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-' rl 1 i i m v hi v hi f x t a j 11 VOL. XXVIII.-No. 68 NEW BERN, CRAVEN COUNTY, N. C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 'l-FIRST SECTION. 28th YEAR ) t3iK3f COTTCX PUtSSt . tarun. stkmcut, best flM MVMRAY OlMMIHO BYVTBM $ tit, f Cm4uu, Eta. GIXXU MACHINUT CO. Colombia. C Yale Beats Harvard Boston, Mass., Nov. 25. The Yale foot ball team defeated Harvard In the annual game at Cambridge field today by a score of 6 to 0. -. Liquor Money For Education. ' Special to Journal. . -Raleigh, Nov. 23. The State Supt, of Public Instruction, announced that receipts from liquor licenses and dis , pensaries show a great increase. Last yeir receipts from liquor licenses were $67,863 and from dispensaries $19,551, total $77,443. This year receipts from liquor licenses are $53,778 a falling off of some $14,000 but there is a big jump In receipts from dispensaries which aggregate $73,237, making the total $132,011, an increase of $44,567 over , last year. : John W. Gates' House Boat Here. The Roxana, a house boat owned by John W. Gates of New York, the fa mous Wall Btreet plunger, arrived here last night with a party of six gentlemen and ladies from New York. The boat . is chartered for a Southern cruise by iir. Arthur Kemp and is in command of Capt. Isaac T. Golden, a nephew of Mr. T. A. Henry. The schooner Bettie another New York boat belonging to the New York Yacht Club was towed here by the Roxanv, having her tender out of order. She will be put in repair at the Meadows ship yard. This morning the Roxana will leave at 7:30 for Har bor Island, where the party will t pend a few days hunting, they. Will then em tinue their cruise to the West Indies where they will pass the winter. It will wash and not run off This complexion all envy me, It's no secret so 1 11 tell Take thou Rocky Mountain Tea. For sale by P. S. Duffy. Get fcur Trees The Woman's Club have delivered ne rly fifty water oaks, and another lot will come in early next week. Tie trees are fine specimens, and now is the best time for planting, as the sap is out, and the young trees can make new feeding fibers during the winter and be ready for quick growth in the spring Send your order for one or more t6 Mrs R.'P. Williams, 58 South Front St, who will see that you are supplied. - The price is very reasonable, only 35 cents each. Five hundred ought to be plant ed on our streets, for this opportunity may never come again. The collections for silver maples, sugar maples, pecans etc., were very cheerfully advanced, and the order for them has been sent to the nursery, it is hoped to get them in about two . weeks. Arbor day will be ' observed at the graded school, when each grade will plant an elm, with ap- i proprlate exercises. Maysville Item November 25. Dr. A. W. Disosway has purchased the residence of Mrs. Carrie Henderson,. on Main street, next to the M. E Church and will move his office there. Church at Er.dgetoj. The legal organization of the Metho dist church at Bridgeton was affected Sunday, Rev. G. T. Adams officiating in the matter. The church has 23 mem-bii-a, Messrs D. W. Dowdy and J. S. Wallace were elected stewards. . The Sunday school there was organ ized with GO members, and the follow in? were elected officers : Superintendent, Wallace H. White hurst; secretary, Flossie Lee; treasurer, W. II. Mason. Rev. J. K. Betts will be the pastor and services will be held every Sunday morning at 11 o'clock, Sunday school at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. If you are troubled with dizzy spells, lion.l.iche, indigestion, constipation, T "' i?r's Rocky Mountain Tea will t s you Well and keep you well. If il 1 ., i t your money back. That's t : li crista. For sale by F. S. 1 1 f n vje firms ': I SPECIAL TERM LDURT Farmers Urged to Hold Their Cotton. Negro Assassin Soils Property and Uavts State. Work Begun on Colored Hospi tal. Governor Refuses to Pardon - Murderer for Crime Commit ted In 1697. Raleigh, N. C, Nov. 25. Governor Glenn orders the special term'of Duplin ourt for the trial of civil cases, the firt week in January, Judge W. R. Alert to preside. ; ' " Preparations are being made - for placing steel filing cases in the office of the Secretary of State, and the floe r will be underpinned with brick in order to sustain the extra weight. ' I , Jacob Evans, colored, who is charged with assassinating another negro, Jas Hockaday ha3 fled . the State, the sheriff says : Hockaday has made a dying declaration that it was Evans who call ed him to the door of his cabin in the country one night this week and shot hinu down. ', The father of Hockaday was here Thursday but failed to get a warrant in time. Evans was here Wednesday, and it is now found sold all his property" and departed that day. It is believed that he has" gone some where in Virginia. ' Hockaday 's father said that Evans claimed that his wife had left him and accused Hockadayf being the cause of her leaving. The father declared that there was no truth n this statement and that Hockaday had nothing whatever to do with the departure of the woman.- F resident John S. Cunningham of the North Carolina Cotton Growers' Asso ciation left here, today for Enfield to address "the farmers. . He is urging tie n everywhere to hold cotton and ex pects a sharp advance in the next 9) days. Very little cotton is coming into the market in this State." ; ;.. Work has begun on the new hospital at St. Augustine, Colored Normal School, a mile northeast of Raleigh. The funds for this building are a gift, amounting to $15,000. The students of the male department of the school will do the work on the building. They have erected the other buildiogi on the grounds, including the chapel and library, both built of granite fro-n this, section, and they have also built gate ways and a fountain. Governor Glenn declines to pardon Thomas Broadway, who in 1897 killed Mi Ui Reii in Rowan county and fled the State upon requisition of Governor Aycock he was brought back to North Carolina from South Dakota, where he hnd been captured in the autumn of 1904, and was tried in November before Judge Cook, was convicted of man slaughter and sentenced to two years in the penitentiary. The jury recommend ed mercy to the court. , Neither the Judge nor the solicitor recommended a pardon, and in a personal interview with the-judge, the latter informed the Governor that he had given the prison er as light a sentence as he thotight he was entitled to and this, upon the re commendation of the jury. The gover nor says as to this case; "In this Icon- cur," the prisoner has a fail trial and was convicted and two years was little enough. An appeal" for clemency, based on the condition of wife and children always touches a sympathetic chord in any heart, but the defendant himself showed very little consideration for these unfortunate ones when ho took human life and remained away eight years from those he professed to love. Fine Words of Praise. Under the head of "A Good Exam ple" the Industrial News of Greens. -boro Nov. 25th, has the following good words in an editorial for the New Bern Iron Works. ' The Daily Industrial News has been especially careful to keep its editorial columns free from anything that savored of an advertisemsnt, but there is one North Carolina firm whose enterprise we think should be held up for imitation, and we propose to do so. Our New Bern correspondent reports that on 2 o'clock of the morning of November 22d, the engine-room and boiler room of the New Bern iron Works was almost com pletely destroyed by fire. So far the story is simply one of many similar stories, which we regret to be ob'l -ed to report. Bat there is something tl e. The report siys that the company J n mediately bsgan to rebuild, but in the meantime procured the city's steam roller, coupled it up with the shaft of t ie main building, where most of the machinery was located, and was kept at work. The man who thoiiRht or using that roller deserves a medal and ' a inousana imitators, iviore men 01 the same kind men who think and act and do thinps while other men sit by and mourn their loss are the greatest mmiityT C;od for the New Bern iron Works, and rood for the man. whoever . he is, that "does things.1 Xmas Si!7jc:.:ions. For Gentlemen A Kodak, set, scarf pin, cuIT buttons, shaving match boxes, silver handle pocket I.ui h, hat Irutih, military brushes' and isad files in silver cose for pocket. It ia the prt of v,i: !.m to have your Rejection j ut up f r y..u 1 " fere the ru h i.-i oti, and to 1 ' rf 1 v ! , 1 it i . t. j t 11 t 1 w-l 1. r on. J. o. ' : r ' MILLIONS FOR INVESTMENT By Standard Oil Interests In Eastern North Carolina Railroads, Boats, Mills and Vast Timber Territory. For tunes Being Made, That millions of dollars are being in vested in this Eastern North Carolina section, is to beeen by the activity in business circles, the number of strang ers at all the leading towns, and par ticularly is to be noted the number of lawyers engaged in examining titles to every kind of property upon the county books, and passing upon all kinds of papers,, by these lawyers,, which mean the tranferof property from one owner! In all this buying, the Standard Oil people are the buyers. Various agen cies are empl yed to buy from local owners, but there is one center from which fell checks pome, and the various buying, agencies simplify the work, and expedite the purchases. The great saw mill and timber in terests of the Roper and the Blades people, amounts to , about $4,000,000, while the purchase of the several steam boat and railroad lines in this section, can but be generally estimated. In addition to these, parties having timber lands of fairly good dimensions a e selling their possessions, and some big profits have been realized, for some of these lands are changing from their present owners to the Standard Oil people at prices varying from twice to five times their original cost, and hand some fortunes are being gathered in by those who bought timber lands during the last five and ten years, which are now being taken up by the Standard Oil people at about what price the owners place upon vherit1 These millions of dollars of new mcney, mean an activity in the com mercial affairs in Eastern Carolina, for the new owners of the property are certain to make their investments pay interest, and this means that a good d .al of business is to be done. IG POST OFFICE BUSINESS. New Bern's Record Shows an Increase of " Business. The Washington correspondent of the Industrial News gives that paper a fin ancial statement of the business done by North Carolina post offies last year. They all show a substantial gain and the New Bern office takes a leading place among those doing over a $10,000 business. ' These figures show the busi ness done up to June 30, the end of the fiscal year. The gain as reported by Postmaster Hancockjismore than 15 per cent over the previous year. Following -is the statement in the Industrial News: ... The Charlotte post office is ahead of all others in North Carolina in a busi ness way. The receipts of the Queen City office amounted to $82,308 last year, while the Wilmington office, which was second in this industria race, collected a total of $71,394. , ' These figures are obtained from the annual report of the Poitmaster Genei al for the fiscal year just ending, ai d reflect the industrial development of the cities and towns in the State. Ra' eigh takes rank with receipts totaling $63,076, Winston-Salem fourth, with re ceipta aggregating $61,356, and Greens boro fifth, with receipts amounting to $53,394.- : - - There are 19 post offices in the State with receipts in excess of $10,000. They are as follows:. Adheville, $46,941; Durham, $24,454; High Point, $19,921; New Bern, $16,778; Salisbury, $16,539; Goldsboro, $16,5; Fajetteville, $14, 008; Statesville, $12,076; Elizabeth City $11,961; Wilson, $11,708; Kinston, $10, 070; Rocky Mount, $10 645:Corcord, $10- 1 287; Washington, $10,050. There are 66 other presidential post offices in North Carolina", but their re ceipts fall below the ten thousand dol lar mark. .". - Cigars and Tobacco at Warren's. Successor to Archbishop Chapelle. New Orleans, Nov. 27 The question of a successor to the late Archbishop Chapelle of New Orleans, who died of yellnw fever during the early stage of the epidemic, will be decided herein the Eecond week in December, when the convocation of bishops of the prov ince and priests of the archdiocese will be held. It is stated on apparently good authority that Rev. J. M. Laval, of New Orleans Vicar general will be chosen and that a petition in his favor has been signed by 90 out of 147 of the archdiocese. A Pair of Pinks" The komicks West and Vokes and MaTret Vokes will bring to our cuy "may jlcc. 8, ine runny ac-crrc- gation known the country over as "A Pair of rinks. " Too much praise can not be awarded this clever trio, West and Vokes as Tercy and Harold the two detectives hunting for fun and amusement, and Margaret Daly Vokos as Mag Nctte, the original Rube Girl, are the top liners of mirth and pong. I The-.c t !o lave surrounded them. seiv 3 v '1 a clever ea.it, pretty pirls and -!.v. r 1. - i, .- , 1 iho thru! re gwrs lot Kt-.v I' 1 i- a j er...l jei.uri!- 111 AWFUL E Sores Covered Neck and Cheeks Itched Day and Night -Noth- . Jng Did Me Any Good t Was Growing Worse. V CURED BY CUTICURA" . AT COST OF $4.50 " Miss NiHie Vander Wiele. nfT.uk . side, N. Y., writing under date of April 18, 1904, says : ' I do wish you would publish this letter in the news papers, so that others suffering as I have may see it and be helped.. 1 suf fered for many months with ail awful skin disease, sores covering my ears, neck, and cheeks. Scabs would form and they would swell, and ith day and night. Then they would break open and blood and matter run out. I had tried many different remedies, but none of them did me any good. I was growing worse when , tried the Cuticura Remedies. Thfc first application helped me, and when I had used two cakes of Cuticura Soap, three boxes of Cuticura Ointment, and "three bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, I was completely cured." Humours, Eczemas, Itchings, and Chafings Cured by Cuticura The agonizing itching and burning' of the skin, as in eczema; the fright--ful scaling, as in psoriasis ; tly-' loss of hair aud crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head ; the facial disfiure- inent, as in pimyles and ringiorm; the awful suffering of infant)!, and anxiety of woru-out parents, las in milk crust, tetter, and salt rhenm, all demand a remedy of almost Super human virtues to successfully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills are such stands proven beyond all doubt by the testi mony of the civilized world. " f ?!toira fctoup, Ointment, nnd P1U. re wlii throuRhoul tirwiWil. t'orivr Itnij A Ciii'tn. Corp- Sole Proprietor., - itotw 3-Seudfur"How tuCurv jkia Hunoura." S. C.A. -. 1 The above letters simply mean that the Southern Cotton Association wants to help our Southland to put (30,000,000) thirty million dollars more in circula tion and in the cotton growers pocket, something like it did last spring and summer. How is it to be done?: Well its quite simple, let the' Soutlilfekl.its jetton ninety days, and the result will be about; 15 dollars increase on each bale. Two millions bales thus tied up will mean another extra thirty millions for the cotton growers. . Somebody is going to get this extra thirty millions, why not the farmer ? 4 ; '': Brother farmer we are taking a long time to learn how to attend to our own business, but I believe we are learning one part of our business, is to know how to Bell a crop when we hare pre pared it for sale. - Don't forget that the first Saturday in December is township or precinct day. You ought to organize at every voting precinct in the county and send three or five delegates to thecouiitj meeting to be held the second Saturday in December or 9th day at 12 o'clock at the court house. " . This county meeting will elect Its offi cers for the coming year and also dele gates to the State Convention. Como out and join us, you busines men of New , Bern, our fight is you fight, our victory is your victory, and our defeat is your defeat. Let every section of our county or ganize And be represented at New Bern December 9th. DANIEL LANE, Pres. S. C. A. Craven Co. Bellair is trying to be ready for Thanksgiving, any and all times some of us. Cotton picked, corn housed, potatoes banked, peas picked, hogs nearly fat, turkeys around and hens once in awhile laying nice white eggs, but they Bum very slow about it. When we look on the calendar and realize that it is only one short month to Christmas. - .. Well if they wont lay wo will just eat the hens and get the best of them that way. There 'seems to be some some cases of whooping cough and lots of colds about here. . , . . ', : Rev. W. II. Townsend preached his last sermon for us the 19th, and goes to conference next week. L. eras CONTRACTS BEING MADE A Norfolk special to the. Washington Post, Sunday Nov. 2Gth says: "The Virginia and Carolina Coast Railway Company has awarded its con tracts for railway construction to J. G. White & Co., of New York, and that firm already has a force of men at or' on a portion of the contract in Ncrt'i Carolina. The Virginia and Carolina Coast Rail way, which is being built by a syndi cate for the purpose of exploiting over 500,030 acres of timber landa . in Vir ginia an ! North Carolina, will extend 112 mi'eM, connecting with the Suffolk and Carolina Railroad on the north, and the New Irn, Oriented mid We;' tern oil tie! HOUlh. Tin; c.,i'.di-;itiii! ' f r v.;;i f . ,1 a r '1 1;.. FOREHEAD CHOSEN By Board For Permanent State Mili tary Encampment What Board Says of Tarmt Offered by More '' head City WriflhUvllls. What Each Place Offered to Secure The Annual Visits of North Carolina Brigades. Special to Journal Raleigh, Nov. 27 This afternoon the board of officers' report to Gov. Glenn on permanent encampment site was made public by the Governor. Bjl h!s order the selection of the site was left entirely in the hands of the board, which unanimously select Morehead City. ' . ' This report gives terms of offer of Morehead City and the Atlantic & N. C. railway combined, and that of Wil mington for Wrightsvllle site, and then fays that first named offer was to give old camp site with two thousand feet frontage on Bogue sounds with addi tional land ' adjoining, running two thousand feet back, and a rifle range two hundred by one thousand yards, also adjoining; to build range and pits, railway sidings, store houses, -all other necessary buildings, to clear and grade grounds, set them in grass, furnish water supply and lights, and to care for all this property when unoccupied. Wright8ville offered 101 acres with fourteen hundred feet . frontage on 30und, five thousand dollars in cash, and five hundred dollars rnnually for five years, with no promise for future maintenance of property. Offered rifle range one thousand yards long on Wrights ville banks. . ." Board says that after duly consider ing these proposals, and going over the respective sites, it unanimously selects the site offered at Morehead City,. , It threw out the idea of having two en campment sites, so that one year two regiments would be at one, and one at the other, nex year this being reversed and third year entire brigade at one place. . Morehead City signified a will ingness, but Wrightsville said its prop osition was based only on encampment of entire brigade annually. The board says farther, that Morehead City offers more frontage on water, in such shape as best to serve the purpose, while site at Wrightsville though contains about same acreage, is in such shape that it is impossible to make it conform to needs. A railway runs through More head site, while Wrightsville site is a considerable distance from railway, thus rendering it necessary to use a large number of teams in hauling. Salt water bathing at Morehead is at one foot of camp. No cost to men and target range is in camp limits, while suitable range is not offered at Wrights ville in connection with camp site of fered.' Members of board left for their homes this afternoon. Exquisite : Christmas . goods. Waters China Store Huyler's Crystallized Ginger at War en's. - The Agricultural Bulletin. . The North Carolina Agricultural De partment and the North Carolina Agri cultural Experiment Station are just now issuing some very valuable publi cations known as "Bulletins." Among the recent "Bulletins" published are "Farm Dairying," "Holding the Apple Crop," Egg Preservation," and "Farm era Institutes." ,.' , ;' These pamphlets are printed monthly and are designed for free distribution. The general farmer, truck grower or stock raiser who wishes to keep abreast of the times and in touch with improved methods in his business and every in telligent man wishes to do that should receive these publications regularly. A postal card to the Commissioner of Agriculture, Raleigh, N. C. and an other to the Director of the Experiment Station, Raleigh, N. C. asking that your name and address be placed on the Bulletin Mailing List will bring this about. These publications will give you much information regarding soils, their preparation, seeds, growing crops, harvesting and marketing them, etc, anTwill help you in many other ways in your farming operations. They em body the experience of other farmers and put forth the best results of the experiments of distinguished scientists. t Huyler's Chewirsj Gum at Warren'. A A solemn duty which selves is that no tlung which can be done to assist nature at that time when our wives are to become mothers should be left undone. Of all the countless details to be uuserveu ai bucq a importance than the mother ; she must lorougn any iacic 01 should be the recourse of all real men and women at such times ; it is I easily obtainable, and it is a positive crime not to procure it Its offices j ixa to relax the muscles and tissues intimately associated in this greatest of the Creator's phenomena, and by simple external applications a result I is obtained which at the appointedtime permits the mother to undergo her I greatest joy with fortitude, and'bring into the world a child worthy of its ( parents. -11.00, all druggists. Our -- -- - W irm a 5 n. i. . i( .; MP rurismunui toraeo inuiieis NICE LOT JUST RECEIVED AT . p. J. L. McDANIEL'S Also fresh lot Fancy Cakes and Crackers. Old Fashion and Prepared Buck Wheat, Oat Flakes, New Carolina Rice, 'Grits and Big Hominy, Dried Apples and Peaches, Dried Figs, Currants t ; 'and Raisins, Euglish Walnuts, Almonds, Pecans f ' and Brazil Nuts. Cape Cod Cranberries. J T. TVrnTlflTii a! I ... ; i Wholesale & Grower. .Sg Parker Store. . Comer Broad and Hancock Sta. FAY STOCKINGS We hove a complete line of Fay Stocks for Boys and Girls in all sizes at 35c per vair : If you have never used them try a pair,' They Fit Fine. Button on the waist, no supporters,' They protect health. They prevent sickness. W Ball and Gnaranto FAY 1 1 BAXTER M. E. Whitehurst & Co., Special 20 p. c. Reduction Sale TWO 22u.!ZrS Tuesday and Wednesday Before ;Th3nkssh';"3. Haviland China Dinner Sets, Fine Parlor Lamps, Old Fashion Blue Dinner Ware, A Special lot of Fine China Salad, Cake Plates, Vases,, etc. A full line Tin ware and White Lined Enamelled Ware. 20 PER CENT REDUCT1GN FOR CASH. Makes our Japanese . China and Vases, very low, notwithstanding ours is a finer grade than kept elsewhere. v M.E.Whiteimrst&Co. 45 Pollock Street. .11. ( ",1 q we owe society, our children and our ume, no single one is ot more bodily welfare of the expectant not experience undue suffering enort on our part. 1 book Motherhood" sent free. j w a wwf n-ffIMIf ? II 1 i. ..... i m 3i i . " ' M St.. STESSaBSSl 1
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
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Nov. 28, 1905, edition 1
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