Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / Oct. 2, 1903, edition 1 / Page 3
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..." . . . . . t f ' - . '7 . . LXfTAl tt EIAlTlV ) ! 1 .1 W . . -T - KODOL dlfwti what you ML -KODOL cleanses. parlf.es, 1 aircnguianj ana ITMp ena the itomaclii 4 i;.: . j V KODOL cure location, dr and bovel trouble. - KODOL aeoslarateetbe action of - i the fajtrlo glands and ' fives tone to the digestive organs. KODOL rtIeYM D evenrorked ' stomach of all nsrroui strain, rives to the heart a full, free and un trammeled action, nourishes the nervous a "stem and feeds tha Drain. KODOL to ,ba wonderful remedy i that Is making so man; sick people well and weak people strong by giving to their bodies sll of . the nourishment that Is oestalned In the fooid they eat.. . s- lew swer ui qni im. Bottles ant. 1 1 .00 She boWtna VA tha trial Mi, watch sella lor 60c . , ., X. c. Dewrrr co,, chicaqo V ivw ". 8 VUTtY Twenty-six bales of cotton sold on ine local maraet yesteraay at v:ou. , - The Hebrew day of atonement or Tom Klppur begins tonight at sunset and ' lasts 84 hours. ' , .". ' " .. :i Autumn coolness wu Tory marked ; Monday night. The mercury went down tha coole.-t of tbs season, -r ; Friend of Rev H 8 BradBhaw. will be nlnarl tn knnvr tht ha has retioveri . from I-! Indisposition so a to be able to return to New 6arn and till his pulpit : in the neriiti:re. C f .- I ' mi. .i i ag--fr L r 1 . i. ... I i no irieuuo i mr a. i ly pleased to see mm ou ngain atter ms ? laveie aicaness, bdu gimg uim hearty ' gaining In hciltb .nd strength each day. x Mrs Joseph Nelson has received a ' benefit certificate from the 'Knights of ausur lur ,uuu i uim vniuKmn w t -received tbo same day with that of the ' Royal Aroanum whlcn . was mentioned in the Journal tome time ago. Mlsa Ellinor Taj lor, who was pianist at the Opera Hon jo last season and gate ' so muoh satisfaction, has been engaged Mo the same .capacity' for this season. - This fact Is a floe testimonial of the - young lady's talent as a musician. , There Was a rdugh house at Horehead ' Monday night at a vaudeville tent show, Some negroes from Beaufort had a rack et with some of the loial colored men and the affair tt said to have ,. been very " Intereatlna- for a time. - It I said that Mr A B Dawson, .who tried the experiment of hiring Porto ; guess laborer last Spring is si. pleased $ with the " opera, Ion of his "experiment thit he hat gonu'Morth to ingsge more J Portugueee for himself and others. Be j. has found thaL they are the best of labor . Miss Belle Bennette of Kentucky, . president of the Woman's Home Ml-tlon 1 Society of the M E ( hurch, Son lb, who i to give an a 1 1 i-sj tonight Ik the guf it I of Mr J A iivnd i. Thcrtt will he a reception In hon t of M Ui Ben no ,: e. at the hhrch pariir this, a(urniii ' to vwhloh all ladles are Inyited. t , . , - j - tteeti weepliijKi'Vhttt i it..nvjr awcetegt love? 3:f.-fXhi 4 t Mrs. Yonnghusband Horse radlshl Ycu A Are You Expeciant? mni almoat iwlnlM; by .1.. Inv n.rftirltlnn. thtl. ...1.1- E)( N.tuM, and hortenhif labor. Th painful Sansar tharaof r..tlr laaMjosi to both moth and chili Tha parloi of sonnnenieiit la alsa araatlr ahortaned, the nothar mud, and tMwi4 IiUt davalopad, atruo' and healthy. . - - . . .i. k...... ... n.uMa arislna- from Draa rdaal or cmldr.irtn u muDN 01 witu, ww uw ancy ta prarenttd by relieyln tha atomach from )a praaaura brouht to bear oa It by tha expand. , tnforiran, and by which tt lalnfluancad tlmnwh,. yaipauiy. A. mhui adrancea. tha praaatt cwanra. VcncTieawollen, hard and tlirbt. Lons before tin C nld it oom, they are prepanni 'u1im"" loa li.ott. r'a trtend aoftena tha akin, reUeT tha ; ar..,nra. and facltitatee tha aeeratHm or un aVtuirt. tfiideireloped and occluded duett, ane Sreaiia hanl-cakrd aliortly r suit of non-treatment Bin nhar,i-cakedahortlyjr"tr delivery, are lua i rammary Abecaaa from which tha patient nU fn ecruclatln pain and la left with tbaas . Kpctlonal organa permanently Impaired. homer's Friend l alwaya applied eztamany mwxA hMm! Into the Senhover the reaioa of pain. a likely tocuiminata ua Softnaoa, pliability and exnaniion are iHn, to - than- , tiaauea, fibres and alne., e.iowlnaj tl.e e M. r neo-ntiary to bring comfort whha hur rn. and cause easy utsneof tia tt.' (1. , 'i r Thz t: . t lidrugaiUW. l"Iio. . - 1' ' :;OFiri O RCULATOH COc AfkAMVA. UAa, '.T . ",; KO OYSTERS HERE. The Scum b Opea Bat H( Kortk Ciisllaa ' Bivalve. V- '1 .: U ha passed teooHsctloB,. whua New Ben paeeed September without htvlng somecaoloe ortlers from Ua WaMrt of lis sounds. , . T . , '' Bat ewoh has beet the case tills 'year. sod September Jt Its ,tt iu brusght forth only a few alone ah ore ,"0000" oysters, tad perhaps a lew from Norfolk bat the real deep water, delicious hlralve is not here, and win not be until after OeUberlStb, ;, Vril'.'-..:'.)! It will be remembered, an J now most forcibly Impressed, that the last Legisla tors set the limit at October 15th when the oysteraaa tould ply his tongs, had bring to the snrfao the choice oysters from North Carollaa waters. It may be wisdom, this delay, bat K is hard for loeal eoBSumers to sit dowi and be forced to continue a diet on kog ad even cakkta effertao. attraoUoa, compared to the oyster, when they know and can almost taste, certainly in antjet pa'Joa. the precious oyster, o near yt so fearfully beyond their reach. But perhaps the delay will bring gnat er pleasure, and Ike oyster hungry win be folly satisfied. " tarje School House Needed, jj ,The Journal has received a letter from J P Godette a represenUtlTe colored cit izen of No. 5 township,' concerning the colored school hoot in that township. The writer states that the building now need is only about 10 by 80 feet and that 130 or. more pupil are assigned to the school there. It is wonderful how so many people can be packed ra so small space, but tt it said Uat two teachers ' make an effort to teach the crowd in the small building. , .. I i The. writer states that requests hare been made to the. committee to enlarge the school house to meet the demands, but that the committee pays no attention to tha request . :.;.; r i ; Now it teems to be a ohrslcal lmpossl Mlity for pne hundred and ihlfty pupils to learn much in a twenty by thirty feet I room, and a house should be built to ac- I commodate tha papUa, Lota of valuable newspaper space is being wuted every day telling about the 1TUUUH1IU ff U mUK UVUV IH IUH UMN . . . . wonderful work being done In this State nowadays for scnoois, DUI St HW'e tP m the rural dltricu will disprove Jt sll There we see UtUe shantkf, usually bout 13 by JO Jfee.tn shtoj reometlmes located In a pond, and forty 'or more children hanging arobnd waiting for a sixteen year old girl to teach them. That's about the size of It, , . Confessions ot a Priest. i- Rev. Jno S Oof, of Wake, Ark, Writes "For 13 year I suffered - from Ysllow Jaundice. I cqntu.ted a number of phy slofsns and tried all sorts ot medicines, but got no relief. Then I began the ase of Electric Bitters and feel that-1 now cured of a disease that had me in its grasp for. twelve ysare' If you want 4 reliable medicine for Liver and fXldney trouble, stomach disorder ot general, de bility, get Electric Bitters. It's eakran. teed bv O D Bradbam. onlv SOo. 1 4 The QuesttofrAnswered. i The Journal's question, on the matte of tha Inmate of the county home being teen working on the county road, hai been answered. . . . , ., J .The person in question, had been dis charged from the county home, and waa working on the public road for pay, tak ing the place of a man -who while not really a subject for road duty, yet felt an Interest In better roads, and paid a sub stitute to do work for him. "i Maie Vagrants Work. With the farmers in despair over no labor with Which to secure their ripened crops, it serau a deplorable theme that men are permitted to idle around corners! '.in this fclty. h h i n I' :h -Yet men who want laborers hare tried In vain to get them in this ctty, an1 he persona whom they solicited, were doing nothing and had no visible means of lup port.' - - ' j.. filxty and nhiety days from this time, with achange to wintry weather, many of these tsme.lolterert wilt be asking for esleianoiaad people will hnve to help them br see them auffer, physlosDv, which ao oee .can do, :" ;; -f : 'i .Butjtoda)!, theae- corner hangers and those Joanpg hoton the corners hat around saloons, should be compelled to work . - Z There are city ; Improvements 'needed and. these .loafers should be forced io give their help to make these Improve ments, whether they want to or not. There Is a choice of worklbg where wages an paid, hut with the demand tor workers now existing, there need be ho solicitors for help next winter in this city.; v .V: :v tk. There is a good living here for work- ert. And vagraatt should be forced io work, srant tmvrHk Cir&r ;: -i A September Menu; Table Talk, Philadelphia. il.wJ'v'aHUFABT Ralstoi Breakfast Food Z .3(1, , Sugar and Oream Minced Beef - f . 'r-; ., : . Potatoes auQratla Potato and Egg Salad ;:hj i Pried Apple Sauce ;" '"" 'J & ' '' -'V:- r'-:J Gingerbread :.;yi'V:' DINNCa v,.. $ V-' vis.' ; . '.Raw Oysters' H'' Mutt5n Stew 'With Ollves' 't Potato Croquettes ) f ) EplnsOi -a.,-;V i.Tomato Jf ayoaaaist) - Wafers '. Cheese 5 -Air't Lemon Jelly v - . , Coffee - , " SHORT; 8TORIE8. , The United 8tttee lighthouse service oosta H500.000 year. There are In the wotid 404 steamers I or 4,000 tons each.' ' ' vTho lntast coast ahowt that there art about &000 of the Thousand Islands. The savings of school -children la Pittsburg during the past year aggre gated over $2,000,000. Louisville chil dren aaved f 400,000 in the asm time. The drummer boy of 8hiloh,": who was eleven years old when the battle was fought, Is ah officer In the regular army,-aged fifty -two, He will be re tired In 1816.. - - , Many people are alow In having deeds recorded, hot few delay tt so long a the Baymottd (Me.) man who brought one to the Cumberland registry which was made out In 1850. . t- A Portland (M.) little boy who lock ed his little sister In the wood shed and bombarded tha shed- door. with a 22 caliber revolver sobblngly .explained over his daddy's knee that he was -Vylo' war maneuvers.'! . , ; - Inasmuch as alcohol allows a tempo rary relief from the burden of life, the London Lancet thinks that "to such a degree as that burden la lightened or removed la other waya, so will dimin ish the demand for Intoxicants." .. ; ' One of the boats running up tha New England coast turned her search light on a sea gull the. other night and fol lowed the flight of the bird for some time. It was pitch dark, and all that could be seen by .the passengers waa the hlg white gull sailing slowly along In the brilliant white light One of the largest apartment houses In Connecticut has Just been completed at Hartford, Conn. It consists of sev enty-five apartments, varying from one room and a bath to eight rooms and a bath, a public dining room, publio re ception room, ten servants' noma. and a liberal, supply t private storage rooms, - v jO A & "5? O X. a. . BMnth si" P i H aiwayt A Sa4 Death. Tuesday jnornlng at his home in Bellalr, the death of Sam L Kilpatrlck occurred, after - several weeks sickness with hemorrhagic fever.- Mr Kilpatrlck wu a young and pros perous farmer, and besides enjoying an enviable .home character and excellent reputation among his neighbors, was re spected in this chy.-where many knew him. ' '.1' - i His death It a sad one. He leaves a wife and aoa to -mourn their lots. - . Tha funeral terrloes will take' place at Beech Grove church today at 11 o'clock, the interment being made aTThe burial ground neaf tha church. - :!-'V A Lore Letter. "-Would not Interest you If you're look ing for a guaranteed Salve 'for Sores, Bums or piles. : Otto Dodd, of Ponder, ,MjM6.; wrltets "I suffered with an uglj m j sore f ot a year, hut a box of Backlen's Arnica Salve cured me. It's the . heat salve on earth. BSe at O D. JBradham'i Drug Store. I'-'U - "a Uti Oak Too. " ; The bride was fair and slight and the brldegnoom was dark and stalwart. They, ;dSrJj lnte,e,t'n V ' and ithos paopJe oothe lopgi dletance train who had watched them more or leas openly 'Trom San Francisco were eheered by the sight of a shower of rice jwhichi fall out t tha toldfa par-asoltww-days lter.'tVS' VV' The bridegroom aw tha arnltea, ana. mitting his rai round Utv biusning Wife, be faced the earful of friendly eWjraiig8tK,- 'iw.- w.t "I reckon there's no neea ror me to saywe havent heon married tong," he announced In, full cneat tones, -our. a can tell you one thing. Too don't want to tznUe any mora than 'a pollta, for she's tux tlolet and I'm her Bbelterlog oak. and I velfih 804 poaads. Btanths m mi to WW m saiait if ' Omlosu mm Uevrlie. The Onion la a vegetable of great an tiquitr, being found among the earliest of cultivated apedee. A kind of onion crown tn-Eaypt 2.000 years and more ago was considered so excellent that it received divine honors, being worship ed as a god. f. This was considered A good Joke by the Bomana of those days, who, as well as the Qreeksv .were ao qualnted with several varieties of on ions. It Is likely that the plant first grew lh Persia or Afghanistan. GurUo has been raised in China for thousands of years, and ; the ancient Egyptians rnade great neo of It No picture, of It has ever been found on the monuments. but this may bo because the plant was wdered.unclean by the priests. Tolliaat Ttpae h the Porch. . T -The oldcet: system ' by vrhlch men fcava told 'the.tlme of day . la sundials. There axe sundials still, in existence since long before the Christian era.; In fact, they have beeni found - in Egypt flaring, before the -pbsraoha. ..Tha. Ine dlans and wild- Mtioaa told the-time by 'the position - of. tha shadows of trees or mountains. , The Chinese have carried the art "of sundials to perfeo tlon and even , today nee pocket sun dials instead of watches, .One Chinese watchmaker has arranged his front porch in such a way the shadow of the posts tells the time by which to regu late the watches. Ada Patenon In Pll-.gML....-,,,,r.:.- . v A f hkfLzz Invites Disease. V,' To euro Dyspepsia or Indigestion )t ti no longer ne ssary to live on milk and toast. F'arr "on produces inch weak ness tL&t ' ) i, hole system become an easy prey tQ.u.ooas.,, Kodol j Dyspepsia Cure enalki the stomach and digestive organs to d'gest and assimilate all of the Wholesome food that one caret to Sat, and I a never' filling cure for indiges tion, Dyspepsia and all stomach troubles Eodol c""'twht you eat makes the laaSajpaajBaja aa aasBS) stomala t euU Bold by T 8 Duffy. FACTS IN FEW LINES The lrnchlnes for the first half of 1903 numbered forty-eight Paris has one acre of park for every fifteen persons; Liverpool one for every thousand, ;', Thomas A. Edison, the Inventor, will exhibit some of his latest Inventions at the world's fair, St Louis. . ' Anonymous remittances amounting to 185,868 were sent to the conscience fund of the United Statee during the fiscal year. r The losse - ot German registered eeeen vessels, according to fresh impe rial statistics, were eighty-five in one year. Three passengers and 286 sailors were drowned. . , ' , . It Is suggested by Professor Plcker-brg-that the streaks which radiate from iunap craters-rone from Tycho Is 1,700 miles long are-caused by pumice thrown; ant by the volcano. The latest Indignities that microbes have been subjected to Is firing them from s gun. This was done by govern ment officials, and It was found that the bugs were not loured. . A British board of trade return shows 442 strikes and lockouts In the United Kingdom,. during 1002. The number of employees affected was 236, 007, the aggregate duration in working days 8,479,000. The electronometer Is so acutely sen sitive that it Will detect in one minute an amount of matter'whlch must accu mulate for 2,000,000 years before there is) enough of It to affect the most sen sitive chemical balance. - There is a man in Warsaw, Foland, Who baa the long distance record for bigamy, bar Utah, Turkey and a few aoch places. He has seventeen living Wives, and each and every one of them la glad that be Is in Jail. Ireland possesses the eldest Judge in the United Kingdom. This is Vice Chancellor Chatterton. who waa born ill 1819, six years before. Lord Hals- bory, and who stepped from parliament to his present position In 1867. The annual vacation is one of the most efficient weapons against break down for those who live in the intense modern life. A well known New York physician used to say that be could do (i year's work In eleven months, but not in twelve. Some large beetles are as good as circular saws. They seize a branch or twig with their deeply toothed Jaws and whirl round and round until the twin Is sawed oft. They have been known to .saw a twig as thick as a walking stick in this manner. The Ktckapoo Indians are leaving Oklahoma at a rapid rate and settling ta Mexico. The McLoud Standard says tt won't be long until the tribe will be forgotten In and around Mc Loud and that there will be some fine sections of land for Bale in the near fu ture. In the Alps, Mont Blanc, the highest, Is tedious, but easy. Delicate women make it by hundreds without much danger. The lower Matterhorn, when iquered. took four Uvea. Whymper, one of the three who escaped death, afterward broke his leg by falling off a platform at a lecture. The power plants now In operation at the falls dlverfone-eeventeenth ot the Volume of Niagara river, and when the flumes now building are completed one-eighth leas water will go over the falls, this aside from the water divert ed by the Wellond canal and by the great volume ot the Chicago drainage canal. " .,' . The published statement that we now get no purs Mocha coffee is con troverted by. the United States consul at Aden, who shows that mixing other OOCCses with Mocha or shipping coffees fx) Saden to be ree hipped as Mocha is prohibited by the authorities. The Unit ed Mates bought of this coffee last year SUS988. pounds at a cost of 3T7,352.. -On the thirty-seven acres of ground devoted to the -Uvo stock department at the world's fair at St Louis are be tas' built 2,800 stalls. Two thousand four hundred of these are open b tails, 5 by 10 feet The remaining 400 are box stalls, 10 by 10 feet In addition foot octagonal dairy barns will provide 140 ocen stalls and twenty-six box stalls. , . Ether and chloroform, so useful In sending men to sleep, have the very opposite effect on plants, which are stimulated to the greatest possible ac tivity by these drugs. In Denmark and Germany advantage has been taken of this fact to force flowers In rooms and glass houses and to make them bloom out of season. Tha results arc said to bo marvelous., . . . - tt Is proposed to use currents of elec tricity In place of anaesthetics for oper ations on the teeth. One pole is con nected to ah electrode molded to fit the tooth and lined with wet asbestus to counteract any heating effect on tne tooth itself. Five minutes suffices to sender Insensible a tooth with a single rang. Molar teeth and those with sev eral fangs require, longer. In some countries walking sticks are manufactured from shark fins. . From the skin of the animal is obtained a leather suitable for making sword grips and many fancy articles. Sharks abound on the coast of Nicaragua, and Mr. Gottsclialk, the United States con sul at San Juan del Norte, suggests that the fins, backbones and , skins might with advantage be imported into the United States for Industrial pur- poses; There ore twelve Yale students' who because they are more than 6 feet 1 Inch tall are eligible to membership lh the new club, of Brobdtngnags of the university r The president Is Frederick W. Wilbeml of New York, the secretary-George A. Gross of Waterbury, Conn., and the vice president and treas urer Stuart B. Sutpbln of Cincinnati The tallest man of the club is Thorn Baker of Cincinnati, who stands 6 feet B Inches in his stockings. ::V Tbe Salve That Heals without leaving a tear It De Witt's. The nameWItoff Hazel it applied to many I salves, but DeWltt's Witch Hazel Salve Is the only Witch Hazel Salve mads that contains the pure unadulterated witch hazsL If any other Witch Hazel Salve la offered you it It a counterfeit. E 0 De Witt Invented Witch Hazel Salve and DeWltt's Witch Hazel Salve Is the best salve In the world for cuts, burns, brul- tea, tetter, or bima, .Dieeaing. itcmngi lm hrefd with font miini "I and protruding piles. Hold by V a uar HINTS FOR FARMERS 4 Cera Crej. We do pot like to see land remain bare during tha fall and winter. There are stronxer ' reasons this rear than ever why soil should be covered with some groWM crop, even though it be late sown rye. Of course all hilly land Is better for a cover crop, since It pre-, vents washing, but Z chief reason ' why some living crop should occupy the land Is that during the fall a great loss of nitrates occurs. The humus or vegetable matter In the soil furnishes organic nitrogen. This Is usually not put into such a form that plants can use it until the hot weather at the end of an. -ordinary summer. Then it Is made over Into nitrates rapidly. These nitrates are Soluble la water and are easllv washed rmt of tha soil bv sur face washing or by drainage water. If some thrifty crop Ilka rye, clover or turnips follows com or potatoes the greater part o( the nitrates will feed them and thus be saved, Even weeds are useful to follow a crop, since they hold tne nitrates, out of course a means much bettet farming to follow one farm eras with another. This year the weather Das beao So cold and wet that the nitrates have not been formed as usual. Should there be warm weath er In October this most valuable form of nitrogen will be rapidly formed and lost If the ground Is bare. It Is there fore good practice to sow rye or vetch after the corn Is cut Rural New Yorker. CMra. With a crop ot corn 800,000,000 bush els less than that of last year in pros pect many people are jumping to the conclusion that prices for that grain will be proportionately higher than they are now. Therefore they reason this will be a better year to sell corn than to feed It Corn may be higher than It Is now, for the crop is not safe yet, but the effect of the lessened yield has already been discounted In market as shown by the present high price level. Furthermore, it is very likely that much less corn will be heeded than last year. Not so much stock will be fed, nor will so much of the crop be devoted to replenishing the reserves which were practically ex hausted when the last crop was har vested. Under these conditions unless there is great damage to the crop by early frost it Is well not to expect too much of corn prices. Stockman ana Farmer. Pnrchantnar Brprodncta. The farmer who has a high grade class of animals, If he knows how to feed them for greatest gains or growth, need not be afraid of investing In some byproducts to balance bis farm foods. If the manure is savec its vaiue is greatly Improved by feeding rich foods. The cottonseed meal, the wheat bran or gluten meal makes a good profit when fed to well bred animals. In ad dition to this profit these byproducts add largely of nitrogen, pnospnoric add and potash to the fertilizer from the stables. Increasing 'the fertility ot the land increases the Income from the farm. Where farms are getting richer their owners are .becoming educated. They surround themselves with the comforts and even ivlth the luxuries of life. They are progressive and feel content ed upon the farm. Indianapolis News. The aTstim'a Flock of Twicer a. A farm Is never completely stocaea without its flock of turkeys, and what an attraction is a good, large flock of bronze turkeys, and where is there a rJace that eo.ua Is a farm! We raise what we eat, and that brings money to buy what we wear. We have our gar dens, our fruit our flowers, our droves of chickens, turkeys, ducks ana geese. our bees to make honey that equals tne nectar that Jupiter sips, and we have telenhones. free mall delivery, electric cars, .and what in the world could the town add to the freedom of tne coun try life and Its health, prosperity and happiness! Yon can even keep a dog without asking your neighbor's con sent I can Soon-see from my window the smoke from our new railroad a lit tle over a mile from our bouse, Mrs. Charles .ones In Poultry Keeper. Irrls-atioa for Onions. . An expert of the Irrigation Investiga tions division of the United States de partment of agriculture, in discussing the crops In ordinary districts that can be greatly benefited by small and In expensive systems of -Irrigation, tn- stances the case of onions grown mine south ot Georgia. - In that district when there are opportune reins in May and June to mature the crop, the aver age yield Is about 800 bushels ot on ions per acre, worth $1 a bushel. Dur. ing May and June the necessary rains did not come, anorcompiete loss ox crop followed, the Dlants withering away in the drv and shriveling heat One good Irrigation each year would bave.savea the crop and mads tne . returns man ia am In Quantity and irreproachable in Quality. American Cultivator. '' HI Grain Prior Predicted. It is hhrhly probable that grain. of all kinds will reach record breaking crtces this rear. ' High authorities In the eraln market confidently predict uollar wheat at an early date. The wheat crop Is short and the quality good. This will render cornering com paratively easy. However, high prices are certain oa the merits of the mar kets, but the speculators will not get la their work until after narvesung and marketing the crop, for It Is not contemplated that the farmers shall DartidData in the rise. All other grains are In condlUoa to reacn ugn prices s soon ss the farmers market tha crops. Farm and Bench. i Blackbird Days. ' Jan. 80 and 81 and Feb. 1 are famous at Constantinople, Brescia and. along the Danube and the Rhino as the "blackbird days." A curious legend says that originally mil species ot g ruc kles (blackbirds) were white and that they became black because during one year In the middle ngea the three days mentioned above' were so cold that all the birds In Europe took refuge in the chimneys. As Brescia the three days - l igiornl dells merle," or "the feast of I transformation, of th NrA A POOR CRUTCH. Experience is a dear teacher, aa those who pin their faith to Mercury find out sooner or later. This power ful poison combined with Potash, is the treatment ren- - - - - ' - , : . ti an.: . . -. .H T. u 1 "Lli?1! disease is cone and the ttatient believes Bent, but soon learns better when return aimosi as soon as ine treatment as the treatment must either keep the system saturated with mercury or endure the tortures of sore mouth, ulcerated throat and the mortification that one naturally feels when the body is covered with disgusting acres, rashes, copper-colored Splotches and other aggravating- symptoms of this vile disease. Mercury and Potash are poor crutches, and their use eventually breaks down the constitution, ruins the digestion and cause the bones to decay. n n i a ... of the disease seen. Nor is the taint ever transmitted to others. We will send free our book on Contagious Blood Poison, whith is Inter esting and contains full directions for treating- yourself at home. Medical advice or any special information desired given without charge. THE 8 WIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA CA. I ENGLISH ETCHINGS. In Ireland there are 211,000 widows as compared with only 88,000 widow ers. Coal miners at the Dark Lane col liery, Mlrfleld, England, have been on strike for 112 weeks. In the city of London there are still 861 of the objectionable private slaugh ter bouses. This, however, U some 300 less than In 1801. The Jenner Institute of Preventive Medicine in London, of which Lord Lister is president recently changed its name in bis absence to Lister insti- j tute. The tenant under the contemplated j Irish land bill will pay annual pur-1 chase installments of sixty-three years, 1 which are 20 per cent less average than he now pays annual rent. Four hundred and fifty acres of land have been obtained in Blairgowrie to enable Scottish peasants to try the Irish scheme of small holdings, but without aid from taxation. Fruit grow ing and fowl rearing are to be insisted on. The great Duke of Wellington has been dead for half a century, and his monument In St. Paul's cathedral, Lon don, has not yet been completed. It has .been the. subject of animated dis cussion at brief Intervals ever since his death. Arab L.jrln- The following characterization of the Arab penchant for not telling the truth Is from a paper by Dr- - Saint-Paul on the Tunisians: "Arab lying is ex asperating. It Is absurd and victorious. It triumphs easily over the critical sense and the habit of scientific rea soning. It is sometimes childish. Your native servants will never bo token unawares. You forbid one of them to smoke In your dining room and you surprise Uim there with a cigarette In his mouth. 'You were smoking.' 'No.' 'I saw you.' 'Impossible.' 'You had a cigarette In your mouth; you are bid ing it in your hand; there it isf Then God put It tn my hand.' The native denies always. Taken red handed he denies. Beneath blows he denies. Pain Is sometimes powerless to make him confess, even at the point of death. This obstinacy is due In part to the high idea he has of his dignity. His pride forbids him a confession, be cause the avowal of his lying Is In finitely humiliating In his eyes. The fear of losing 'face' Is all powerful In him. To recognize a fault is more shameful than to have committed it Hence the peculiar obstinacy of the native In denylufr, even when It would be to his Interest to confess, an ob stinacy not manifested In other ways." Journal of American Folk Lore. Strong- Erlderaee. "But" protests the manager ot thtl matrimonial agency, "I don't see why I you accuse me of being a bunko steer-1 er. : You haven t found any green goods I etMAM smAns m noruiia " I 1 haven t aska the astute detec-1 tfve. " How about' au these catalogue lists of grass widows 1"J udg. . Resident of New Bern Shows The Way. Only one way toloure a bad back. Liniment and platters may relieve it; : ' - r . They won't cure it Backache means tick kidneys. Doan't Kidney Pillt cure all kidney ills. . New. Bern people prove this. Read a ease ot It: J.H. Curtis, plumber of 71 Craven Street residing at the end of Neuse Bridge, tayt; "I suffered with a weak back which started from a wrench I gave my back when teventeen years old, ani It hat troubled ma ever since, sometimes so badly I could not work." I seemed to lose all use of my back at times -andwat hardly able to ttand, and could not straighten to tave my lite, especially when I took cold. I never thought about it coming from my Kidneys. I used plaster after plaster and liniments wlth- nnt nntnhAr tint wlthnnt narmanunt rsv lief. I saw notices about Dean's Kidney Pills andwat induced to go to Bradham't Pharmacy fpr a box. They are a back t ache pill beyond doubt I used them and have not had my former pains Iff IT. and my back haa become well and strong. You can use my name as one who don ei the olaimt mads for Doan.s Kidney Pills and I am glad to have you do so. For tale by all dealers. Price 60 cents, a box. Foster-lallbura Co., Bu3alo, N. Tn sole agents for the U. 8. the Remember the' nsme Doan't take no other. (WIRY u i1 .re The8.n.B- the rare wrmi. the old symptoms u left off. Is left off. You . o. a., a guaranteed purely vegetable remedy, is the only antidote for Contagious Blood Poison. It de stroys every atom of the deadly virus, overcomes the bad effects of the mercury and cleanses the blood and system so thoroughly that never after are-avav aims EeMICHESTCR'S KNOLISM 7 , ' L a.-.t. rWi.t).. . ase. i rr i nlal C H It! H KST E1T8ES OLIHlI la KEtt aaa 6.1a UUW laa MtaS lta UMribM. Take aa atteeTSefaaa Paag areas SeeetUaeteaa aa latlta tteea. B17 f rear Drsa1s. sr aaW ae. KB satswa atr rartlesrtare, Taasta aMbReneriWIaleaelu linMsUi la.WaTaasawU, half an Srmarlau. Cklekaaaae Caesataal Oa. Beaat. all llsia Heaaje, FaGLsW Urn SsaWalkai tr. Execution Sale. To satisfy that execution to me direct ed from the Superior Court of Craven county on the judgment therein docket- ed In the action entitled Hymaa Supply ComDanv vs. Manhattan Beach Lumber Co. I will tell to the highest bidder for rh at the Court House door in New Bern at the noon recess of Court on Oc tober 5th 1903, all the -following de scribed real estate of the Manhattan Beach Lumber Co., subject to the mort gages recorded thereon, to-wlt: That tract of land situate iu the fork ot An--derson and Slocumb creeks in Craven county more particularly described in the deed from F M Barnes to Manhatten Beach Lumber Co. dated March 17th 1903, and recorded In the office ot the Register of Deeds of Craven county in Book 147 page 80, together with the taw mill situated thereon and all fixtures and appurtenances, including boiler, engine, taw mill, saws and tools, machinery, buildings and all other realty appurten ances levied upon for that purpose. This Sept. 3rd 1903. J. W. BIDDLB, Sheriff Craven Co. ' Notice! Any farmer desiring to fence his land with the American Field Fence can procure the same of me for a short while. I now have in stock two car loads of Same. IWMUwi Under Hotel ChatUwka, NEW BEBN, 97 G. Bowden & Land, ,. ; DEALING IK Staple and Fancy groceries: Having bought the : entire stock of M. E. Land & Co, we beg to so licit a share of your trade. Tour orders will receive our care f ul attention and prompt delivery. All orders large or small will be appreciated..- -"'',' ' Bowden & Itand, Phone 162, 75 Broad St. Pistols and Cartridges A ft .t tiJ- flu mdRcs mu tonus Guns, Rifles, Loaded mi l. rJ Shells, and Hunting Goods of all kinds. . Bicycles.: Phonographs. V.; I Razors, and Pocket Cutlery. VT.L T. HILL,' Dealer tn Biorouts, Firearms, axo A.U. Kotos Spobting Goods. Job PsHTrM . Rtjbbis BiAjtra, en - Phone 115. 81 tlUJle Tt. f AJiSla . ' J 1 and v m . ....
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 2, 1903, edition 1
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