Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / May 12, 1892, edition 1 / Page 1
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It,.; $1.50 Per .Year. INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS. r, 1S. VOL. XV NEW BERNE, CRAVEN COUNTY, N. C, MAY 12 o. ;. .USA. - --" . " !' x ' .' '..wiisy ",irrfck " V I i! E3. C. K. BAGBY, SURGEON DENTIST. I OCm, Kidil t4e, ppoei Bp4lrt .eeJiwtf , C. EOITOEUL NOTES. ! A TIIRLA1. T : . v ... Look oot, frie-ids! By keeping NKaBOS3r leering Aikansu Allianceme 0Qt of the primarie8, great numb, j an(j by other ttrickB, a etroDg effort LADY roLlTK IANS. - DESTIST, OfBaa o Cnm llw. Pollock WtBfMl. .W. D.'2IcIVER, Attorney - at - Law, Nw Bern, N. C. GEO.- HENDERSON, 1 Basal-' Isssxmcs '"'Agent. r ,, - t Ti i t - i -of vrxa ona Bmm 1 r - t. or xw MRS- J. M. fflNES' frariHr-g Ectsa Rscpensd. HyMlW ,Bpto Boom t tk city mnnmiimxrffiiiiiaii J. LL HINESf Agent. FREE TO ALL. MOB VT A IM VOM HOB1U AID TXt M nm Ihll IB? Fnll lino of Choice Groceries & Provisions tlT.Mku4.M4 nurrx LOW AM tub ;auxt AJt &iaa fe. mm la IBM M J. J. T0LS02T. JE3TS Cmpche, linng near the eitj of ilexioo, h j as t celebrated hU 15lth birthday. Thk Federal Sopreme court holds , that pajmeat In Coufederate mon ey made dortoj; the war m a good pa j meat. It ii believe that the threaXeoel opriaiog ia Europ which wm booked for the first of Hay, ia sim ply postponed. LlADlsa Republicans who op-j Pom the renomlnation of ilarrlaon j are talking about Lincoln and Rask as tbetr ticket. ' Thk Iloase bill to exclude the Chinee basf fire ia the,Snate,bQt J Khu now become a law and the' Celeauala mast stay out. CoxXaJiput ETA53 haa been plaoed la command of the squadron to b sent to Behnag sea. Hia in alructicos ar very atrict. Tax steamer Tnehead sailed frota Uew York for liuU Monday j With 7,000,000 paunda of wheat for he famiue slricaea people. THE Soatb. Carolina Democratic primaries, neu aionaay, snoweu clearly iht the DemociaU of that Slate waai a Wee tern man for President- U l3C053i.x formally enters Hon. W. F. Vila. Mr. V. will please take hU sat in the "dome good Western dm corner and Keep quiet nnui eaUi or." CosrorD the maa that sands hLs sogar and waters his whiskey. Uireit to ns straight. We waat the old fashioned Thomas Jefferson Andrew Jackson Democracy. Tsui nerer was a time in the history of thia country, when the sensible, self respect and patriotic people of the South needed more wisdom and unity than the pre eat. Col. Polx is beinff made to nominate a mail for Governor of North Carolina, who has never done anything for the farmers and has done much against them. If theae tricks are successful, the Progressive Farmer will right that man to the last. His name is T. M. Holt. If he is nominated an independent will be the result and he will be beaten. Remember that. Progressive Far mer. The above is from Colonel Polk's paper. Brother Polk has ceased to be a terror. He has quietly subsi ded into the amiable centleman he Tho Wyoming Kopnlilican Convention Send-; Two I.aclio-; a Alternate, to the Mi nneapolis Con t ion. Denser, Col., -May .". A Ke- rn Kl i i r n c rv a n a 1 f tt- ( 1 li m- nn nn pULIILiCSii PCIUl 1IU ill VjUTJ L U1H j Wyoming., says: The Republican State convention met here yester day, there being several lady dele gates ia attendance. The conven tion was called to order by Seuatcr Corre, chairman of the Republican State Central committee, who in his address said a glowiug tribute to President Harrison and James Ct. Rlaine. After permanent organization was effected a resolution was pas sed endorsing Harrison and com A DYNAMITE ( ONSI'I RACY DNcouTetl Hvthe Authorities at used to be, and it is not probable pl'menting Blaine upon his mas- 1 fori H i r- 1 - m r f ii ntt.irt lamr l An thot he will ever again go about as a roaring lion seeking hom he may devour. When Col. Polk was in the Dem ocratic party as a disorganize and the Progressive Farmer was run ning at the rate of fifty knots an hour as a Democratic Alliance or jfao, we were somewhat uneasy, bat now that he and his paper are prophet and oracle of the Peoples' Partr their performances are of little consequence. As the Colonel well soon go into retirement we trust that he will find in a happy home the oomforts, eojoyments and emoluments that an nnapprf ciating public fail to giTe. j The Progressive Farmer 'will! fight Gov. Holt, If he is nominated." Certainly! So will the Signal, all the Independents, the devil him self, and all who are opposed to the Democratic party. Oh, it is too to protective tariff was reiterated and the importation into the United States of servile labor was strenuously objected to. Liberal pension legislation was approved and gold and silver in equality are urged aa the proper basis. Delegates were elected to the Minneapolis convention. Among the alternates elected are two la dies, Mrs. Theresa Jenkies, and Mrs. Cora G. Carlton. A CYCLONE SWEETS KANSAS. l.ieire. RuvssKr.s, May -1 The iv. irif" trate w.'io is enquiring into the ex plosion that wrecked the residence of Count Minetfe at Liege, s;ns that the bombs that caused the damage were charged with t wenty-tive kilegratns , ot lorcite. Fourteen kilograms more of the exprosive have beei. stolen and a Iresh outrage may be expected. The authoritios had no doubt that Keanjean and Leefovre, the two men who were arrested yesterday on suspicion of having caused the explosion at Count Mi nett's residence were guilty. Search was made of Reaujean's. lodging and there were found one cartridge and a quantity of dyna mite. When Reaujean learned of this discovery he made a full confession of Lis guilt, and incriminated a number of other anarchists who were arrested today. Tao of to- monetary ; nay s prisoners are named essent and Laeroix. A number of car tridges havs beeu found in the house of a man who was arrested at Stoumont. Ihe police declared that in their raids unoi the anarchists thev have discovered evidence of a most THOl'CH : lormuiable conspiracy, the head : quarters of which is in Liege. The THE COMIffi RAILROAD. Tin- V Oryraiiizatioi: Coin j.iiiiic ..!' to 1,' Coii-nMab ! .!. ViY.-li.:i:-'V il.ii icvl- Art I'nMDj.t!;. L : - . of t:. . ; ton r:.l tb. f. " Btthe! Siffirl, Dirojtcr. : Kibbu'U, J i.-.c jrpjr.v Lb i t : John 1:1 1'i . f Jjhi; :A iu m ill. ' ri 8 1 iiim Oar RoaiN Maj I n t i tv I'-t : i . v, c tin? j ( : I,-. i u , 1 i ! t fix months tv. n-j Hubj :Ct COU lit t." ( .in' ii ! ia the N 'i'. Fou We (j jott a f w Hi I t1 ILIj. -,p''r: -.r;t pi.. I v. cu!d have i ti e enactment tliinpp in the dii pr.;c ach ait i 11, f; v : ? i;:it : ' l'.'. -li: it' V, 'o-Pu-i b-. cr: ! 'i -y : ' P. II C. SI-NjueI J. V u-.d cop. j. v. :ii-?!. j. x. Bfthe!. C. Vv") iu'c S.ur,3 lu 1 siev.srr. r.:..,:ar J It. r. B : , i y A YOUNti HEIRESS MURDEEED. bad that Independent and Radicals jured, and may not recover. His - i conspirators thev sav are a tho People Hurled to Death By the Ah fnl roughly organized body and their Hurricane and Farm Houses ' ajm i3 to terroize law abidding peo- uemoiisnea. pie by means of explosions. Topeka, J.an., May 3 A dis astrous cyclone, destructive, to life and property, last evening struck the farming community of Tevta, a village on the Missouri Pacific Railroad, ten miles southeast of Topeka. A farmer named Plaxton and another named Mitchell were kil led. John P. Hill was badly in- V .1J ' I .'.'rn t: :ii to u cr&c -za-of tho very i n i.i ih: coui.trr, hag &1- ftltct . d aa Frt t iii-tt of the d coaspacics. a;,e:;:.a cf ihe roid hivo recently irom orlh Carolina itito South C.ircIiLai Wt toi.l recently cf the con- gaiiized r.i'er.tiy i- The X W. & C. It. It. working utder chirrera S: ilr 3 rsnd it i.i ( 2;i ';;ed t:, th "lKici"' N;rth and Su'.h Carol ica li -ns into out' c ;.i rs:;J nr:i-" DC r ra;: roan rc id y t e n ft CO ."y.'tJi r.vc til ed ! HI aH nir a4 11 twaate to aait t& Lime Lime Ctrlcallural Ueiq! Ci a a out. iUX woo V sr. Ra tstaw Famans aa a Um Cox Ccllaa Phniors, La In for the race. When he was mounted on the thor- agabred racer Democrat, he stood some chance, bat bow that he is mounted oa the Third party Jack be Ia bound to be distanced. In OrimaLaod Alliance ol Pitt coaoty, deaoaoce President Butler for proacribiag such Alliaacemeo, as will not accept the S Lools de mands and allege that the Ocal demands are eooagh for the Alll- are "agin" Got. Holt! Down this way Alliancemen are sound, patriotio Democrat. They may not prefer Holt, but the De mocracy Is their shield tnd buckler. valet we aflW far tS.00, tad Q air, , ja a Boy Utxto Plow witJa mca fiAtr. Oasaw fiai,ae we only aar fw Wa atUI have a fw BarrVo Utt ia ilziiumo, Crockery l KOmX. BOTTCO PRICES, aa wa ot mx stock la both ol J; Oiccrics of All Kinds. 7. P.-Dctios & Co. M . Foot of Iliddle street. " DriafnriJfo Jnsnranco OTP tiilSw YORK ISSITES EVEHY DESIRABLE FORM or THE CANDIDATE. uThe Meesenger holds farther, that it is the privilege and duty ol Democrats to freely consult in a spirit of give and take, and try to find oat who are the available, the winnnig candidates. It is a mis take to have a favorite candidate and slick to him when it is plain he is not the man will handicap heav ily the party." If there is any one that we are , willing to fo'low blind forld, it is the wise and accomplished Editor of the Wilmington Messenger. All men erTj sometimes, but when throagh a long and useful life one has Ulastrated the finest elements of manhood his opinions commend themselves. The above eitract is an illustra tion of this truth. Lt Is not wise, in the present con dition of affairs in North Carohua, to instruct delegate, to the ap proaching State Convention, to rote for any particular candidate. The better plan Is to elect, as dele- rates, true Democrats, sound in their principles, anl devoted to the interests of the party, and leave them free to nominate such candid ates as the exigences of the occa sion demand. There are honest difference that can be harmonized without the sacrifice of principles, and on that harmony the success of the party depends. wile and child were also badly hurt. For a space of about two miles square the farms suffered severely. Many people were more or less mjured. A number of physicians have just left Topeka at this hour (noon) in response to calls from the locality. Hail fell in great quantity, destroyed the fruit pres perts and breaking the trees. THE ALLIANCE IN COUNCIL. Hbat To Secure Her Money a Relative U i Arsenic. Massilon, Ohio, May 3. The investigation into the mysterious death of Ada Ebersole, at Dalton. Wayne county, which has been in progress some time, was concluded today and Henry R. Werner is now lodgedin jail here, charged with causing the death of his step daughter by poisoning. Miss Lbersole was a pretty eirl tract to tui:d the road frc::i Charleston to the North Caroiina line having been given to the Suuth Cmulina Lnd ecmpiny. Since then, on Af-ril 2d, President Gaddis imformed the Charleston News and Courier that from a letter rt ceived, the iud icatioona were favorable for warranties; tbtm iu start ing opr;a'ioLB ciinultnnecus'y fiom the other end at Wilmington and pushinu the work forward eouth at the same time, perhaps i; miy bo decided to start from Norfolk. Branch lines will bo built to Fdj etteville, to bcdjC point in Hyde cghdIj and to Columbi j, South Carolina. Wo stated a morning cr two ago the ,;iP : olack , ina i sonify ht i v': tao Btr..ior, an i Started, t ) Cv. 5 tij j When : thou ,ht of h. r : j llanhr d in L t v. : seizri h;r by ;,. . do vi n. t!iO sir:, ; time and 9onM:-.j he chohing h- r hand, Botnttiiue biting her. Abcui tho a wagon paes it ii Hupp -.sc-1 frightened . Mrs. Wiilts s: tho imperfect ii ho teitiGed, .it J i lae . ; tni--n the 'i i.LLl) l.t Of :lLniy a e she at the f danger -h -.vrjtth : : hre -.v her , !y fell the h-: cou;J, ' ai.h one hii-i even i r. ti i n , lr . r I. 'i.-il f . 1-l u ! ..: ,s' t i c 5 1 ir L I it : '. i . n , (';;;... i'y. u -a -.-n i isw,: f.f ti.i kit. .- of r o.iid r'iill 1j 1: . ) u : ce.-tr.:..ed : ti.f n I would hav-; oi htuts eupcrvHion and tiince by a competent c sjicecra app- iotnl by ti e St v. of road and biidKe builJu: iuopon hcitntii",: rri:.:'!; a rcrupr hen. i vo r.:. ! ( i , fsrC'wh : S:ii!c : tf.ir Vr. , I w :' n-.i. -l.e S'.:.;u . i.'.tr c , . ; . . n-.sintain o:nu thrcu.L,-h . y .. connecting the principal tovn. ia tin State, fcni coruectinp; thetu v. nh-Iu-principal towns of ncighbo.-inK S:ati 8, where they are muHt needed, erm r fcr Rreat public exlgencie or for i!:l Kftr.t eet pi e n l r a 1 use. The State would thus romote the equalizitioa and the en ral reduction of expense of coLstr'iction and in .in tenance cf tbeea main roade, and wcuid give a profitable example and a t-tronn incemive to the aijiccnt town tn con contributary roei.i r.p V, A ' 1: ti.n-3 ho d;; d over tho I ho Leor-; s:." 1: r r-..-c ihz cf i when a.- IU JTew DUtribation Policy is Ih Uot Liberal erer affertxl bjr U7 Inanrmnce Compasr. AmU, Dec 31, liOl : $159,507,138.6. EndownenU and Death Claims paid Lost week: . 369,B87.5L Areraca Dailj Pay men U: '$61,647.92. fctf C. A. BATTLE, - "At J ooraal Office. nDDEIlTS ti PRO. Groceries; Proyisions . 7?3i23 tut mi, torn iu uiu' v u kjm m tb mrx-Duosir a. kr. ka m4 rTU .WOT IXDta . 'LAMM, T U Sa to. frwa LOW m ta aouars a sao It ia said that Sampson county will tend Third party men to the Democratic State Convention. Saxnpeoa coanty folks onght to know better than to mix cackle bars with their huckleberries. Tils conference of Southern Al liance presidents and executive boards at Birmingham, Ala., ia se cret. It is learned though that they all favor the support of the Omaha convention nominees by all Alliaacemeo. Mb. J. A. Willis, anobleyoang volte bsd, swam a mile in the re eeat great flood in the Tombigbee riter, Alabama, to get a boat to rescue fire negroes in gTeat danger of being drowned. Think of that, ye howler! "We thoagnt yoa were for San derllnt" So we are, ii he stands op bravely to the Democratic) par ty. We are for no maa who flinch e la the least, or goes a hair's breadth towards the Third party. Thk Cleveland county Demo cratic convention was a contest be tween the straight oat Democrats aad the Third party men. The lor eaex won and none but good Dem ocrat, some of them being Alli ance a eo, were appointed delegates to the State convention. The vote of the county is divided between Holt aad Saaderlin. TBB Third party, we understand expects to influence the State Con Tsntion to nominate as many of its adherents or believers a) possible, i aad then to insist that the Cooven-1 tioo send one set of delegates to Chicago aad another to Omaha, ! representing respectively the Dem-: ocratie aad Third party elements of j the convention. State Chronicle.' We take it that there will be no I Third party element in the Demo era tie S:ate Convention. On Joh2 H. Gob do 5 , of Georgia, i an honored name in the Soat" As -oldier, as Governor, as Senator, as cttisen, as Southron, he ha been true and faithfnl. lie is a Democrat, and not something else, while calling himself by that i same ol nonor. tie lias msde an ' appeal recently to the Georgian to j stand together. He warns against j the Third party infatuation and j folly. He says, and we saj: "We are ail la favor of lower tariff and , taxes, lower interest for money,' aad largely increased volume of; money. On theae vital issues an ! overwhelming majority of Demo-, erat are la abeolate accord with . k, I r . I ue prvwacvn, larmers aaa laoor anion of the coan try. How much Tub Wisconsin Democratic wiser, then to cease quarreling State convention has met and ap aboat the plana and tight together pointed delegates to the National for the general cause. How infi nitely snore sensible to stop the chimerical efforts of organizing a sew party, which lnsare division aad lavitee defeat. Wil. Messenger. Wail street; that it wculd become the duty of every true Allianse men to vote lor the nominee of the Ohama convention. He believes that ticket will sweep every South ern State but three. A POLITICAL SENSATION. A Pitt Connty Alliance Denounce Hut ler for Irocrlbinir Such Alii aneemen a Will Not Endorse the St. Louis Demands. IIALEIGH, C, May 3. STE cial. There is today a first class political sensation. Gnmsland Alliance, of Pitt county, has adopt ed a resolution declaring that the Ocala demands are sufficient for the I Alliance and that the State Alli 1 ance has not adopted the St. Louis i demands and denouncing the arbi trary and dictatorial stand taken I by President Butler in makiDg i these demands a test of good fellow jship in the Alliance by proscribing i all such aa uill not stand bv them Whether an aspirant is an Alii jn the Kaleigh conference to be ance man should not be the prepon- j held May 17th, declaring his action derating question. Is he a Demo- officious and culpable in the ex- .rf.. 1. h,. nr.nnl anrf rlitil , trem6' aS wel1 " prejudicial tO the record dear does his public and oik Thinks iu for His 0"n Ticket. Bibmin'GIIAM, Ala., May 2. A large number of prominent Alli- anpmnn ara in Tlinminahftm fn- night ready for the convention of ! arr"r Dnc l"y rlelu8 c, 1Q"ri,re Southern State presidents and ex- anif.he wnt tback l? ulton; ecutive boards tomorrow. More I Sluc th tiaa lhf lstnct At are coming on every train, and the I torney haseen bard at work, and meeting promises to be a large one. President Polk and Col. Macune are both present. Col. Polk said he was satisfied that the financial platforms of both the old parties will be dictated by of 18 vears. and had insf. come, into Portion tn r.i.road ho.ds in reference a small fortune left bv an aunt. ! t0 runnin-' trunk lino to New Berne when she was stricken down, and after two days' illness died. The attending physician suspected foul, play and notified the proper au- thorities. A post mortem exami-; nation was made, which showed arsenical poisoning. Suspicion rested on the stepfather but he was allowed to bring the body East lor burial. While on that trip he told many contradictory stories and re latives of the girls asked the Lan caster authorities to cause bis has at fast gathered sufficient evi dence upon which to base his charge of murder. L'y her death he would inherit the monev and that was doubtless his object. IT IS A LAW. The Chinese Exc'usion Act Duly Sign ed by the President. Washington, May 5. -The '-Act to prohibit the coining of Chinese persons to the Unitid States" was laid before the President today and he hac a conference with the At torney General in regard to it. The latter explained the matter carefully and informed the Presi dent that it was a very grave ques tion whether all the existing res trictive legislation did not expire toworrow. In order therefore to avoid any possible legal complica tion that might arise on that point the President affixed his signature to the bill and it is the law of the land from today. DUOWNED AT OXFORD. private life commend him to the peopleT Considering the man, the occasion and all the environments of the situation, is his nomination most likely to reault in the success of the Democratic partjT These are considerations in the presence of which all personal preferences sink into insignificance. "It Is the privilege and duty ol Democrats to freely consult in a spirit of give and take, and try to find oot who are the available the winning candidates." This covers the whole ground. Ele is a disorganizer who enters the Convention with the determi nation to have the lion's share or nothing. No one locality must dominate, no one profession or vocation should be supreme and beat interest of the order and ques tioning his authority in this pre sumptuous and overbearing conrse and commending the action ol the Pitt County Alliance in demanding representation in thia conference in defiance of this proscription and in opposition to the Sr. Louis de mands. Dr. Keelej's Life Threatened. Chicago, May 3. Dr. Leslie E. Keeley, the wealthy proprietor of the famous bi chloride of gold in stitute established at Dwight, Ills., ,s threatened with death by a dynamitard, and several of the best police officers at the central station are trying hard to bocate and place i under arrest the mis-guided fanatic! who makes these threats. Dr. Keeley's would be executioner is a woman, or at least is supposed to, be, for her letters are signed withj a woman's hand. She calls herself; Fannie Parsons, for the sake oi i convenience, says Dr. Keeley is responsible lor her husband's death Mr. R. M. Shaw, a Student of Horner School, Meets With a Sad Death. Henderson, N. C, May 5. Richard Merrill Shaw a student of the Horner School at Oxford, aged sixteen, son of Dr. II. M. Shaw, of Shawboro, N. C, and nephew of Capt. W. 13. Shaw of this place, was drowned in a fishpond at Ox ford today at 2 p. m. His uncle Capt. Shaw will take the remains to Currituck county tomonow for interment. He was a youth ol great promise and had many friends. April absolute. The State, from the mountains to and demands $1,000 the sea; the people; in town and conn try; its good and their inter est should dominate the Convention. Nkab.lt all of the county Demo cratic conventions held so tar in Iowa to elect delega'es to the State Convention which will te held at Council Hiuffa on the llih mat., have instructed for Boies as the coming man. It is said that five thousand Uawkeye Democrats will be in Chicago to whoop it up for the favorite son ol destiny, who has tome right good timber in him by the way. Reward for Detection of Anarchists. St. PETEKsiiUEG, May 3. The government has offered 100, U00 ruubles reward for the detection of the publishers ot anarchist pamph lets in which the Czar is blamed tor the famine anil misery now pre vailing tn parts of the empire. Hun com be for Holt and (tiidirer. Asheville, N. C, May ;. The I'.uncomb Democrats held an en thusiastic convention, The dele gates were instructed lor Gudger for Lieutenant Governor. The majority are for Holt for Governor. There were no other instructions. convention. The convention was enthusiastic for Cleveland; it in structed the delegates to vote as a unit and desires them to use all honorable means to secure his nomination. The Alliance Conference. Birmingham, Ala., May ;. The National Farmers Alliance Conference opened here today. The sessions are all secret and none of the proceedings have been made public. Cyclone in Oklahoma. GrrnuiE, O. T., May i. A ter rible cyclone passed over Oklaho ma this morning. Two were killed and fifty injured at KiDg Fisher. Diocese of East Carolina. Washingtonn, X. V.. 20th 1S0-2. The .Ninth Annual Council of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in the Diocese of East Carolina, will meet D. V. m Christ Church, Elizabeth City, on Wednesdav, ISth day of May, 1S!2. Ka'es to delegates reduced. Nathaniel Harding, Secretary. A Fatal Cyclone in Missouri. Partonsburg, Mo., May 4 About ::JU p. m., yesterday, a cy clone passed through DeKalb county in a northwesterly direc tion, sweeping everything before it. It wrecked the home of Mr. Sharp, seriously injuring him, and killed his wife and Miss Boyd. The ;-'!) llallot. Jeeseyvii.le, 111., May ."). The Democratic Congressional conven tion of the Twelfth Illinois district ballotted all day yesterday, with three anjournments. Ballotting stopped on the i;2'.tth ballot. The convention adjourned till this morning. The light will probably be a long one. Apprcprial ion (or Kliahttli (it' Public JSuihliiiLT. Washington, 1). C , M.iy .". Tae House public building commit tee today acted favoiably upon bills appropriating ?iO,()u() tor the benefit of Elizabeth Citv. ". C. and 100,000 for Tampa Fla. To Fitrht Eitz-'iininoiiN' New Orleans, May Pntch ard signed today to fight Fitzsim mons in September for a purse of twelve thousand dollars. A Million Dollar Failure. Kansas City, May i. The Kobinson Wooleu Company failed 'this morning for a million dollars. and WasbinOa. Tneeo c : ; i o 3 can se cure the roud if they will. We have no doubt our pocple will take the right action in tne matter, but it strikes us there is something to be gained by ta king thut action prorrp'Jy. The rail road company will no doubt be encour aged to movj wijj mora despitch it self if the ir.uu m: t, td th.-.t will be of fered ara cllertd with rs little time being a'lowed :o eU; s ; 1 ef. re it is dene csa reasonable be expected. "(1 I TS THERE." A "Litlle h" in the Post Oiliee. Contrary to (ieneral Custom and to the Decision of the State Hoard of Education Hut, Kt ( p Ouiet. Mr. Clivtr is ahead. P.st iliStcr Ciarke has been cilLiilly notifiVJ by tho post cfii.'e dt p-irtment of the charge to "Newborn" in the government uisge in spelling this city's name, which change w as ordtn d somo r: or. '.Kt ego and is now cdo,; into t IT - : t . Ojrreadiia know huw thia change was brought about. Ucicg aware ttisi custom had the i.rme n;;re than one way. and d-:sir:cg uniformity in thc-govc-mment ucs of the wcrd, Mr. Henry , Gannett, ch. si main cf the Bjf.rd of Geographic names, wrcto to tho city ' clerk atkiDg what was riht acd Mr. Oiiver answered that it was 1 'Ne w bsrn" and presented tho r.rgum'-uu used iu favor cf that pci;i:n,on the strength of which, before bearing from any cne else the board pis?ed a motion to adopt thit way and did not rescind their ac tion though a petition was sent on signed by nearly every busines msn in tho city SKaicst the change. Let it bj born ia mind that the United States government decs net ; name or change the names of places. Namiog; ia a lecal m?.t:er and the gen cral government only adopts lbs estab lished name a3 the officials understand it from information furnished them. ! This bcti ju cf the government in I adopting tho way least used will only, tend to make further cjuf jsioa in the j matter. It i- knov. n and almost unani- ! mously admitted that the name belongs j to bo fpelied as two words. Nearly all , our cii:z?ns fpsll it thus and will, we doubt not, always continue to do so. Sj will tho school histories of tho State, : because the publishers have been di rected by the State Board of Education to spoil it "New Bern."' This crder was given aftt-r the Stte Bjari cf Education had cartfully examined into the matter and found that that was, be yond all question the correct and origi nal way. I" h sj directions are given to the coDlisry, which cf courso will cot be done tr.e etme orthography will ba ai-he-irtd to in '"tho North Carolina spell ing book"' which is now in preparation and will soon be issued for use in the schools ef the S;ate which will instill the correct epellir.g ictv the minds of thh people all over the Scato and will be a vast power in bringing about that uti.'ormity wl.ijh is so desirable. Bu: let us havo no further di-cussion Green waa her assailant, not swear posi.Iv.. !y. Lu!. her knowlad-iB anj b,-i, the man. She noticed t1 resemblance as rooc an sh him. and eho rd w,ya n : ic:J voices and the v:i:e of Green )B:ai!ant were vi.ry cuuch alike struct better feeders to the main ons. I would have the State divide the ei- pneses of this schema of road bettr ?i: tail :iLd ran , ment in the tax levy, bo that part of it brhi.ro, which , should be apportioned to the whole r.-.-J 1 fcirr.e j State, part to the counties through which the roads ran, and put to the iliirit only by towns. And, further, I would have . :..oc-:i, and thia tax Ievy kept small and the invest ; d v.-'aethtr nieut adequate and quickly made by hat mi c ju1o tne business man 'a method cf borrow t .: th- b-.-s; of irjK 'he money on long leans. It would :l" t.o urou te j 'bus be easily paid out of the profile y a remarkable j thote sharing them. i jt , .mi P ' I; in the mi the 1 r:: . )'ul ' if m iin- . n his "I tn Uov. I f((.nlod II in d ft I - to Ih U irtr ' ' Home- tun 1 1 n pair . with r 111 Id rt-rive r ( the ure an- 11 tiport. 1 I y ! 1 v innen rily of ' 1 1 ii and :: lay it I lit W lU ' ry dt ornprs of d 1 e- n in- The . . mch of uti'ion. ; i for the r 1 t and " from ''ill cure This '1,1 Ullt- t 1 il'TH 1 r. orioo. it. For Mii'oh's . v fn rne TVli.-tl vlti' . a Whnn ph.- h..-n: Wheu she lia,: c " ' ' i.'.r ( iu-'. ' : ia 1 t i.-.l f- r ( 'ftki , .1 ia r ur.p til ( 'iiKturi - i:uif Ihi-in CastiriA i eyes .crl 1 The city has c i" .red :'. tho apprehension cf tLo with proof euillji'. ;:t tj to be hopoJ that if (lie. criminal the ici will ba thq tiroo cjart i i fa.:.-id, shudo'.v cf b d'ju1 t. 0 rsr :on ard for ty party ct. It is 1 ii the true -Uablisbed by j beyond the ! Clyde's Stars G3.1 rypt; niei I'AS an Obe: !-(;;!. ii i'ilK.-. .-Wa-hi: cf Audi :nt. U'ton lit lb .1 01UI- 1 0 The all of Solon.: all his i d o " a w i ago i f : , ri .. y ex 1 :d Witt; ness. Ia his u rememiiered hi: f; get his old r-:i! To uuroil il:o seems 14 d;;tuat certain: y, yet, v. 1-1-1.-'.; Mr. Gii: to the daytj vi the fact that with h - had w orn himself .t: .. ., ;d died at the i ,vid, his father, TO. Undoubtedly he tea eonouct cf him o.'tca lijhed to mad-io.j,- nion.ents if he ;:.-:d ; he did not for- Duels iu North Carolina. One of our exchanges has compiled in j brief form a number of hietorio due's j that have been fought within the bor-1 ders of The Old North Rtate. Among ! them are names of some cf the beet and most prominent families in our history: "North Carolina has been the scene , of many fatal duels, and it has al waj b Deen regaroea as a perfectly safe place 1 to iiht so far as the law is concerned. ' Atnonrr the duels that havo been BaltililOi": fought in the Sate only a fe w of the I most prominent ones can bo mentioned here. John Stanly fought with Richard Dobbs Bpaight, sr., behind the Masonic ! Ilall in Newborn, on Sunday afternoon, i September 5, 1S03. At thd eesond fire a bullet pierced the coat colUr of Stanly ; at the fourth, Spaight rdoaivu ,1 a wound in the right side, cf which lie died in twenty three hours. The h -1. it Line. cce and Vesper. ' i , i!a- win HoU-WEEKLY TKIPli Leavlni: ' bS I'A i beavlriki -c -da V. f i: Me rcli.i 11 1 Or,aii cf v,i - ice. - . . ' i:I i'.'J . t: n 0 1 ii-ir .J.JT rx. Ne '.1 cf time this : to reach with do those see that . tha Ei'yption :L, the height to top C'J feet, r.: : the base -"-..i."3 weight sj quar i . rr . 1 : enure 1 ;.;t:. tho Me . i wid th oi v!:o . cf C . 4 0 0 i:m1v:' s;:i:cir for an tuiiee: hevit, existvcee tc-.-r host u tri.. : lied Eca: quest of J.i. ucg the las-:: ana 01:1 :r Gr lore: A!e3:r:::. torious exp-.d '.jOfiita: fix i to man j'ivsr !C."7 'o.'. : ' r -j; r" 'oioce id' :rj I old , '"near .0. ; . . v, r;-.;d the i T I:!-:;; of that of -C:: i. .: 1 tS-- v. hole lb.!".-;- . oc ;m; a distance f .-jvir.g a liret-tate :.t fsn'-i or trarty-live cen iu tl.o course of ns long Mor-.-t : I'oorri'jh end his tii ir el:-; ;ru rtion in the niir::;..c to lae coa 1.1 '. L'aro.b 30s dfsola ijootus rdo'on, Plato, 5;:;.:.r.li of Egyptian - r t o ttrt-ii on his vic itton thrcuoh the land of tad .i l-.'.ll centuri.a of !i'.J itic. '-hri-itian Ptrug- e!e at A'.ex.ic : in: e'i tho lor y; line of "Moslem rul:?rs Breo Cilioh Oruar: and now locking lio-n up''a the million dwellers of iCciv Yo: i; zliy. whoso site v.-ss even unL"nova to thn Eistern world v. heu this O::i;0; i:id an exis tenc3 cf two ths.-.tand ; . r..-. '' Appar ently it hr.s beer: p. j;,or;.d by supr-r- humaa power wht-.a pa!a:e3 hav-j c;ii.o'oie ste-idy march of ti n.u-l i'oo ruthless hand of the c:t?';:i-r li 3. solid shaft of stone. The Washington monu.uent is made of blocsg of ii:arc!e, 2 f-rit. thick, and. it is said, there f,r upKo.rda of iS.000 of them; the total w i,4h:, fnun iatiou and i all is nearly SI. 000 tons. It '3 height, ns ! is known, is ojj feet and tho cost will aggregate SI, 500, COO. j Gov. Vance informed too writer that j while traveling ia Etircpi, Asia and ; Egypt he measured crcfuiiy ia eaoh of ; those countries the deep rats, worn it , the stone pavements by ar.ciont wheels i and found them to have been exactly 1 4 feet, 8 1-2 inches apart: then as now, i- eeems that was the universal gnugc. Kiilroads have had occaseicnaily the track to vary but, g:i;-'rai'y, was i adopted, the etiino'ard (4 feet S 1-2 incnes) in all coun'.rif n w hero they are lenge was sent and aootpted duel fought on the sam& day, 3Jj ; -o-ple witnessing it. In IS 12, on the Virginia line. Thorns J. Stanley was killed at the first fire l v Louis D. Henry. This duel arose fro.ti a dispute in egard to the question w ho was the partner cf a csrtaia lady ina danca at a party given by Judr;e Gaeton, Jarvis Clifton and Prontico Law fought at Crosses, on the lino betv.-i 1 1. Gates county, North Ciroiini, r.ml Southampton county, Virginia. 1:1 1".. ; or 1S0S. Law was a Northern man by birth, while Clifton was a nativ.- of Bertie county. They fought over 1. Mrs. Blanchard. Law struok hie an tagonist, and in pulling the clothing from the wound the ball came uih n Clifton afterwards married Mrj. Bio chard and she died in a year. In IS 12 Lieutenant Samuel II. Bryant United States Army, was hillfd i ti n duel in North Carolina. Ialb!) Vv'il liam E. Boudinot fought two dm-U with Montgomery Hunt, within a f v. days of each other. Tne fi rt wan or. 1 the island of Java, where neither ?as hurt; the eecond at Singapore, nin rr Hunt was wounded in the thigh at th Sicond fire. They afterwards berime warm friends. Hunt was a naval ollioi r end was lost at sea. Boudinot w .it realiy the inventor of the present efgna: service system, and died near Puts boro, N. C, in the spring of 1SSD. The half-way houee, where tho Dis mal Swamp Canal crosees the North Carolina line into Virginia, has beei. the scene of two duels. The first took place on the Virginia line during Cm 1 autumn of 1847, when H. F. Harris f li in a duel with Edward C. Yellowly t.rnpl'ja and The second was on June 12. lsCS, when before the 1 Robert W. Hughes, of tho Richmond State Journal, fought Wiliiam E Camaron, of the Richmond Index, with pistols, and wounded him in ihe breast at the first fire. Miurice, tne son of Judge Alfred Moore, of the United States Supreme Court, fought with Benjamin Smith, afterwards Governor of North Caro lina, in 1800 or 1801, on the South Carolina line with pistols, because of an alleged insult to Moore's father. Smith was badly wounded in the side Smith was engaged in other duels." WKD )'. M. " IUKB- - OlI.V. R oll . t (if Ne ' , HUip- r.ir 1 '.i-ii-' .(. I. 1 N it. .cthgato, a- 1 rnr. . . 1 1 r -.0 ty, IS . .. 1 . H 11 cl . ..r I for .. . 1.1.111)11 K. I '.: :. , K -t M ' i.l .1.1 Kr.,t:i for C;,l iiOHlO.'l tor Kl:if; It K, K. IH no ).:,. I t)( r !i ... 1 irJc; fo.k. V t'aBou(tir fto!v rio':il , -tto:. vr' .1 tit- p constructed, tbus folio'vii. of the anci.nl art! rcuJ road vehiclfj, Asking G?v. W.uco if scious of the fact oi set J ph in use in the days of Kii'tc : replied yes, even Aditn h rs commencing bu-otiLur! and that they Lt.! beon constant!? in u.jo u-.til th ipeeutv out;;; coic v.-as n rj r.ir ( :e weathtr is warm: keep cool and horn n.ing ' tuo guage i n or.j inary 1 ho was con- j .-inters being ; !:j!.;0'JU . he ! 1 ad one e-ocn for hiin.Wf I kf-p : pri ttv I :i'0rty. He' ot a wtre the 'j. D. W. i Eastern Carclina Chasing" a Whale. m. c; u.i.aui: Tuesday morning about nine o'clock v. :. (ini.i. n a large whale was sighted ofT Morebcad ! disportiDg in the wares. As soon as he was seen throwing up irrnat rnlnmnn of waf.Ar fbo npwn mrpfiil ! over Morehead and Beaufort, and about a dcz n boats equipped with fifly-twu men started in pursuit. , The huge monster was followed and chased until late in the afternoon, but he proved too much for even these skilled and bold fishermen. i is.:. Two bombs were fired into his body, ' New York, 1'iiiiiv.. i, besides being repeatedly harpooned. . """" ' He finally escaped, but it is thought that he will be sure to die. it 1. a .-1 1 .'.In 1 y. IISTDltch. 1 Hst raHi'-n'-'iT hii XvTEW '.u tit r 11 N r : l. i it r. 1 ('ii .' i... I, ft u c. PKWSl LV.ll! KO I. Tlie I.Y Tli-V. : ! : 'T r,r:-f. tic i c o N 1 F'.I.V! ipat.on. take -tion i.ud '. :y, j omach, take itdaches, take Dil r.frvcurtR0, i! ity , t&ke and uc.rtiari. take i or bill; Lemon 11: For in.i ; Lemon E . x i r For eii-k nr. i ne: v L'-mon Eiixi-' For sleepit-snufre thke L?mon Elixir. For loaj of appttite nr.d Lemon E isir. F- r fever, chii Lioocn Elixir. 1raon illnir will not faii you in anj of the above diseases, all of which ari. e from a to pid or diseased liver, stomuch, kifr.eyH. bowe'e or blO''d. Prepared or !y by Dr. Ti. Moziey, Atit-nti, Ga. DOc. acd 51.00 p r be. lie Sold by U r'J - ,(.; Lf LS. i TKUMINF-NT MINISTER WRITT.S- After tea yeurs of greit su tiering from lniies-t.ou, with ttreal nervous prostration, biliuitne-e, disordered kid otys and conptipation, I have b-'r. cured by Dr. Moziey "s Lemon Elixir, and am now a well rrsn. . Rev. C. C. Davis. Eld. M. E. Church Souib St. 31 ii Th toe 50 h meat of which w as follow Sun-.!-'.; vicci ia AliiLun.o -1 . ..1 ... . o'eic.;!:. T i- o , o'c '..''.. . Al:.;oi; . Ant:: 0 :cr t: 1 I.i- - t ,t ! Vi n 1 II . , V A . ... N or f.. i U, Hi. I font. :i. 1. I tin.' On) of 1 it, 1 iO KlniTKl) r hovda s. yv.rr I II I It VK, 0 t! .'.-- t 11 S:G0 ; t he- M.Mr e.e i.v totsrnrcnov, I'KRlIA.VESir I DlllAIKIV. KASM.Y APPL1KD. Kl L, VSE (il'll'KI.Y 1 1 The L'eetrepoise is e.n Insiroi THE CCItE OF DIM -YYIIH0LT MLDKIM:. the 1 rcir pi 'J. 10 'A Of C- X - ::', a r pti 1 the 0 1 of ItASKD on new theur'i h of li.c cmo of diKoaBe, lt (1mi;ku-o1i i1:.. iin'.i iiiai4 n-Lt ic t'oinl 1 1 ii,h . .r ' 1 - 1 ijaiies Hinroii ntl 11. it :i 1 1 , m: i'o:itrt)i linti t hese coi. lit ions Mt not elorlricKy. UISKAsk paired vitality. Tin- I-0(h"i.i;- '. ":y a'h's to tiie i t h 1 1 T y ;n, ! .-.:.-Saturr, In "Vnt urt's wbj, to t :i i 1 a . 0 truulile. A -Ji-pntze t'.ook tfrRcriVrtr t :; u: :;: r . t "ontii'nLnut t-htt 'uotiMls l.-'.-ii no u 1 f 3r t ho riire of n 11 tl i m ks. h. i.i : . : ; o 1 iippltoation. AildreKb ATLAMIC EL5 CTUO i'OISL CO WnIliE'-Klori, F. C f liarlcston, ? Atlntltn, Ua, W M.WA.. '". " tit, ?'e v I'- rni ;" ! ! V . No. 2:: r&tnsll ?t . A: Chi'drco Crv fcr Pitcher's Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorlc N V
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 12, 1892, edition 1
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