakc shock was fe't fit Rictoriow n, Fauquier county, Va., a lew days since, Iiim 't!'' about thirty seconds. At a me. ling of the State board of agricul ture nt 1; nnund. Vu., nn encouraging report on the iie-icck industry was maoc. The Virginia side of Bristol has now about four miles i. f granolithic pavements, and will have seven when all has been completed. President Ingails say the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad will spent $1,000,(00 in im provements in and around Richmond, Va. The n w railroad connecting the Hot Springs with the main line of the Chesapeake and bio Railway has been turned over to the company. I he fall term of the West Virginia Univer sity of Morgaiitovrn, W. Va., has opened with the largest enrollment in the history of that institution. During their vi-it to Richmond, Va., the latter part of ( iember, Mrs. Jerterson Davis snd Miss W innie Davis will be guests of Gen. Jos. H. Anderson. The apple crop in Albemarle county, a., is inimci -e, and is being harvested. The yield on the farm nf .lames C. Gentry, of Char lottesville, will be about two thousand barrels. John Shank, son of Rev. John Shank, of Rockingham county, Va., was knocked down by a runaway leant last week, and received injuries w Inch caused his death in a lew hours. The grand jury of Iuiisville, Ky., returned two indictments against Major William Til man f"r grand larceny and embezzlement, charging him w ith stealing $7,000 from the Falls iiy Bank. John Crump, a farmer, snd Overton Ber nard, of the real estate firm of Bernard fc Son, of Tallahassee, Fla., had a shooting afiray near Tallahassee, in which Crump was seriously injured. Henrietta Murrell. was hung at Smithville, Charlotte county, Vs.. for (he murder by drowning of her eight-year-old child. She confessed her crime, her defense being that the could nut obtain work and support her offspring. Major John G. Lee, who died suddenly in New York last week, was relate I to the family of the late Colonel Richard B. Lee, of Alex andria. He and Colonel Cumminga, who once lived in that city, were recently in the service of the Corcan government. I). W. Summers, residing near Harmony, Md., Iihs four horses which he has owned all their lives, (heir combined ages aggregating eighty-eight years. The horses are in service every day, and nre apparently good for some vea rs to come. The Kentucky Savings Bank of Louisville,, the fourth bank tha( has failed in Ixiuisville inside nf six months, has closed i s doors. I nlike the other failure?, however, the de positors in this instance will I e paid in full, and stockholders will get dollar lor dollar for their stock. Miss Nenss, of Caney Branch, Tenn., is a vic.im of the rnre disease known as exfolia tion or shedding of the bones. During twenty one years over o.J bones of every conceivable shape have been expelled from different parts of her body. A young man named Alexander Williams, living near Chatm ss, in Henry county, Va., dropped dead in his barn. He was in the barn playing with his brother, whom he tore 1 in a wrestling nia:ch. and as ho did so, fell over and siuhieiiiy expired. I The fishing smack Ada, which left Pensa- ; cola, Fla., lor the fishing grounds September 3, with a crew ot six men, is given up as lost. Three ol (he crw were Capt. Maurice Lough lin, of G.oucest r, Mass.; Charles L. Bates and Charles B. Kinney, ot New York. Mr. Hates was a r.iedical Btudent "roughing" it lor health. j The first tobacco "break" orauction market in south Carolina, w ss held last week at Florence. Over 4 '.Is pounds was sold for nn aggregate of about $4,'KK), the average price being be; w een nine and len cents per p 'Uiid. Two small lots, extra tine, brought $ a jMuiid. Lew Dnke, while engaged in digging pota toes on his tjrin in Taylor county, W. Va., a few dm s ngu, unearthed an iron pot contain ing j-Vi i. I ine fifty-dollar and several twenty dollar g.dd coins and a number of copper coins w ei e fi inong the lot. A cattle buyer nnnieil Simerville was drugged and rubbed of .) by Kirk Pierson nnd Joseph Sweeney, at Parkersburg, W. Vs. The officers caught the robbers, who were ad mitted to bail. SomerviHe was poisoned by the drugged liquor, and is no-.v dying. Some of th-wniskey was secured by the chief of police, nn 1 is said to be lull of rank poison. Ti.omns C. Crawford, employed in the lime room of the Piedmont Pulp nud Paper Com pany's works. Piedmont, Md., while assisting in the clippc room, was instantly killed by the nut breikin.' which held a thirty-inch circular saw. The saw being released flew through the air, striking Mr. Crawford on the Lead and splitting it open from the right temple back to the middle of his neck, scatter ing his brains over the floor. The pla( reserved for West Virginia at the World's la r is in the central group of States, consist n - of Maryland, Delaw are, New York, Pennsy lvania, and North and South Carolina. The building will be about 1 2" by I.VJ feet in dimensions, built in the colonial style, with w iiie verandas, the roof supported by Corin thian columns. The first floor will contain two parlors Ji by .1" feet, and a large hall and vestibule. On the second floor is a hall 76 by 33 feel, and numerous smaller apartments. Judge Sliced, of the Knox county. (Tenn.) Criminal Court, made a decision which does by law that which the Briceville miners attempted to do by force prevents convicts from being worked in the mines. The miners clairmd thst the law by which the prisoners , are sublrased is unconstitutional, and induced a convict sent up for murder to sue for a writ of habeas corpus to test the law. Judge Sneed granted it, and if hisdecision is affirmed ' by (he Supreme Cour(, now in session, it will cause all convicts in East Tennessee to be removed to the Stste penitentiary in Nash ville. Lawyers believe tbat the order of the lower court will be affirmed. Mr. Jacob Scherlzer, of Churchville, Har ford county, Md., was lately visited at his house by two men, who represented them selves as w ant ng to buy a farm. He guided them to a neighboring place, which was for sale, and while there a third man put in hi appearance and claimed to be an agent of the Ixiuisiana lottery. He said the lottery was a perfectly fair and legitimate business, and to prove it brought out some gambling apparatus ond soon all were in the g me. Mr.Schertzer won S,im). The gambler paid him $l,6oJ, probably bogus money, nnd then began to inquire what money Mr. fchert zer had before. This made the lai(er suspicious, and becoming convinced that the itn were tryingto swindle him, he handed back his winnings and told them he would have nothing more to do with them. FOUR BURNED TO DEATH. Result of a Tenement-House Fire In New York City. A fire occurred early in a five-story brick tenement-house at th" corner of Hudson and Dominiek street", w hich caused the death of four persons and the fatal injury of a liuh. The dead nre: Mrs. Annie Murphy, 32 years o'd, wife of Firemin Matthew Murphy; Miss Katie Dunn, "J'J years old, a dressmaker who boarded wnh Mrs. Murphy; Josephine Ryan, ." years old, of Wasnington, D. C, Mrs. Murphy's niece; John Toohey, u years old, Mrs. Murphy 's son by a former marriage. Martin D. Toohey, 11 years old, also Mrs. Murphy's son, is so badly burned he will die. 'Liie last twu named were taken i ut of the building alive mid taken to St. Vincent's Hospital. There John died at I' o'clock in great ngony . Nine fiitnilies resided in the house and epch fHinily liadan h ver.ige of t !i i ec lmarders. The fire bloke out in an unoccupied wood-house in the c.llflr, nnd the police s-aid that it was ot incendiary origin, but they would i.ot say on what this opinion was based. The netuni diiinsge lo the building will not exceed fl, ."0 '. STRUCK BY TRAIN. Mr nnd W'onmn Killeil Outrlj-lit and Two Children Fatally Hull. A wqgi.n beh.n-ing to the National Meat Market nt Krastma. Staten Island, and con taining four persons a man, a woma' and two ehihlreu was s'ruck by a west-bound train nn the A m h iy d i visin-i nf the Staten Islnnd Rapid Transit railroad af the crossing in Gjffords. The man and woman were instsntlv killed and iheir bodies were burled a considerable distance from the track. The children were picked up in a dying condition and were carried tn the nearest house. The victims were John Jones, aged '24 years, a fisherman of Erssfina; Mrs Carrie Edwards, his sisler, aged 2S years, and Blanche Ed wards, the 1 year old infant of Mrs. Edw ards. Anton Banter, aged 14 years, was to badly hurt that it is feared he will die- MR. PARNELL DEAD. The Irish Statesman Suddenly Expires at Brighton. sick Less Tliun a Week The AMnck lie-ran AX Ith a Severe li I1I--C real Sur prise Everywlier '. Great I'r tain and Ireland were s artled by the utterly unl oked-for announcement that Charles Stewart Pan ell.ihenoted Ir.sh leader died su Idenly at his home in liri.hton. It has 1 een well known that Mr. Parnell has not erjoyed the lest of heal h fir years and it hrs been rotice l and widely comment ed up.n li nt since t h e i'Shea divorcedeve'op incuts liceanie a inai ter of public notoriety and sin; e political trouble enme upon him, that the great Irish member of Par.iameut bad frown th nner and that he hud perceptibly aged in appearance. But nobody expected to I ear of his de-ith and no inkling as to hia ill ness IimI reache 1 the newspapers. Mr. Parnell died at his residence, Walsing ham Terrace, Brighton, at 11:30 o'clock P. M. Mr. Parnell arrived at his home at Brigh ton, from Irelai.d.on Thur;day an i complained of suffering from a chill. On the Friday fol lowing he was unable to leave his be! and h s regular physician was summoned. He seemed to have considered Mr. Parnell's illness to have been of a serious nature, (or he soon sent lor another physician with whom he held a long consultation over the sickness of the Irish le dcr. His sickness w as announced to be an atlack of acut rheumaiisui, anil every attention and care was pa d to the sufferer. He wss care fully and untiringly nursed by hi wife, who hardly le t his bedside Iroin the moment her husband's il ness was pronounced to be of a serious nature. Mr. Parnell, in spite of the care and atten tion which he receive I, did not ceem to rally from the rheumatic attack aiid grew weaker and weaker. Several hours beiore hie death Mr. Parnell btcame unconscious, and so re mained until he died in intense agony. Owing to the suddenness of the Irish leaders illness and to the belief of his wife and of the attending physicians that ho wou d recover, nt friends or relatives of his family or of that of Mrs. P.irnell were present at Mr. Parnell's bed-iJe when he died. Mrs. Parnell and the phys.cians w ere alone in attendance upon him when he died. In this city particularly the news of Mr. Parnell's death came down like a thunderbolt upon the ciui 8 and in political circles. No body, tn lar as at first known, was even aware thnt he was ind sp; sed, and, consequently, when it bicaine known that the Irish leader was dea i. iiHturaily (he lirat idea formed was that he had lomniitted suicide. As the day wore on, however, it leaked out frum the a elements of his intimate friends that Mr. Pjrnell had complained to them re cently of not feeling as well ns usual, but it as not thou iht by anybody that there was anything serious in the symptoms referred to by the late member for Cork City, thougii he wss thinner tnan he was 1 ist y.'iir. The last time Mr. Parne.l appeared in pub lic was at Creegs, ill Ireland, on September 27 when he delivered a long speech upon the at titude and alleged inconsistencies of Messrs. Dillon and O'Br.en. I'pou that occasion Mr. Paanel. st iteil that he was speaking in deti unce of : lie ordeis of the doc.ors who were at tending him and w ho had expressly ordered him to Keep to his room.- While Parnell was speaking at Creegs it was not c d that lie was very pale, and that in oth r re pens U v a not the same man he had been iu the past. In addition to his pal lor, wnich seemed to denote failing health, Mr. Parnell ujoii the occasion referred to carried nis left arm in a sling. His friends upon asking him the cause of this were in formed I hat he w as suffering from rheuma tism. Telegrams received here from Dublin and other towns in Ireland and the principal towns of England united in reporting that the death of .Mr. Parnell has caused the greatest sensation among his supporters, principally on accout of Ihe sudden manner in wh eh he died. The I'atriot's Career. Charles Stewart Parnell was born in the month of June, 184'i. As a child he showed an uncommon love of study, devoting far more time to his books than to the ordiuary sports of childhood. His memory was admirable, and he was by uo means deficient in wit and sprightliii' ss. Mr. Parnell's educjtion was begun at a private school conducted by a Protestant clergyman at Southampton, England, whence, at the age of eleven, he was taken back to Ireland and placed under a private tutor. F'our years later he was sent to a private tchool in Somersetshire, England, to complete his prep rniiou for college. While pursuing his studies here he was taken own with typhoid lever and lay lor weeks almost at the pom t of death. After that he never enjoyed the robusl health of Ins ear.ier years. Ho grew rapidly, and was a tall and slender youth of eighteen at the time of his matriculation at Cambridge L'niversity. Beiore entering the college wiiere his father was educated the latter bad expressed a wish tnat Charles study law, but the proposition was not received with favor. The bar had no charm for (he young man, who declared that he would not care to be a lawyer unless he were certain of being a celebrated one. As n youth Mr. Parnell showed no particular int. rest in the affairs of Ireland, and when he discussed Irish politics with his sisters frequently took the conserva tive side, to annoy ti. cm in a harmless way. This humor sometimes worried his mother, who, as she dec. ares, has an Ameritan horror of toryisui. L ke his father, John Henry Parnell, Charles was a skillful cricketer, and when t home always took part iu the game, whicn is much played in Wicklow. IKS DEBUT IN POLITICS. After finishing his course at Magdalen College, Cambridge, he made a tour of some duration iu (his country, and returning to Ireland was made high sheriff of hisconnty in 1874. His first serious interest in politics dates from the execution of the Manchester rescuers. Their terrible fate, it seems, deter mined him to enter parliament as a "home ruler." After consulting with hss uncle, Charles Stewart, wno then livtd in Paris, he informed his mother of his intention, which met with no opposition on her part. lie made his first at(emp( (o enterpub.ic lite, contest ng the county of Dublin with the late Colonel Taylorj in le74. He was defeated ny nn over whelming m jority, but in the following year 1875 he was returned for the county of Mealh in succession to the late Sir John Mar tin. At this time he was a (all, thin, fair, studious young man of nine-and-t wenty, and nobody then suspected in him the luture leader of a party ot "exasperation." He hnd not long finished his studies at Cambridge, and politics were practically an unknown field lo him, his chief article of faith being home rule, which Mr. Butt had not long be fore invented as nn improvement-on Feninn ism, and while it was then understood by Young Ireland to be a patriotic thing (o be lieve In. That seSsjon alter ihe manner of most new m. rubers, Mr. Parnell was mute, but he eoon broke out. Few men have the temerity to brave the House .of Commons. Ninety-nine members out of a hundred, finding that they cannot get a hearing, are content toncceptthe inevitable. Not so .Mr. Parnell. I'nder a slim nnd almost effeminate extern r he had an iron will, lie refused to be put down. The more the House would not listen the more he would talk, even although he could not be hear I more than a couple of benches off, and his persistent per v1o iy attracted the support l the sympathetic "liiggar r nd one or two kindred spirite in the same direction, who looked upon him as an Irish martyr. In February, 1877, he made his first appear ance us a legislator, introducing the Irish church act amendment bill, the object ot which w as to faciliate the purchase of their holdings bv the tenantry ot the disestablished Irish Church. The hill was thrown out by lo) to 110 votes. Mr. Bult condemned the policy ot Mr. Paruell both by letters nnd speeches, but it soon became apparent that (he action of the younger man w as more popu lar among (he Irish people. In the beginning of 1878 Mr. Paruell, instead of Mr. Buff, was elected president of the Ir.sb organization in England, know n as the Home Rule Confedera tion, and from that time forward Mr. Butt practically ceised to bo the leader of the Irish pa ri v. A mec-.lng had been held in Milltown, county Mayo, in April, ls7!, but it was i ot until June that Mr. Parnell formerly joined the new laud movement. It was on that occa sion that he uttered the keynote of the com. ng struggle, the words "Keep a firm grip on your homesteads." On October 21st following, the Irish National Land Ltaguc was founded, and Mr. Parnell was elected the first president. A TOUR IN AMERICA. In December of the same year he sailed for America iu order to raise funds for the relief ! of the distressed and for starting the new or- pn ni .a lion. He lectured in a large number of ; towns, before several State Legislatures, and 1 finally before the House of Representatives nt i Washington. The honor- of addressing the j House hud previously been conferred upon j but three persons, Lafayette, Bishop England i nnd Kossuth. I Meantime Parliament was dissolved. Mr. Parnell hurried home, took an active part in ' Ihe election, was himself elected for three lonstituencies, and immediately alter the .neeiing of the new Parliament, having been tlected leader of the Irish party, called for ihe introduction of a measure to deal with the Irish land question. In the opening of the session of 1 SSI, the i.overnment brought in a coercion bill, anil to lhat measure Mr. Parnell and his colleagues fJered a fierce and obstinate opposition, pro longed over seven weeks. ARRESTED AND PL'T IX JAIL. On October 13th he was arrested in Dublin ind conveyed to Kilmalnhnru jail. The gov ernment immediately afterward proclaimed the Land League to be an illegal association, and Mr. Parnell and his colleagues issued the "Xo-rent" manifesto. Mr. Parnell remained in jail about six months. The Land League was revived under the name of the National League, nnd Mr. Par nell took his place as its head. He inspired all the policy of the Irish parliamentary party during the sessions of 1884 and '85, and on the dissolution, when the Irish people first voted on a general household suffrage, he nominated every nationalist candidate and went down to London with eighty-five followers. It was to meet this new situation that Mr. Gladstone proposed home rule, in which, of course, he was supported by Mr. Parnell and the whole strength of his party. The Parnell commission was instituted to inquire into certain allegations contained in a pamphlet published by the London Times, entitled "Parnellism and Crime," which charged Mr. Parnell and others with conspi racy to separate Ireland from F'ngland. Let ters in fac-simile purporting to have been writ ten by Mr. Parnell and p. oving his complicity in crime were given in the pamphlet, and de nounced by Mr. Parnell as forgeries, and such they proved to be. The commission sat 128 days and examined nearly 500 witnesses. It was followed by an ac ion for libel brought by Mr. Parnell against the Times, and resulted in its having to pay 5,000 damages. A EEVCLSIOX OF KEEI.IXCi. Mr. Parnell w as now at the height of his ' popularity. He had reached the top of his j career. In July, 1889, he was presented w ith j the freedom of Edinburgh. In 18!n the case j of Captain O'Shea against his wife, in w hich 1 Mr. Parnell was named ns corespondent w s ; called and Captain O'Shea was granted u divorce. I The effect was that his old-time policcal j colleagues aud the English liberals, led by Gladstone, turned from him. DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES. Three workmen, named Lamurdy, Lewii and Shora, were killed by a cave-in at the new Slate Armory, at Malone, N. Y. Andrew Quinlan, aped 79 years, sup posed to be the oldest railroad conductor in the United States, was killed by a train at I von, N. J. Three men were drowned in Cheqnamagon Bay, Wisconsin, by the upsetting of a boat. Two ef (hem were named Anderson and Nel son, the third was unknown. John Cromwell waskilled and John Cart wrigUt fatally injured by the premature ex plosion of a charge of dynamite at the Poberts dale coal mine, Huntingdon, Pa. A heavy wind and rain storm did much damage at Muncie, Ind. A circus tent col lap eel durinz a performance, and several per sons were seriously injured. One man Lad three ribs broken. As A result of a collision on the Hudson River Railway in New Y'ork lity. John Leonard, a fireman, was killed, and Patrick Morrison was injured. A number of horses nnd pigs were killed, and a locomotive and nine freight cars were wrecked. The family of Mrs. G. F. Lewis, in Saga nnw, Mich., consisting of five persons, was poisoned. The poison is supposed to have been in the coffee. Miss Savers, a domestic, is the only one in a critical condition. A wind storm of almost the violence of a tornado swept through Hell rami and Itasca counties, Mich., levelling everything in its course. It is estimated that from 15',000,000 to 200,000,000 feet of pine lumber was dam ag d. It is not known whether there was any loss of lie. A despatch from Turtle Lake, Minn., says that the family of Mr. Nesse, a farmer living a short distance out of town, consisting of himself, his wile and several small chil dren, were hemmed in by the forest fire and no doubt burned to death, as no help could reach them. GEO. AV. Johnson and his son have been burned to death by the prairie fires near Bea ver creek, North Dakota. An old man named Tabor has been so badly burned, near Wil iamsport, that his recovery isdoubtful. Thr e m n are reported to have perished in the Hol land settlement. Lewis B. Earl and Frank Thayer went up in a balloon at Mt. Pleasant, Mich. Earl was to jump with a parachute, and Thayer to de scend with the balloon. When the balloon had gone up a short distance the trapeze rope broke, and Earl was killed. Tiieyer had an arm broken and suffered internal injuries. A train on the Pan Handle Railroad struck a carriage near Centreville, Ind., in which w ere Joseph Black, his wife and two daugh ters. Black, his wife and one daughter were instantly killed, and the other daughter was fatally injured. The Black family were ou the way to attend the races. At Marietta, Ga., the horses attached to a carriage in w hich four ladies were returning from church ran away. The ladies were all thrown out, and Miss Katie Reynolds," 17 years of age, had her neck broken. Mrs. Mer i'itt; her aunt, received internal injuries Irom which she died in a few hours. Miss Alma Kohlheiiu was badly hurt and is iu a critical cond.tion. Mrs. Reynolds, mother of Katie, jumped from the carriage, but was not badly hurt. WORK AND WORKERS. All the journeymen tailors in Birmingham Alabama, are on strike for higher wages. Only one firm granted the demand. The works of the Para Rubber Shoe Com pany at South Framinghain, Massachusetts, shut down for an indefinite period. A STRIKE of the Hocking Yslley miners, in Ohio, is threatened because mine bosses in Hodley's and lUnd's niiiiis have discharged union men. Pierce fc Co., the lumber men of Ottawa, Canada, yie.ded to the striker, ngreeinjfto a 10-hour day i.nd 50 cents a week extra. Phis givis employment to uij men. A JEW extra giv rds have been added to fhe force ai Briceville, Tennessee, nnd Ihe lessees of the convicts have strengthened their posi tions by building a rifle pit on all sides of the stockade. About twelve hundred wharf laborers are on strike in Savannnh, Cieorgia. They say that they do not propose to interfere with non union men, but union men will not be allowed to work. THE handlers i mployed in the New Eng land freight house, nt New liritian, Connecti cut, have 6truck because they were not paid for overtime. 'I heir peaces 1. avc been filled. They received $1 oi) per day. The Cotton .Manufacturers' Association met in Fall Kiver, Miisachusctts, and in structed its Executive Committee to hold bnck its revisi-d clu-uule ot n:fs report, wilh the provision that if the market awakened and fell ott ina crially ti.ey should call another meeting. " I'. c nc.ion of ihe association has lifted a load t'r.uii the minds of operatives and business nu n, who wen- Iu ly alive to the Inct that a prolonged strike w .uld follow a re duction. Secretary Nor.t.K has i.-aaed a circular cnihili; attention o an order now in iorce in the Ie in tini-i.t uhic liMiys: To prevent fur ther .nipoi t .until s lor promotion, in which a ten ol t. e employes have indu.ged, iu spite of the well known itilis ol the Heparinicnt, notice is given th it application for promotion made by tne employes themselves, or at (heir iustig lion, will not only be absolutely fruit less, lull, if j'ersiste.l in regardless of this order, m y imperii their position in the office. NoTK'K whs posted at the Edgar Thomson Ste. 1 Works ol the Carnegies, at Braddock, Penna., that, "owing to improved machin ry, the pro luct Had tnen so greatly increased thai an wseaeit wages would be uecessaiy." The old scale, whi.h expires on December .'II, has been ill operimo i three years. A confer- . ence of the officials and employes will be held about Ociouer 1". ihe wording of the notice leads ihe workmen to think that a reduction iu wages iscontemplated. 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Send for our catalogue. It is free to every reader of this paper. Bing hamton Wagon Co., Binghamton, N. Y. " BUILT FOR BUSINESS." fEL2) V2c53P' $65 OUR SILVER QUEEN $65 Is it possible a first-class Buggy with Silver-plated Dash Rail, Seat Rail, Handles, Hub Bands, and Shaft Tips, for above prloe? rr 1 u H J UJ o O D O 2 2 s c ul 2 a O O o u. o Write for our New SO page Catalogue of all kinds of Vehicles. Address SOUTHERN CINCINNATI, - - VAUGHN PATENT .LIGHTEST, STRONGEST EASIEST RIDING VEHICLE ON EARTH. BUGGIES, ROAD WAGONS, PHAETONS, AND SURREYS OfltMsfoMerM si3 hi ist o I TfWlST3il--e-?-. SSJt ' 1 X0i0.ae- BABCOCK & VIELE CARRIAGE COMPANY- Sole Proprietors and Trite far Catalog. Ment.on thi, Paper. WE ARE IN THE LEAD FOR FINE QUALITY AND STYLE OF SPRING VEHICLES. THE MOST FOR THE MONEY IS OUR MOTTO. BEST JT ONE OF MATERIAL Xyf"" OUR CAT A- )N OR KM AN- Hty WJ FULU ,L SHIP S2i LUSTRATES WINS. II OUR LINE. SMALL AND LARGE ORDERS RECEIVE BEST ATTENTION. A SAMPLE JOB WILL CONVINCE YOU THAT OUR WORK IS THE WORK TO BUY. BRIDGE WATER CARRIAGE CO. ROANOIEB, -V Fast Passenger and Freight Lin betwaam NEW BERNE, N Eastern North Carolina Pointa, and all CaV nectiona of tu PKMNSYLVAITIA RAILROAD, IKCTLUDIKO New York, Philadelphia, Jfaerfwlk, BaW ' llmora anil Boataav. T. OUT Ta-I.Waaklw Ltmm Oait Kew Bars. y New and Elegantly Equipped Bteaunr ' Salla from New Barn) j BOIDAYS, WETIESDATS, rEIIATf,' AT FIVE P. M., " Stopping at Roanoke Island aach way Mat forming close connection with th r ' Norfolk Southern Railroad. The Eastern Dispatch Line, OonsUtlof ef , the Wilmington 8. H. Co, Norfolk Southern 1 R. R-, New York, Phila. and Norfolk R. , and Pennsylvania R. IL, form a reliable ana i regular line, offering superior facilities Jot? quick passenger and freight trans porta tiom. , No transfer except at Elisabeth CUy,t which point freight will be loaded oa ears t . gn through to destination. Direct all goods to be shipped Ia Eaatera -Carolina Dispatch daily aa lollowe! Krom New York, by Peuna. R. R, Pier 17, j North Rirer. . From Philadelphia, by Phils-, W. and BaU. 1 R. R., Dock St. citation. -From Baltimore, by Phita., WH. and Bait. It- R., President 8t. Station. ! From Norfolk, by Norfolk Bon there B. B, From Boston, by Merchant at Miner Trans, portatiou Co.; New York and New nf land R. R. . asT-Rate as low and time quicker than by. . i ii . anj uiuut nuc. p For further information apply to W. H. Joycb, (Oen'l Freight Traffic Agent,' ' P. R. R.) General Traffic Agent. . Gko. STBPHK.fs, Division Freight .&ftm.L' ' P. W. A B. R. R-, Philadelphia. B. B. COOKE, Gen'l Freight Agent, K. TJ P. 4 N. R. It, Norfolk, Va. i II. C. IlDDOtns, General Freight Agent X. 6V R. R., Norfolk, Va. GEO. HENDERSON, AOKKT, Newborn a. M.C.' Boot and Shoe Maker. All Stylo of Hoots and Sroeia made to ordar and on 8hort notloaw' ' REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. N. ARPEN, CKATU ST., tp-MUt) IttXlll CDcfe L. S. WOOD,: Formerly 18 yeart with Geo. Alien A Co.' DEALBE IW fr General Hardvare aid Cutlery. Harness, Saddles, Bridles and Whips, FARMING IMPLEMENTS. follock Street, text te latleul Bask, NEW BERNE. N. C. 0 V H PI 9 ft r 2 ? H 2 3 o z z o z 3 7 I '? I 8 " to m O o z o m 39 BUGGY CO. - OHIO, U S. A. SPRING VEHICLES, AND Manufacturers, EVA SVI LLE, IfflflANA. iT j "- Jt.. L f- - - f '( 1
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 15, 1891, edition 1
1
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