Newspapers / New Berne Weekly Journal … / Jan. 5, 1906, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 n r AM-?ctab!e Preparationfor As similating uieFoodandScguIa tir2 iieStomacls andBowcls of Promotes DigcslioaCheer Ful ness artdRest.Con.ains neither Opium,Morpliine norJIiiicraL NOT NARCOTIC. PmpluSal- AUStKMM tmtmmt - , lliianxniltJelt ClitnUtiAiql - ' huUmymn fbmtt Aperfecl Remedy forConslipa non. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoca Worms ,Convulsions,Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. . Facsimile Signature of -NEW YDTIK. fXASX COPY OF WRAPPER..) u Li .U,LuLj d Fcr Infants and Children. . Tb Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ) vU H In Use For Over Thirty Years RH fir lull TMS OIHTMin MHMHT. ) VORB OlT. i The Age of Political Enlightenment. By A.' Maurice Low, in the January March Forum: Since the beginning of the twentieth century empire building haa continued to spread; but, in recent, years,-the trength of democracy and of the new play of world forces has been spread- ing in proportion,- The student of in ' ternational affairs must preforce follow . not only effects, but causes. - A revo lution means much, but the causes that ' produce it mean more. We close the year with the glare of revolution over i- Western Europe, and the light of pro gress burning steadily and brightly in the East There were mutterings and . rumblings in Central Europe. In wha witches' caldron, the balkans, by the 2'it of the moon, men in peasant's dress, but with weapons in their hands passionately talk of liberty -and inde pendence. In the north of Europe " there has been a bloodless revolution . and a dual kingdom has been cleft in , twain. There is a spirit of unrest. . Blind obedience t) the divine rights cf . kings no longer exists. : Doctor m Empire Enlidcra. The East Indih company in their at tempts to make headway lu India were signally Indebted In various stages of their progress to bumble practitioners In medicine, a It was iu consequence of a cure effected on the favorite daughter of one of the Mogul emperors that they had first been allowed a footing in Ben gal. " ' Later still, In the year 1715, a med ical man named Hamilton, as a reward for curing the reigning emperor of an Illness, obtained for the company a grant of three villages near Madras, a .'permission to purchase thirty-seven townships In Bengal and the privilege Df introducing and conveying .their merchandise : from Calcutta through Bengal without duty or search. f The footing thus gained and the ac companying pntronage and encourage ment enabled the East India company to make such progress as to cut out all foreign rivals. So Enfeland, through the company, gradually obtained full sway over India. London Mall. A Modern R'.lracls. "Truly miraculous seemed the recov ery of Mrs. Mollie Holt of this place," writes J. 0. R. Hooper, Woodford, Tenn., "she was so wasted by coughing up pus fr,m her lungs. Doctors de clared her end so near that her family had watched by her bed side forty-eight hours; when, at my urgent request Dr. King's New Discovery was given her, with the astonishing' result that im provement began, and continued until finally, completely recovered, and is a healthy woman" todt.y" , Guaranteed cure for coughs and colds. 50c and 41.00 at AIL Druggists. Trial bottle free. 'THE HALL OF FAME;: When two men get their pencils mixed, ever notice how jealously the owner if the longer pencil insists on getting his own back? If n kind of billious mood, You wish an aid to digest food, No other pill is half so good As DeWitt's Little Early Risers When e'er you feel impending ill, And need a magic little pill, No other one will fill the bill Like DeWitt's LitUe 3 i?'. in The London Times thinks Presilent Roosevelt might make a disclaimer of a charge thit he expressed sympathy with the British Liberal paity. A Jtmalcin Lady Speaks Highly of Cham berlain's Cough Rtmedy. Mrs. Michael Hart, wifo of the su perintendent of Cart Service at Kings ton, Jamaica, West Indies Islands, says that she has for some years used Cham berlain's Cough Remedy for coughs, croup and whooping cough and has found it vry beneficial. She has im plicit confidence in it and would not be without u bottla of it in h?r home. Sold by Dv.a rharniacy anl F. S Duify. As Boon aa a man gets rj,;h cr,out h t) huve fire all ovt r, tho home, re burns the l.ii:n:' h.; made t.11 through lifts l.h it it is heulti.iv.-r v.j ....... p in a cold room. How to Avoid Pmunionia. We have never he.-ird of a single stance of a cold resulting in Pneurm or ot'u-r lung trouble when Fol IT " -i y and T.ir h-isL'-n t. 1 ,-n. It .: ' r'"l i t',( -'rt!;;li,. lid In ;i!s V-.v !: - i. '. f r Fo! - ; IT. r.v I r- i .: ' ( 11-. ('. .1. in- itila -y's nut niij y's The MnrchlnnoMS of Ovnioude posstss cs a g:ild plate. !'.ervlco !l.SU years old, which Is the mo;- vulunblo of its kind in Ureat Britain..-.. ' When Dr. Nnnsen goes t Loudon ns Norweginu minister, he will take with him the material for a tiow book ho is to write on antarctic exploration. : E. Vlckery of Sydney, N. S. W, has given a hotel mid tlieater property In that city, valued at $270,000, to the Methodists for a central misslou hull. : Mr. Allison, who1 is seventy, years old and who graduated ut Missouri uni versity in 1852, has re-entered tlie uni versity iu order to tatte a special course la surveying. Dr. John V."nr Eagle, n hnlf breed Chickasaw Indian, Is ouo of tlie wealth iest members o his tribo, IIo was edu cated in Scotland, where his .father, a Hudson bay trader, was boru.. -1 "Bud" I.edbetter of Muskogee has such infallible sceat for 'bootlegger" whisky dealers thr.t ho is known a "the Carrie- Nation of lndiuu Terri tory," the name having iieeu eonferrwl upon him by the redoubtable Carrie jerself.' . '. Benjamin K. Thorn,' a native of New Vork, neiiliew of United States Senator T. C. Piatt, nr;e(l seventy-live, and clas.iej as tho ma.it fqavless sher hT lu California, died recently. . As tiherin.' of Calaveras county he was leader of the most famous man bunts la tlie stale';! bHory. - ... , Iviiltiou Vau Rcsnsseliicr". nnd 'Miss Dsralhy .Mansou' were nunrled in Kew Yo:U tlty recently,; Au interesting fea ture of tlie e:u-onpny Was the wedding ring uya! :!is sa:uo by, an nu cea'.or : iir.d nanieytke. of the groom when ha j.mrrled .Vn:i:i Vnn Weyler In Atnslerc'ani 'JTS yeui-s ngj. D.ivi.l I). Thompson of Evanston, 111., Ibo newiy clecteil pi'islduiit of the Chl f.iKi Methodist yocii'.l union,' is tho c:"!ioi' cf the ,No!-llnve.4tern Christian A'r-.;er.te i:nl a well known religious vrlivr, bin "Abraham Lincoln, the First. A Tit'i'.n," ami 'Mo'in Wesley ns a So cial Iteformrr" being bis chief works. Tho secretary of the navy and Mrs. Bonaparte will 1ntrodu;o a pleasing diversion in cabinet entertaining by giving dinners or lunebconn in their own beautiful home la Baltimore rath er than In 'Wn.ihington, where tho sec retary will Occupy a modest apartment fur the season nnd be Joined only occa sionally by Mrs. Bonaparte. Modern Greek rire. "Marine torches" are the direct de scendants of the Greek fire of the an cients, though the modern torch is used for defense rather than offense and prevents the surprise of a fleet through the silent approach of an enemy. It consists of an aluminium cylinder used as a projectile. On being fired from a guu it produces no result until it falls Into the sea. In Its interior it contains stores of calcium phosphide and calcium carbide. The former pro duces pbosphureted hydrogen on con tact with water, which ignites sponta neously and also ignites the acetylene gas liberated from the carbide through the action of the Water. Enough' of the chemicals is contained to last for ten hours, and a few of these torches thrown to the points of the compass from which attack might be expected would leave tb defenders In obscurity, while not permitting the enemy to ap proach. " The Great Annu Hirer. In South as in North America na ture does her work on the grand scale, and one of her noblest achievements la the Amazon river. Rising In the Andes, it flows across the continent and dis charges Into the Atlantic ocean at the equator. The ; vastnes of the area which it drains, amounting to 2,308,000 square miles, will be evident when it Is borne in mind that this is more than the area of Russia in Europe and Austria-Hungary. It has a length of near ly 4,000 miles, is navigable for 2,800 miles from the sea and is fed by nu merous, streams, which In any other country would be ranked aa great riv ers. Ift tlie wet season, which lasts for about eight months, Its width varies from five miles to 400. No wonder the Amazon . has been called a gigantic reservoir rather than a river. Etroove T?te la Eating;. ' Many strange dishes were eaten by Dean Buckland, (he English clergyman and geologist.. At his dinner parties, which were attended by leaders of sci ence and literature, the menus were often of a most eccentric character. On one occasion pickled horse tongue was greatly relished ' by the guests, until they were told . what they had eaten. Alligator was served np as a rare deli cacy and puppies occasionally and mice frequently.-. At. other times hedge bog.?, tortoises,' potted ostrich and sometimes rats, frogs and snails were prepared for the delectation of favor ed guests. Henry Labouchere said that the dean swallowed the mummified re mains: of tho heart of Louis XIV. of France. " ' Tlie First Lemron of Arab Dor. - , Tho very first lesson which an Arab baby learns when he begins to talk Is to keep facts 'to himself. It does net Bound yery friendly put In that way, but It saves a deal of trouble. Foreign ers do not understand -Arabs.. They ask them pointed questions and receive peculiar answers. They construe the answers to please themselves and come away to tell the world that the Arabs are a nation of liars. They are not a nation of liars. Perhaps if they should tell the foreigners to mind their own affairs and lot them and theirs alone the foreigners would understand them better. Exchange . ". O Boaee. . Ox bones have a considerable value. The four feet of an ordinary ox will make a pint of neat's foot oil. The thigh bone Is the most valuable, being useful for cutting Into toothbrush han dles. The fore leg bones are made Into collar buttons and parasol handles. Tho water In which the bones are boil ed is reduced to glue, while the dust which comes from sawing the bones la turned Into food for cattle and poultry. Qualified. "What I You marry my daughter," thundered old Roxley "you, a men clerk"- ' - ' ; "No, sir," replied yonng Hunter, "not ft clerk, but a gentleman now. I re signed my Job the moment your daugh ter accepted rao." Philadelphia Press. Fi-jls the Music Cure. "To keep tho body in tune,", writes !is. Mary Frown, 2;) Lafayette PI ice, F., !.!;" :, N. Y. "I take Dr. i. ;'s Mew Iafi) Pills. Tin y ere the r.:.: I i ': ! !, is : 1 1 j, I, .: ;aiit laxative I l ave U- . I." I - I f.-r tho fc'tomaeh, I i r ; !;-,';. C l. a i 1 ly AI Hardly Hleks I nnderstand somebody has discovered that there's alcohol In root beer. Wicks Yes, but there's no fear of any old whisky drinker adopting it for a substitute. Philadelphia Ledger. HERE'S OAT'S WANTED. A Citizen of New Bern Supplies the Information. " Over half the complaints of mankind originate with the kidneys. A slight touch of backache'at first. Twinges and shooting' pains in the loins follow. They must be checked, they lead to graver complications. The sufferer seeks relief. - Plasters are tried, and liniments for the back. " So called Kidney cures which do not cure., - ' The lng-lxked-for re3ult seems un attainable. If you suffer, do you want relief? Folbw this plan adopted by this New Bern citizen. C. Lupton, one of the best known policemen of New Bern, of 135 East Front street says: "We think Doan's Kidney Pills are all right. I have tried them and can rte mmend them highly. My back and kidneys troubled me for quite awhile. The trouble was right across the small of my back, which seems to be the weakest part about me. I tried plasters and other remedies but none of them acted like Doan's Kidney Pills which I obtained at the Bradham Tharmacy. They are a pood pill and I will not hesitate to say so to anyone. For sale by all dealers. Frice 50 cts. a box. Fotiter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. sole agents for the U. S. Remember the name Doan's, and take no other. PERMANENT MEADOWS should have an annual dressing of 500 pounds per acre of a fertilizer containing eleven per cent: Potash and ten per cent, available phos phoric acid. ' , This will gradually force out sour grasses and mosses from the meadows, and bring good grasses and clovers; thus increasing" the quality as well as the quantity of the hay. Our practical book, "Farmer's Guide," gives valuable facts for every sort of crop-raising. It is one of a number of books on successful fertilis ation which we send on request, free of any cost- or obligation, to any farmer who will write us for them. " - 1 : Address, (0ERMAN KAU WORKS. . tew York-M .Nassau Street. or Atlanta. Oa.-22J So. Broad Street. II KEXT ON FOOT BALL (By Billy Burgundy.) -(Copyright 1906 by the Cosmopolitan Association, New York.) ; . "I see," said Mrs. Next, "that there is a popular demand that football be stopped at all our colleges. " "I rise to second that demand, re plied Mr." Next, "for when a col lege game reaches the stage where it produces, in one season, more rigor mortis, spinal meningitis, fractured skulls, concussion of the brain, broken ribs, internal injuries and unclassified dislocations than all the battleships of Great Britian and America, it is up to us to take the hint and administer the anesthetic with. : becoming - extrava gance. V. v 'k-'r ' "I'm giving it to you straight, that game has done more than enough to entitle it to the death warrant. Take it from me, it is ripe for the extreme Unction. A railroad disaster is not in it with a game of football when it comes to creating a demand for surgi cal dressings and embalming fluid. - "It has been said that a student can't keep up with his class unless he is given a lot of vigorous, exercise. I'll stand for that assertion it's as true as an affadavit But he doesn't need the other college got all the compliments because it had a habit of saturating our young men with useful information. Not so now. The college that gets the hands at the present . moment is the one that owns the winning football team. . ; ' . . ' ' "A mother sits up nights planning all sorts of new economies to nable her to stake her son to a college course. In due time he is shipped hence. . And what's the answer? , He forthwith passes up the text books an j chases the pigskin until his mother's purse is exhausted. . When he returns, his only assets are a mandolin, a briar pipe, a sweater, a college yell and a broken collarbone. ' A fine return on the hard earned dough of a devoted widow, isn't it? '.V .;-;r-y "Take a peek at the associates fur nished by the big colleges to our young men. Fine, ain't they? A bunch of truck drivers and members of Monk Eastman's gang of thugs. Why are those bruisers allowed there? Simply because they are necessary to the foot ball team. Their brand of brutality is what draws the vociferous applause on the gridiron. How do they enter the colleges? They are let in on an exami nation that is about as trying to their dwarfed intellects as a set of A B C blocks is to a High School graduate. ' "I see that the football fans are ex- I v l " I brand that negotiated the demise of one at the Naval Academy, one at Ken yon College, one at Franklin College and " some .twenty odd : others at our centres of Instruction this season. What he needs is to stimulate his appe tite for knowledge is the old fashion hickory sapling under the - direction of a muscular, headstrong professor of mathematics, rhetoric ; of physics. That's the form of exercise that puts the sprouting cerebellum on keen edge and shows tangible results on Examina tion Day. That's the form of calis thenics that kept our forefathers at the head of their class, and they had to take it without any shin-guards or other upholstery. I repeat, hickory sapling did it, and we can prove it ,"Time was when our young went to Harvard, Yale, Cornell, Prince ton, Columbia or some other fashion able informatory to connect with an education. The ambition of : his life was to become the first honor man of his class. Not so now. At the pres ent stage of the game he attends one of these seats of learning to grow crop of long hair and to commit mayhem and murder in the presence of a howl ing mob of hysterical ' damuels and euraretU fiends. His sole ambition is to become a right-tackle,' left-tackle, half-back, quarter-back or Borne; other part of the group of gore. ; "Time was when this, that cr the man BLOOD POISON CURE:, ; A Desperate Struggle and How it Ended . Just 27 miles from the classic city of Athens, Ga., is located the thri-' little .town of Maxey's, the residence of Mr. Kobert Ward, who has just V , released from the most perilous predicament, the particulars of which he 1 consented to give to the public. He writes as follows: . " Maxey's, Oglethorpe Co., Ga., July 1 For twelve or fourteen years I have been a great sufferer with a terri"a form of Blood Poison (Syphilis,) which ran into the secondary, and finally it was pronounced a tertiary form. My head, face and shoulders became alaio a solid mass of corruption, and finally the disease commenced eating away r ' skull bones. I became so horribly repulsive that for three years I absolute r r ;f used to let people see me. I used large quantities of the most noted Llooj remedies, and applied to nearly all physicians near me, but my condition con t'juied to grow worse, and all said I must surely die. My bones became tbe seat of excruciating aches and pains; my nights were passed in misery: I was reduced in flesh and strength; my kidney were terribly deranged, and life be came a burden to me. , I chanced to see an advertisement of B. B. B., and I sent one dollar to W". C. Birchmore and Co., merchants of our place, and they procured one bottle for me. It was used with decided benefit. I continued its use and when eight or ten bottles had been used was pronounced sound and welL . .. Hundreds of scars can now be seen on me, looking like a man who had been burned and then restored. Mv case is well known in this countv. and for t.h benefit of others who may be similai ly affected, I think it my duty to give facts to the public, and to extend my heartfelt thanks for so valuable a reme dy. I have been well over twelve months, and no return of the disease has oc curred. Robert Ward. Maxey s, Ga., July I We. the undersiimed. know Mr. Robert Ward, and take 'rteasure in statin? that the frets as above stated by him are true, and that his was one of the worst cases of Blood Poison we ever knew in our county, and that he has been cured by the use of B. B. B. Botanic Blood Balm. A. x. drightwell, Merchant. John T. Hart. W. C. Birchmore & Co., Merchants. W. C. Campbell. , J. H. Brightwell, M. D. Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) is guaranteed to cureanv Blood er Skia Disease if taken in sufficient ouantitv as directed. It is sold hv all I o-nnrl Hi-iid-. gists at 1.00 per large bottle; 6 for $5.00. Valuable book free. ( B1AJUU BALM UU., Atlanta, Ga. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. SCHEDULE IN EFFECT NOV. 5, 1905. - - 118 136 108 112 j Daily. Daily. Daily. Daily. P U P M AM AM 1 27 7 20 1 IE f I 40f 7 33 M 30 1 53 7 48 1 47 1 58 7 53 1 53 ...... 2 08 8 05 2 06 2 13 8 10 2 11 ...... 2 18 8 15 2 17 2 30 8 27 2 33 f 2 42 f 8 38 2 45 2 51 8 47 '2 58 ......... 3 03 9 00 3 12 6 45 3 25 9 20 3 40 6 57 3 35 9 30 3 55 ;7 15f 8 43 f 9 37f 4 10 j 7 30 3 58 9 51 4 27 7 42 4 10 10 02 4 40 8 05 4 36 10 80 6 15 ..I-..,. 62fl0 45f5 33 4 58fl0 51 f 5 40 5 U 11 02l 5 54 .;. 5 25fll 18 f 6 09 5 43 11 30i 6 29 ....... 5 60 11 36f 6 35 ...... 6 05 11 48 f 6 46 .;. ,:.f 6 2l'fl2 03j, 6 40 12 2o 7 15 I PM I PM I AM 0 8 15 17 21 23 26 32 87 41 46 65 67 61 6J 73 81 87 Lv. Eastern Time. 107 Daily. GRENSBORO ..... McLean............. Gibsonville...... .. Elon College...... Burlington.......... Graham.., Haw River........ Mebane...i?. ....... Efland.. ... Hillsboro UNIVERSITY .... DURHAM........ East Durham. ..... Brassfield, Morrisvilie ........... CARY RALEIGH....... Garner... -.. Auburn........... Clayton..-.i Wilson's Mills SELMA ...... Pine Level........ Princeton., Rose t GOLDSBORO.... Ar. v.'-w;.':.'. ,. Lv, 135 Daily. AM 11 69 fll 40 11 27 11 22 11 14 11 07 11 01 10 50 flO 381 10 28 10 16 10 00 9 44 f 9 37 9 13 9 05 8 45 8 8 20 8 08 7 55 7 45 7 36 7 26 7 14 7 00 AM 111 Daily. PM 6 35 f 6 15 6 00 6 55 5 46 6 39 5 33 5 221 6 10 6 01 4 49 4 30 4 18 f 4 10 f 3 58 3 49 S 30 f 3 121 f 3 06. 2 55 f 2 40 2 25 1 2 12 2 01 f 1 49 l 8e PM AM 6 35 f 6 17 5 05 6 00 4 47 4 40 4 4 m f 4 02 3 47 8 30 .3 00 2 48 f 2 35 2 15 2 05 1 40 11 45 11 31 11 23 11 08 10 60 10 38 flO 25 flO 10 f 9 55 9 40 PM 117 r Daily. AM 9 20 9 07 f 8 42 f 8 22 8 12 7 50 AM This condensed schedule is published as information and is subject to change without notice to the publ' c. - Trains Nos. 112 and lus connect at uoidsboro with Atlantic uoast Lane trains, both Southbound and Northbound; and with Atlantic and North Carolina trains for Morehead City and intermediate points. . Train No. Ill connects at ureensDoro witn tram no. 33 lor unariotte, uoiunt bia and Jacksonville. No. 37 solid Pullman train, drawing-room sleepers New York to New Orleans and Memphis, also for Winston-Salem, Wilkesboro, Dam- ville and local stations. : . Train No. 117 handles throueh coach between Raleigh. Chase City and Richmond, where close connection is made with Washington Southern Railway for Washington and Eastern cities. 1 Train No. 107 connects at Durham for Oxford, Chase City and Kichmond; University Station for Chapel Hill daily except Sunday; at Greensboro with train No. 36 for Washington and points North, close connection for Winston- talem, High Point, Salisbury, Charlotte ana intermediate stations. . . , - Train No. 135 connects at Greensboro with No. 39 for Charlotte, Columbia and Jacksonville; No. 35 for Atlanta and all points South and Southwest; Nos. 34 and 38 for Washington and all points North; connection is also made at Salis bury for Western Worth Carolina points. 3L: Hardwick, P. T, M. R. L. Vernon, T. P. A, i Charlotte, N. W. H. Tayloe, G. P. A. Washington, D. C. T. H. B, Spencer, G, M E. Green, C. T. A. Raleigh, N. C. Daniels ... s Sale and Exchange Stable v" uding the argument that the game de velops the fighting instinct in our young men. That's a good reason why it should be scratched. If we tied a can to everv fiehter on earth we would be a darned sight better off. Skakespeare, Jenner, Pasteur, Herbert Spencer. Edison, Marconi and the other live ones never wasted any time fighting with either bare knuckles or bullets did they? "This thing of worshiping heroes gives me a pain. A short time ago a certain guy was being kissed and ca ressed by every pin-head fairy in this country simply because he dealt from the bottom to a handful of sacred Span iards, in the flush of excitement What else has that over-kissed bunch of brass buttons and braid done. ' Not a thing. He was all in from the start, and a lot of those obnoxious osculators are now wondering how in the world they ever got worked up to such a high degree of daffiness. j ' V.',' . "No, ma'am, football won't do. It's nothing more nor less that the advance agent for a highball, and is fixing a lot of subjects for the chain-ana-Dan, wo, i Ta tiivreball ' asked Mrs. Next, 'anything like a masque ball?" "Only in effct," replied Mr. Next " s Four Hundred BaWss. St. Vincent s Infant Asylum, Chi cago, shelters homeless waifs awaiting adoption, and there are nearly 400 ba bies there. Sister Julia writes: "I cannot say too much in praise of Foley's Honey and Tar for couho, colds, croup and whooping cough.". Contains no opiates and is safe and sure. ' Ask for Foley's Honey and Tar and insist upon having it, as it is a safe remedy and certain in results. Refuse substitutes. For sule by Davis Frmrmacy. General Kuropalkin is said to have withdrawn his fortune of over $1,000,- 000 from the imperial bank of St. Pt!or::burj. The President at the New Year's re- .orvtinn ni the White WOUSB suuua hands with 9,052 persons. : : Tht Grip. i ."ft fore1 we can sympathize with ' i ;we'muat have suffered our ' No one can realize the suffer- il, f th inc attendant upon an nwv.iv grip, unless he has had tne actual ex perienee.'. There is probably no disease that cHu-is so mtfth physical .and men tal a4 ui ;. or which so successfully de fies medical aid. All danger from the grip, however, may be avoided by the prompt vaq of Chamlscrlain's Cough x , G V - : - i v-o,t;i. ianncpd of the recent two car loads of Horses and I.'. ' j i innmnainir trade and demanr1. our Mr. L. G. D r receiveu uu - - - . ...... :v,; quo i has; years poses. Rtnntl Wagons, Cart Wheels, Harness weighing 900 to 1250 , lbs 5 t i old, all well broke and adapted to the farm, road, umber, and drait 5 " w ... nrithin next S davs. We also carry in fo P"Brr; y'Ti- .ruf tin. of onen and too Busriries. Surreys, Tr E "wheetaT Harness of every descriptionritobes, Blankets, - . . . - , U n. boah-u l-QTMr It. Wl.l 1 etc Same will be sota on ciose margin mr liooii o-v. fr.. yon well to wait and see us before buying. DANIELS & Emi ' We can ship whiskey io any point in North Carolina that t: .e 1 Steam Boats lines go. We are located in the State of Virgin!, .'.a I An-ti-jug laws do not effect us at all as we are protected ly t -j I Commerce Laws. We sell corn whiskey at $1.25 per gallon an 1 I ; at $1.50 per gallon and up. Write us far our complete rnce-h: t t rate to your office. ' Z. F LGIIGc; tG.. P. O Box 398. meilv W. Armm? the 'tens oi umu- lh I y 'IV.' :t 1- o have u: : Ins ever li.i-.l in j r . t 1 f t t 1. i I' v:.i ) t f I ii 1 if t" ' 1 7 n . r. l "PffTifnii iD)iP)inrrir
New Berne Weekly Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 5, 1906, edition 1
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