Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / Jan. 15, 1904, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
TUB WEtKLY JOURNAL ErUalisk lt7. Published ia Two Section, e?err Taee- dey and Friday, at Jooraal Bulldlog, 5- w CTtTcn Bireek CHARLES LT, STEVEN., ditoi ua nomrror. T"" SUBSCRIPTION KATE?-, Two Month, OTCent. Thrwe Months,. 85 " 8iz Months, 60 Tvelr Month. $1. ONLY IK ADVANCE. ' ,,4df ertislap rates tarnished upon ap- ueauon M UM ouioo, vr upon 111411117 bjmaoJ. "EP"Th.- juff'uiu. m only sent on pay - Za-tdTuice built. Subscriber will receive notice of expiration of their tub- tcription and an immediate response to notice wul he appreciated by the Jours ai Filtered at' the Postofflce,! New Bern A. CL as second-class matter. Roetloi Twe Frldaj Jaa. 16, 103. RICHES FOR EVERY ONE! Ia these days of high prices for cotton and good demand for nearly every p re dact which comes out of the ground, there It wealth and prosperity for every working man and woman In North Caro Una. But the demon of spesnlalion Is tak ing the place of the quiet and healthy industrial and agricultural spirit which should possess the people. It is not enough that through honest toil, persist ent Industry and careful habits that our people can gain a good Uvlhood and en joy a life of peace and comfort. Bat instead of the pursuit of a daily arocatlon, he it on the farm, in the of fice, In the manufactory, in a profession there is an unrest. The question of the hour Is "What o futures?" "Is cotton np, are stocks down ?" It Is the tick of the telegraphic lustra- ment. the demand to know the latest price on cotton or some railroad stock which has seized too many people today In North Carolina, and causes the ordl nary pursuits of life to appear Insignifi cant and unattractive. A day's labor and Its reward is too slow. A cotton "future" gives the quick results, a trade In the stock market promises quick riches. And tbl speculative madness receives fresh fuel each day as the newspapers tell how Farmer Jones, always a poor man, placed a mortgage on his farm and with the money thus raised, bought cot ton, and in a few days realized several thousand dollars. A clerk on a $25.00 a month salary took a deal In Wall Btieet, with some money he had saved, and Is now worth twenty-five thousand dollars. It la not that Rockefeller or Morgan can make a million dollars, this- does not to forcibly appeal to us, but our next door neighbor, that slow fellow Smith, has taken a few thousand dollars ont of the stock or cotton market. This appeals, for If our next door neighbor, 1 the man whom we know so well, can speculate and grow rich, why not I ? It Is this nearbyness which is so alluring and ao fatallv treacherous. Riches for every one is the cry today, a most dangerous condition, and one which Is going to prove In the end as fatal In its effects as an epldemio which takes lives, for this fever to' get rich, to day, at once; Is going to. leave a sad line of wrecks In Its coarse before the craze Is ended. r-y . . DESIRABLE AND UNDESIRABLE IMMIGRANTS. 1 In many southern localities the quel' tlon of Immigration tarns largely upon the desirableness of the Immigrants who may be secured. This is a most Import ant consideration, the character of those who may be brought Into this section, for once here their Influence mast be an Important factor In its effect upon local conditions, social, as well a? In any ma terial, Industrial or agricultural way, That there are desirable Immigrants, many thousands of them, men and women who want to change their pres ent habitation, and who would prove of Immense value to this sooth land, with their energetic and Industrial waya there Is no question. They would prove of value in every community -and locality, and by their coming would give an In dastrial activity to many places which now need new comers to posh into ac tive development local Industrial and agricultural matters, which Dow lie dor mant. ' - -vv ''";''."; : The exodus of the colored race from n any portions of the South, acts very dotrlmentally, for the time at least, on loc i develorment and progress, as It I 3i - s L'jor Scarce, and made It es- ult In many afnculturw ry on tlie cusl -'y farm ' It impossible to go Into 3 t J c; authorities shall take positive action, looking to seen ring immigrants to not merely (take the placet of those , who have left, bat a class of immigrants who will prove desirable rtaldeaU, who will I add to the Industrial streagta of the lo cality which secures them. ' Immigrants jnst to fill up places which the colored people have MX 9 cant, are not to besought, but immi grants who will Ja every way prove valuable, by their industry, honesty and thrift, la what many localities want, and these can be secured by employing the proper methods, which every communi ty can easily find oat by Inquiring RUSSIA'S METHOD OP SECURING TERRITORY. ' Since the Crimean war,RnsaU has not seriously gone Into any war which meant loss of men end money. The Russian method of territorial aggran dizement is one of making treaties, with no thought cf complying with them. Of securing new territory by the very mag nitude of Its empire, and a diplomacy which Is shrewd and unscrupulous. The stsnd which Jspan la , taking at the present time shows how that nation fears for the future of Its t ommerciai and political existence, for the Russian march Is towards the sea, and Japan lies very near Korea, which once added to the Russian Empire would place Japan In the shadow cast by the tremendous Empire of theJNorth. It Is a matter cf, national humiliation with the Japanese, the present attitude of Russia, towards Jspan, for It was Ruiiia which made nail and void every victory which Japan bad gained in its war with China. Russia quick to seize advantages c cupled Manchuria and has used lh years since the war to fortify Its posi tion and .strengthen its occupancy in a country where It has no Just right, and its note to the Powers that their treaty rights In Manchuria will be respected, Is the assumption of ownership of Man churia. This promise will be like every Rut slan promise made since its occupancy of Manchuria, simply Ignored, Russia makes no promise to be kept, as her record shows. The treaty Is the barrier against possible war which the Russian gets behind and accomplishes without loss of men or money, that which the sacrifice of these might fall to secure. A failure of Japan to assert her rights, and an Indifference among the Powers, means absolute death to treaty rights in Manchuria, and the ultimate abporptlon of Korea by Russia. Over riding of treaties entered Into, and a defiance of her opponents, when once the territory 1 occupied, Is the Russian method, a policy not of Russian dishonor, for that country has not shown that It hat a character which can be stained by violation of Its National word. $100 Rcward,;$ioo. The readers of ithls paper will be pleased to learn that there it at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that Is Catarrh, Hall's Catarrh Care Is the only positive care now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitational disease, requires a constitu tional treatment. Ball's Catarrh Care It taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous (turf aces' of the system, the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the dlsease.and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing tt work. The proprietor have so much faith In its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It fails to .care. ..Send for list of testimonials. ' . -.!- ,. ' Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo O. - . , , Sold by all Druggists, 85c. 1 ' Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa tion. . ' Little Hemrr'a' Qoeatloaa. ' ? Little Henry was reading ancient his tory stories,- 'Ta," said he suddenly, "can I ask you a question?' . - "I guess you can, Henry,' ! Ion seem to have a fair command of English.? - "Well, may L then little Henrj continued. , ( , ."Tea," aald pa., ''Fire ahead.",-, . "That's funny," said little Henry. "I was just thinking of such things. ; NoW, did the old Romans light their houses with Roman' candles V . ' "I shouldn't wonder," said pa, chuc kling. 'Nero, at least;' Indulged In t good deaf . of fireworks. ! Anything else?" - 1 "Yea," replied little Henry. " "Did the people of Athens do all their cooking With Greek fire?" , Then pa got mad and said he couldn't be bothered with any more silly ques tions. Household Ledger. , ' Cured After Suffering 0 Tearsi B W Hare, Supt. Miami Cycle & Mfg. Co. Middletown, O. Buffered; for ten years with dyspepsia. . He spent bun dreds or dollars for medicine and with doctors without receiving any perma nent benefit He .says, '-One ..night while feeling' exceptlonly ; bad I was about to throw down the evening paper when I taw an Item In the paper re garding the merits of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. I concluded to try I' Jand wl!e I had no fulih In It I fJt better after the second dose- Af'.er tr j two toUlos I am etrortc-r an J t-' r I' a I 1 '78 1 ihr s 11 1 ' 1 IToM , 'AROUND AND ABOUT. Attention 1 colled to Mr J J Battel's large ad In this ttaoe, j Mr Baxter Is hav tog a great mid-winter ' tale, and from the prices he mentions, . he must mean business. It would very likely pay every one to buy, even extravagantly at these prices. " Read his ad A license was granted to WP Phil lips, a white man, to marry Mrs Areas Meadows, low of Charles Meadow, Monday evening, It will be remembered that Phillips was on trial for the murder of Meadows, last October and that be Wat acquitted. Mr Joseph B Congdon, foreman of the planing mills of the Atlantic and North Carolina railroad, has resigned his position, and will leave with bis fam ily for Philadelphia on Friday, whleh p'acs he will make hit home, having ac cepted a position with a large firm In that city. Barracks for the nse of 'the convicts who will build the Pamlico. Oriental and Western railway are almost com pleted. They are located three miles on the north side of the Neute. When fin ished they will measure 84 by tO feet and will be built la sections. At the road progretset the building will be moved to convenient places. Congratulations. Mr. John H. Cullcm, Editor of the Garland, Texas, News, has written ajlet ter of congratulations to the manufac turers of Chamberlain's Cough Femedy at follows: ''Sixteen years ago when our first child was a baby he was sub ject to "croupy spells and we would be very uneasy about him. We began us ing - Chamberlain's Cough Remedy In 1887, and finding it such a reliable reme dy for colds and croup, we hareyiever teen without it In the house since that time. We have five children and have given It to all of them with good results. One good feature of this remedy is that It Is not disagreeable to take and cur babies really like it. Another la that it Is not dangerous, and there is no rlk from giving an overdose. Ifcongratulate you upon the success of your remedy." For sale by all druggists. John rtunnn. Tue bill of indictment pn-fenvfi ngninst John Ilunyun run th':s: ".'ohu Bunynu linth devilishly ai:d .M-n'c!mi. ly abstained from cotiiint; to i-hivc-li tc hear divine service nml Is a common upholder of several unlawful meeting and conventicles, to the disturbance and distraction of the good subject of this kingdom, contrary to the laws of our sovereign lord the king." He was convicted and Imprisoned twclvf years and six mouths. A Prisoner in Her Own House. Mra.W. H. Layhs, of 1001 Agnes Ave., Kansas City, Mo., has for several years been troubled ' with severe hoarseness and at times a hard cough, which she says, "Would keep me In doors for days. I was prescribed for by physicians with no noticeable results. A friend gave me part of a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy with Instructions to .closely follow the directions and I wish to state that after the first day I could notice a decided change for the better, and at this time after using it for two weeks, have no hesitation in saying I realize that 1 am entirely cured." This remedy Is for sale by all Druggists. Happily Married. ( . "When may a woman be said to be happily married?" . "Not until she has had the pleasure of refusing several men." Detroit Free Press. "f la every family there is a genius who can't prove his genius. Their kind daeen't count Atchison Globe. " N ' Mr. Wm. 8, Crane, of California, Md., suffered lor years from rheumatism and lumbago.' He was finally advised to try Chamberlain's Pain Balm, which he did and it effected a complete cure. F01 tale by all druggists, '.. . ' Health Ilalea. . .. ' One of Queen Victoria's he nlth role Is said to have been, ''Do whatever you like, but do it in,' moderation," or words to tint effect and a similar rtle might be adopted with still greater profit by the men and women of the present day. The people of Queen Victoria's genera tion bad not made d fad of health, and every newspaper Wiey picked- up did not; worry them with conflicting hy gienic rule Hue no breakfast fiend, if he existed,, was less prominent than at present' aud those who thought that the .first ought, to be the best meal of the day did. not publish their' views from every roof top, figuratively speak ing. Vegetarians and meat eaters wran gled only In Inconspicuous corners, and the devotees of the cold bath were eon tent with fewec , victims.- Today,, when all these and a. million other so called health rules are being dinned Into the ears of a long suffering public on all sides, it I more than ever; important to bear In. mind that inclinations and disinclinations were not'aWJitrarily Im planted by 'nature In ailnnll.Tp'ganisins; that they, exist f of otfc-guidance and not solely to mislead ns; '- New', York Tribune. ' " " - t . CLIMATIC CURES. The influence of climatic conditions M the care of consumption Is very mucl overdrawn. The poor patient and the rich patient, too, can do much better home by proper attention to food digest tlon, and a regular nse of German Syrup Free expectoration in the morning li made certain by Gc'nn Syrup, so It t good night's regt t tfe absence of thai weakening cough and debilitating night sweat ' Eostles8 nights and theexbaut- tloii due toMcoughing, the greatest dan ger and drei. J of the consumptive, can be prevented or stopped by taklng'Ger- n pa fyrep liberally and, regularly liould you be able to go to a warmer c"me, you will find that of tin thous Bn.'a cf corn- ptlves there, the few .0 are I 1 and regain trertl ' FO TCCICCO ColonelJohn S. Cnniunjham Says v Plant Good Acreage. IevutlgaUd Cattle Disease Hea- Ufle the Negro. Ballreadt ' Sty Sehedale tee Fatt. Ox- .fer4 Orphanage Oett . ' Bravest, Matoalc tlon ..; Rauioh, Jan 11 Dr Talt Bailer, state velerioarlaa : hat returned from Swannanoa, near Aiheville,' where he In veaUgaTed disease among f the herd of 22 cattle at the Farm School Oat of the 23, 14 died, tome in 80 hoars after being attacked. The deaths were due to ptomaine poison of tome kind. An experiment It now being eonlucUdby placing other cattle among those tick. Tae disease It not Infectious, Colonel John . Cunotnsham, presi dent of the North Carolina Tobacco Growers Association It here, and when asked hit vlewt as to the ' redaction of toe acreage la tobicc) laid "My adj vice It to raise food crops and then al the tobacco that can conveniently be planted. This ta k of organising to re duce crop acreage amounts to nothing When the statement gets oat that there will be a general ic taction tome farmt i are sure to plant more, thinking prices will be higher. Such attempts at or ganized reduction will always be a fail ure. There will however, be a reduction In the east of perbapt 80" per cent and In the older tobacco growing tectlon of tome 20 per cent I believe. Tobacco It now telllnz at better prices tbaa It brought In the autumn." Treasurer Joseph G Brown of the Methodist Orphansge here says fundi are coming in very w 11 for tt A gen tle man died In Alabama .recently and left by his will a considerable quantity of land to the orphanage. The Oxford Orphan Asylum is also understood to be In luck. The late Miss Betsy Bryan of Saratoga, Wilson county a sister of Mrs Robert W. Best having left by her will money to this asylum. This morning Mrs Paschall . Long of Edgecombe county came here with her husband and Sheriff Bullock of that county to tee Joe Battle, the 23 year old negro In jail here, who It charged with having feloniously assaulted her on the first day of last August . Mrs Long said He is the man, only he is lighter, a good deal lighter, because be has been in prison." Sheriff Bollock said "Battle it a good deal lighter ' than when 1 brought him from Manchester, Va. to Raleigh to tave him from lynching. Be Ing In jail hat bleached hit color. He 1 wat born near Rocky Tilount and until be wat IS yeara old lived on the farm of J General W R Cox. When we got into jail three prisoners : were brought oat Battle among them, and he would not urn bit face. He tbowed all the tlgnt of guilt. When I was br!nginghim from Manchester he admitted that he had worked In a brick yard within a quatter of a mile of Mrs Long's home, although he had before denied that he had been in that seotion. He is a native of Edge combe county. Mrs Long Is 24 years old and her home it about three miles from Rocky Mount. Battle will be kept In jail here until the first week In March We are afraid to carry hltn to Edge combe until the trial time, at he would certainly be lynched. It he It not found guilty he will be lynched anyway. I am certain of that. Of eonrte I will do my duty to prevent any. auch thing." Mn Long tt a small woman; quite pale and hln. Her husband laid tha identifies ton wat inch that he was certain Battle was the man who had beei described to him by hit wife. It is said that Mrs Long wat more certain later of the I dentlty of Battle than the was when the first saw him, at he wat not at black at the expected him to be, having brighten ed under confinement, f Her last words werC'He most be the light negro.". ' State Auditor Dixon wat much amused today by the receipt of t letter addressed to Mr Aycock Dixon. It wat about pen tlon matters, these gentlemen being among the most prominent members of the State pension board, ' The corporation commission devoted today to hearing arguments In the mat ter of the connection at Salem betweeo the Atlantic Coast Line and the South era railway, the commission having or dered the Atlautlo Coast Line to quicken itt time about half an hour Irr order tc make the connection and the Coast line having excepted and replied that It could not quieten the time, while- th Southerh railway said Its schedule wat already to fat at to be dingerout. . The Grand Lodge of Matoat met hert tonight In its 116th annual communica tion, with a very large 'attendance. The orator at thlt communication wat Col. John A Cunningham, who made an ex cellent address, In which he thowedthe great work done by masonry, and told of the fact that the most distinguished men in American history were members 6f this great order, headed by Washing ton, the most eminent of the ions ol men. Ia thlt State the order wat est ah. ished before the Revolution and the residence of William Hooper, a signer ol the Declaration of Independence, wat at Maronboro, to named tecause the lodge had opened there. Many yeart eanler a lodge had been established at Wilming ton, but of lit history there appear! to be no information. Grand blaster Wil liam R Davit devoted himself to tecur-' Ing university at thapelHill of which he laid tbe corner stone, and Its estab lishment wat due more to him than any one el, e. The chief actors In $" .'e af fairs In those early days were r'1 m v ons, and they had powerful lt.n : Tl.e noble order has taken a d'- r 1 ' 1 -w " ! FOREMAN. January 13, Mr J H Davis, Jr., of Darlowe, passed through here Batarday ea route to Beau fort. ' s , ' Mr Alex Foreataa got another ahot at the wild tarkeyt latt wwk, but aot with inch good results thlt time at hit dog flushed them tcxrsoon. Certainly. Bat Alex, Td Oath that yellow dogtbe next time. Rrt J H M G;lai of Newport passed through here Batarday ea route to Wire Grat where he filled hit regular appoint ment that etgh', Messrs William Clayton, L- Hollow e'l, Vernon Galavrand Mrs.Je.tle Spar row, of Aurora, Beaufort county, were the gaestt of Mr W D Hammingi Satur day and Sunday. Messrs William Clayton and Lee Hol towell, are on their way to Marahalberg, to enter the Academy at that place. Quite a lumber of our dtlsent drove up to Harlowe Sunday to attend the 11 o'clock service held at the M E Church by RevJHMGIlea. . x ZOE. Death of T. K. Hutchins. The Sin Marcos, Texas, Democrat of December 18th, 1003, hat the following notice?. - V .jv.;,.v "Tom K Butchlnt diel at hit home In Blanco county Monday from paralysis, Mr Butchlns was for several yeara a but (neat man of Ban Mtrcti aod leaves a host of friends who regret to hear of his death." Mr Hatohlat wu a former? New Bern- Ian, having been born here, and left In lf76- He leavei a large family who re tide In Texi v MrtMary 8mith of tbit city It a slstor of the deceased. A Vest-Docket Doctor. Never In the way, no .trouble to" carry, easy to take, pleasant and never fatt Ing In resulta are DeWltt's Little Early Risers. A via', of these little puis In the vest-pocket Is a certain guarantee against headache, bllllousuess, torpid liver and all-of the ills resulting from constipation. They tonic and ttrength en the liver. Bold by F 8 Daffy. Prohibition Jujs For Goldsboro, Goldtboro Argus. The afternoon train from the North it now known at the "jug train" and more tlcketi have been told to and from Pike- vllle in the last ten dayt than for several months before. On Saturday afternoon there were about thirty jugt besides the large number of bottles, and again on the Norfolk shoofly Saturday night there wat a quantity of whiskey brought here irom riseviue. ine tsiyor had one cue of drank and dltordtrfy before hit court thlt morning. The offeader said he got his whiskey In Pikevlile. "On to Pikevlile" teems to be the slogan of the old as well as youag tope's. ATery Close CalL 'JI stuck to my engine, although every joint ached and every nerve wai racked with pain," writes O W Bellamy, a loco motive, fireman, of Burlington, Iowa. "I wu weak and pale, without Any ap petite and all run down.' At I wat about td give up, I got a bottle of Elec tric Bitters, and after taking It, I felt u well as I ever did in my life." Weak, sickly, run down people always gain n.w life, strength and vigor from their use. Try them. Satisfaction guaran teed by 0. D. Bradham. Price tO cents. Sympathy to Gen. Gordon's Family. ' Mrt Fred A. Olds, president of the North Carolina division, United Daugh tert of the Confederacy has sent to the family of Gen John B Gordon, at Miami. Fla., the following telegram: ''The North Carolina Daughters tendtendei ett sympathy In yoer great torrow." The nicest and pleasantest tredlclne I hare need for indigestion and constipa tion It Chamberlain's 8tomach and Liver Tablets," tayi Melard F Oraig, of Middle grove, N.T. "They work like a charm and do not gripe or have any unpleasant effect," . For sale by all druggists. ; : CI orb n.int. . , The clock plant Ih u native of Borneo. and' In that country even It Is said to be rare. The plant derives Its name from its peculiar habits, which are known to but few who have hot studied It from a scientific standpoint. Tbe plant has leaves, of two sizes,, one of which acta in ' the capacity of minute hand, which keeps moving un til 4 o'clock in the "afternoon," hhd the other keeps going until morning. Tbe larger leaves act as the hour hands. Starting lq a position when all tbe leaves lie close to the stem, with the points hanging down, they rise gradu ally until they turn toward the top, and then they drop to their former po aitlon. It takes the smaller leaves about one minute to go through this performance and the longer leaves Just about an hour. Melbourne Time. t. - T honsand Churches tn the United States; have uted the Longman fc, Martlnerf Pure Palntadur- (ng the put ten months. ' Every Church will be Tgiven a .liberal quantity whenever they paint. " .Don't pay 160 a gallon for linseed oil, whtch you do when you buy it In a sealed can with a paint label on it. 8 & ft 14, therefore when you want foarteen!galloni of paint, bay only eight tallont of L. -&;vi, and mix aix gallont of pure linseed owwith it It will make fourteen gallon! of paint It't done easily. It makes thejjalnt costyou only about 11.20 a gallon You piobabaly;won't need fcore" than ten or twelve gallons of It, bee s.as the L. & M. Taint covers so mucL jorc'sur- face than other paints. C ..' slavejbeen tent or. K..;.onsJ of ,. j v'jtwo Btr.llon hou s palnt- "", ' -r gv.trtKitee u repfci.it If not .V r u 17 c-t's ti The Kind Tou Ilavet Aluroji la use for over SO rears, XT ' All Counterfeits, Imitation and " Jajt-as-good are bat Experiments that trifle with and endanger tbe bealtb of . Infants and QiUdreo Experience against Experiment.' What'fo CASTORIA CastorU Is a harmleM Vtbitttnte tor Castor On, Fare Boric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. . It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Xareotto substance. Its age Is Its guarantee. It destroys 'Worms - and allays FeverUhnees. It cures Diarrhoea and XftoA Colic. It relieves Teething; Troubles, cures Constipation -.and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the v Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep -The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. ' ' CEMUirJE CASTORIA ALWAYO Sean th l r m 1 r- w - M M M The Kind You Hare Always Bought In Use For J. jA-. Ltvery, Feed, Sale and; Exchange LARGEST AND HOESES $ qxijSJI "UTILES Ever offiretl for sale in Few J era, A car load of each juet in. ., Also con plete line bf I tiggiep, Waf cnn, HameFS. Eobi,J Whips Cart WheelS. Etc. , , r ; J. A. JONES, Broad St. I.. I have just!returned sas and Hissouri T7ith GO Head of Horses anil uuids, all personailyjand mcsl carefully eclccted. ThfiUeat Class oi stcc!i choun In this niarli- et for the past 6 yean;, 7crk, general drait haullnrr. . vO- v i-v Can alsd show you tbe most complete line oi xop vpe" rles, Harness, r.Lf s, Whips, Blankets, Etc. to he found in Eastern Carolina. . . - " . ole agent for the EENOWNED ; TJBURN WAGONS AND WIIEHLy, the Best on tlie market. " ' :, ' See me before bnying, or If you SAVE YOU D Bonght, and wh.lc Juu bom ha twirn thA iiimsrnni f and haa been made under his per . onal supervision since Its infancy. Allow Tin on tn rlmln mn In tKIo. Signature of . Over 30 Years. :, FINEST STOCK OF- JOjSPBS Monuments' and: Headstones All Cemetery WorkatRight Prices 4 f Lettering and Finish 'the Beet.' v Latest Designs'. All Work Delivered. " - r It. A. TUCKER HBO., ' ; V J WILMINGTON, N. 'O. ; We have soma cut and rough brown stone at A. 0. L. depot in New Bern that we will Bell cheap. ' from Tennessee, Kan - cuch tz you need and purpee3 &au jtuaurx ' ' -' expect to Duy. A ua ana viiuit .31111, 1 I. ( i t 1 : ; I 1 i Ar-'o .xon. Tie e ' i 1 ' I t " "i t ft' 1 ' " 1 ' I -1 I i I n c.
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 15, 1904, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75