Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / March 22, 1894, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE HOLLY BUSH. (Cassin YanpOTk) ;: Axbekt C. ' Hofkiss. ' (Proposed floral emblem of Xortb-.Carolina The Old North State Motto: Immortality of Love.: . "A.9 freshly green as its mortality, With fruit aa: varmTjc red, as poising ' .' Iotc". ? w .'--s ' . "'" " -' . ':- C - . Evergreen holly bush. - - -'--- Still your sharp lancee push .B)ickvrH, the. wanton bntte JJ freaking yoar ftow'r or fruii, " " 4 Bmarttng with paie; xt"ha do jo kep at bay. '. AM those who. would betray . ; Thy holy lore; all those, t " Heedless ot thy repose, I Seek tbee in rain- - Tana nM artt (! ... ; .' If it bat choose to sue - Gracious! r, thy warm heart; " Bleeding From, thee. " - Immortal gifts are thine; V "' Those who tbejr heart inclim " : Truly to life ami Ictc, . Find tbee aa God above, . Lorinj and free, v - - .J". - - y--- fc. - let na read true tby life ' ? . - Lot must be armed for strife i v - r.tu 1 1 : r.m ''. While still ita heart o'erflows . Benthos oar emblem, bright; " Lead us by day and night;' a Bloom on our shield and claim ' 7 Honor due, and name and fame , ;V Ihira aa the doVt. . Proposed addition oi this emblem tb!ZMjLa coat-ot-arma ,aud banner, crowning wreatb of the Goddess. 1 r ... I C- MICC SO CENTS PCR BOTTLC. i (! w vauaui mraiMATiaa s;t. . 4 FOK SALC BV DRUSCItTt. PER WEEK FOR UILLIilG VORKERS frf sit her ttx, any f in any part of Ibe eoaatry, at tb pkF att waick w tmrnlabl Yoa aacit ot b any from hoaaaovcraighl. . Ta cam gtra j inn ptinlTii foltia woiV. imlj jiwi nnni mil , menu. Aj capital 15 aot reqatrtti yoa nia ao risk. VTc inpply yo with aU that ia neaded.;it wiB I cost yoa aoUtiag to. try the badness. Any on caa do the work. BeginiMra aiaLf aatrr ftoam thattart Failaia U ankaawa aha oar worlnn ary boor yoa labor yo aaa easily make a doHai Ho om vbo la wUUb to wore faOatoaMkearar.'. oraary orery day tbaacaa ba Made is hre day at aay ordiaaryeaiplayvtrat. Scad Ibr ttr baolr oataiaiac Um folleat tnfr; awtiaa. -. -. - II. i!ALLETT & CO.f ' ' --Box 880, FC.1TL AND, MAINE. . DI7. HUMPHREYS' Ui Specific No. SeYenty-Seien -- - -- - - rOB THE .CUBE OF '. . s 'With all ita aymploms . of Lrfloenza, Catirrfe. Faina and Soreness in tha Head anl Chext, Cough, . Sore Throat sad genoral lYcwtzaUon and Fever. - Taken early it cats it abort promptly ; taken daring ita prevalence, preveata ita fain fcion; taken wtdl Buffering from it, a relief is speedily realized, which is eoo tisned to aa entire This bein? a New Bemedy, if your Drucjrta will not get H-tat- yon, it will oo sent prei or 5 for U HUMPHREYS' MEtMCtNE CO, Cor. William A John Bta, Hew York. 3il Clothing Ewarranted the Best in the World I Is more Waterproof, " v Is Stronger, and " will Wear Lowif? than tor other roods manufactured. - -. - ma mam rian DKAnu; uu mm 60. A. ZffiCKEL & CO. Sols agaala. BafSi WL IlLL IUU Mtfhin aew wbea we Hate that it paya to enrnj fca a p-rmaaeat, bkm bealthy aod pteaaant bu.- aou. I at retarna profit for erery day's wurk talt b) tbo baaiaeia we OaVr tbe workinr c&mss. We kEaeh tbem how to stake moaey rapidly, anil iraaraatea every oae wbo folk a oar instructions tUithiaJiy tbe autkiaa; of S34M-00 a muutli. fe.rery oee wao takes bold mw aad work will aarely aad speedily iacsraae t!ir earnings ; tbrrt caa be ao qaeetwa aboat it; atiiera aow at work are doiac it, aad yoa. reader, caa da tbe nnae. Taia is tbe beat payiaa; basioen that too have aver bad tbo cbaaco to lecace. Yoa will make a crave amistake tf yoei rail to gin it a at once. If voa craap tbo attaatioa, aad act quickly, you til) directly tad yourself ia s mjt prosper" siaesa, at wbicb yoa caa sorely ataka aad save arge saau of aeooey. Tbo- results of only a few ours work will oiteai equal a week's wages. VV aetber yoar are old or yoeioe;, man or wosaaa, it rs . m, ii ffi ii mi ii tta m are tell voa. and attA. eeso will ec yoa at tbo very start. Keitber expedeBea or capital aaerssary. Tboee wbo work fur aa are rewarded. Wby aot write to-day lot tuti parucavs, tree ' K- C ALIEN CO., Baat - tO, Aucasca, lie. It has permanently enred thocsank Cf essi'w proooaneed by doctors hope Awe. It yoa hare premonitory symp toms, each a Cough, DU&calty of Breathing; doa' delar, bat ase Prsoa-CUKE po CONSXillPTION tmmrxliatey. Py Druggist. 25 ceata "; - s jj" ' 1 : "j i WW BECEXT DISCOTERIES IS EGYPT. Intereetln? Incidents in the Days of Ancient Times. , Grant Bey, in the service of the Khedive of Egypt, reports to the Aberdeen (Scottish) Univer sity that during the excavations for a new terraced garden over looking the sea on the site of the ancient city of Alexandria there has been unearthed the actual tomb of Alexander the Great, who was the founder of the city of Alexandria and ho died, after his many conquests over the Medes and Persians and in Northern India and elsewhere of a fever brought on by a pro longed debauch at Babylon while celebrating the obsequies of his friend Hephaestion. He was under thirty three years of age at the time of his death, and the date of his death is put by historians in the year before the Christian era. The tomb of Alexander a soli tary sarcophagus was discover ed fifty feet below the present level of the city, and near it were found several subterranean chambers filled with ancient parchments and manuscripts presumably of great historical interest. Thirty feet nearer the surface and at some distance from the Alexander sarcophagus the workmen came upon a series of tombs connected with the Pto lemy dynasty. Of these tombs thfl only one as yet uncovered is that of Cleopatra. None' of the tombs or the chambers filled with ancient manuscripts had been opened at the time -Grant wrote, but he said there was no reason to doubt the truth of the discovery, "for the names of the occupants are -over the doorways of the tombs and the bronze doors are covered with confirmatory Greek inscriptions." The contents of the tombs had only been : dimly seen through interstices of the corroded doors by the aid of a magnesium light, but they seem not to have been disturbed since the original interments. The university au thorities, to whom Grant com municated these details, are said to be entirely convinced of the discoveries. Nor would it be at all somris- Ing that the body of Alexander should have been brought down from Babylon to be interred by his devoted followers in the city he had founded on the borders of the Mediterranian sea, and to which he bad given his name. With respect to Cleopatra, Alexandria was the capital of her Egyptian dominion and the burial place of the ototomies who had toundetHn Egypt the Greek dynasty of which she was destined to become the last sur vivor. ' It was Cleopatra who had brought down froni before one of the great temples on the Nile, and sec up in Alexandria the fine monolith so long known a Cleopatra's Needle," which now ornaments Central Park, io Aew York, and history records that it was in one of the mau soleums of the Ptolemies that she invited ..Mark Antony to meet her after his irreparable defeat they might die together. ' Deceived by tbe report that she ' had already committed suicide An tony killed himself. In tbe meantime Cleopatra had sought an interview with the victor, in the hope of moving him to clemency, but finding him obdurate and bent on car rying her a prisoner to Home, she deceived the vigilance of her guaids and put an end to her life in the thirty-ninth year of her age by subjecting, according to the common version of tne story, her bosom to the bite of an asp. And - now bv one of those strange chance.-that so often oc cur in Egypt, are simultaneously unearthed the tombs of the greatest9 conqueror the world had then known, and that of the most fascinating woman of her time- Bait. Sun. The Deadly CirTarette. , Dr. B. Beverly Cole as quoted by the New York Medical Examiner, explains tbe destructive 'effects of the cigarette, in ' an article - from which we extract a paragraph or two. He Bajs: T "It is the young men of tbe conn try who are being rained by i-i-aalinKobacco smoke, and unless, some effective inhibition oan be suggested tbe outlook for a sturdy, clear-headed, energetie whi'e race ie gloomy. "Cigarette smokers draw long woiffd into tbe mouth, and then by a reversed action ofthe mouth and (aacee fill their lungs with the re sults of combustion ad carry smoke into contact with tbe great absorbing surfaces of the lungs, wbere tbe noxious elements are passed at onoe into tbe circula tion and traverse tbe whole body under the most favorable conditions potteible for doing harm. 'When smoke instead of air is breathed, the Jung's ' tke np the volatile and enbtile poisons wbicb result irom combustion, and the carbonic acid gas is slightly, if at all, got rid of. A single whiff from a cigarette, inhaled deeply, affects tbe smoker more than a pipe fnl of tobacco or a strong cigar. 'The tobacco heart' is produced by the continued practice. In that diaease a kind of degeneration en- ueB. The muscular tissue oi ine organ becomes friable, like liver, and can be readily picked to pieces It may perform its functions fairly well under ordinary conditions, but any startling incident producing eurprise or excitement, is likely to cause it co suspend, and there is no aucoor for one so afflicted. "Oigaretts will stunt men, arrest nutrition and hinder development. The French Government, as a re sult of its observations in the mili tary schools, absolutely forbade tbe smoking of cigarettes. It baa been said that tbe gradual lessening in stature of Frenchmen was to be at tributed to the almost universal habit of inhaling cigarette smoke. It impairs all tbe Inaction", tbe eye sight, moral preemption, mental grasp-and physical power, and in return does no good." N. 0. Ad vocate. The Handsomest Lady la New Berne Remarked to a friend the other day that she knew Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs was a superior remedy, as it stopped her congh instantly when other cough remedies had no effect whatever. So to prove this and convince you of ita merit any druggist will give yoa a sam ple Bottle free. Large size 50c. andfl. MORE TROUBLE FOR fOOR HAH-MI. Plan to Overthrow th.i l'roviion;iI Uoyernment An Knsrli-ii Protec torate. Hooolulu, M-iroli V i tj ; . B. 0 , M ircli 14 A uitiuiiui-iir,i Auglu Amentum riupurier of ill deposit! Queen nayi llit roalirn have lusr nope of her re-t jr itioo by the poein at Wttwbiugt m, but de clares i he provit-ional government will not u tolerated one day after the Hul deci-iiou of tbe Washing ton aut horitien reacbert Honolu lu. The nutivea intend to riNe and restore t lie t'l I order. Being iberi who wo ild lend I he insurrection nativen. white-, Euglieh, or Atueri caos Ne replied: The l -adeirt are Ameiican ar,d English, and the whole native and JapaneHe population ih to follow at a moment's notice." Then he went, on to my t'te roy alists bad the. assurance of Mrong moral aid from England and J pan. Tne ident cal coarce mapped out by Hteven and the committee Of safety will t pursued. British andJrfpiuese marines will l.ind, and the provisional goverumeut will be forced to surrender. If tbe royali.8 are, soucessful Liliookalani will be re tored, mai tial law declared, the meinoei'i ot the provisional government ariew ted for treason, and the British minister will declare a protector ate, as StevenB did. PIEXOTO WANTS DA G.VMA. He Is now on Board the Portuguese Warsliip He Desired Refuse Under the British Flag It Was Denied Uncle Sam's Snips Sail Sat urday. The French warship Magon, on which Admiral Da Gama sought refnge jast prior to tbe surrender of the iu -urgent fleet, transferred Da Gama and eightotber insurg&nt officers to the Portugese warship, and then pnt out again. Several boars later, a French mail steamer was stopped a she was leaving port, probably because tbe Federal authorities cuspecced that she carried the insurgent ad miral. Her jap tain proved to the satisfaction of tbe Brazilians, bow ever, that none of tbe insurgents were aboard her. President Peixoto and his cabi net are considering whether or not tbey wil demand from tbe Portu guese the surrender ot Da Gama. It is known that tae insurgent admiral was more anxious to get an asylum under the British flag, which has been more or less at this service fioce ihe beginning of hos tilities. Lit, applied for passage ou a steamer of the Royal Mail Steam Pgcket Company, whose vessels ply between South American ports and Southampton, bnt the captain declined to carry him. The United States war ships will sail 06 Saturday. Da Gama Will fly to Portugal. LlBSON, March 15. Aocordiog to despatches received here from Bio to-day. Admiral Da Gama is on board tbe Portuguese warship, Mindello, with 500 of his sailors and marines. The despatches say that the refuges will be brought to Porto f a I. All Quiet In Costa Rica. Washington, D. G, March 13. The costa Bican Minister, Mannel M Per a Ita-, makes the following statement: A telegram from New Orleans, March tbe 12:h, published in this mornings papers, purports to give information about a revolution in Costa Bica.No such revolution has occurred, ncless seme electoral uabbles at the end of February, promptly quelled, deserve that name. There i no reason whatever, to fear of even to predict a c ivil war in Costa Rica. Tbe country is quiet The sensational rumors reproduced by the press and the same contra dicted officially one month $90,000 Repairs to N. Y Oflle Washington March 19. Mr.Dnn ptay, Democrat, of New York, of fered an amendment' giving $90, 000 for repairs and improvements to the New York postoffice. So tbe amendment was agreed to. TO KEEP HER YOUTH a woman must keep het health. All tha "beau ti llers" in the world wonl do as much for yon at Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription. With that, you can see the good that'i done, as well as feel it. That regulates all the wo manly functions, improves your digestion, enriches your blood, brings re freshing sleep, and buildt tm. strengthens. And re. pairs every pert of your system. In every one of the "female complaints" and weaknesses that make women old and miser able, the " Prescription " will certainly cure. It's the only guaranteed remedy. If it doesn't benefit or cure, in tbe case of every weak or suffering woman, she'll have ber money back. You pay only for the good yon gat. There's the very- best evidence that Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will cure your Ca tarrh. It's this promise, made by the makers of the medicine: "If your Catarrh cant be cured, no matter what your case is. we'll pay you 1500." There is one body who is wiser than anybody and that is everybody. Hundreds or Witnesses, Stomach diseases, such as indiges tion, dyspepsia, etc., are hard to core with ordinary remedies, but Toner's Dyspepsia Remedy never fails. Thous ands say bo who li ive been cured. If you have a htomacb trouble it is your duty to investigate until you God a enre. Send for book of particulars ''How to Cure Dyspepsia" free to Ohaa. O. Tyner, Druggist, Atlanta, Ga. A South Carolina gro Giantess. roe tram iron i i-i'imni i i im night had on bi .iil .tSmth Un -lina negro giantes. Hi r name is j Alice Shannon, and she a. mi tie 1 way from (Joiumoia to .New ore to join a dine museum. The woman i- years old and stands exactly seven feet and three inches in heignr. She weighs only 175 pounds wt.i.'h won d eeein rath er light for a woui.m oi If i len-rb She has lived ia or near Columbia of her life, and happened to attract tbe attention of some Northern tourists who offered her a place in a show. Char. News. Answer This Question. Whv do so many people we see around as seem to prefer to suffer sod be made miserable by indigestion. Constipation, rMwinoaa. Loss of AnDetite. Coming no of the Food. Yellow Skin, when for 75c. we will sell them Shiloh's Vitalizer. guaranteed to care them. Sold by New Bern israg do. 4n I it ii THE DISMAL SWAM I. An lute ro.titiug Description oT it and n Brief H'story of its Early day Tlit 'resident 's recent hunting -tlit i n , iimig tbe coast of North ' ilina lias awakened new lnter .. . hi fhar rt-gi u), i lii mosc not iile ib.tnim oi which is Ihe gie-it. Dismal S.nnp. Tin vast morals is called i paradise for huntsmen, hi tbe Library of (Jongiess is a copy ui a nuitjue report of a partial survey made or this swamp in 1 7 'J by Col. William B rd of Westover, Virginia. The original of this re port was eut to (leorge Hi with a petition signed o.v a inimDi r ol 'ir ginia planters, asking the King to give I he in permission to tiraiu the Swamp and to give them tbe re claimed lata 1 wiiio1! w,is to lie nee from taxe lor len ;ears. Col. Bitl gucs a teir ti'e de- scriptiou ot the p to th King. He wiole ilitt all s, beaits roamed at will an i I tint members ol b party often sank to thei necks in the bocgv soi o i wild n rough it ex illol lllg a- n i m t-t an d lit; s t (1 ''the un w bole.iome d ,im lis" made ii necessary lo take alo.i plenty o! that "bt si cousuler id HIV, tun'1, which ttie did. He wtoie thitt when he g.H to Ihe Noith Carolina lino he luuuii the ''Liziost lot til ineu" he ever saw, 'that they made their wives get up and make C:e lice for them every morning and I hey Nuored in ia tbe bed until the sua was oie third of bis way across ibe heav ens" etc., all of which prompts me to write that 1 hope he bad too mach ot bis ''best consoler-' uuoard. La ter, i lie eminent geol. gist, Sir Ch.ules Lytll ol Kuyland came over add gave a very dilTar eot account. He measured tbe swamp. He found it to be forty-live miles in extent, lie visited Like Drammoud which be IbuQd was seven by five miles in extent and one of the most beautiful lakes he bad ever seen. He decribes the tall forests of cypress and juni per with their fairy like draperies of silver grey moss, most charm ingly. Lord Lyell aljo found out tbe most peculiar thing about the Great Dismal, viz: it" is twelve feet nigber ti an Ibu Him outlying couu try. Tbe altitude is most at the centre. There are many romantic Indian legends cjnuected with this swamp. When the poet, Thomai Mjore was in this conniry be visited this mysterious and beautilul marih, beard tbe story ol tbe Indian gi.l and her crazy lover aud wrote the popular poem which embodies the legend. Many people who live near believe Lake DrummoDd is a rendezvous for the ghosts whicii are supposed to haunt tbe swamp. This Boperstition arose from tbe number of ignes fatui which are really seen every night in almost every part ol tbe Dismal Swamp. Tbe negroes are specially afraid of this exteuf ive bog, aud partly for this reason, the place abounds with opossums, coons, rabbit", tqnirrels, and all sorts of sural! game, with an occasional deer or bear. It is useless to tell them tbe flitting mysterious lights they see ui night are burning gasts which rise from the feus and mar shes. Tney would not believe it. I have tried to convince them of this and the result was a pitting reproof for my scepticism. They have all heard tbe story of tbe In dian hunter and bis lady love who are t opposed to cross Late Drum mond at midnight in a white canoe'', and the m rlads ol the Will of the wisps who escort them. The "White canoe"' tbey claim to have seen at midnight on the bosom of tbe dark lake was perhaps a Hock ot white swan, birds wbicb with wild ducks and turkeys and marsh bens are found in great numbers io this locality. I recall a picture of tbe Dismal Swamp I once enjoyed. It was in August and I was ridiug through p trt of itekirting Lake Drummond. A glowing sunset was fading into a hot moonless twilight; no breeze stirred the gossamer tendrils of the graceful moss or dark glistening leaves of the cypress trees. The black wter was as silent and motionless as if a magician's spell rested where the crested ripples should have been. Its surface re flected a few stars which shone out of the mm ky liquid with as sinis ter and uncertain a gleam as If every one was a baneful and ill omened Algol. The air was heavy with the odors of tbe yellow jessa mine, tbe mimosa, the magnolia and the aroma of countless shrubs which grow in profusion in the dank rich soil. It seemed like a vast cathedral in which restless spirits of evil might worship. Tne incense from "censers swung by unBeen bands" bore perfumes too heavy for tbe nostrils of healthy mortals. The twilight deepened. Through the aisles ot tbe forest tbe massive trunks of tbe cypress and juniper trees looked like columns of dun colored marble, arched with a dome ofdaik foliage, frescoed with a delicate tracery of pale grey moss through which not a star or Heck of blue sky shone. Adown these dusky aisles balls of fire would flash and fade as if the will o' tne wisp had employed a band of impish acolytes to light hundreds of uncertain tapers on countless movable altars. Decaying trees covered with gleaming phos phorus, either stood erect or bent prostrate along nd adown these m j stei ions vistas like goblin priests or spirii 1 of white robed Carmelite uDDit celebiatmg a vesper service in this weird minster ot exquisite workmanship. The Lake wits its Ktai ry reflections was li ke a tesHar. ed floor of black marbU; the g-i in ed an Ins bore the fain i;-e tracery of the nlver iror- nri a thick c.tIiop i I ;!aiU green leaves. N- sound ciiiie, irom the reedy njar.-dieM. no whisper from the mo tionlefS tieei-, no song from the 'invc, hircl.-, no ripple from the i,l -. v .iter. Hilei.ee was sup- utiit- tui in ent-', until Ihe ear cuugni, a li i if monotone like the note of a bass pedal of a mighty organ at a great distance, aud rec-1 OgniZ'-d l he roar of t he ocean's sui I breaking on ihe brst ol a chain o! j rocky reefs which culmiuate in the j rhnnilers and tenors ol siono- lukoul null w i tek-ftre wu HuLter as. It was fitting masic for this unique temple of nature. Tbe soft er diapasonof snging birds and whispering leaves, cf noisy brooks and rustling reeds would have been out of place in this vast shadowed amphitheatre whsre some Circe or kind of tbe Gnomes might have as sembled their followers and cele brated their sinister orgies. Or, where the spirits of tbe usepulcher ed dead who have been wrecked i oil' lit treacherous oast s;rco eartu's !-. une t limes give bnh to t lie hidden d mil dunes ind moil ster ho ilder-, might Ii .!d t (nightly carnival- I suddenly i.-aliz-d I did nor bl ine the ::eK;otn hi) uiucll to be ;im v:li., t I ii Pl.t' hour O1 f he eveaui; In Hi" :uv.i Irom the L ke wf t he Dk-hihI Scmp. RKA KftY Of TIIF, IIKillKSr TYPE. A Man ( an ii . n Kiiriiinsr id' Hi n:i mite li-Niii a I'uil ioiir mi Fire. A few n il i ts ;i l! . a I hvvm'vcii room il w. 1 1 i ii li. ins,- ,i r 1 1 -Black mini', m-ar Indian Trail, t'itit inihts west i.f Muni",-, caught on tirt- and Mht.- c:iiiu iit'ar In." i n iT i m - f 1 1 io m i i , I , , n, I . (ul cat asl r, iphi -s -t r kci.'.vn In this section. Tilt! hn'.lsi; was ii -flljii.-il bv Mi'ssrs. ('. M. ami l. . Knyu and Ihcir farnili'. 1 1 1 - lumn which caught mi lii'- w-is next tt t ho ono ncriipi'-'l 1) v . : ii mi M rs. ( '. K. IJ.ivte. fii,.i was u ..m as a storoift lumn l-.r mm material-. M r I '. M . 1'. . ' , awaken, -d iv ' h. 1 ! , el th- M-.lVCj Cl ,., mil i.f .l--.th.-r. -OV.T.-.1 I nvit iii ih.at i . ,. c ui -h-.nl. I'm- lice and as sooa : - ii what the trnu!;.- a his room a n. I - When Mr. 1 . . !; the lire h,- c: ; ! ' G Oil, the .! n- in room." No one can port r sternal inn in tha' h they all knew th it s Ml- nr. tl ia I hat room, which was then on lire and the tlames untier full head way, were many j-oiiad-i of dynamite and over a ilimisaml dynamite caps and other e.xplo uves. The miii,'r.-w-.-ll kn.-w the explosive power of that material. They knew full well that unless something was d me and done quickly tha' the building would be blowt to atoms, b 'light was impossible, for in all probability they would have been killed had they been 20(- yards from the building, besides the children were asleep ami it would have been impossible to have saved them all by fight. There was also a family asleep in another building near the one on fire. As soon as Mr. D. A. Boyte mentioned the dynamite, Mr. C. M. Boyte rushed into the room and caught up the box of explo sives which contained eleven hundred deadly dynamite raps, and which was already on lire, and carried it in his arms out into the yard and a saf'- distance away from the burning building. The box containing the explo sives was a wooden one and had a pasteboard lining inside of it to protect the caps from concus sion. When Mr. Boyte carried the box out tho top of it was on fire and after he extinguished it and examined the box he dis covered that the heat had ecorch ed the pasteboard and had caused the bright brass caps to turn purple. The brave and heroic act of Mr. Boyte surpasses the flesh creeping story of the dime novel writers. It was bravery, not of the foolhardy, sensational, am bition kind, but was bravery of the highest type. Monroe In quirer. Kespect the Feelings of .Olhtrs. "Had I a daughter to traiu," said a woman of the world, "one accomplishment above'ad shouldbe taught her to make herself agree able without descending to make fan'of other people. Mjch.it not most of tbe fun current among young folks, consists in picking others to pieces. "Bright people are given to ua iDg their wit very freely on others who have the misfortune to come near them. "Women especially regard the world outside their immediate cir cle as created to afford them amuse ment not of the most amiable kind. They are not discriminating enough to see what underlies and offsets the peculiarity which pro vokes their fun. The iP-iressed, harried woman is commonly trying to carry affairs whose buulens her critics would shirk shamelessly. No wondar if the brave spirit steps awkwardly aud sometimes unbecomingly under the load she can just bear without I:.-, .iking Those who bait their tuu on her must laugh and laugh again unheed ingly. His Body Was Tm-ueil l-i Stone A remarkable -. rf petritica tion was discovered when the t -dy of Solomon Kreepps was exhu -a-if the other day, in Taylor's Ce.n tery, near Brownsville, Pa., for u moval to another graveyard, 'i grave was near tha fence vim i. separates tbe cemetery from : h National Pike, ami it is suppost ': that water, percolating through ti limestone loadbed, h id kept tha body covered with a calcareous so lution. The clothing was found w. 1! p - served, although the hurial m 1 place eight years ago. T-.e hair beard were criso. and lelr like threads of glass The iod w .-. en tirely turned to -'tun, ami ?n Ii trd that powerful blown with a pick and shovel m ide no impress ion. Make it Rich. It is estirn.t ' per acr t - . .t i n. . i this eetlma e c :, !.' e ni..ii who make?- " ') p ; s a imr cot ton to tbe acre ,.i,u - u. ,t ;.t mi cents a pound de.u.-i 15 per -.t.-e, while the man who cultivates four acres to make .";;( pounds loses S'iO s ' nee he get... only .'(( for a crop up..:; Inch he l' Js exi etaled '(!d T'b.h is j I ii,. l-gniing and sw that a man c oi ii t .ilfotd to cul i vte poor In ti. Aii'iu: 170 puunds istheavarage for the Sourh, so that some'Midy at the present price, is bonnd to lose money. Warren ton Uncord. The Population of New Berne Is about nine, thousand, arnt we would say -it i!-:isi one-hLilf nro troubled with some so'eciiou on the Throat and Lmij;s, .-is those eoiuplaiutti are, according to sr.n dsti. s. in. ire niimei-otis tliau tluti. We w onlij :i A iso all our i e,-ulers not to lie- On- upi.i.rt unity in can on Llioir druyuist anil ei a botl'e of Kt-miiV I'.rtl- sain for tho Throat au.l Lunef. Trial one fir-e. Large bottle rUc. aiui ?1. Sold by all druKfjists. Largest Opal in Hie World. YVord comes from tbe opal mines of the finding of the largest opal in the world. It is as large as a hen's egg, and without a flaw. It is estima;ed that the gem willdresa 225 carats and prove of the highest quality and immense value. Cald well, Idaho, Dispatch. AT WHAT AGE IS SUCCESS W0. 1 he Opiniou of Eminent Men Yaluable Points for Consideration. The New York Press has started , an interesting question. It Ins in terviewed a nniiitier of prominent j men concerning the age when snc j cos in likeU i,o (Muie, -tad here are j some of t ne opinions on ihe hub i.jcr. I C l'. iluntmgiou ihitiks tbat j 'Success may lie won by any man. n- rna'ter how old, who is honest, lnteliigenr, liidust riorja. and willing to liv .-iiii I -H-, i h an he earns I have known men.'" sa il tie. '-who lit-Ertn I : o f ise in life all , r t he :i e of hi't v." j Sena in Millti, of T. xas, says i th it a in in :uus- make Ins mark 'i -lo e he in 10, and he must get his ; h ird work done before he i-i 55. I ;tio ii,,: me th ,,, i,e understood that ' . II :he world niur know he has i il U'le hi- lii.li k liepoo lie is 10, but 'In- is i,.-t h;i , -hi. itte li b that lime, an i in order to do this he must ' 1 J, 1 : o III ike I w i it'll he ir. OUDg, - ' ' i h- i one he is 25. Il the i ! -a ol" success be the accumulation a un i.e in must by ti.e tin.e be ii 's i e idt d he lafcv nge have ia tia something e , .,( i' Uo-A' ; 1 1 i he tune. I (Jeorg,.. I 'l ess Ui at lie i v t i ach le t F. Shrady toal the w i-t s,r. ii en do not Mii-in-w wliiie Ji ung, ::.u : l.e same opinion taiili-.l by (ten. J.ttiies was enter w h o thinks g-i--a lieallli, de'ei nana! ion ;;nd ..-.ilit) will tiling siii cess to a m-n a' -ny age. Gen. .)ame.s backs up Ins opinion bv inakuit t!ie lollo.v 1 1. g i liust i at'ons: Abc.hifn L'ucoln wa, not a success in I he ordlt.-.try c it-p'atio! it t !i e ' er ai ui-f 1 tin meitioi ,1 !. tieo.ite ie; ween turn and D.aiglas, and that was in 1.S5S, wham Lincoln was 10 n ears of age. li fore that he v.i . accounted a smart W stern lawyer, a shrewd politician onl. and yet all the world knows thai airer that he became tbe groat figure of the ccuutiy. Tho man whose name has gone doti in bi tory as that, of tbe General who fought more battles and won more victories than any other soldier, Ulysses S. Grant, was piactically unheard of rintil alter l.siio, whan he was ".' years old, and it was not until after he was 40 that he really began to make the wide and deep mark which he has left on tbe re coida of the civil war. When Enhu Washburn called upon Grant to preside at a meeting held for tbe purpose of raising re ci nits in Galena, be chose Grant htcaus i he was known as Captain (1 tut, and in spite of the fact that (iraut. was then as conspicuous be cause of failure as he after ward be c une because of success. Charles A. Dana was not successful in the larger sense of the word ur.ti! he got Tbe Sun LSo'7 or ISliS, and in 'G7 Mr. Dana was 18 years ot age. He was managing editor of The Tribune belore the war at $20 a week; during the contest he was Assistant Secretary of War, and after peace was declared he essayed journalism unsuccessfully in Chi cago. Tbe secret of his success lay, of course, in his magnificent men ial endowment primarily, but be has always had good health and no failure ever caused him lo lose heart . Ex-Mayor Gaae-. I New York, g.ve as bis opinion tn.t a man has a plenty of time to tie successful after the age of 45, aud Judge Noah Davis is of the opinion tb it a man must display ability before be is 10, but bis success may come after that. Now this is the way Gen. Horace Porter puts it: "A vigorous man may win at 70; most men oaght to win at 40, if tbey are going io win at all, though there are those who hold tbat a man does not attain his full powers until be has lived two score years. Ton know the military adage, "Old men for counsel and young men for fighting," and this is fru- of Jiili tary life, because martial success depends as much on physical v-gor as mental. Gladstone's wonderful vigor makes him a batter fighter at his advanced age than be ever was before, bat Gladstone's success began when he was youog. I do not think your qaestion could be an swered to fit every ease. It depends upon the mau and his conception of what success is." Confederate Ball at Washnigton. Richmond, Va., March 13. Gov ernor O'Ferral has through his chief of staff, issued orders to bis staff to assemble here on tbe 2Stb of this month to go to Washing ton to attend the ball of the Ladies Confederate Auxiliary Association of that city. It is probable the Gov ernor wiil take a large party with him. It is understood tbat Governor Brown, of Maryland, and staff -e 1 so expected to at'end the Two Kinds of Wniin n n -t ,1 !r. Pierce's K.t i'r ( ; timi- those who a I n- mole ', and those wh . a . o.' : , well. It build ui. i . v -o . . , regulates, and uures.. It's for young girls just entering womanhood; for woman wbo have reached the critical "change of life''; for women expecting t become mothers; for mothers wbo are nursing aud exhauster!; for every wo id -in who is run down, delicate, or ova rworked. "Favorite i'recription'' is tho ouly remedy so uni'iihng 'hat it c au be guarantee. 1 I' i' doesn't beuefit ... cure, in cveiy e.s -, the money will b . re' un on Chok sneezing and eve'.v 'titer form of . atari h in the head, is radi cally cured by Dr. Sage's Catarrh Rem. dy . THE Y 10 LET. Down in a green sliadv ln-.l A niinlest violet crew; fl stalk was ln-nt, it Iiuiil; il head, As if to hide Irom H.-w. And ycl it was a lovely rTowir. Its colors bright and fair; It might have graced a lady's bower, Instead id' hiding there. Yet, there it was, content to bloom, In mildest tints arravctl; And there ilill'iwil its sweet perfume, Within the silent shade. Anony mom. Shiloh's Consumption Cure. m This is beyond question the most HUCceHstul Cough Medicine we have ever sold, a few doses invariably cure the worst cases of Cough, Croup and Bronchitis, while ita wonderful success in the cure of Consumption is without a parallel in the history of medioine. Bines its first discovery it has bjen sold on a guarantee, a test which no other medicine can stand. If you hare a cough we earnestly ask you to try it. Price 10c, 50c, and $1. If your lungs are sore, cheBt, or back lame, use Gal lon's Porous Plaster Sold by New Berne Drug Co. A Cry in Slur's V Ayer's Cherry Pectoral "Ono of my children had Croup. The ense was attended by our physi cian, and was supposed to be well under control. One night I was startled by the child's liavd breathing, and on going to ii found it strangling. It had nearly ceased to brent he. Realizing t hat I In- .-lidd's alarming condit imi had become possible in spite of the medicines gi en. I reasoned t hut such remedies would I i no avail. Having part of a bottle of A YKK'S Cherry Pectoral in the house, I gave the child three doses. ;il short intervals, and anxiously iiwaited results, l-'mni the moment the pectoral was given, tin child's brent hino- grew easier, and, in a short time, she was sleeping quietly and breathing naturally. The ehilil is alive and well to-dav. and 1 do not hesitate to say that A Y HP'S Cherry Pectoral saved her life." C. .1. Wooi.niaixil--. Wori ham, Tex. "I wi.-h to express mv high iippreciat ion ot AVf lfs Cherry Pectoral, having had occasion to use it in many ohm s. two of which. Y. 1 Owen and Jos. Johnson, were abscess of l In- lungs, involving almost t In- cut ire organ. The pat ien i were treated l. several physicians, ami wen- pro nounced to be in lie- last -tages of consumption. P. at;; placed in nr. hands, the ni.iii; p.u: of the treatment v.:i. A Y Kl.'-- i;.-:r 1, , i..ral. This was a I :' bt y i -a rs a a 1 id I a h men are now , to all appea ran. e. in perfet tly -oiind he.ill b. 1 have this reined, i u a number of ot h.i cases wilh Ida- fav.,r.il !e r.-sidt -." - .l..ii A. Pri'l ia:, M. Ii.. W. t liadeii, Imi. "When my children had the whooping cough, AVER'S Cherry Pectoral did them mure good than anv other medicine." Mrs. If. Biiockwem,, Ham . Tel. n. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral I'rrparo.l by Dr. ,1. '. Ayer t 'o., Lowell, Mass. Prom.pt to aot, sure to cure JOE K. WILLIS, PHOPRIETOH Of mi iflfii 'mm 2 -i I i ? 'A ,S $ vj E VV BERN E, N. C. 'tml'-xi-i tsnA AnuruHZTi Harbin f5 Ot-ilors solicitn-i and given prop-r al coution, with satisfaction toiai anteed. Terra ('otta V'nos lot- (ilanis an 1 liow --rs fnruisliad at tho verv lnwo-t ra'es. 52nd Year The Great Farm. Industrial and Stock Journal of the South, Ons Year For $1, To every subscriber who sends us $1.25 7e- will Bend Southern Cultivator for one year and 20 full papers of choice Garden Seeds. Sample copies rjd iremiom lift will be mailed FREE ou application to THE CULTIVATOR PCB. CO., Box 415. Atlanta, Cm. Tub Weekly Jourmal nd the Oulti Attor one j sar for 81.75. HQ 3) 9 H 0 it G H o 0 P H Q hip mnrM t 3 ! il i ' v 8 3 i tftk 2 Vk :s 80 H&ad of Driving AND 8TR0HG ACTIVE YOUKGt MULES Now is the time to Buy while I have -a large stock to select from They arc cheaper than ever before for CASH or Negotiable Paper. tXi tX ones, South Front St. Oooosite Gaston H0U8& the M mUlHER A Wakes to Find Her Little One Strangling, She Saves its Life by the Prompt Use of Vii- NSRVE l Pr.. r.. :. .v; iMI- T ; S..fl.-l.!HS ..-! (loath, J'" ' i t 1'nffiT hi .i:l i- Fcac.lc W. . - ... 1. in . ,-i ai'U-. , . .--.r -; t'.f..r.r.-. I,y ii.ui!. V , ?.'Will ..'Ini V.! it;,'?- t'i(;. - .: Gunranti-'-f i,ku,-1 rans Sic-1: llwi.i.-. la ' I 1 rtsl. . 1 1 i-ILI.S C'.lUi.viut, .1. v S.iiir.StmiiiiL-h. lv.-i . -. t ik-maiit (JUAltAMtKd 1S.--J. J o-7 ly F. S. DLTFFV, Druggist and Solo Agent. ! mm. m M v v mi sir s-,ffa rttJlU I I flUW& rfenJSa For Rent 895. Is tin1 11 nest truck farm '.in llast orn North Carolina, well adapted for all kiietls of truck. Mas all necessary buildings. Out- (1), mile of xMorehead City, N. C. Two hundred yards ol the A cv' N Pailroad. l-'or forms, ,. Apply to O. (J. P.KI.L, Narlowe, N. ( Ittn? T 3Et TS AH OLD VIRGINA HERO o r WHY NT USE TEEM? Prices as Low as any Good Che root. F. Uli-ich, WHOLESALE GROOER, NKW HEIIZIE, N. O. SES! FROIVa THE WEST E. S. STREET. ! i(J V?t fen h ZJ fyu-f If oii vii 11 1 a .stylish liirnoiit. Si nn i-i h i ii g gootl and neat, You do not need to look about Pail go K. S. Street. Mid e i-i y k imi ol hiu se y mi need. 1 la- a lung ;i nd useful I no o n-.e lor iii iiei s i hen to hoed, I' "i In- will sine sail you.' ' 1 lea! yoa light, and s II yoll cheap. )n is word you may rely, '.ml nil his pi oiu isi-s will keej), S. fi-: .in Ii i in t is be.si to l,u v. JKYAX am. SMITE! iite and Comuimi Meichants, -DEALKKS IM Iky, Grain, Sasd Ami All Hinds eed. 1 1 in ! . and a iltai Seed a special- .Millet, Clover, Lawn and Sun , tlry Grass Seed always on hand. Nave in transit large sjpplies ;ol Klourantl Truck barrels Also Truck box s and Crates. I Ilaggs, Un ilaps ami Parrel cov ! ors. SOLE AGENTS for the sale of the Cel ebrated Navassa Guano Co's. Standard South ern Fertilizers. (Quality Unsurpassed. Prices and terms to suit all. Call and see us. Bryan 5 Smith.n DOH'T OOJi'T- DON'T Ije' our child cut bin feelh on a ,!-! dsp-nm. I im KMllinK Oorbm; Comiiany'M Sood Sterling f,' jir n;i) c? t r i"ixro For $1.01) j ! r Si-1. I have a ie- rttilt l-ins )en ,a l0ot8- il(.,,; ' - JHIuir "Pins $15' hilier. , Those little Silver Souvenir Spoons at 75c.ts are not. high. tf?" Come and see nm. '- EATON, Tie Jeweler. 97 Middle Si. " ;f Opp. P-ipt'st f'hnrcli. , TO FARH-IEflSS Examine our Paris Green Sprayer For Irish Potatoes, and Agricultural Impli ments. ' L. H CUTLER L CO. ; HORSES! w 0 w Work Horses JUST RECEIVED
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 22, 1894, edition 1
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