Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / March 3, 1892, edition 1 / Page 1
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- "' . ' . ' J . ? v Vi. .. - t i ( INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS. SL50 Per Year. NEW BERNE, CRAVEN COUNTY, N. C, MARCH :s i vol. : Sit If IS-O.E.'.BAGBT.. SURGEON. DEKTIST. : CO, KUil rt Bfi - t - mr . - c : OdU em C W"i PcOoe Attorney - at - Law, V : rNw Bernt, N. C. ; ;oeo. HEOTERSON, xtM Tmii Com p . . - - T-Tr-.. tal!4 I4t ;V 2IRS- J. M. HINES' . Eciriisg House Eecpeaed. uui. u. Hixrs city T3 raia 11TIS XITO3 IlfiSW MkMlltUlUM ' X M.' HIKES, Agent (XlITks'84or. FREE. TO ALL. obiu a a naicm. tm i bi i W !" u Full Lino of Choice Groceries & Provisions Ttl M)'t tlUAUlT.AS tUV .t ru Ri juiutr. , . Hit,M4U4Mtt Mai ri" J. J. TOLSOK. .Wlua' It 2iay Ccicsrn. W ar Ktrw StUU 1 VLur U 5y. Frbck 6 llasbBrry, -FCUHDEnS & UACHUUSTS. ItiwInrtNw mmd ImptrtM.U at X Mi Boili. Sm ra.MUl iU. mm Urta. ILmU EgtM. Ur Sk. ( - ievrtacW all tmd . '.JlU pJwa (Mttef tsr thm TU who h mw tote 4am. 1U Mr tim fry tia tt t T hmgtT tom iawUi rwMi-ve eaa mumIos. AT-ggigTAxg.iigima . wwAir JOETKrWILLIS, -pROPRirron or rtSillTil (Mil TMieWorks i - rirMr4aA. 'lYTawill-plica" ca Sale To-ciT-cnly : sans ' caul' dEABE THAU ' CAN BE EQUaHt ELSEWEEKF. ""-A:iwcppcrtmty to get ;a wtiiing cr Chiistnas gift vsy cheap. BELL THE JEWELER. rfiGEnTSfiSsSS J. J3 BHOWN, B A RbITrIsH O P. . Mt7 ta4lsaWj rW M (HMvUWlaUiril wwSml kUUCX BLOCK. MIDOLX ST. J. 1 IXTU,7m- T183. UilllM ks tru. t.T.UlUTI.CLakt. The National Bank, 0? NEW BSEJTE, K. C. Xsvosvosutw 1MX Ca?iU2, - 1100.000 SoxjlttJ PrcitJ. - 86.700 Iasw A. Ssrrajr. Taos. Dasiaxs. Csua. B. Ear a. J. H- Bacsacu, ALax.taxss. I HAxnT, ' f f . I . I .1 I . Cr'sriio.'.uJ a4 EDITORIAL XOTI S Th ittAatblp Iadina is dow teamioc ftcro tbe ocen with a eaxfo of trJn for the starrinf pManUjof Kcwata. A 5KW Ditioool bolidaj com memoratir ol lha clos of tbe war ha bttu propod. Tbit looks u If tbe war wu reallj orer, tboogh Meeerf. Hoar, hodg and Daren port hare notofflciallj certified tbe fact. The wtidow tiuif, wh oh embraces nearly all tbe manufac tories wet of tbe Allagbeniee, hare decided to raise tbe price fire per cent, on tbe 1st of March, which means fire per cent, more tax oo daylight. GKOBOC WASII15GT05 had a rtoleot temper, and once be said to Martha, in a load tone of roice: '-What basioees hare joo, madam, to pot oat a declaration of Inde pendence 1" It waa the beginning of the equal rights basioeea, and Martha went oat nd wept. Judge. Tns nation pieces. Hi l-Brce-Oortnan combi appears to have gone to Seoator Hill can carrj New York for Senator Hill, bat the other Senators do not appear to be able to deliver the goods. Ohio and Mar; land gag and spit oat the Hill colon. Sixty Firs-year old George Smiley, of Harriabarg, Pa., bu Just uairied thirty-seven yearold Mis Annie Carnmao, of Sonth eastern Missouri, in this city. The brvde is the youngest sister of the wife of T. M. Smiley, son of George Sailej; and by this peculiar anion she become tbe mother-in law of her elder sister. FOKTTHAIILT lor the hen-egg btriiT duty, tbe powers at Washing ton and the Canadians cannot agree on reciprocity. Look bow in the Republican presa for long ac- coaata of how the Canadians are slanghterLng all their pallets be eaae the hen-egg industry has been ruined by oar tariff wisdom and foresight. LomsTille Coarier- Joarna). Eoisox Ihinka be may be able to hear the an spot roar. II a idea U that a long stretch of copper wire to be set up will be affected bj the electrical disturbances on the ana. From the wire theae dis taibsuices will b translated into sound waree. If tbe wliard should hear old Sol spetktnj, he might appropriately enongh call it the retee of God. 5 ewe & Obeerrer. 4X5J.TOS VixCK, of JTonh Car-, ollaa, la hLs eharacteriatifl waj, ex preeaed tbe general Senatorial opinion when he aai4 thai Senator Hill ean give aar man la public to day "cards and spade1 and then win his cme. "XhoM bright little black eyea ofhbx," added the North CaroliBUn, "can see the finest wire, and when he get bold of it something baa to give way." Thb defenders of the Billion Dollar Congress who are tanctlng Elolmao with his inability to re- dace the pension appropriations woald do well to await tbe result of the penaion investigation. Democratic retrenchment doe not contemplate any interference with Jost pension laws, bat it will hare something to say a boat Tension Office eieli. N. Y. World. The Senate ha passed the bill, extending for ten years tbe opera tions of tbe Chinese Exclusion bill, with amendment designed to ren der impossible the return of a ones deported Mongolian. The meas ure will doubtless speedily become law throat: a the concurrence of the lower House and of tbe Execa tire. Ere a its stringent proTlsions scarcely satisfy the dwellers su tbe Pacific eout, who are familiar with the sharpness and atgrninoaooe of Chinese competition. IT begins to look as if the g. o p. would hare to renominate Ben tamta Harrison, because do one else wants the nomination. Mr Blaine has declined. Senator Al lison says he doesn't want the nomination. Senator Sherman says be has oeen sold out often enoacb. and will bare no more of it. Senator Cnllom, of Illinois, and Gen. Alger, of Michigan, are about the only statesmen in sight who are willing to bead tbe Republican ticket thi j ear, and both sre so far bslow tbe Presidential site t b at tbelr aspiration are redicnlous. Indianapolis Sentinel. THB submUs on of a constua tlooal amendment providing for 3 six- ear term fcr the President, with ineligibility for re-election,, y b diCQMed lo tbe Saate, Joint tMolatioa to tht effct bar tag ba iotrodocvd by Proctor, of Vermont. Iaotbr il publics Ue toK if i term for tbe Kiecatits ku ba tet4 with mxliniteUfrj rMoiu, s-od it nay be rrdd m a etbltabd tenet of iiodri republic forma of fOTamiaeat. Tet so oppod mn tho poopto of tbia oon&try to Ooastitatloo tLnksr iof tbAt it may be doabted wbotb tr tbey woold b wUIisr now to depart from method tilmt whtcJ the only lerloas argnment m jet adduced ia tbe frequency of elections. D1T1D n. HILL. If New York is as potential in the approaching Democratic yational Conrention as she has been in th paat, Darid B. IIill will be the next Democratic candidate j for President ol the I'nited State. The friends of Mr. Cleveland in New York, slept too long. The dismay of the cook on seeing that the biacaita are burnt up and the lamentations of the milk maid after her pail has been kicked orer, amount to nothing, and ja-t a useless is the racket of the belated Rip Van Winklers of New York. The calling of another conven tion, to send contesting delegates to tbe Chicago convention, is little! better tha n child's play. Sach , delegates will not be admitted. If they go complaining about a mid winter conrention, the Chicago Conrention will sat: ''Sorry for - - J m you gentlemen, bat we can't take yoa oat of the cold." There is bat one way now to de feat tbe nomination of Senator Hill, and that is for those who are opposed toils nomination to nnite on Cleveland,! or, taming their backs on New York, select some strong Western man as tbeir stan dard bearer. We are decidedly of the opinion that the latter is tbe better conn. The State of New York has al ready felt tha result of Democratic disaffection. Only last week, Re publicans elected election supervi sors all over tbe State. This means something it may mean that pub lic sentiment in New York has prononncel judgement against the leadership of Senator Hill. Wiih a strong Western man the National Democracy may win without New York; bat if Hill is the esnldate tbe loss of New York will give tbe Republicans victory all alonsr the line. If Senator David B. Hill sue. ceeds in reaching the Presidency of the United States through the methods he is now employing, he ill have the honor of ' breaking the record." To advance upon the Whits Hoase as one might advance upon tbe office of Sheriff or Road Supervisor is not entirly a novel spectacle in our politico, bat it may be truthfully said that no open. avowed, scheming candidate has ever yet been chosen to the Presi dency. N. Y. Advertiser. SK3A.T0B Tiller says that Colorado Republicans do not favor Harrison for President. He thinks a free coinage bill will pass the House and Senate and that the President will veto it Thb St. Louis Convention, more properly called St. Louis Confer ence, adopted a very long conglom erated incongruous and latitndina- rian platform. The man who can stsnd on it must assent to salient points of every creed and be able to bring together antipodal poei tions. At a caucus of the Alliance delegates to the St. Louis conven tion, Monday night, all the Georgia delegates announced that should1 the conference decide on a third party tbey would withdraw from the body. Four of the six Alabama delegates announced that they would do likewise, as did the dele gates from Tennessee, Maryland, Virginia and tbe president of tbe North Carolina State Alliance. Thb following story is character istic of the precocity of the age: A little girl in a child's school tbe other day, on being asked by tbe examiner, "Who was Moses T'' con- dently anrwered, "The son of Pharaoh's daughter." "Oh, no!" corrected the teachers; "Pharaoh's daoghtar it was wbo discovered Moses in the bulrushes." "Yes, mum," answered tbe child, with a stguj leant smile, "to the taid." Pall Mall Gazette. MB. L. A. QuxowiT, who had been postmaster at Santhport, for 30 years, died recently. All the bosine men of the place signed a petition requesting tbe appoint ment of Miss Maud Golloway, his j dasghter. To tbe surprise of all tbe people a nero received the ap pointment. Not even tbe South -port Republicans would go on bis bond and it was made up else where. The people aie very indignant, and justly so, at such treatment; but they might have expected it. That is the way the Republican party usually treats tbe people of the iouth. TnK World gays with prudent and characteristic fore-thought, ei Governor Warmoth, of Louis Una, has pot himself anil his frag in-ritiry and picture?ijue collection of political followers at the head ol th FJrri(on colomn in that State, declaring tht tbe President ought to be renominated and reelected. Ttero are no offices for the oppo nents of Democracy in Louisiana except those which a friendly Ad ministration may bestow; and if Mr. Harrison' hopes phall be - . MIel-Jl ii ""J,MU uc w"4 iiuu tnc Ktiuutu crowd standing-, hata in hand, in receptive attltode. Of all the un pleasant reminders of tbe lush days of cirpetbagism and ecalawaggery, this Louisiana faction is not the i eait malodorous. NusTgr-itiom to the Younir. 1JY JOSErnt'S EDWARDS. 15R07HEB Editoh: Another writing spell has come over me and I ak space in the columns ol our home paper, in order to unload a little. "My subject will be mostly for the young people as the old ones are bo foil of prejudice and super stition. My texti8"Mind the com pany you keep. Mind how yon bet a man on his own tricks for man kind is very tricky.'' Everybody wants to be rich and the newspaper stones of men sud denly acouindg wealth have in- tiimea ana wreciiea many ; ot all Christendom, let my grati men in various walks of life in ! tnde humbly borrow this worthier country as well as city. response than I myself could ever Many a yonng clerk's ruin may frame to the great Democracy be tract d to the fascination ol J whom you represent. My respict Wall Street, many a merchant has for them obliges me to submit my bankrupted himself by venturing self to their praise as to a grave into the same whirlpool. Banks : and emphatic judgement upon me. Have Dee n oroKen oy speculative officers who ventured the money intrusted to their care upon theiimuossible ever to forsret The rise and fall of the price of stock, l and the mauia seems to be spread- ing. Sometimes a man in a board ing house will make a little hit in tbe street. Straightway every body in the house, men and women, will make an effort in the same direction, either individually, or by combining small soma for one of their member to operate with. Sooner or later disaster overtakes them, and hilarity is changed to dispondenoy. It is amazing to see the extent to which tbe infatuation goes. Even ministers, as well as doctors, lawyers and merchants have yieided to tbe spell, and there are some brokers who have many women among tbeir customer?, When n big speculator goes down, the country rings with his misfortunes, but the tbonsands who have lost their few hundred dollars to them as terions a loss of Yanderbilt'B milions would be to him are never heard of. They plod their weary way along, some robbing their employers, others depriving their families of the comforts of life; some taking to drink and wrecked dissipation, and some committing suicide. Lower in rank than regular brokers are dealers who invest for their customers very email sums ot money five or ten dollars at a ti me. This permits office-boys and messengers, and young men, to speculate. There lose far ottener than they win. for the broker con- tinues in business, and how could ! he do so if he did not make moneyf and if he makes money the customer must lose it. Thesa places bucket-shops, as they are called are moat dangerous and demoralizing to their intinenc. Still lower in the scale of brokers are those who advertise in the newspapers and by circulars sent through tbe mails, offer great advatages to those who may be induced to speculate with them. From all over the country they receive small sums for investment. The scheme often succeeds. A man who has paid six or seven doTlars, which he is assured is the profit on his deposit of five dollars, is reason ally likely to respond with ten or twenty dollars when a still more promising scheme is unfolded to him. He dose not stop to consider that the so-called dividends paid at first are really made up from money bodily transferred to him out of sums, accumulated from other victims of the swindle. Yet this has been done in thousaods and thousands of case?; and once the larger amount called for is 6ent, the victim never hears ot his money again, and he applies in vain for any returu. Better keep away from gambling dens, the big fish have always eaten up the smallones and alway will except they take advice from the old experienced men like I am. If yon want to get rich, be frugal, industrious and eaving.Ifyou see a chance tor a safe investment with honest people put in your money and wait patiently for honest returns, but don't try to get saoh by stock gambling for that way will surely lead yoa to poverty. Be faithful, be kind, be loving and be honest. Worship God and keep bis commandments and yon will prosper in all yoar undertak ings. Lore and honesty are essential tojhealth. As a phrenologist and christian adviser, I fully assert that every word I Paid in the above article is essential to heal h, wealth and prosperity. These are words of warning needed by the young in their zeal for soccesa. But let calm assurance prohibit alike thirsty ambition and i , anxious care, of ii- ucuicii, miiusiiy, uprightness, will secure for everj - one IMJtuuoiiui u.i wimiicirui.c. Edwards' Mill Feb. 15 "J2 The rapid growth of truck farms in the Booth hs due to two causes the increase of population in Southern towns and cites and the running of fast freight lines to the large distributing centres in tbe North and We. Truck farming has become a recognized industry in tbe vieinity of many of the inteior Southern citus. former cotton plantations being now devoted to the culture of vegetables and fruits. The local liemanti is sup plied from these farms and, the surplus is shipped to distant points To show tha rapid iucrease of the business, it may be mentioned that on one road, between New Orleans ami Canton, Miss., the track freights during aggregated L'S,L'2d tons, au increase ot Jv" per cent, over a similar period iu 18S7. The fact of the business is, the South is yet in its infancy in the matter of development. There are ; many persons io this city who have 1 not yet reached middle life who 1 can remember when the trucking business of this vicinity was accommodated by two steamers , v, " wrea vo rew lOtK, oi it amouuLs to several minions of dollars annu ally, and gives employment to thousands of persons. not one who is The best dairy man is who knows it all. bnt one constantly learning. SENATOR HILL'S SPEECH. Fellow Democrat?: Yoar com mittee, nnui mouing me to this pree ence, Lave Bpprista me ot tli.u nnanioiom vote which will make j known your approval of me to the j authorized representatives of the Democracy oi' the United States 1 and be record d in the annals ot 'our national convention. With I what terms bhall I acknowledge this official act, my fellow Demu- crats, which, instead of pointing to some new untried career, might amply reward and crown the labois of the longest lies? From that great cardinal whose "Lead, Kind ly Light, has touched the l.euts , which it would be rude to question. unthankful not to be nroud of. and 1 reawakening of the Democracy all i over our land is the most auspicious i o I nrn r i tha t-i m n ci W rion t 1" v Ck r (?iaLt Ul LliC tLUiCw 'V UUU C i-i pcu pie of i ranee rose against oppres sion a hundred years ago, it meant revolution, a change of rules, and a social earthquake. When the De mocracy of America rise, it means an upheaval at the ballot-box, a change of their servants, and polit ical reform. This js true Democ racy. This is government of, by, and for tbe people. When yoa see the farmers arousing and allied; when yoa see all the federations of labor stirring; when you see in every State the great Democratic party op and afoot, it means that the reign of plutocrats is nearly over and the bright day of Democ racy is approaching dawn. The use of political parties is to promote the expression of the peo ple's mandates. The function of statesmen is to frame and execute the same by jast and equal laws. The Democratic party has this proud record. It is swift in its re sponses to the peoples needs. It makes choice of safe and wife statesmen.to the statutory land marks of the people's progress, and releasf s their energies to an evr larger liberty. Democracy is prog ress. Liberty is its vital air. Con stitutions and laws are the volunta ry, self-imposed safeguards of D" mocracy. 1 If any word of mine could re.ich ! every tire-side in our land, this is what I would ask my tehow-uoun trymen at this time to consider. All our troubles, all our dangers a' this very hour, after so many years of Republican rule, are the direct consequence of that rule and flow from unconstitutional legislation by the very men who sit in shivering j fits over what the Democracy will do with power. On the other hand, the Democratic party, which trusts the people and would see a 1 "broad based upon a people's will,"' is precisely that party whose creed baa ever been a strict interpreta tion of the Constitution and con finement ol the Government to a few specific granted powers. 1 commend those contrasted facts to my fellow-couny men for neighborly debata and fireside meditation till the snows melt. The Republican part-y neither trusts tbe people nor obeys them. It now requires another upheaval at the ballot box like that of 1S00 to be convinced that the wicked work of the billion dollar Congress must be .eoealed and the peopled- will obeyed. Fellow-Domocrats, I rejoice to know by those infallible j signs, by the ground-swell; by thej re awakening of the Democratic j hosts; by the arousal of high and , noble young ambitions throughout the land, that we are advancing to a cordial union and another ovtr-i whelming triumph. We are advancing to a final re-1 newal of the nation's verdict in the mad, insensate reign of autocrats and plutocrats in tho billion-dollat Congress, whereby their verdict, now scoffed at and stayed, shall have efficient execution in the election of both branches of a Feu eral Congress, and a Federal exe cutive obedient to the sovereign people's will. Your message to the great and general assembly of Democrats, I rejoice to know, touches nothing of interest to New York, but what is universal and common to the inter est of the whole of these United States. You stand for the whole Democratic faith and tradition, which in the billion Congress un derwent the most powerlul, delib erate, and revolutionary subversion by the monev poer ever kuown in our History, ine two .uivuotj now transform the Federal j power of taxation i i !eei.ue into an instrument of extortionate tak- tha wocroa un,l urnf r ot our industrial toiling millions by- snhsides. bounties, and enhanced i prices, a stupendous increment for the wealth of cur employers, less than 7 per cent of all our people Shall these laws stau l! j The Sherman silver law now ! transforms the Federal coinage power of silver and gold iuto au in strument tor the gradual exDuision ot our gold tortiic eattlii.huiiT.c of an executive basis and for the per manent reduction of every Ameri can dollar by 30 per cent, or mote below the level of its true value dur ing the whole period of our tree bimetallic co.iiage from 170:-' to 1873. Ohitll such a law stand; There has been no.-ujh h't'ilatiou lor free men since (Jiomwell called the law of Kngland a "tortuous and ungodly jumble." The ilet. .and lor repeal of these edicts ol the iti!!i:in Cot.gresi ii.s.-extortt-d trotii liepubiicau ledor. their published purpose to reiast repeal. The admission is ot gret importance. It is fresh ev.tler.ee that 1 do not press to tar the harge of disobedience to the peo- nle'a overwhe'mine manaate a . m,r,,i frr rnai ia a uronosal ' 1 UO t Ul UiiU FVM' I largest measure of tarill re form, 1 admit, for it is a proposal to recover the whole ground usurp ed by the billion Congress; and it is even more, for it has apprised the country that their unrepealed existence for another year shall not erect the novel super-added wrongs of the two McKinley acts into a finality. Lnpeal is not a proposal to stop at the tariff of 1883 as a finalit. M language expresslv bamd our that abscrJ ilea. Moi over, when the t mil' of 1883 was the law ot the. land in the hour of our defeat t hree jeans ago, 1 waul hei e in Al iatn : "Tne Deinr. cra'ic parties nails to the mast the tLig of tariff reform."' Tariff retutni will rem lin and require progressive solution with the wioe and politic method of abol islnug, v, la -or praetible, one; after another, indefensible tax : at a time, where the two McKinley' laws today replaced the laiiff of 1883. But I do not il.nch tuck ward fio:ii the advance line, df in trenchments which the Democrat of New York have won, kept au i will guard. I do not shn k a deadly grapple, with the Republican sevolutiouirti, whose banners no longer fly the tanff of 1883. biu now fly the mad McKitlev lavs and the wild Sher- ' man iav aQd mock us from the J ci adels of power. The cause of tanii reform has lately made ereat ; practical advance, ' Secretary Manuing, in his la6t report of lSG, advised Congress to begin practical tariff' reform by a single ac'j au act for free wool; an act untaxing the clothing of about 00,000,000 people. One year later, ia 1887, the Secretary's repoit was "writ large'1 in a message of the President. Now, five jears later, one of our mast enlghtened econo mists, David A. Wells, writes to the chairman of the ways and means committee that the path of progress which Secretary Manning bli2-d first and' alone is the true path. It is a mixim of sound poli cy, better fitted to win elections than to lose them, better dividing into easy chapters the lessons of a loDg campaign of education, to abolish whenever you cm, one after another, one indefensible tax at a time. This is true progress. Let us rejoice. The Senate and the executive may now refuse the least, ai they refused the largeat, measure of tariff reform, but of the futuieofour cause we may now fee! better assured. AS OTHER SEE US. Extr ,i5 From the Ktstte Chronicles Account of tho East Carolina Fair. liiio.--;.. ?-,,-. its : en,-.:s-:;: it..- ".vi ;-fihao ."; : v: . - f ; t: o E a ir D.'i.irt thi. xi i'ciiijn ww i .v, lsn d.-f o i;..ions d i i i s be seer, i-.n I of wbet w&: at it while the- exhibition ;r;.. T:-i v rcic '.vi ui c ;. P i h-:id, anu oi a hit w. be in,- d-.c- WiB il pO Mr. ii. B li-in-v, ua rtu dr Btoilf c:jr- , respocdLt. That our readers my eee and judjjf fcr ihcnioelv-'s from ou'--IJc j teUa;CEy how w.ll pleaaod every etui j was with the Fir aud oo inuuh bene- , fit the Cbronicls has been lo the Fair, i i we give ijctao short extratti running; thicu'U three days c f what ic bsj p. ! FISH, OVSTES AND GAME IN GREAT VARIETY- tWBJK:;, -i. o,, rib. .7- special. J The fiftii i-unua! r ;h. Ojne aud Game ! 'urp&s&td ar.y prtvioua exhibit. Th' re i t-;r: ihowu ibcu, 2 W0 sr.itl- p. Tlit- j rp'...--: 0.0 vi-rv . .L.. .- -:. .- . favorable, about 2 wants to h j-.jra c.-i coin u.ii aca -jitne. , .-.l.'.' :r.;so pjviiouily a.a j g : . l-.-iv,..,; dcl-q exceDt'.onally 1'iu-ro i3 a large crowd here oo'j today. Everybody who j -6 the gieslrst Fair in the I State ia iavited Tho oysters are and urged to coma, i euocu.ent. tho tl5h prirr.e, tli3 garae elf -nt and ttiS extioit a gr.nd sucsesj. n. n h. A GKCAT SUCCESS -EXCELLE.NT IXrilSITS in' all the various dlpaetMuNs tPHCIAL FEATURES GooD HaC INO THE PARADE New-bern, Feb. 2-1. The New boa fisa ga ue and oyster fair is a ct SH. While the principal exhibits are tb.033 gam Ind oyster o-.herdepa-1 .at n are well tudtaictd. Machinery Hall contuius a notable exhioic, intereeiicii ind msti active. Taere are many no-. - j elites and special exbibws of variou.-' kinad. The WHALE, a neat atd newa- j nttiesheit. taakes us appearance every ; evening : it is printed rlp;ht iu tho. o u i - d i n ' . j Tuj fidh, game and cya er exhibit is euperi : Mr. LiejrKO N. Ivoa has hhowri skill ar.d ot-iiuy iu geuins tcgothtr j this lare acd oompreheuEiva ehow. The aquarium is filled with many va rieties of fish and it is very interesting to watch tbe finny creatures swim around in tneir native element. The finest epf cimens cyders, clams, scallops and shell fish I ever saw axe shown here. One whole side of a room is filled with solid blocks of ice in which are frczsn all kinds of fish from tiny perch to immense sturgeon; this makes a beau iful end uniqu-j exhibit and the visitors lo tho fyir ere much pleased with it The exhibit of fowls is about the best ev.ir thonn in the S'.ate. Too piradi; tuii morn ng waa pqriic ipat'd m br- mill.? of ibe .ia. io nt.le tous- o itt p!ac- aud tide i hoe bp pearacc .'. TUI-SDAV AT THE FaIU. Nkwbern, Fto. 24. Not withstndicg tho drizzle, about live thousand poople were on the ground tod'iy. Tne pre ceesion to the trouudB whs neaaa p , -rushing force Jpon m-.i.y of our best, the Juvecile Band, the fire compani.-e n(j m:tf( i,;.u-;. i';z n?. ibrouh comingnext. followed by carriages i out ,n.. Stote ond the S uon j comaiuing tne uoveruor Kiwca : people and visitors 'ILe line was one ! fourth of a ue: looja,. Governor Holt's ! Hp.'i cri was m propriaic iu ilib (joiui. oh1-- full of good souse. ATTENDED W ELL IX fTITE OJ BAD WE ATHSK. BaN. tj C5 -Tne eii. hi r d id v-.iii a o"oJ f.-.m c.-mtng : thfy ,-v in!, water, private conyey- iu.i .-iuio-t every conceivable 1 Tl.o heat ..-mist- of the r -i visitor" h' tv placed it at Ne iiOL i C :i m C iT-ee mt th r,v, ul 5 0u0 The o-.ii-. 1. Tu.tr ;linri .ting ho i. i ir:.-.- - r: win.- t e:,r. h of l.i '-t r is better and - exhibit eiti .!ieg hi?tri t is complete, lift . r f- c T r : ic Tb- J.pir.r. ni o '. every v-.b j din J V d licacy. pis c , daintily pr-. face) w .rk d. r ' e-. p',- f. x:i;. i air iu 1 tf 1 ; held as u is. s J in:", toe oeii f;r, the ih Sia;e. H. B A BIO CROWD YESTERDAY. Nf.Vi-BEK.N-, Feb 25 (Special ) Bad weather doesn't keep the crowd away. As many or more were on the grounds today as yesteidav. The balloon went up today notwithstanding the drizz'e. hnvn a so.-edv and po'.itive cure for catarrh. I'lohtheria csnker moutn , 20 7 per cent Uf th2se too v; cues gamea and he-oiache. iu SUILOH'S CATARRH j 22 3 per cent, end the colored 10.1. REMEDY. A oisal injector free wi'.h Asuecefd wealth ea rinen from $2 164 -.o,-h r..,.ti. U-e it if ou dpsire health 155 000 to S3 l-3 777 000 or a gain of pr.d s-oi t L'e-.tU. Price 50c. . Sold by New Berne D. Co (;0V. HOLT'S SPEECH. Delhercd Ui fuie Expos flic .cw Heme .Kill. In U: tl iai is with il mveelf I ot 3 jji c .1 j i . i j.i 10 j An lu v hea Eastern cr . it t.t capitol, 1 jouth, end l:-.? of land scd ;(.Uf r-litiUfll (. K'Uiicus in ii-r bu; 1 1, sj nil . .. by i sea. T.;o xf.-utBiOii 'auciciit capitol," of iim. IXtit.. iq jour mi'Jbi ruled an irly Gov. nior IVi-.ti Carodui, v. ith n taoaC imp - i-i ut..w,r, bud ub.ct-8 yet f Xidi, in j our tur )our streets. (,l thH lordly pile of 1'Uiiu i.-.ri th At liy -in wrun out of tfce b:ood a:id ewes!, of the people. ill-. (i--;d of h!- 1 1 " 9 - ii. il fume of Ihe tattle of the AU;;...!.. wnere first tie b.ooi if patriot.-i c-.E:-: . in for: t'i'-ir litf'aa was spilled .S.c limits of th:. Urio-- - r. ' - j .f aiy owe j f-tbt,-ij, as.-' 1....UL.... t-ciy .toil I claim my biithiight, from tout ijtvtu ground I I cotiie to iuy, ton-turn in the BtranB contravioiy of huj..an history. ODb bua drid acd t-toty ots ytara from that period, as ti e tLuf WBisirato of the peopie, v iiosc ar.ct-rtors were the moat emiDent of ;he fit'ite ia Ti on's day. I - - - - ...... ......t-.. . . i,.i i. r jn my iangujo. in dedicating a monu ment to the brivo Kegulaioia on the spot where they fell worda ppoken to the poople cf tha Alamance, twelve yeara ago. "No vindictive feeling licgers in tee hearts of the defendants of the mar tyred dead, again&t the troops who were led to battle by Try on 's command. They too, were North Carolinians from a distant section, without the vicioa of railway connection, vithout a full knowledge of tho wrongs, that had be failea the people of Orange, and under the beliuf, that in obeying thb laws ae they understood them. it. was incum bent upon them to heed the commands of the toy al governor, sent to rule tha colony. We would not da them less than justice, an,d would strew with im ps, tin: uiiiidti, gat d i up jU the gravto of men who dared do ;h-jir duty, ac cording to tha fuith thiii wua in them, and in doiiv, diva. What more cjn man do. tt.cii to oh j conscience unto tho caarjoi.'d mouthy M cout-trv men, let tfcis sacred hour teach us the Iteion. that as the pneriooB of thctt ooi.n ot of a far-away da, more thaii a century ao, have long sit.ee died a hay, ai.d its neroes have mingled their c'.a., in J.o toiiou boeopj cf our tattb'.r !l-.tpia tnc afecp Of the iajt; iio ini i. a rcmc-iuba, that the -tc A ti. .,-K t ot our I v. lit:, a by j i .. d i I'cr,-1 O Mi t , p;3Uiiij tu:y ehvi : L-o Th:-iu: a-....; .. to ni wh- . l:.e LOiu1b i; e-id of i..- : :-. . f . ..in u 'li r.e.r . :ui U l' i.o.U' O ... ti-i t;pon th-. ... U W o , a hi on fsvor mi.) i.. .-!;:- 1 !1-1 K .'-iil i It,.: ... - b-ilcES ' Ltttie tveiva y 1 1 . u oouuceu v. old tb:r ! f oceaek:.-. iviui epiri: c f tho r Tbia gram! derfully vari: adaptioae ot CRf'.n ,'-Ld us T. .01. ktti I i- H(OJo WO . ireti oo pro : ver l ! be noble -;-' an the st xou-.;ui-, p.nd riubauiEg .! reeo s?t vcur If.-CUfC : c'.-i ' ..- r-'o . lutiort trfi n,-. faces to tha ot r a: or.rf grsr.d'-v -' ' -: and ? -cr- r ycur utr; t h-. . The ,!;; ri . ra:..-r -y. iz- - - svir.ii-:. i : v ; . eubjecs -xhi-: to. t tbouahtr. Viz: 27. e True Co-wliU So: h and its ri obuuuils. It k ei." i to :.; - ! a truths to lc dv. tit up :ii . n.l t j re-tc'.i ihjpt-Jii.'.. ih,, :r. r.i !-;:;uj Of fc.d. Vrl.'ic. to ; -. r A.""d .1 It t h t our ihe A3 'J -.- j.'j fome soase facts y convey a uoiii piie'ifent r deeply H cenftfg Of - aj". p. . -i:li - vi j ! V.l.. 1 i 1. p i . -.i ' tn 'f j . .1.: 11.-. i I- I . fl by the tt -i.d to iuy ot ki-ra, to I rii-pei :n a u; .cur- ut - ' lu that ha? suoi'antiat biesbojg th-l a-ia.nu: Provoleiico has give!, t .U p. p No r-iiopabio n i- .oii .ioubt the r.atursl c-'.urse t;f ih..- wo-', i 'ti masketa b atblust t hei-vy pru-; uiiiiou of co tcn f r the paer. yt-!r. VTnh the enoimous U.-9-C3 of the Eogliso iu S ;tit i Ameri can pecuriettea. ite re.-it blow to France of ; he euuluOk of humire-.-s of mil lion, in tho final b' ak up of the Puna mi ('una', the calr.mitoti season and diruicu:ir of tht f-iod crop , of iln Eas tern world, by' att b f air hundred millions of bu-:h' Is, tho rt? pr- cia'i -n cf silver in China, ana tho extraordinary supplies of cotton, most of v hich wes of somewhat inferior grade each and all these causes portend ed the certain decline of tho value of cotton if a full, or even average crop was produced ia 1891. Early in the season, at the first op porlunity to address the farmers, I reviewed the e tuation as it appeared, and earnestly urgt-d the planting of small grain, and tho preparation for food crops, and the raiting of live stock at home. I am rot here todny to ufer a Jere-a-ijd upon the realization ;f our fears. i or to repeat "I ton! yuc bo, ' to those I who may be rtiffere.-s Iv id true: tha I cotton has rarely p ii e-vi n the oe.t of ! its production, aiid iu sfotions bt r '. i the Btand -.vaa dedciejt or tht syuaon- ! ! unfavorable, th--1 CG-.'.en-.tion of short crop ana low price, tan isnt'U wun But Btr.-t;ide as it may app -ar to me, ihe work t f civer?ifj io: our cropi. and multiply Hie; our nifctouf nCiuren, and developing tuoti irit.reniK as foreetry, minings, fi-herie?, iiucj gur iemng. ; fruit cuifure. hf1 al r- rly made good j progrts.-. I. u truo th.it cotton hie : Im doal'-it-l i. ami i ' tw. city rears, j : four ti.-ea th.- Scr-i use of pop But Oil- o -Vii-- noi tho ol.ief or ar.- u u' .on pro the uci of lh Su: uein Sit-s ourius pn-t ve-ir I b t which ks made was pr i'iuo'. 1. . t.- . just el- - r o coud-i.so;: r frj:n o ' Ci!.. o. li -,.!,. ,.o I'll CrSenp p r OV is!: O! -. (.ff. . o! : - . .-. ih. . r . : .- d.il-rr. . - . : -.. 1 i .o i-e . : .- - - t- - i ' - - .... on West : Virprii ". ;. ..i. ; f ihe South. 51 v ..-; ' - t' r !'. u "i I'm Be fi-iurt-e is t) t.-- f.;'.: - i-'1 l:o- oi-n.'. tONO-iai.a th1 truth (.' resi! tin n.'i i (O ii'mi ul 0 ir T,:'p; ' '-. y t o fot;-. ti.in fr-icta It will i,; h u lli.jistt fo bb.w. tbit the vthole So., h - - ..ev, wet,Hh as today, io. ev- : el- it;, of advsocc ment, nrti thu Nortt. C-roiina hns kept pace io th-: m-rch of progrrgs. Leaving cu: M?yind and Missouri which would tiroatly incrtaBe Southern j strength, the remaining thirteen, bo ; cording to the rf cent, c;n.ni3 from 1880 1 to 1890, gained aa foTowr; Round num ; bers are ued for brfi?y. Within the i ten year timo, popul ition uaa risen , from 15.257 000 to 13 3?0 ( 0. a gain of 79 4. In 18S0 it was es'.isuit' d that each pericn on aa avera in the Southern States, owned 6 14 S 1 5 now the eot.' tuate id $217 7 notw ithBLano ia tun increase ot population, on ihe other hand, the tutal laxea have niateridll) decreased. The whol State indebted ni i-8 w.is decreased from SI 1 3 000 to S96.400 000 (this waa beforw Va. settled her debt question.) Hinkitx cariitnl inoreattd from Sc9 337 000 to SUM TM COO nnd Otpioita in bir.UH. from G2 '41.1.000 to 7 224 010 M-nic baoU from Si 685 COO to sll 701 000 M;nu factureu from 84 CO 3 eBtiblishments to 57.013 or 65 per cent, with the vat in- 1 create of cat itul from 8.79.300 Of.O i to S5S2.C70.0C0 or 2.'5 per cent, and tn increane :n tbe number of bandB eni I ployed in manufacturing in sni i putab- ' I liahments from 215 000 to 502 000 or more than double. 'iurely bo far cb I opulation , wealth, ! j as assessed for State puroea. indebted- ! ntes of State and contv governments. ; i " r x . . i . -J, ,u" and r.-t ir..,..., BU (, n ,,.nr. lUDCIi:j, 1U till I II tM- (3 I il.-IJIflllH OI erowth Nonh Oarolin-i Lit) a conspi cuous part. But let uu sti y tho CriiBus r.f our great ectiuu from aiother point of view. I mod i reniscd you that whether from t tj : natural diilicul-.ien of enumeration in - .ir broad region, or from neslig-'cce. or :'rom leas creditable reatons, it is well hnown that our ad vantages have at least r? o ived no over statement from the a-.uhori ies of the census, the great probability beirg that '. the Hg-ures a: e rather Bhor t of tho full truth. iho grand educational developtnetit or the bouth in the sime period, r.e revealed by tho national figures, ia the greatest factor in the prepuration for tho lasting properity and the highest oiviliz-ition. Witbia the same ten yeara. nohool revenue have increased from S3 Ct)7 000 to $16,862,000 or 213 i per cent. The permanent school fund has mouqted rapidly from $18 650 000 to no less than U53 777. 0C0; almost three times as much of the means of the 1 .nd devoted to the improvement of the young, rs at any period heretofore As part of its fruits, notwithstanding an increase of over three millions of population in the States named, all tbe incoming children have been provided for educationally, and 400 000 less illeteraio persons are now reported than in 1880 The value of school pro perty has advanced Irom t 10 164 000 to 818.aS7.00Q. and, test ot nil. tho num btr of pupils in school has made the enornous Rain of 1.850 000, or thu increase from 1 391.000 to 2.787.000 being nearly 97 per cent. Well has it been acknowledged by tbe moit distinguished educato s. that nowhere on the globe ha? bo much in tellectual advancement been made by tbe great mass of the people. There is nothing lo compare with this, in the census of any other region or section. Adding tbe careful calculations of tbe St-ita eta istics and the trade journals for the farther development in 1891. j we haYu up to Jan'v 1st, 1892. the fol ; lo -ving elements of increase of wealth, 1 in tho South. Th" tendency exhibited iu several di cadi 8 to decrease in number of farms and decadence in agriculture, has not only b-en arrested, but wo hive now 52.103 .5 20 farms, of which 15 909 000 acreo have been reel itned since i&bO At that pnriod, tho South had 54 079 000 acres under cultivation, which pro- I Juced crops of a money value of SOU 039,000. Now hue had In 1S31, ho acreage in cultivation of all crops, amounting to 82,465,000, producing the grand money total, all crops included, of $1,068 450,000. The former result of the farmers labor being less in propor tion than ia 1891, the highest price of CO'.tOa that day notwithstanding, and the greater amount of low price cotton now. For in 1880, the cotton produc tion was 5,733.000. and 1891 is estimated thus far, at 8,233,000 or 87 per cent in increase. (Later intelligence indicate: a crop of 8i millions ) Hut so active has been the Southern Firmer, in the growth of other crop-i. that farm values on the whole, not- ' Wii'nt landing cotton losses, amount toj 78 per cevt increase over .hc;6e of 13t0, I or fully seven per cent average annuil ! gain. Another cheering mark of improve ment is the existence today of 49 715 000 live Btoca, as agaioct 0a.410.0uu in incu i or an ad vance of 29 per cent. So that j while we have been calling on the farmer to raise his meat at home. b has begun it so effectually that he has now about 50 per cent more of live stack, than we have had increase cf population, ia the same period. Southerners have laid up Fomo fixr-d oepital from their Bavings, or have secured it from abroad, within the i decade. Thus the banking capital eleven years ago, was $29 337 .000 Today it is 8134 5t9. 000, an increase of 359 per cent. Tne deposits in banks in the South from $62,846,000 have reached 8207,274 COO, &n increase of 2 9 per cent. Thus it i proved that the 8oulh is learning to nave. Even the eavings banks, the resort of the poor in cities, of which we have a limited numbe.-, only, have begun to be appreciated, and their deposits of the weekly and monthly earnings, have increased from t?4 C85, 000. to $11,764 0L0, some 115 pvr ct. It is simply idle to belittle the force and eloquence of figures like thcee. We are rearing an empire, of whioh so little is Been at a time, that the mind does not take in its mighty proportions. We stand as before a sub lime landscape in our Western moun tains, and lose ourselves in tha effort to count the thousands of balsams and rhododenrons that -cloth their sides as far as eight extends. We stand aa on the banks of your beautiful Eastern river, and fail to conoeive the myriads of raindrops, and thousand of rills, and streams that llow into a harmonious current in its way to blees mankind. That financier and farnighted men of commerce, and leaders . of the great routes of transportation knew and re cognized the rising Btreatn of wealth in the South, ts shown by thn way, they increase thoir mileage of tracks in 1880, which was 21.634 to 51 366 in 1891, or at tbe rate of 137 par cent, while teel trackage mounted frcm 5 020, to 42 279 or six ar-d a hslf limes at much. Their enterprise was rewarded wiih and iccrease of cross earointa from $47 455 C00 !o $154 G-2 000 but a large amount being expended for expansion and improvement", about $30.0(0 0 o was left fcr net earnincs, or 1G7 per ctnt of tbe amount in 1880 Since the w ar. cotton o'.jne hsB paid ; the Sjuth SS 119,403 0(0 more than j twica tha BspeFBpd value of its property I ,.nd over 000. 0C0 000 of this, is esti- j ut-ited to have been p? i i by Europe; through our foreign importations. ! The wonder is that tho poople of the ' S uth have retained as much we.ikh as exift. out of that vast n -cumulation when wh. ciVj rider how t!o y h ive in sisted upon inakiug oe.- :ir;i-ie of pro ductiou pay fc r almo-t e human, lift), for to !a an food . shelter, raiment . nr -ry di.'i d of nolle: i i!.i of I tho ti.y ri id ! needs of civiliz -d i' Q; 1 : : Nay, worte Klili, th: t iin-y aro bur dened with grievous imp h lu op iu near ; iy bM goods from other countries, the duties upon whirh nrn distributed I chiefly in other sections o tho country: with Bpecial taxes upon the corn and tobacco of their husbandry and with a pension system that is the most gigan tic legalized robbery of a whole people that wan even imposed, even in the worst autocratic country of the earth. In this connection we are told that' 160 000 000 is to be required for next! year, of which North Carolina's share, according to population would bo over three and one quarter millions of dol lars. Nothing but extraordinary resource?, and eitraordi ;ary thrift and industry ! cau withstand Buch drains. To return to tho con&iderati 3n of th-3 po Fibilitu i o' the South, )u may re member i hat .f :rr t ) wur between th '-I'-l. temple.! by I'm biVi jirioei, 85 . win ii.o t i-d to lien! us in the TO n f ,-. l! I ' HI : f I ;l i - . .1 h i; t- n I h m' v. ero moi . of i Item Ire i i 1 n e r : i I . 1. I ti, I i i II the rei, iio !i Houth baa . h . 00 per cent. V li i' cent. I ' . ' V-l cny oon- '- i'i kw t thin i:l i I. 1 I e H)ppld I l ..!.,) mi the iur- H In I Vi "-irienii i-. t ri: ii.-. d: it) ii,- ii plun Htoi Ii I il,. v. as a'ji.ile ii. j rices would . bo i i.-e t hr froni colt-, tiou to the every !i liar cow would Ci-m-to derived in addi- cr.lth fr ¬ huio.iriMl other Bourcep. l'l i.s eu; w it of ihH other !i more lhy i rtnift allow i turn to dry mnune you My life has f Ii'.nl faotB, aourci K are, ami h nv may become, and hen me, fellow ci: :-. fiiure- i iiiii.-i ! i w ith livires of i ;. ; nr h;en i n", v, i .h ( , ,i -, arid pi- in evrr i!.-.y ini por ti t f ;t J ih i. th'r:, V. I1 i , m I h with vr to deal. . i-ii ifo d crop t tho corn of Tu ri. i i, k the:, tn I in ! of the South, wo fool th 01. w a-i f biiib mil nhtin- d -ii.; .1 i . ': ' :, ' i 1 1 iirholn I je vii iz out 7.1 1.-. -i i-;i nrul M ;rv land, and , Dele wnro r. tefoi i... inl! our calonla Itioiip; r.f ihii Ninth dirolira raised j 43,Slrt 000 ttli r f.;!i i-hui, inj ! eeodd only hy Ti j:-i. ICr.tU'.. y . Teij nesee. ard by ! thf.n ! f h million ! by Virgil i-i, 1. 1 , r. .-n: j- n Virginia raiped litlli or no cotton in unu; ,: oon with ! Norih niolin:.. I in a e hi ion ' i h : t! ii -fin crop ,8utuiiiy exti'iilin tn value what tha cittou i r. p 1 r.iuK'.t. tor thu H ntti tor j 1891, which it in r-Htimated nt 307 000,- 000. Ia as lhau 100, (.00 bunheln ol corn, it is paid, has be on shipped out of if region of its production, and n. vr-iy short time, nt the numo rata of pmn will keep every dollar ow Hint i;y or corn, within its Southern home. Wheat ia naturally adapted tooolder portion of thu temporal 7. me. an 1 the Bouth made only about -HTiOO 000 bunh els. Aga n the old North State i found well to the (front, exceeding oach of all the Btatea. eicept the nmr four mentioned above. She produced 3 988, 000 buhelu. Io the production of o.itp. our State deeorveB conspioious mention, aa ah excelled every one of her Bin xr of tho South, except Texan; of th entire crop of 70.178 000, bucheiB, nhe(N.D) pro duced 7, 401 000. The tobacco product of tho South for 1691, is givon by iho Chattanooga Tradesman (to whioli I iim iailbtd for many vnlunble (iguioii)at 420 698,000 cts., cf tho valiirt of $35.7&0 000, or T)out one tenth of th 1 cotton crop, of this North Carolina is credited with 28.744,t'li0. Hho however riceivas much larger proportion of the aaoBav tary valu, as phe bin iho almost ex clusive production of tre flnetfe Krades, arol much of her produot la credited to Virginia bedime void ia her near by markets. Of sugar, tho figures am now esti mated, hh the hai vesting oocum, cbiefl . ia January. It it: believed that the un fHvornble imaioti will riinco it to 848, bOO.OOO pounds of i,u,;r. hd.I 7,200,000 gallous inoliii'-i u, Tho rice cr. p of 10) in 201.C67, 000 pounds, worth -'j;, 48.000 d llarr. Lou'niaun is loivv ,,ro.i .ioiog n large hht.ro f t i" n o ( i i-i. i i li jt VVestera pri'iriis, with rre- t jiroflt I t. fnl ro ini'lera .I ui i .j ft, ib the , t i c. -tton. tlon l.i Dui.nii FlihHti.i ..il t to regale, L.ie e. and of tbe Upland vat ieti-1. Or puaiiula. thu c-ijf. of 1S0-J-91 wee 5.450 000 bunuilri, ol ih aluu of 3, 200,000 oollar".. Tt.is ih lulled by three states, our own t-.tin tho ninallosk shaic, but producing 1;59.000 bunhela, . The value of hay produced wee s'Sl.'.'OO.COO. Ilfre dcuhtltsf li ths greae sin of ;.iibt-iju in the Southern f aimer'. Moro m.-adowB, more olover and blue rann. m.d timothy, in the up country, more iJiitive gru- bch iu thu l iw-laudn. ma to into nutii-.i- u buy , u keep fat the R . CR at h'e:. rnpidlv lEOfiMiti! . 'iU I o vi o I. . ' ' 'utU ii rO UlU-.tl t- at ction. The day ouAM supply tho Ui our oitie . vi h popu '.if ioti tor 1 1 .- ' j 1 1 .. w nen nv I .,' Ai r i Uould be f h: y, and ensilage i, ; u to w inter our another blade of pUued, bu1. pUDty t:e provided with hio'ik. With the ibtii.diiico nature-, pours forth .-.round you. ii is not possi ble for y.,u to fee! lir.e ..trenKity of this, liko one v. bo ! w 1 h ii dry rtd Clay hi'A i:i our t't-ntri.! ic.i.M'. Potato, a coi.tri' -in. d jll 202.000 t the farmers eii!i i ot in nothing ha t:i" xtrnordio.ry ni'i been made which U eh own in o. cunr 1 fruitf, tbe' value of th j 4 000 0C0 l uus of orengM of Fioridi. tho melons of (ieorgi and EiBtern Carolina, th-i a i.lfti of' the tnountttin i itr i ;tn ho 1 i f Arkaneai. tihe Riu'ill fruit crop i tc Tnn valut- of orrhHtd product has ir.croM'-ed from J'J 0-4 K-0 in 1830, to . 10 5;6.t(0. The pro.-notion Htir) nnl of ornamen tal planln reHched 1920 000. and aalu of cut flowers nearly tb'00 000 tnoro. A very miportai t item in tbe present enhb of tho Koutli cor.tists of the number an-1 quality of , r live Stock. In 1891 ( he ovi-n.-d of llore. B 5.."23 2?1 in v i uo 192 0H6 000 Mules 1.004.000 " " 181 027 000 Co vb and other caf.h-17 055 01 0 ' ' 213 953 600 Sheep 9.317 820 " V 10,834 000 Hogs 18,205,000 " " C0,a28.000 Total 49,715 717 " " 613,527,000 Although only 10.000 000 more ia number (or 23 per oent) than in 1380, the breeding of fine tock h brought up tbe value $250,000,000 ia exeene of that period, and Ihe gain in the pact year has been a little over $50 000,000. Much things go f r to balnnoe the Icee . on cotton. Continued on third page. e. cTr: Eastern Carolina Eispitch. J ast I'AHH nger ariii Ktu'rIi t Line I otwn "aslrrn N or: Ii ' roll iih 1 tl n tn, ai J al 1 win i) llr n m t ho PKWSVLVAMA tl AILHOAU, INCl.ITMNU Nrtv York, PI 1 1 al Ipliln. Norfol ky Rftf ttinoro unit linaton. Trl-W i i lily Line Hi v II rue. Out 111. ; .NEvV AM I l.t-.'l N I I.Y KHUIITKD K 1 i A M I It 6 i -Te-T- . KaiiK fro:u .New lleru" mo i vn, T.UMiSDA VP,; IIIIDAYI, PIVJ Hti SI i.L ul 1 1 1 . M hi N .r k. isiiiini nrh way erd OOU .4-01 i,,u W till tn .tllhiii KhIiioaiI. Oitrh i .' no. r-.irisliltni of N iiIoIk Koulhsrn ri. H. I 1,1, .. ri ll 11 . lo I Mir'olk It. K.. il H rt-llltoll, anil or far-ihllr( for 1 1 hiii-i,ii I -4' Ion, : !, I h i tty, t -... . 1 on ram to WlO'ii t:o Ho II ri- i ! hill I . vi vi.i astern ('ill Oil H 1 if ilH :l. 1-- iim N.-M- 1 ..rt-. : Norf' Kiver Krnni riiUn.tolrrtll-i. K K.. Ii.jrk l-l. t From il.ilt onoi ,'. t.v It It . Her 27, i:nl Halto. i.nl ltivlto. il K 11.. er-i,ent st . K hunl Nnrf.ilk. Oy Nor! Fi-o'ii U.wion l.y M , "Ii' Ion i ()., Now 1 it. :. 1). ou honi It l. -, .i 1 rt- M i iifi n Trnn- i U Mini New KtlKlKtld i: .' - Kutef i 'ov,al;d ton anv ot h. r lino quicker thnnjhy Koi tun lier In f irtimt t'-n i, epiv to W. H. .! oft (; n 1 y -reiKin Train 3 Agent, I". K I'. : fl KO S- i r v, i u. 1. ,v ' H ' ! ' U. li. .AgeinC- i i-.l'i: i - t 1 ' I i 1 ( I oh 'it. To lulu Aijeiit.., N. Y. oi '.vl!il-AKfnt S.'H I'l.tt-O--. .Knt Meff l),-rn", N. C. :5 V f 1-
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 3, 1892, edition 1
1
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