NEW BERNE, N.C. APRILKth. 1894. CITY AND VIOINITT. . Qtbbttge are now Ring tiff in large qnjtn'itie, the shipmeits are up t about 8.000 packages dy. A usrul the A. & N. C. R. R. will gWe ery r ilei " the lOMi of May - from Mun-I-ead C :y t Xe lime in "i . order thai pnrti s fro. a b.-low inn -it-t d iheU-Mi'e Irr.w M . o id . xe i,- - A. tint ract-d i.- viiuj is in ri:ivs in -'' !h Ftw-Will I.!i3i chmh n Fh-et trrCT. If i-o wm.'-i. I 1 it We In sd.lv ' JEIiksr Wilsoi L6p:.ni the pn-stor, has etindO' tnl ! fur. lie expects ttssist- BCB Belt w ek ' New Beruians il! bj glad to li-irn - that we hi t Icive ihe. pleasure of ba v- S Mr .n.l VI l... , ri .11 1 wiuujiui 'muia niduui. I Uev came hxon the steamer Neae and are stopping 7 t Mis W. P. Burros'. 1 hey will spend m utc uuia ai jwjuuiort also. The Twin City Daily Sentinel in co.- v pointing Ev-Gov. Jarris 3 Sjontor says Jm acted wisely, ami ih-it in doinsr ?o he SOet ftbore petty section il prejudice'5, and .recognized merit. Tliis is u broad and f statesman like view of tin- appointment which is in accord with nea--;,- all the -expressed opinions upon ir. We publish in this iu ih- .-:..- scholarly address delivered by Uev. Ik 11. Pctree, pest or of the Church ot Christ in - thi city,, before his congn-gaiioo at the nooa aenrice on last Sabbath. Mr. Petree i- ia a, studious young minister of the gospel ' and a profound thinker, And has a bright .future before him. . j Among the oat ward bound passengeis r r. ii T-i i . Jfason, of Philadelphia, returning home. Mr. Mason came down to the Fair and . hi remained front then until how at Mr. &. W. Wulia. Mr. Mason was formerly . of Adatus Creek, and he still owns the fanu ".o which be then lived, lie and Mr. Wlllia were neighbors at the time. Mr. Macon visted the old jlace while : here. It wis ametett years to the month from the tiii) ha left it uatli his return. Eeter4 ! Keat, . At her bone in this city on Sunday BMroing, April 22d, 1894, Mr Sarah F., beloved wife ofD. T. Carraway, in tbe 66ta Jr&r of her age. . The funeral ook place from Christ . thuich at 5 otlock yesterday afternoon, . Ref, Mr. George conducting the serrice, - VTb pall bearers were Messrs. Geo. H. " KoberU, T. A. Green, Cha. C. Clark, XL DeW. 8tereoion, VT. B. Boyd, W. F. Boantrea, E. K, Bryan and J. A. Bryan. - Baytl4 ia a Baih Tab - . Yesterday aitern xin, Ker. D. II, Petrce of this city was notified that Mrs. J. W". tim -ft if Tt trlncr An ITU-n fffn-nt vaa niiita 01 ainl that she wished "him to come to s-e M. Sli M foil id to h - sco'j 1, hw-1 anil quite low the attending pjy-ucian pro . aouocin very utile hope of her recovery &ae told tho minister that she realixed that her days npoa earth were most pro bablyj very few, and aa the had never ' eoafeased Chnai, it was with tome tear that she lingered npoa her bed of siet- , - -liter reading the scriptures to her she told Mr. Perrve that if it was possible she wasted to be baptised. A bath tab was immediately fille I with tepid water and ia : the presence ot oily a few Inends solemnly immersal. She was put back to bed and verr xn wis enjoying, ap- parwatty, a sotrnd and rcftcshioj sleep. Mr. and Mxi Clayton were tormtrly of Hfde coontyt and have the name of be ing gocd and honorable citizens. j Ca-Mlaf aa4 Golajr. s. Mr. J. W. Marteoia, General Freight mod Passenger Agent of tbe W. X. i X Railroad and Mr. W. J. Cresswell, 8o- ' perinieodent of tbe South .-m express com pMj CUM up IIUU1 TT IIUIIULUU ui.; went down to Morebead last night with their (amities on a pleasure trip. . ' ' Eer. JJU WinfieW, editor of the Watch MB 1 i L 1 A. 1 i . k lOWCC, piHHoa uirouga aw aigiu en route -a. l T r a, TT. ' 1 Uf SJV uiipwu -w vuu j Jsa Nettie Sabistoo, of Harl owe, who kaa bees making a protracted visit to rela tires ia Onslow county, came up to New Berne and is risiting at Mr. Jas. E. Smilhl Onr Ihroier townsman Mr. J. F. Pretty aaaa, was in the city yesterday for the first time in some month. Ue is now.it wil be remeiubecevl, in the raw mill busin-ests at Stella. Ue will kare for his home to-day. at -Capt. ' Charles F.iwler, chairman of county commissioners of Pamlico is in the eky. Mr. Walter Pelletier of Stella and Mr. Xeonidaa Pellflier, or IVlletier's Mills are Spending a short time with their brother, Mr. P. H. Pelletier. Tb steamer Ncnsei-f .he E. C. I). line took OOt tbe following pnssciigers yi-ster-d:j: Mr. Mohlrr, of St. Paul Mm 1 , Pres ident of the Great Nor. haesteni Railroad, ; aad his family, who have been epemimg ' the winter in New Brrne. Many friends formed during their sojourn desire to see them come again. W TCaaivm n.l Lrnnir srods down ouite a e aamber of her citia- ns to attend ihe V. - & Court. Among them we note Messrs. W. I. Kennedy, Dempsy Wood, (. L. Hodges, S. M. tlarrell. Herbert Rout. tree. . W. CFieWsR. C. St.ong and Dr. C. B. Woodier. , Ifary L. Alien, came in on ihe steamer .. jna trt mtrui trvr wwks u-ltli rv!:it-es ia the city. Father P. F. Quinu lclt to speed a fe days at Goldsboro. Mr. Henry E. Hawk, wife aod daxrhter, of East en, Pa, are in the city. They are Stopping at Mr. W. F. Koch's. Mr. W. F. Aberly left for I'ensylvania. expecting to make a stay of about a week. ' - Mrs. Ii Greenabanm of Wilmington who has been visiting her ?iter 'Mrs. Crapon CA IV " -"v YoeL omce inspector ciuriru amveu m ' the city last nigh'. " - MJas Mable Pearce. age -it at Scuf . HuT-of the W. N. A Railnw-1, c in e i 1 ,l ;.. wtailin.r at fr R R ! HU vnicxuitl inei 1- . ..... ... 1 t Nixon's. Mr. Wni H. Olirer, Itft for Wilming ton fi iiit his dan. direr. Mrs. M S. W d- ; lard. " Mr. Ge... Allen an ived la--t night to . .pmidalewdaysmthecity. ?Mt F. J. liege, ot baieru. who maie a . notable exuibil ot poultry ami pet an i naals at the recent Fair, arrived on a bu-i- neastrip. He ia stopping at Mr. W. II. j posed ot exclamations and inte; -Bray's. j ogationa. UNITED STATES COURT. Judgre Seymour Prvsidin Fal lock et -Unusually Large Attendance. A few ni:nutf after In A. M.. eter day. His Honor. .In le Wimnir. oix'iioi the I'.S- Court in the Crueii eou:it eourt room .-olii ilorC. H. Aye.nk. Mar-l.al ('. .1. f'Hrrol!. CI. rk (eo'ue l.iwii iu.l .pute :i n'jml'vr of other I'niteil .S:av - otli.-iaS. attorney-, w'n vs, et. .. v. re pre.-.' t- The jury ;is iinpa uiasl a- ! i'ow-: T. I. Mal'.ion. foreman; A. U I). nnion. Unae lWk. V- C. I'iei.l-. V .1. Ji col.. Kuo-'i I.. no. A -I. Smi'li. .1 .lm Catr-ek. n. A. Iitham. U. 1' W1I ianiv I". Sue t. Tho-. Gr.e i. eol-. A. K- W.id.woi F. F. C'lie'TV. Ha. il mi yit.i eo'. . It., h- ard llardv. A. G. Ia'. .1. M. Wn;t. . The uran.l jan imp ineUvl, the Indue charvd taem a.- to the law. warii?d flie'ii u'lin-t nia! :ei. m provut'ons a:..l profe'-.nal witue--4; told the n it wa? particularly tho duty of otlioers to se? that die law was exivuteil etc He farther explained tluit in hi. courf, the oriiuinal pirt of whVh they raail to look after, 'here were no "0011111100 law" offrnscs, they leing all statutory ns far as they were concerned. This through witli. Mr. Samucl l larrell. a police officer of Kinston, was put in charge of the grand jury. Then commenced the calling of the other jurors and witness-.-s in the different cases set f r tria'. durii; which time his Hon. r ih-Mvn led f,..m the ! noli an.lJiiad . i. ,r -.!;; i. ' ati i I '.-t-t Uli.v In spector. Captain V111. Conard- The Judge wore a yellow ross in his lappel on tbe bincb, and a silk beaver when court adjourned. "Jud" wore no flower?, hut outside the wright of authoriy was as heavy us his Honor, while "Cii .il.t" wore the same blabd expression he had on in the cam paign of 1892. The docket was called and nil the cases save one dispose ! of in short order. The case Dot disposed ol was the one in which the counsel mil the defendant had not yet arrive 1, l)ut would b- in du ring tbe dav-that "he walked aav. and . 7 ,. hacl to walk back." Ills Honor corrected this with the remark, "You mean to say he ban away, and walks back-"' At 11:10 A- M. the court adjourned to 3 P. SL to give the grand iu'y time to bring in new busine. The following are the cas?s that came up : V, S. vs- A. B. Hawkirs. Continued lor payment of costs to Octob.T terra 1894 V. S. vs. J. O." Hawkins. Continued for payment rf coits to Octolicr term. 1894. U. S- vs. Frank Iocast. Retailing liquor without having paid the special tax. Jurv trial. Verdict guiltv. Thirty- lavs imprisonment in jail. U S. vs. Geo. D. Bowden- Opinion reserved. I". S. vs. A. E. Harper. Dismissed. Dismissed. Dismiss ed. . H. UzxeU Judgment, 3ci-Fa- De&ulting jurry. U. S. va. C. S. Hewitt. Sci-Fa. Delaulring jury. I". S. vs. Joseph Turn age. 5Vl.Fi- Defaulting jury. U. S. vs.-Fraak Locust, J and Jesse Howard. .Sci-Fa. pay cost. U. S. vi. J. P. Morris. Submits. Judgment. Obscene mail. One penny and cost. U. S. vs. (i. D. Swaine guilty. Retailing liquors. Court adjourned t 10 morning. Jihlgment l.x-k thus The Sew Enterprise. The Pine Lumber company bas built a fine new saw mill in this aity; the mill was started about ten days ago an 1 runs to perfect satisfaction. The dry kilns and planing mill were also started last week, and the company will be readv to ship dressed luoder the latter pat of this week. The daily ca pacity of the mill is twenty-five thousand Ie t This firm has also secured several tracts of fine IuiiiIkt along the Xeuse and Trent rivers. Messrs. W. F. Koch, W. F. Aberly, ' Henry E. hawk and Freeman Hawk constitute' the firm, firm. W. F. Koch is the President and superintendent ami W. F. Alerly Secre tary and Treasurer. They are both from Gilbert, Pa Mr Henry- E. Hawk, of Eastn, Pa., and Mr Freeman Hawk of Allentowo, Pa., are the northern sah s cian and collectors. We are glad to see t'uise men among u--. They have taken hold of their lusiness with a hearty good-will that pro-ages success. Good rr.the Atlantic Hotel. Mr. B. L. Perry, proprietor of the At lantic Hotel, M irehend, is now at Raleigh in the interst of the hotel. The im mediate cause of li i s going was that the military council of the State meets to-day an l he is there with a view to the en cvunpment this summer. He will also while there secure more boarders lor the Morchead season. One hundred rooms, a t hi r 1 of what the hotel contains, are already engaged. This is a remaikably gixxi showing to,- s. early In the season and ilonoly as good as it . list year. It show- that the populinty of Mr. P.-rrCs management la-t sear on is having its rffect. Those wjo h ive engaged rooms are from Marylan 1, Tennessee and Louisiana, and d'f&reut parts of this State. Xearly all engage for t wo months or more. We believe Mo-eheid never had a bet ter season than the appr-a- aing one will be. A Good Strmou I're-shling Elder excep" onally nno street M. E. ehu: h win lei preached an -oniioii at Hancock Hiii I adit, lit subject, "Why ;ir- 1 i fecteil w bile t h" o k 01- p, 111 s 1 pro polity. Tho nrini :i 1 i Ii a-- of th. u : l.t h I o' 1- - w ed w a- li.t too rih'.-u- a; (i.l's children ..il h- ..1 :p"i - 'he n ac cording io h ir 1: -o t-' n ' U ! them into the e'nari I r- he .K-.r,-, t-' .t he maye give them e.o'e 1 1 e: a hint Joy Ht last, while the wicked not being his children are not under his sp aria! ca'e aod are left by bim for awhile more to their own devices an 1 to destruction at last. For Carteret Lodsre Agao.llv nuiubv want il-mn to Car teret I.odg.-. near Ncwp rt. Monday nigllt to so-n- a week. The party con ed ot Messrs. '. N. Duke and his son j M ister Angie. and Mes-rs. (. W. Wa't. lO. J Walker. W. T. 0'ljr.en. and Ivirwan, f Durham; Mr Hmk.-TIolt. 'brother of t -.J .verno r T. M ami Rev N. M. Jurney ,.f M , Some ot the gent. emen intend I their famils. s ,hwn to the I..,,!g Hoi', Olive. I Ting ah 11' th. lirst ol M iv. A woman is principally cum- COXEWS ARMY. A Earning lias Re n Sent Them by the Washiiigtmi Authorities The c.misii.'iii-r ' the ) -ti;.t ol ( olnnil'iti after e. .11-u i tat i. ill noli the 1 1 1 1 1-i , t Att 'i nt in I Chief 1' ': 1 1 , ve ,--u. .1 a pi 1 1. lain, l Mil n! ' w.o if nir to the iiiilu-trial i.nni"- oi Coxi y Co.. now appio i liii.-t the Di-trict of C)u:i; wi'li tie- iv. .we ! pul p -e o! ar nh''ru on the tirst day of M iy u th :ii .n'eiiti a of'soeiir'.!!,' -ueii i.-''s'at! ve action as wi i t tie Ullellip - . . .11 rrv. I 1.1 1, trers 1 hrou ; !i - 11 -. 1 1 I'm. -appel 1 of h 1 IV .! nt y t h : i 1 1 v n 1 to th H.-.- ri i .. ri.iii-! the i I - m-t 11.- 1 n th.-ir 1 a ! . 11 " 1 .:), ' h -nothing lei I la fi. 00 1 1 t ii .1 II ' colli ill liter fully the local I. .Ill he h". mi it a iv I m t a.- n Mir a: iU lifting tlle-i.-' - laws, the v are -it isrie-! tre ite l as vagrant- The in lus-1 i-(i ,ir n marching on t 'A thirteen, e -ntaini u .1' A Liar's Licet.se. A ihihiIht of our thrnuiih the mail-, liceiive . i-f w ha h the t. except for the tiling 01 Division y.17. Ttie Ancient. K ckh-ss Order of Pros ' the We-t e.Ncd. printed l cpy. 'ank-: w in of lie peirieiil 1.1. I! 1.1 KS E 77, i in l',ri''; that-- is entitled to Lie trom the 1st day of Jan uary to the 31st day ot December, he be ing a duly qualinV I Liar and having satis fied the License Committee, of the. A. 1!. A 1. J . 01 1 . 01.11 ue .s a ... .i.ni ('."i'i pei"son to hold a license. As witness my liau.1 thi- the 2 Id day of April, 1894. L. H. A. Xotiier. Secretary of State to his Infernal Majesty. Some of the receivers took the joke in good humor, others doubtless kept it to themselves, while others got frightfully mad an-1 wanted to w hip the offending sender inside ot ten minutes if they could just fin 1 out who he was. Some who think t liu words too hard for a joke intend to have the Post Office department try to ferret out the sender and nut the law on him lor sending scur rilous messages through the mails. Changes at the A. and X C R It Mr. Wm. G. Boyd left for Washington City to take a situation as Tope-writer and stenographer in the same office in which his brother-in-law. Mr. Webb, is employed. Mr. Boyd has been with the A. and X C, Rail road eight years and for six years he has held the place of telegraph opera tor and train dispatcher. His presence will be considerably missed there by tbe public as he will be also among the sotial circles of his friends. While we regret to lose Mr. Boyd from New Berue we are pleased ut the opportunities that are opening before him. Mr. V. W. eiiadw-i.k. who has l-een assistant freight agent takes Mr. Boyd's place. Mr. 8 .L. Dill jr. takes the'position of telegraph operator at the freight ware house. CULLED ITEMS OF NEWS. Boss Croker evidently wants Bourke Cochran to realize that it is better to bj born humble than clo-iueut. There is likelihood of a speedy ter nination of the Great Northern U. R. s'.rike tv arbitration. The Behring sea bill is now a law; the announcement was made Monday in die House of Commons of England that it had become a law. Senator Jarvis' credentials have lieen re crived and placed on file in the Senate. There is an even feeling amoDg Demo crat! on the Tariff bill, it is expected to pass in a few weeks. It may be true that Senator Hill is not a good grammarian, but it cannot be denied that lie is a nard Hitter. The Anglo-Saxon race is in possession t one-third portion of the earth and rubs over 400,0()0,000 of its inhabitants. The failures for the past week were 219 against 166 lor the week before The Indians show their na'ural shrewd ness by regarding the proposition to make t State out ot Indian leritory w".h suspi cion. Governor Tillman bow-, to the liw. The South Carolina dispensaries are clos ed and the b iml tigers are reported blooming. There is a dispos'iion in som- quarters to mistake bull-tiea-l -lines, fo. statesman ship. People who don't want to be diinne 1 should keep their bills p lid aid pe qile who don't like to be otl'enJe 1 should keep their bids out of other people's busi ness. An explosion in connection with a volcanic eruption was. it is clakne I. heard l.T'HI miles away and was consequently rated as the loudest noise ever made in the world The daily explosio .s in the 1". S Seiwe mi v not a.-loud as that of th-.-volcano, but they are heard much farther all over the civdi.l world in fact. The Thir l piny people of Kmston called a meeting ou city elections Friday night, and failed to get enough to hold u meeting or to even ring the bell. Though every man in Ain-ric i were ns l-a 1 as Breckinridge, still that would not excuse him. He alone is responsible for his own acts, no matter w hat th. example set him . Tbe appointment of Senator Jarvis has ben received with wau-pn-.id approbi tion in the east, and also in the central parti of the State. In the we-tern por tion there is some dissatisfaction but even there the vast majontv of the expressions strongly approve the selection ot Jarvis. In tin- Senate executive at an adverse r p .rt was made nation ot Charles H. J. Tiy to he iccordcr of deeds lor of Columbia. Mr. W. S. d' P.. Robin- m t lie Fi rst Nat ion-, I bank, ot stvs 1h.1t ii,- w ill be able to nl Friday tile 11. ani-c- 'lort d In-tricl m th . 1 e Wii liav eiv. r of innglon tne de ion p. r p -si' a- and other redil ors cut dive! n l m the next t.nrty day-. V . -t r. i : at noon was the time fn the. big - rike of miners, 12 noo w. re ex p t.- 1 to go out at noon. The.r distri 1 ute 1 among the States is a- follows; P, m v-v mia. 50,000; Ohio, 2o,0uo,- low... o.OO. .'West V rgiuia, 6.000. Tenuo-ei and :. Iituoky, 5.000; Missouri. 3.000; A'.a Imm 1. '8,000; Colorado, i.iXM; Indian Territory. 2.000. The total is 13" The:.- is a pi 1 dj d'i dty t in. t tin- order I'm the strik.s will be disregarded in Kansas. Color. id 1 mid Iowa. Fridav Sen i'or Hnv'.y lua-le an tack u.mn ii r Ad."t lor lit- -tan I in 1 i'lvar nl' i' .x. v - arii'.. lb' d loiin e ) tin- -intone; '- expie-siii b. ia.- p. pu list N. hrask 10 m lavoi ot receiving them, alld Slid 'he -pi cell w mid II ive bet 11 received wi h tumultuous a.piau-- in a meeting ot anar lnsts. Trie whole ot S. nator H-iw ley'.-speech attr-ic o 1 a'tef tiou and the ln-t litterance pro. lucid a sce.sition A rep'.v bv Alien w a- out oil bv the aM' al ot the ho'ir 1.. t ike Up the tarifl bill. Machinery Ar vnii in the maiket for Machinery 1 f any k;ml.' If so w riie I.I HDEI.I. Com -1'asy. Cn.vnr.oTTE, N. C. for their cat ialogue and irices, they make the bjst. ot r v im i: yk 1 I'i:aks. Achlre-s )e!n e Pato ol the :! hi Kei. I) . p ,r(, ( litirch of c lirist, evt Iterne. (' III i: il ifiia.a -. T,i almost "Vance ;i- e 111 j 1 1 ; ' ! da thei 1- 1 .;. th- u '. r 1 1 i oi i i. - p Hi n 1 K -l.ll t I: pow 4ir 1 .111 - 111U t . w i'i 11 1 ie , , iu' s Ue ale -o power- 1 t I I - -I I! t I' O II of a L.',-, .J. ma.: i- . . . - V. : there is a 1 i : :a' 11 .'i.i '.. . ''!,.. 1 t'd with it. I w 1- p. r-.'ti.iily aiipiainte 1 with Jlr. a"nc. an 1 naviiio watelieil Hie nolee-iies- th it . 1 1 .1 1. t - - r i .- 1 Ins hitler davs. I iniii" h. 'oie you t"-. lav to speak a word in h - pia;-e. IO! us 11, cp fore spuid this hour in in. !itati;i; upon his chorions car- I't-i .11111 u ioiaiiucr -.roin 11 ics-oa- 01 . , . jn ,,,.,-r,, ,,r the ta-ks! eiicoiiiaoi-menl 111 perl. tuiui.' the ta-ks 111 i have to meet in coming veils. Wi- ne with 1 o pomp or pageant to- .l , .1 it ' I, . a- n. 1 I' in to ha vi its 111 11 :.t.i; -o.eniii.ty. ami anpressive a we 1 b 1: r a ! by t he r ' i of the drum or the thunder of the cannon. We come, not s 1 much to do honor to our Vance nil" hi- i-a- d from his toiis. fait to seize up oil tile spotiesj name he has be-j queath.-Ti 11-. .ml. holding it up before. 1 v,,u . Ill' to enuilati integrity, ting eouiitryiiieii. invoke you an example so adorned with ' . ia.lia.it with glorv. (ineoi tie- t-a -ly cii-toms ot the Io maiis wa.- t ' fi'.i tn.-ir hail- with images ot such o. tin ii fnnhi- s a- h-t 1 rendered tlitiii-; Iv, s ll.u-trtoiis. These linages cotisi-ted ot'n-.a-k- repri -. lit mg the Itat ures of the .li .1 I. With the co-Unne worn bv thetn. their at nor, and various Jtlii-r things in lie. tog 1 h ir po-;i ion among men, ami the glory th-y had won Tin v wiies) pi n ed around tiio an cestral hill as to convey the appeararve of living men. so that the descendant nad constantly before iiini the regular slic cession of his ancestry. I pon the death otanv nieiubcr of the fimi ly o! disti no tion, a wild and tarn' i t ill p'ocession took place. Tin so' anci-str.il masks, costumes, armor, etc . were placed upon the ser vants of the household, who arranged in the order of siicco ion, followed the new lv deceased to the market place, v. h- i e a eulogy was pron mnced over him,- and from thence they lepaircd to the tomb, to commit his l.ody to the sepulcher of his lathers. fhe off, ct of tins awful proces sion was overpowering' The young Ro man, as he gazed upon the datk ances tral line, apparently animate and breath ing, offered anew, Ins vows of patriotism, and caught a fre-h eiikiii.llenient of glory as it leaped Iroin the passing throng. We are assembled to-day. brethren, not to gaze o ., such an array of depart ed ones, not to 1 ok upon a theatric rep resentation like that, but to remember simply remember the pitriotism of our Vance, to contemplate his service, to place in our hearts the beautiful memory of his goo buss, and to reilize the truth of our text "Ac h, ii,g le il. 'jit enkth." Mr main purpose to day will be to im press on your mind- the solemn truth set forth in tho text, which is. that the con duct of each actor on the stage of life is to exert an influence in the world aftei death. It is appointed unto all men to die Death then, is inevitable. We mean by death, the suspension of the animal func tions. 1,11-1 the n lliitioll of th it challgi which leaves the eye close I t - 'h? most beautilul objects, the ear deal I 'he most nie'oeliou- sounds, th- heart dead to the teiulerest emotions. We moan by death, that period in tin- history of man. w here all that is vi-ible to tho eye. or tangible to the t'-ueh i- -hut off and the grave opens her dark b .sum and folds her cold arms over us : 11 our forget lulness and ob livion when the pleasures that may1 have .leelouded the sou!, the schemes of ambition or of In nevolence that may have engrossed the powers of tbe mind, the visions on whose beautiful forms we niay have gazed as they careered by like gor geous clouds moving in wind-heaven; we mean the period when those and all eNe that stirs the multitiule of mankind, shall have passed away from our contempla tion, and' we shall have entered upon another state, to be engrossed by the niightv scciie,s to which the present bids, us look. In this sense i'' hiiat dir. The doom hangs -n a'a. i:! -;1s passe I upon all, with a few x-options from the hour in which the Kne I ot' heaven proclaimed: '"Dust thou art. and unto tlust shall thou return:'' and m w.li it continue., until that peiio 1 shall have arriveel to the full display of wh.ch, John was ad mitted, when he "heard a voice out ol heaven, saying, there h 1!'. be no more death." Vance is elead: but his face has only been veiled Irom the living, w hile his actions remain to bless his countrv. (bid has so arranged it trial the agitations we give birth to while voyaging t ae se.i ot life, are to roll on with a elouhinint, ami widening sweep, gathering strtnglli in their ample etrclings till the dirge nt ti nes li-t wave bnakiog on the shore ol eternity shall b- lo-t amid the voices that people the (11 lless future. This is a solemn and unalterable fact It has upon It the fiat of he-. von, ami no di-affection mi our part can change it ; 110 str.ving to hide ourselves 111 the shadow of obscurity ea-l avail in exe l'id ing us from it awful application. We ;ire here, ni t-xi indetnicti I de el being 011 which has been -et. break that s..,!. fortuae can no 'so 1 . too . o I meats ,- endowed w ith a the s.-al of immortality No 111 u tal pow or can ( il - ur.ty . -f t..r a .,r ot lift it from ;n, nor e an the darkne. of th, lu-tre. God li is p h h -r di n Us it 11 lion u- ami 1 there it must ton-ver remain. The law ot our being, the law ot society, the great law of influence i-. that actions live after the actor dies. In this sense we aie ail architects, rearing piles on which caning go i.-rat i""s w ill gaze, when the n 11 lies of therj banders shal 1 have Peri -a t . 1 amid the 11 n emi-iii 1 er.-d pa-t. We are -.1 Ve- 111'. 1 1 '. 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 s ot These 11. a . ditfereti' 1st a dill' r.-ia e ill .... g, iod or spre e ling e mns-i I a-c s,i v: 1 . a 1 a-ting for uiii'--'iory 1 r shame, a- the-c may e.x lleaus of doing One n iy bo a - 1 by a ..w erillg .-. . . !' the world m y mode t y shaft 1111 "i winch th - i m i re-t; v, -in. ill: v -: nein- 1 onlv t s 1 1 in ho la l.t; v a, tal' 1. .re 11- mill I . 1 builder-, a!! me 1 11 ay I .e 1. ing ai ' 1 c 1 e 1 - 1 -ha 1 .-. Ihctln ill c t ill" n.l in tpid;, -with iu- . rk. lling lllillV I I IOI, stili olii p .. of toe ' IO p .rt ; e, -ung h Us ;a t. e V. o- a-t poj in 1 pari ol - I t ; bit I p ping - i 1 . r - - r 1 1 .-' 1 -1 i arc In -re. an 1 niu-t act in some iiidei-ry de d ha- in-cfibed upon ,iti. Lite- i- but one great ivgi-tre it w ho e cii-h d w - lh r i- cut -ling hi- i lei d-. d'iiese are to ) read by suo.-.-t. if ng ones, and are to influence them: and ultimately, his volume is to be in;pejte.l at the heava 11, and hv its con - e to he awarded. ha h I am trving to im- , , " n tin-solemn occasion. i-::a 1 v ' ' 1 1 iiui-liiiteit iiv the entire lii-tor tti d. We see the seal of one aoc a i t h in. a e ipon 1 h -1 a gi in rill" which foil a 1 w a - a re, 11, li -s ol impression, testing .ae!iir one. The events of 1 a-t 1 h i outline upon that Tln-.e 11. ay he, there list i notions marking a differ- i-llrr ill each. t tne sh nlows or the -iln-hine o il in- . lepar: 1 111; wti 1 1111 n 1 he daw ninu re-t with T-l . ni-tii. ...loll The 1 10 - 1 h it di-t U;-h all r.-M .hit n of ; ,-i tie- e'eiiiotit- .1 t hat v. hi. h toil w s. To I". 1 thi- 1 1 o.-trine nl' are v e t. at' r.liute wind t lie st rnizu io- i - "'i" "''"'- ';" t ia- -in 1 1 w Inch or , f our liii-i. r- in t'lei.iu-e of ft a ill lie -u'-i iju lit iici.ieveniei,'- 1 1 1 1 1 . f the I ,1 ill people, w uicli h;ie III nl to no 11 it 1011 ill the woi 1 1 1 III Tne ,1. eia nee 1 1 , a n 1 fesi ed t..w,nd die l'uri- 1 11 , pal e. I t hem lor the course 1 .f I I iii- -.in 1 solve winch re-ulted in the -el-I 1 nt . f N, w Fnghnid, and finally in j :t lie , 1-1, -nee ot t nis iree 11 ai ion. 1111: lu cre hole privations endured hy them from an oppressive hierachy, wrought in their souls a hatred for tyranny and a love- f i i-.-e. lo 11. Upon this aliment they fed their s ins a 11 1 t In 1 r da ugh tors ,- and 1'caiiniT these ill tile fieo, wild solitudes of America, where the green earth and the vaulted skv were crowded with symbils of free lorn, it is no wonder that tiie altar of Ire. -do n was the great colo nial heart, and that when she demanded it, each hardy descendant was willinu to vield. as his .-tiering, his own warm l.ioo.l. luir Iree institutm-lis toumieil upon 1 truth and ju-tice, be'.ir upon their front the high seal ol prosperity and ot nation- rv; a id receiving the honinge ot the friend tiio might I lib-.-rtv elsewhere, proclaim I the influence of that g. m ra- tint). Nor is it less true with re-girel to the revolut ions by w hich ecclesiastical pow ers have bee n shaken. Take for ex ample, the Lutheran relormatioa be hold what a moral change suddenly pass ed upon the wori'l through the influen ce of one master spirit, anil the actions of one gen ration. A tearful darkness had settled upon the religious world, and extendeel its effects to the civil powers. Man was sunk in the scale of being fear tyramzed over the passions anel ri-asiHi was bound in the chains of sensualism. Biutal, lawless, lust and gre'-dy ambition trod the eatth with a dominant step; s ii nee. honor, virtue, patriotism and devotion were forgotten aad i-vel'V right, human and divine, were disregarded. An awful night had cast ita lull over the world, aiul darkness unre lieved by the beam of a single star, seemed to hold the world spell-bound. Peace itself became the pander for the lust of power and wealth, ami was made the instrument of crushing to the earth the very beings it was designed to elevate, Thus draped in clouds and impreg nated with storms, the darkened firma ment was made bright by a solitary star that was hung out 111 the midelle of the fourte'cnth century. During the fifteenth others were visible, and in the sixteenth the German reformer startled the world by the lustre which he shetl around hitr. Since that period, light has been in creasing. Luminary after luminary has appeared; sparkling groups have burst forth.- and now the retiring darkness, the beautiful light, not only visible upon the hill-tops, but coming down almost from mid-heaven itself, is a witness of the power anel increase of its influence. Now, then, what has been affirmed with r.-gard to generations, may with equal truth be r.pplied to individuals. There is not one of the actors that throng the mighty stage of life, who does not w hen the drma closes, leave mi impres sion on the vast platform. The memory of the head of the house hold throng lingers long with the sor row ing remnant; and often in distant years from the sael event that made the child an orphan, memory comes with its sad, lute like tones, from the wreck which profligacy may have heaped upon it and whispers to him ot the past. O : it is 111 that hour ol bitter reminiscence that the ghosts of murdered blessings, of violated innocence, and of destroyed peace are invoked from the past, and the deep pietv of that mother, the godly conversa tion of that father, whose efforts to bring back the prodigal were unvailing in life; these gathered as it were from the giave, snatched from the lives of those who once lived tell with emphasis the influence excrteel after death, and prove that the dead often speak with a voice that breaks not from the lips of the living. Who does not now, while we speak, Jbring trom the cells of memory the for' - the look, the words, the life, and e the death of some dear departed 9ilend or relative ? A grave on one of the hill-tops of Wes tern North Carolina today holds the dust e t' our lamented Vance; but his life is with us still. His words, his faultless ch iracter, his noble actions, his last sick ness with its sufferings and patien -.0, his closing hour w ith triumph, all are yours to dwell upon, aud from then, to gather consolation to elo, and strength to endure, whatever in the provideuce of Goel may be needful for you. Glorious lights these are did b.,in beautifully bright over his scpu.ch r. p neiling w.ta their beams the truth ih.n t.'n dt.i-l tjHiik. Innumerable ! ;ii e t he voices t aat steal up tro.n the burial grouii Is of earth. Tne dead, all the dead the dead everywhere, pour forth the oratory of the charnel-house. The ru Ie resting place of the humb'e cottager, ami the pompous mausoleum ol the prince are alike vocal. The gorgeous sarcophagus in which the scion of royalty sleeps and the unsightly ditch where the no r beggar found a release from his suf terings send up a kindred eloquence. The d. ad ad speak. I would earnestly im press this upon the living, that they may so live as that trom their dust, a voice may arise the tones of which may cheer sonic pilgrim on the way to greatness anel glory. I repeat it then, the dead all speak. The more their lives were char :Kterized with greatness, the louder they speak in death. Only a few days ago nearly every church bell 111 North Caro lina broke the solemu stillness with their doleful music, but they coidd not drown tho voice of our dead Senator; neither the c-'id clay , nor the green earth in whose bosom hi body awaits the resurrection, can muffle that voice. il i s voice comes to us in the lonely hour, the Sabbath stillneas, the twilight's hush, the midnight's awe. Indeed all Carolina's noCle sons, liom earth, from ocean, send out their pealing tones, pro claiming that, though dead, they yet speak. We may dismiss them from our sight, yet we Cannot consign their deeds to foigetlu ness. If their lives were made up of at tioiis worthy to he admired their ilced- o all never ..lie. ii or dying b.; forgot ten. hide' -I. we must admit that at death, they just begin to live; they just enter then, upon that existence of mighty influence anel unciou .e I lame here, anel uninterrupted bliss there, hr Which thei" devotion to their country, to humanity, to their God, so pre-emiueni ly lilted them. T.io-c whose lives dwelt not so much in the physical as in the mental and mora! i oriel, whose stead la-l hearts n. ver -"n inhered, whose souls struggleel tip : -. 1 1 . 1 nobler being, the great enet of w I10-0 ttl'nt was to do good, vho-e ; chi-s 1 011-istcd in a name wi ' .nit spot, ai.ose intrepidity was display, ;n daring ;.. do right, who-e spirits were niteriuseel 1.1 the inst 1; ut ions of their country anel of ihe ehuffli. w 1 -e names have b eu en graven upo. 1 nor pi nu ' pillar, and '.lie i blO -I I pon 'C i ei e i o ni li va '. ol f whose brave hearts has been forth in her ihtlnce such men a horn to ni-- No cloud ol death .- i.i; il from . lit vi-iou, anil no ial kllc-s ea . -1 ill t 10 h .-U' . .,- tie : I tin- -'Io all h- igllt- ol Hu ik r llill. Gaze upon the marble shaft point ing totlu-hgh enipyrein above, ami tell nu if the .Ii e. Is of Warren w ho tell there in the tnlainy of our national existence, ai f .1 -"I t. n. While that pillar braves its -iummit to tin- tempest, or receives the dew which h -a en distils, will the actions of that brave officer and Ins martyr band be Ircsh in the hearts of his countrymen. Tell me, e who visit the siia les of Vcrmon. i-, Washington confined to the little vault in which Ins body was laiel ? Is nothing left of lnm but the distinguishable ashes that people a narrow house of earth, grand t n'-. Th.- . guardc 1 1 y a lew b-.-ndicg willow N and .iiiged hy the ixa-ele-s l .ll ot tlo- l',.to- ' 1,1 ' Has Monticello. which contains the i,.,,i .1,.., ,.., 1,1 , ... , , .1 .1 1 1 .1 ..... 1 ' L 1 1 U L ' I III., I 11,11 II I OI . V 1 1 1 1 11 a I I rv 1 Independence, inoiionoli.c I all that wli-ll f a Jefferson? And sav. vc w ho kn w Iiim in the quietude ot 'peace, and in tluti-Ter olhutletoo has the glorious heart of Vance. 110 miiditicr hoiindaiv than the I little vault at.V-hiville? Have those im- pulses which siine t his soul so patno 1 tic in their intent oils and 50 iror.-'ike in 1 their evectni.ui -uone down into eternal I . -.. ... la nce witii t in-n-1! ! . I u-t t hev animated : age ' No. Va lie. loble et -peaks, deed- we -ei 1 m 1 In his m of rav of fore i the ar- veileral ile ami tell 1 1 count 1 v , hut ; In hoian. ' nipire . image 01 o "Th -llall of docav. u-h I s have in 11 t on.- in I pass. I, the . I a w 1 ; 1 11 -I In- p. ( old i-li-d h- I'm I it Call tleVer lie. Wh, c ,11 ted h v n, u. h hio. 1 at Naticl -shed uring - the WHS -p:, I ei I in 1 he I 1. 1 1 I t he Flench iw; -1 u ion hold, la. r. ic w oaia i w I 1T1MI. by 1 so r. in lied to the tire her wild, u 11 ma nagea1 ., the seen nl i-iiinni, inutineer- not to and who made seremns 1 fleet 11 d by tbngin pdi of Water oil 'he 1 hi name is unknown taliz.s the deed. geioiis engine. H.-r but history iminor toner or later, good deeds wiil emei ge from the obscurity in which thev were lirst done, and bvconie the talk of the nation, until thev leach even royal ears. O, there aie beauty and niaje-tv in tln thoughts connected with this theme ! The trainers of our Constitution, the achievers of our indepem le'ice, the pre servers 1 if al I we lionl d ir a- Ifeenieii, these are gone, but they . re s:n remem bered. The bp- of our i-lo.jin t.t Vance have become silent, the arms that I -attic for us aroun I New- Berne have be come du-t, the brave heart that beat for our welfare is stilled vet his spirit is with us His actions emb idying all that was noble in patriotism and lovely in virtue, are our legacy, (hand inheri tance! To these let our sitchelled school boys turn for examples wort hy of emula tion. These are beacon tires lighting up the sea ot State amid our dark hours. These, rising upon the co 1st, become pledges of saiety and harbingers of suc cess. Wo may rear the marble columns over his grave as a memorial of his greatness, but a monument more lasting than this shall meet our gaze everywhere. His country, ins na ip country. Ills wnoiei happy country, is the eloquent attestor of his virtues. The humblest mouiul ot earth rising over the noble dead in our free land, arrayed in its robe ot sunshine, and glittering in the dew-drops of tlm morning is a prouder niausoleni than royal oppressors ever reareel over their tyranized herd. Carolina, I repeat, is tiu monument 01 v ance. itts epitaph is true patriotism. Whenever an agonizing people shall perish in a geneious convulsion for the want of a valiant arm and fearless heart, they will cry in the last accents of des pair, O lor a Washington, a Jefferson, a Jackson, a Vance ! Whenever a regenerated nation, start ing up in its might, sh ill burst the bonds of steel that enchain it, the prai-e of our venerated fathers shall b: the prelude to their triuhDlial song "They being dead yet speak." v Young men, seeing that we are to leave an impress upon the sands of life, when we are called from, its busy pur suits, how deeply should we bi impressed with the solemn importance of pssing upon our coneluct a constant and rigid scruitiny 1 Ot what immense moment is it to us, anrl to those who are to live alter us, aad who are to he moulded to some extent, by the influences we are to leave behind us that we study to make that influence profitable ! When we die, we too shall speak from our tombs. The sound will rise either to gladden or sadden tbe then living. We will then have sent upon society a breath that will either fan it into life, or wither into death the beautiful buddings ol moral virtue. Our Vaneifi was tne of the bravest of soldiers. Sometimes while on the battle fielel, perhaps as memory repaired to tne circle of home, ami returned with the tears of a mother or sister, shed nt their departure, and held tlipin before the soldier Vance, his heart mav have beat with wild emotions; vet one thought of his country could calm the tumult, and change him from son into the soldier. At length the command to chirge pealed along the line. Amid the wild rush of armed men, the heaps of slain, and tho falling wounded that yielded before the fire of the enemy, behold your Vance ! your citizen! youi brave leader! with lifted sword and the voice ot the tearless lion, encouraging his followers oa to vic tory ! Only a week ago our Vance died not on the field ot battle, but on the field of duty. O, Carolina '. Carolina ! thou ait ever glorious w hilst thou cans't b ast such sons ns these ; His name shall be en rolled upon the bright catalogue of im mortal heroes. Carolina, Vance is not only thine, but the nation's, not ours, but the world s. During his last moments he appeared to be unconscious, but let us thmk that his thing eves read a mvstic meaning which only the rapt and paring soul may know. Let us believe that in the silence of the receding world he heard the great waves breaking on a farther shore and felt alreariv upon bis wastoil brow, the breath of the eternal morning. '' Give him place, oh ve hidsol Carolina ! In the midst of thee his dust shall rest, a sacred treasure to thousands who shall pilgrim to his tomb to kindle anew their zeal aud patriotism. Ye winds that sing over the western hill-tops, chant his requiem ! ie people behold the man whose life as so many ,articulate woids, pleads for fidelity, for law. for liberty 1 His life was an exemplication of patrio tism, his death the commanding seal affixed to it. And can you dreato that one so rarely gifted, so entirely his coun try s can repose m the grave 111 forgotten oblivion i No ! though dead, he speaks to us today. Though corruption has claimed his mortal part. Ins immortal deeds are ours ours to cheri.-h and ours to imitate. People of New Kern.', free men of his native state, he lias bequeathed you a legacy richer than all your posses sions his own illustrious example. 0, value your heritage 1 Impart it to your children as yiu gather them around the warm tire for w'nter evening conimuu ings, and as you set under the summer shades of your verandas. In coming years as your sons visit the town ol Ashe ville and see a marb'u column rising from the earth, tell them of'he spotle.-s liA-, tell them of the death of him in whose memory it will have been reared. Tell them ot his love for truth and knowl. his regard for his fellow men. his devo tion to his countrv; tell them nil and, as pou senel them forth, hid th -ui mould themselves by what Z. 15. Vance was. Glad am 1 that he lias b 11 laid to re-t in North Carolina. I! s own na'ive stm ts a sepulcher wort iy ol him. Cp 01 her green tuif. he trod when a chil l ami it is right that t hit turf should c over ins eh v. Here the cmol ions ol his bent were lir-; quickened and then ii atu.ed: and it is well that that heart should repose h-re alter it became slid. Young men of Carolina, he calls you bv all that was iovelv in virtue, by that was of good report in In- c m hiet. to be emalous ot doing good to yoiti God and to your country. Strive m the 'great btttle ot hlc to k his example beloie vou, so 1 e;1t ..- may be marked by eipia' tiau-upln sp a - s 1 o y . .11 won a i'i ei 1 V- -II 111. I M ill' the j - - CI gr at n S. e;,k 0,1 1, :...v V . - We h at lh voice, am! n.-pi to pi.,-;: wh it thou ai t say ing to u-t ''How sleep the brave w ho sink to rest, By all their country's wishes blfst ! When spring with dewy fingers cold. Returns to deck their hallowed m.-l I, She then shall die a sweeter s Than Fancy's feet hav- ever tro 1. By fairy hands their knell was rung. Bv forms unseen their dirge is sutig; Their honor comes, a pilgrim grav, To bless the turt that wraps their clay; And freedom shnll awhile repair, To dwell a weeping hermit th -re.'" mmuitm mm "sui.ii.jjmw . n m(;ii i-si:ei.; -kmoks (iood for (;rcenhiro (iirN I went a Trip Wending 'llieir a Washing'on t 1 sfc the Nights of the Capitol City . Ii. V III. V. I.. I.'. -id, the U .1 - n Ihosident ..I i-ii-ii.:ii in.: leaves ( feell-l .. p. I 1 o -senior cla-.- 'o v. -it the inirpose of show in 1 1 ii . 11 I lie 11 ( i- i sights worth seeing ,n tie ( I this great nation. I Tln-y wi'l i-it the e-ll. scientific institute n- of 1 h 1 , with Cohgri-ss an. I a: I t 1 nigs. Ar:"an gen a--1 1 - h a s-- 1 to give them si n c ia 1 ailan sight-seeing and tie- trip will , ; ly erjoyed Iiv ti e h appv p .rtv 1 which h- is h- ie tie- 1 n mg. I wise thing in j)r. j ;..!. who i -! the lookout for an lliing , agi - t . gel! if 0 f f w e I ' '. 'l b': - i- a 1 I ' a - on 1 fi'rhi- pllpi.s or pat 11 The siaiio;- , College is o,,i beailtiutl yoiii greatly minor )ressioii ,.f 11-. a ( . 11- .or. F.-lll .'e f t Weill v I'l l d thev Wll make a g. 1 For Rotter II and ing of Truck. The iiiuie 11- - m w w n h- u-e Pi-n-ylvn which t!i tie- 1 ., t lei s ,ipp. d !- Ifih o .d at .1.1- 11 pa ay a 1- j u-t tini-h 1 i 1 nt v V. utiieru Ni tet Tin -hippi 1- tne p.ao, I by the II. li t ii- I). I i ver. d. The eo,,, M. illafo:.- : ; Ni Y merchant- up . the laci.l; 1 for-Is tor concentration of tl which in-un s rase h-uidiin Selling, pie i-ing ...ike ! . ! and receivers. Mr. Goo. Hemier-on. :. I'lUllodities I'ld quick 1' 111: No Berne of the E. C. I), li: ... n-c iv,- I th following telegram .vest.-rda: "We consider the Pay -in,- d. pit opening a gr at -m as thei" w 1 a fair representation of the crrisivn. i s and a sufficient number of buyer- to n-niive all the stuff before four o'clock this morn- ling, (the buying commence. 1 at midnight) I we are advised by receivels that the pric es iodized were 1 etbr th 1" on the- Now Y rk side.' The Roanoke Colony M"!ll)I'ia Asm)- cia'ioii. In one way ami ano'her 'h- m -m - tor the Roanoake Colony Memorial A ocia tion is generally accumulating. We i-c a notice that to-night, in Baltimore. Dr. Weir Mi'che!!, ..1 Philadelphia tie- dis tinguished scientist and man o; 1-tters, has kindly consented to read, for the ben efit of this benevolent and patriotic obj . t his Elizbethan drama, "Sir Francis Drake" A striking poem which his recently been read with hri'dimit siiece-s in other large ritie. It would give us great pleasure to see that all the money needed for the preser vation of ttie site of the Roanoke colony (the firs, settlement in America) and the Sir Walter Raleigh Fort has been in ale up. Prof. Daves deserves great credit for efforts he has already made and is con tinuina: to make for this o' j,-, t. A Serious Fad. Mr. Thomas Wilson met with a dis tressing accident Sunday morning. As he was pas-ing the kitchen of his residence from a room which had 1 higher floor than the latter his foot -lipped and he tell heavily, breaking one bone in tho w rist of his right hand and cbslocatiiig the other bine. lie also sprained his back st-vere ly. The bone war set by Dr, Duguid, but Mr. Wilson is still suffering severely both from his ami and back. The Red Star CLOTHIER. It Is not prices alone that you want BUT VALUE 3 AS WELL. The Season for Spring Suits, Neckwear and Negligee Shirts is here andw; are r.ffering some exceptional Bargains, The Latest Style Scarf. A Nobby Straw Hat, Men's Fast Black h Hose, .)C r.Oc I'Oo A beautiful line Xeglig-ee Shirts, yl.00 SPRINGfSUITS In all tbe Latest Styles and Colors. drive ii- : 1 CJn.ll. SOL COHEN, THE KED ST AH CLOTH 1 K!i 77 Middle Street, Xcw Berne. X. '. J. F. Taylor You can n:nl ,t t".v of the tliis lilt. 1st. Coal Oil, Jolinv . round soap in the worM. 2ml. Boroxiue, tlir woman'- tri cleans Bleaches ami makt-s wa!iiuL.r Sampler rre t-'-rs. Cream Water Wire Cloth, Win do h Screws And Doors, AT i L. H CUTLER L CO'S. j .KU." For M.-.l-e;,! u-.-s try nl, 1 T i i ,. 1 CSkl 15'- fflM W us . .rtriu. I . I III Oetol...... s-:i:i. lor tl.- put I i F I Mi,, hot,-.. V V M,,i... r,- , -...a1 Vi Mr:.: 'i&SrSk&trjEA. l II.IM- i il sui 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 e I I . e . I I " -I liiliki- 1-1 I'i I Mtll-vlniiill A Itv.--. I'm-.- iii.inirciiii l ..in aiel I WWGer-ntc WlTW.- -Tr8- I mms ami i ii mm- I .. t ... p-iP:i. ;,,n,rie1i.s.,',e.su!,v,r mt ife it'.'-- i . - nfsr-twc 11 -c a,, ,-.-...I. ... ... . .v li: ' IwlfuWilwiU OUo Wit i ce THE-RMN j'r rri 1 1 Jtr ot 1 1 g Pulls the Lever and and his Great Ma chine bounds ahead. We Pull PRICES A NOTCH OR TWO FURTHER And the Business Machine must take; on greater speed: than ever. rr 1 1 1 : io i i rv i : That Speeds us: on to success is made of A N I ) IS FIRED BY OUR OWN Enthusiasm AND AMBITION. And travels over broad gauge tracks of FAIREST PRICES And BEST GOODS. II -EVERYBODY- Hackburn & Willett, 47 & 49 POLLOCK 6T, 1 rTTTTTTpy-HT H as j ust of those r c -ived a supply Tennessee Cait Wheels. Friend go and get you a pair of them, then jou can cuiUe. Fay VVRITTY what vou Owe him and that will make him smile. Don?t you Bee. ::n;:::;i m X I ,1 - 1 1 1 A FINE LOT OF SHAFER'S Sugar Cured T xt si: Xix. Small Pig Hams, CHOICE STRIPS AMU Small Shoulders. ams Beautifully Cured, only I 2- I 2ors Another lar;e Invoice of California Evap- ?fnrl TiYnlta lncf in t e i j on u I JLI. California jPiunes 10c " Extra, 15c Pears 10c Peaches 15c " peeled. 20c Apricots 20c Fancy Dried Apples 10c Fane Evaporated Ap ple 15c Another lot of those Fine California Peach es 31b standard goods 17 ONLY cts A CAN JOHN DUNN, No. 55 & 57,Polionk St THE A. COIIN Organ and Piano Go. W-l,iK. i i lOetiee ns in neiirlv IV Itililloilil i ll h some s i linn, anil .- ,i,e p.a i, ii :i 1 1 s.11,, Li. ii in .l I- e. I. III.. lie lll'lie Iml , lllll.li- Mt.'Oelnril "I Hi' He--I I I. I II st I. . iln.l .11 o I. lie .in. ii in. i,i tl,,. piiiiciiml n.etoriea i'lii's a- to Kivu Ihe imrelnisei tlm v i e lew-e.-i uml hest terms. M e a ; e olli riiiK tho liiHt Iv celol.ruteil MKll 1.1 I'lanus, m hleli ree. ivod Urn hlirliest oi-s iin.l (.,.1,1 M, , t . Ol.-. l'llleli. v.. Ill e li on lie the ..1,1 i . .. K V A S's. I'iiiiio lii,-li M i Selllllie. Ii. the pnl.. 111. I'esiltts toi 1 he ),:( -J , i N : W It V Mini il i ii h:tr- In -n -1 .i Htm 1 ory ' U :tiil Sons l e also I, , ,- . -. Opera riiun s . i.lnl in Mm H : UUIIMlliir I'm.,.., si ri. i , lii ol illi l Ih-i I ill M t n -iiii ldis,n OI-LTUII : . 1 '111 1 1 1 Hi jl iiino.-. a i In 1 1.. M. -J wliic li i- i tlH'!oli'l to li:vnlh i Hi i I Hi- in Aim I Hit, mil! t Jirr stumhi i'i n ft iiii liir vuui j '.tii' -1 . i j : him) f-w i J. a -1 : i Mini oi' jU'ouin! nt tent Uri 1. a 1 1 uml x inn -rot hum on M tMlo licit oi i r l ii rt I ut oi t li' iv i Han.S u Itifh will ivci'lvc and falisln -lion trnai'iintf mo onr ffiKf1s al our wan street. New Berne N. C. ami Main Ht. Wash iiiRton. N. C. A. COIIN I'I A SO A ORGAN CO. Would thank you to examine our exhibit at : the East Carolina Kali to be hold in w ' jjrue, February, 19Ui to 'lith Inclu -tivj.