Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Nov. 23, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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ALL HOME ENTERPRISES DAILY , JOl'EJiAL, . Hltoitlil be Represented tu uie 50c Per MonthS0c I5.-PEB TEAR-1 5. VOL Xiil-NO. 198 NEW BERNE, N. C. FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 23. 1894. PRICE FIVE 0ENT8 .r BUSINESS LOCAL. ALL IniO!nwtion in reference to my wniinj;,8cbo'il ca be obtained by calling on nw ir leaving address at Hotel Albert. I will Uave l'otb arlolt and children's class, s . :;;.. : ' . ; .: tt - ,W4 s '.- . W. . Smith. . HARD R-ck and -. Kye Drops for Coughs iiud Colds 20 certs pi-und. ' -'v . : : ' Ncnh & McSoblby. "POKK SAUSAGE, N. 0. Laf Lard, Dri sa.d Chickfns, orders taken fur dressed Turkejs this morning. N. Whitford. - SHAKER'S HAMS, Bolted Water Mill Meat, Loose and Prepared Buckwheat, at A. H. Babbisotok's, 78 Middle St. : CHIP BEE, Sour Kront, Sweet and S-ur Mixed Picklesat J. R. Pabkbb, Jr., 77 Uroal St. - , -TO LOAN T Two hundred dollars on Te d estate. Address Bex 445, New Berne. POU Salu cheap . No. 7 Lee Range cookin,' stove with water tank. Has lieen u-id very little For particulars ap ply ul once at ibis offi'f. 3t. ODD FELLOWS, mid Masons cards witli name, on them 25 for 15cts. ' Jos. Nelson, at Journal office. LADIES especially invited to come to oar store nod examine our stock of the Litest Style of LdWs fine Cloaks and . W raps we liavejust received. L Schoxtz & Co., Under Geroek's Photograph gallery. - FINE Broad CieeK Oysters nt the door, 15 cts. per quart select first class ones 20 Cs. Henry Brown, adjoining Mare's ilnij; store. o21if KORFbII and Winter saitg g.i F. M. CIIADVVlCt, Tai o-. 10'? Mi die St. New Samples jnat reueivoi. tf. COCANUTS, grated, riuedded or sliced free of charge to purchasers, at New Bern Candy Factory, 59 Middle St HOUSE To Rent-No 124 Pollock St. s31tf. B. B. Davenport. WIIE.V lioraxine is used according to (lii'ccii'iii?, a third of. the labor and the o 8t of soap In ordinary washing is saved. Mamph-a free at J. F. Tavbu's. FHUl I'S, Nuta, Oninyei, LcmouB,Btuian as and apples constantly on hand at New Barn Caud Factory, 59 Middle St. TRY Duffy's Bin Buns and Chocolate Creams, 59 MidJIe Street. THE finest Corned Beef in the city at 8c ntr U: best Flour in:10H packages at Sic . per lb; best Creimery Butter just received at 30c per lb; TUree lb cans Stuudard To matoes, new crop, at 8Jc per can; 81b canned apples, very best, at 10c per can best 4 ttg. Broom in town for 25c; 2,400 Blue Men Parlor Matches, the very best, for 15c; Arbu-kles Roasted Coffee, in 1 lb packages, fresh roasted, at 25c. job lot ol Tobacco a specialty from 15 to 35c per ID wholesale, aud a) to ouc retail. Respectfully. J. W. Messic, 40 Middle St. PRIVATE SALE A number of Mules, a lull Comple ment of valuble Farming Utensils, and a Suogt a Harness. Apply to P.S. COX. . ngQ-dwstf New Berne, N. C, rTTTiWK you seen ttie II N Bohemian Cut I J Grlase Toilet bot- L1I1 ties at CORNER J)RtJG STORE ! Suioke 7-20-4 Cigar, 10 cents. d FORSALK S -STORY Brick Building, Large Lot, aitnatarl fn Wpflt ikiriA nt (IrnVAn strapt. and occupied by H. Dannenburg, Bottlintc . WnrKS. . ': For further iulormation, apply to H. B. UqiiLAND, . Qr F, II, P-elleticr, Attorney. - - , nlQ-m D. F. JAHYIS, Drj to, Carj etiBEs, Etc. ' 63 POLLOCK 81 . We have Just Received a new supply' of LADIES CLOAKS, .i Newest Styles and Perfect Fitting. mZuf Centemeri. v FosrKB's AN0 Baibbttc C ' . Kib Glovbs. WeofrersomeTnnL-0fa ofSuperior bargains in01UK-'dl'0 Quality. We call special attention to our Harris bun: Shoes lor Ladies, Misses and Chll- dre r,' These shoes are of a very Superior Quality, beautiful styles .and prices to stilt ail.' We feel confident m saying these are the - Yon can get for your Mongy. 1 Il'iiNe CJ-OO UM ' - still going for prices that surprise. . . I ouly ask that you give me v a trial before you buy. -J' , 03 POLL00K 8T. CAR LOAD OF- J I P Q Qrrtnppp bits just ar- tbe WEST v. '. 'i a car load of tine Homes and Muit'8 tosnil all purpo?s aws ratios from 4 '.o 7 v"--'3 fii. ail of which he ..! ni-U c'H'Hp f -r t.:; 'i or iV'rtteble P"wt. c .1 aw i rj !'.". fvn-u: Lacal News, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. BoardAt Wilmington. J. M. Howard: Shoes and Hats. Nana & McSorley: Rock and Rye. N. Whltford: Pork Sausage, etc. W. L. Smith For infortnalion, etc Hackbum A WUlett You will be lute. Mm. B,B. Lane Bargains in millinery. ' . COTTON SALES. Thursday 60 Bales, 5 to 5.35. Knights of Honor meets to-night at 7:30 o'clock. Fair weather to-dav is the prediction of the weather bureau. Mr. E. D. Gal lion, special agent of the Treasury Department at Washington is at the Ali.ert. The small building on the south-east comer of Bread and Middle streets is be fitted np for an insurance office. It will be occupied by A. 3. Fhcu & Co. Mr. Jas. E. Warren, who was stunned to insensibility by a tall at the Blades mill was considerably improved yesterday. His condition is not at all dangerous. Miss Mollie Smith of Goldsboro arri- ived en route to visit Miss Bettie Pierce of Pollocksville. She joins Miss Louisa Suter here and both of them go up to day. The New Berne Naval Reserve Min strels will show in Kinston to-night. Those who desire to take the round trip can do so at a cost of $1.00; the train leaves at 2 o'clock this afternoon and re turns soon alter the performance. Hotel I'hnttawka Arrivals. Herm KralDt New York.- Walter D. Carstarphen, New York; W. W. Marten, N. C; Jos. Eahn, Atlanta, Ga., Sheppard Knapp, Jr., New York city; C. G. Mor gan, Norfolk; B. B. Mullison, Morehead City, R. E. Jones, Rock Hill, N. C ; J. L. R. Patterson, Baltimore; G. W. John son, Atlanta, tta. A HMstonary Tea. The ladies of the Working Society of t be rresbyteilan church will give a Mis sionary Tea at the home of Mr Seymour, on this evening from 5 to 8 o'clock, for the aid of the Foreign Missionary Board ot the church. They hope that many of their friends and acquaintances will a' tend and bring a donation. An added attraction will le the presence of Rev. L. Mo-gbab-ghab the native Sy rian minister with some of his novel ties and curiosities from distant lands. The Writing School. Many of our people will no doubt be glad to learn that Mr. W. L. Smith, the well-known teacher of the new system of easy, graceful penmanship will establish classes here. . Mr. Smith taught seveml sessions in Raleigh the past summer of which both the press and the people sptak in the highest terms of him. We have seen specimens of Mr. Smith's work as well as some from former inpils and the work indicates that Mr. Imith, while capable of teaching any branch of penmanship wanted, aims not so muon, at ornamental work as at a plain yet heautiful business hand, which can be executed with rapiuity that is his teaching is eminently practical. Chraglaa; to Band Saw Mills. Messrs. W. B. Blade and Bro. are putting in a band saw outfit of the most approved kind in place of the circular saw mill outfit they have been using in their mill opposite the city. The saw mill will cut from 85,000 to 40,000 feet per day. Mr. J. Li. Uardner, or Washington a native of New Berne has arrived put in the machinery. Mr. Gardner in forms ns that he has put in four of these Dana mills in ine last tnree montns ana has several more ahead of him. His next one will he for Pickles, Bros, nt Smith' creek, Their new mm cut also have a capacity of thirty or forty thousand feet. They will have a plant valued at $20,. 000. : , Pine-Apple For Sore Throat and Diph theria. Dr. G. K. Bagby tells us of a remedy for sore throat which he has twice tried with signal success and esteems so highly that he wants the public to know Of its merits.-". It is to eat slice ot pine apple and a spoonful or two of the juice every tntrty or lorry minutes, as long as is needed. The canned pine apple answers the purpose as well as the fresh. Doctor liagby lound mention ot tlie remedy in the London Lancet that paper had copied it from the (Jermtn Mtdical Journal. ' - The first time the doctor tried it was oo one of his children who bud bad case of : ulcerated and granulated sore throat. ' In about thirty hours the throat was well., :: a if.- i .'. The next time it was a mild case and in less than twenty-lour hours a cure was effected. It is claimed that not only is the pine-apple efficacious in simple sore throat but that tt Is also a specific tor diphtheria. It has one advantage over most remedies. There will I no trouble in getting ths pa tient to take plenty of it, , v ; TBS BVBCMLAK. .' ' Foar Act Cossedy Dram to he Proses ' ted Tnssdsy Night. A crowded bouse both alterooon and evening greeted the firA performance of Augustus TDomas' play, "ine isurgiar, st the Clark Street Theatre yesterday. ' Little Lottie Rriscoe as Editba, divided the honors with "The Burglar" and won the greater portion of applause. Her voioe is wonderfully well adapted, to both siocrins and acting, and she exhibited a hisu-ionic talent beyond her. yean. , Her rendition of wTu-ra-ra-boorn-de-ay'' was, of course, encored. . 1 be entire support was above the average: Chicago Dispatch Japan has been heard from officially about the proposition for tbe Uilted States to mecliute in the settlement of the di-pnta betw a the two countries. The siii stiiit. e of her reply is a refusal. She RpiiivjHates the pood wishes of the United Stan'S but things that now China has been so is!i!,!;l t'j9 should sue for peace BEY. IOOHABHAB'l LECTVBE. He ToU Mmnj lastrnellve Tatars Aaeo the Arab aatf Exhibit Artie, les sf Apparel Ae. Used hj Them. Rev. L. Moghabghab gave an entertain ing lecture in the Presbyterian lecture room last night, throwing considerable light on tlkoso roving descendants of Abraham who still preserve in thir pas toral life many ot the customs ot the olden Bible time'. He showed that the Arabic mind once shone as the sun, that ihey art the race to which we are indebt ed lor. many of the sciences that they have been great del vers into the bidden mysteries of astronomy, geology, etc. He told of their wedding and social customs. of their habits the reverse of cleanly, of their remarkable ude'ity to Ire.ds, etc. The lesson brought out the lecture was the small amount i i missionary ef fort direc ed towards this people and the reason and need there is f r e. angelizing them. At the conclusion of ihe lecture he ex hibited some of the interesting articles he has with him a sling snch as David used, wearing apparel, ear rings about a foot long; necklaces, made of pieces of money, the largest the gift of a woman's Husband and the smaller the gut ot rela tives and friends, one Ironi each. He ex plained that in the p -ruble of the piece of lost money which the woman searched for so dilegemly, the piece lost was prob ably off of such a nccklate,and this causul such l i.portauce to be attacnea to it as to caujc her to call for her relatives and friends to lejoice with her when it was found. Mr. Moghabghab exhibits in the Y. M. C. A. Hall today and tonight. He will remain in the city a few days, and our peop'e ii ay have another opportunity of heuring him. CONVERT AT TRENTON. To be Held Thanksgiving Night In- .der Masonic Auspices lor the Benefit of The Oxford Orphan Asylum. Miss Jennie Windlry, iissistei by her brothers, will uive a conceit at Trenton under Ihe auspices of the Masons of'Zion, Lodge No. 1 on Thursday night 29th iimt. (Thanksgiving Day) lor the benefit of the orphan asylum at Oxford. Good singing and line instrumental music on various instruments is promised by the committee which c usists ot Mr. W. U, Kinsey, Rev. W. B. Lee. Messrs. S. E Koonce, Thos. J. Whitakerand W. W. Fiuncks. The general admissi ii will be 15 cents, reserved scats 25 cenis, children under 12, 10 cent-i. To The New Berne Bar. Judge Brown writes me from Fayette- vllle to request the liar to set i:o case whatever for the iast two days of the Term. W. M. Watson, Clerk. Minstrels, Notice. Every one in the Naval Reserves Min strels will please report at the A. & N. 0. depot to-day at 1:30 p. ni., dressed in Naval Reserve umlorin. Tlie train leaves promptly at 2 o'clock, and the parade in Kinston is from the train. Get your un iform early in the day and thereby obviate all confusion at the depot. Chas. L. Gaskill, Director. NEWS IN BRIEF. The Senate of Vermont pass d tlie bill incorporating the Nicaragua Canal com pany. Two steamers carrying 14,000 hales of American cotton, the first of tlie season, entered tbe Manchester ship canal, en route for Manchester, November 21st, President Hollada. of the Agricultural and Mechanical College, is suffering from a broken collar bone. The Catarrus Cotton Mill Company has nearly completed new mills at Con cord. Having failed to secure a compromise, there is uothing left for China. Let her proceed to throw up the sponge. It would seem that tho Japs suspected Mr. Cleveland and China of having joined hands for the purpose of working a panel game on tnem. The Chicago Women's Club was get ting along famously with its equal rights' doctrine until a colored woman made ap plication for membership. The great State of Ohio has reason to be ashamed of the state of arlairs in Fayette county, where an officer who did his plain duty in preventing a lynching cannot testify before a coroner except at the risk of his lite. The ruin of last Sunday in New Or leans was the cause ol a disastrous fire. A car load of lime in the Louisville and Nashville freight shed ignited from the dampness, and destroyed the shed and a number ol loaaea cars. Gen. Lew Wallace says that be wrote "The Fa'r God'' before he had ever been in Mexico jftnd 'Ben Bur' before he had ever wen the Holy Land, and he ttiii.ks tbe 'local color in each ot these novels as accurate as it would have been if he bad made ft tour in search of it. Logan Meadows, who killed jailer Roy- s term Person county last January, pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree and gets a sentence of twonty-five yeaic in the penitentiary. Gov. Carr appoiuts W, J. Adams, Dem ocrat, of Moore co unty, and Charles A.. Cook, Republican, of Warren county,' as members of the State Board of Canvaesers. The other members are the Governor, Secretary of ' State and - Attorney Gen eral. . i . ' "The more haste the less speed.'' Tbis is true of . buttoning a Starched Collar on to a button, the head of which ia out of proportion to the. Collar's button hole.- The mail does not live who can per- form this little act without losing his temper. He will fret and fume and tug but in spite of all his haste he cannot speed the con nection between the collar and the button nnless he slightly moistens the edges of the button hole,' This is a . good scheme for stiff Cuffs also, hnt the best scheme is to buy your Collars and Culls, Snoes and. IJafsof J. M. HQWAlD. SPORTSMAN'S PARADISE. With the Arrival of Cold Weather, the Hunting Season Has Opened. Nowhere Else Can Unme be Funnel in Greater Variety and ftimntlly than In Eastern Carolina r.nnil Clanic--Ten Thousand Ducks Hilled in One Day Investigate at tlw- F.nst Ini-n-llna Fair. A special Elizabeth City cornspnndcnl of the Raleigh News and Obsrvei, .T. W. Albcrtson, Jr., writing under date of Nov. 19, gives the following wrik-up of game in the sounds of North Carolina i.u.l in counties bordering upon the sounds: "With the cold weather has como I lie- sportsmen with re-nniiiialeil zest lor tlie pursuit ot game, rrobably nowhere in the State din it be found in greater variety or quantity than in t ho -veral counties 2omposiur the Albemarle .sec tion. From the plaiutive note of the ''Bob While," the rasping "nuack'' of the wild duck, the sonorous 'honk'' ol the wild goose und the hoarse growl of the black bear, the local Nimrod may draw the inspiration of his calling. The timid hare, the deceitful o'possum, the marauding raccoon, tlie tricky fox, mid the fleet-looted deer, are all to be found in their several haunts. The man with inclination and the time to spare ,-an easily :nd pleasautly gratify the one and employ the other. Quail, or partridges as w-i call tliem, are abundant, more plentiful, it is eaid, than for seven I years and may be l'oimd in all the cmn ties Gunneri with dogs, are on their tiail every day end vast numbers of ihcni arc being killed. "Foxes are found more or less in eyerv locality, but lox-liunting, as a sport, is not what it formerly was. JJoars may be found within a few miles of Elizabeth City on what known as the Great Park estate, a tract somo 25,0fl0 acres -l swamp, deading an I cleared land, and in other localities in Pasquotank and l'i r quimans co'jntie. They are also to le found along Alligator river in Dare and Hyde and Tyrrel. Col. Creecy, through the Economist, made famous the name of liBill Basnight, the bear hunter" of Dare county. Mr. Hasnight's home is on Roa noke Island, and he can tell many mar velous and hair-raising stones of his experiences as a hunter. 1) c r are net so numerous as formerly, but nny still be found in quantities to justify their pursuit, in parts of Currituck, Dare, Hyde and perhaps other counties. " 'Possum and 'i-muis, like the pour, ar iln-iiys with ii . Yin; pine knot fir. s ot many a iiuvr.; cabin i imninelhe happy faces of grinning darkies ns lin-y roll liuir eyes and sniff the air redbleet. with ihe aroma of cooking 'possum and 'taters. For genuine happiness, unalloyed with cares of (he present or forebodings for 1 1 so luture, nothing ran compare wilh tin Southern darkey hen he may grease hi-i chops with 'possum fat. But the spurt, par excellence, of the section is the hunting of wild lowl in our sounds and bays. Wild geese and swan ducks of all'sortx, canvass back and red bead, plover and teal black duck and coot, all swann in countless flecks, 'flu- air is nuocl wiin men several cries, unci mi good days in Currituck Sound t In- tl -nations of hundreds of exploding shot guns remind one of the lir.ng in any in fantry skirmish light. T have heir. I it stated that on one day iast week no less than ten thousand ducks were killed by gunners in Currituck Sound. Th'uloct not include the accompanying slaughter in Rounoko and Pamlico y01ii1(s 1U u,e various bays and runs. At tuch a rale it would seem that tho wild fowl would soon ba exterminated Uut the same thing has betn going on for years, nnd tho birds still come. 1 hey are more shy tuan lormerly and do not come in such immense llocK., as they did twenty yeais ago, but to the unae-custonied visitor it would still seem that they must come in millions. "The roost destructive method ol bunt ing is in what are calieJ hattcne, con trivances looking liko coffins, made to hold one man lying on his back, and from tlie sides of which exten t wings which lie upon the' water and keep tho whole afloat Upon and around these wings are placed decoys, on seeing which the Hying ducks approach and fall by the dozen upou the discharge of the hunter's guu. One man stays in the "battery,"' a most suggestive name, while another, in a skill' or canoe, sails about at a distance, fright ening feeding birds, who, seeing the de coys apparently unmolested, go to them and to their own destruction "Only residents of tho State can hunt in this manner or in nny oilier manner except from the land. Non-residents are not permitted to shoot afloat in any u an ner but are confined to the shore, and as the natives are jealous ot their rights thev seo to it that the law is obeyed bv lor- eigners. President Cleveland, last wiu'er, was a notable exception, but ot this and some other interesting matter in the same connection I will write another time " We will only add to the above com munication that an ea;y opportunity of making investigations in relercnce to the game of Eastern Carolina is offered at the annual exniDltions oi the Mst uarouua Fish," Oyster, Game and Industrial Asso ciation held every winter in New Borne. The next exhibition will be from Monday, February .. 18tli, !o Saturn ay, February 33rd, inclusive There is not a variety ol animal or bird alluded to above but what has. been shown at these exhibitions and many have, been shown too of which the article does not speak at all such as eagles,' herons and bitterns, swans, pan thers, . wildcats, otters, beaver, ten a4 twelve foot alligators, etc. All these and many others can still be found roaming tbe forests . or . abounding in ths rivers, lakes, creeks and sounds of this region. Come to the Fair and view tbe variety of game, .learn of its abundance and strike out for sport. ' : .. '-;,-' Let ' distant prospective visitors to the Fair remember however,;' that the Fair does not by any means stop with showing the sports of this region. ' . It is an Indus trial Exposition as well, snd therein lies its chief, importance: Those -contem plating removal to the South or making investments in tbe South cannot Oo better than to spend Fair weak in New Berne and see What our iantis ana waters are Capable Of producing evon tu jnial Winter, ' -v,' - t - m). i5 '- AN INTEBEAT1NQ RELIC. Copy of a New Berne Newspaper of 1787. Mr. Edward Gerock brought to this offiee a short time ago, a copy of The St . to Gazette of North Carolina, dated Xew Berne, N. C. Oct. 4th, 1787; printed by Hodge & Blauchard, on Hancock Si reel, between Pollock and Water Streets; subscription 25 shillings n year. Tin; paper is in a gooil stato of preservation and contains many interesting articles. The greater part of the journal is devo ted to the transactions of the Convention held in Philadelphia on Sept. 17th, 1787 t rame a vjonstiiution lor the considera ion ot Congress, Geo. Washington was President and Wm. Jackson was Secre tary of the Convention. The following States were represented: New Hamp shire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Xew Jersey, Pennsylvania, Dela ware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. Among tlie various advertisements, are two ollVring five pounds reward for the capture of runaway slaves, several legal notices and illiberal number of educational and other cards. Jacksonville Times. The railroads whose property was pro tected by United Stiles troops during Ihe recent great strike are now asking the Government jto pay for the transporta tion of the very soldiers for whom they applie I aud whose chief duty it was to keep the mil road lines open and guard their property. Nothing was said about pay when the troops were asked for. The War Department opposes paying the charges and raises the point that as the railroads sought the protection of the troops they have no right to regard them as passengers. BARGAINS IN MILLINERY. SeHiiisr, at Cost for Cash for Next All persons indebted to me are request ed lo come forward and settle their ac counts at once. Respectfully. MRS. B. 1!. LANE. 101 Middle Strket. n22-dw-lni BOARD! WILMINGTON, N. C. By Day or Week. Five minutes from all trains. Fiue view of all parades & river. Street Car Line. Terms Reasonable. 310 X. Front St., between Mulberry nnd Walnut. n'22 dw-tf EXPECT ABOUT. January 1st, 1895 Ami aro continuing to sell goods at re markably low prices between now and that time. WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY. A litjAL will Convince You. Hespect.ully, H. B. DUFFY. IT. DUFlTS CROUP SYRUP. At this season children are liable to at tacks of the C;oup, and parents should always be prepared by having a bottle of K. N. JJufly's Croup Syrup on hand, pre pared from ' the recipo of the lata Dr. Walter Duffy can be had ol the Druggists, and of R.N.. Daffy, proprietor, New BerneiN. C. Certificates of its efficacy van be seen of tbe proprietor. 83 cents per bottle. See that tbe wrapper reads-. R. N. DUFFY'S CROUP SYRUP, PREPARED AFTER A KKCIPB OP TBI LATK DR. WALTER DUm. gBeware ot (alae dealers who are sailing j a, luutawm .roup syrup iorwauw. WE Y YOU U WILL BE LATE Unless you make your Selections from our IMMENSE STOCK IMMEDIATELY o ! WE AN Mm Keep Such Bargains long aud you can not afford under any cir cumstances to i miss them. Therefore, If you have not availed your sell of the many op portunities we have offered you lately, YOUR LOSS, by accepting the best chance that has yet presented itself to you to buy IFirst-Class GOODS VERY Tours VeryTruIyt' v I, 1- Hackburn & Willott. F?77 mm 1 -FOB- " --CHEAP - ' " i' ' - ' , "t;'Hs A .? ' . .--"4. WE ARE Kept Replenishing our Stock of ITirst - Class Groceries Although something is constantly going out we never run out or anything. Our goods are NEW & FRESH Because they are new and Just in. -Just step in and--see for yourself.--liuiiniug water is--never stale. Our -Stock is like a- Always Moving. WE 11UY TO SELL! AND SELL TO BUY MORE. Some processions halt, but our Grand Grocery Procession never baits or stops. The order is to move on consumers steadily,along the whole line, without any cessa tion in tbe general ad vance. We do not pro pose 'to quit until con sumers cry: ENOUGH !" ii No one ever can get enough of our Top Quality Groceries -AT- BOTTOM PRICES FEESH ROASTED Mocha& Java Coffee, ONLY 30c per pound. FINE CAUDir Fresh;. Supply - Ji I r - 23-U.G3T ;
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 23, 1894, edition 1
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