Tol. XXIII.-Xo. 0. New Bern, W. CH ' 8unIy Morning, Jnly l0,'19O5. XBcntj.Frurih Year at Jap Fans, w,rth Uk ani Gauza Fans that were 60 and 85c, your choice for 38c, 10 and X 15c values'for 5c We carry in stock Bikers Perfumes and J.. M. Mitchell & Co., , phone m 42 Pollock St., Opposite Post-off ice J liwJ I -Si'-iiurr ii iilrif ill? were of the belief that everything in the safe would be in ashes, - as the safe was on the top floor, foil six stories and was in the hottest part of the fire, but to our surprise the books were found to be in as perfect condition as preceding the fire and could be used again if it were not that they had a musty smell from the fire. We will send you one of the books as soon as we have it recop ied, as a testimonial of what your safe will do, and we will write you up a tes timonial of any description you may desire, for we can not' say too much of the fray the safe stood the fire. YoureuVery Truly, THE CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH PUBLISHING CO., , LA EI LEESON, Business Manager. P. S. We sell the J Baum Safe ynd Lock CompanVs Safes, one of the best safes on the market, They succeeded in winning the, Gold Medal at World's Fair, St Louis, 1904. . We have them in stock, weighing from 475 lbs to 2,000 lbs. Write for Catalogue and Prices. - T J TURNER FURNITURE COMPANY, New Bern, N C "Big Sa le Ihis Week. - KEAU, L.UUK., LIS 1 C.N . 1 250 yards White Lawn, 40 inch irt 6c per yard, FIGURED J LAWNS. . , 12, 15 and 21c kind, special this week at 7i, 10 and 12Jc per yard. - , ' FIFTY DOZEtf Ladies Full Bleached Vesta with tape in the neck, U ' kind, sa'e 8c a piece. ;. EMBROIDERY. 7H0 ya.'ds embro'dpry to sell this week at Se per yd INSERTION Just think at only 2c SPECIAL SALE on Mens and Boys . tn dollar." Don't miss this sale. Eve.y x MENS UNDERWEAR this 'week A 75 Middle ; " . ' - '.'.V '. : v 'v Hats' and' Dresi Goods 4 , 5 5'81ightly damaged be sold at 7:30 pin It ' ; Jt 7b Middle Street. 70 Middle Street r Gr.Gliill lidv. Ci Dll S-iv Ca ;- '"anufacturcr3 Acuta for Drlo C'it ;::r ' -nr.d DoiIcr3. t:elcbratcl Vr.n r 1 Prcr.r: "n;:nor r:t ' - - ' --':, , ' ' tt Expense ii . ' a , . 35c for 19o " . a complete line ot Toilet Specialties 21i Cincinnati, O., April 15, 1903. J. Baum Safe & Latk Co , Cincinnati, Ohio. " ; Gentlemen: Please enter our order for a No-10 safe at once and get it out as goon as possible. Wo are now located in the Blymyer ri.;tj: w..i cit J i-ii.3 Duuuing 0l. muii ou, Hnu re getting in shape for business.- Everything in oar establishment in the Pike Building was destroyed by the fire, and the only thing which was left was our iron safe . which we bought of you. .We at first per yd. - ' " Suits and Pants, entire stock at 60c on thing will be sold as advertised. 44c persult . .,V . ; i.. i , i ii . ,,y..- Street. -yl.'., ;. A 5; , jj ,4",'";' ' by fire and water will will pay you to be on rl1 IP : Bryan KIocU. ::fh education ' Ti- V m C 1 t . Largely Favored In This State. ? The ? , - Negro Eliminated. , Suck Is Exsrtsfon.Frm" Fsrmsrs.? auditor .: Dlxos k Popular Man. Cliud Bsr-J-- sard lit Good Shape. Choro :' koo County fismo . Prstonror.. Haleigh, N. C, July 16th, 1905- Chairman McNeill of the State Corpo ration Commission . says that the State Board of Tax Assessors it has nearly completed its assessment of the property of common carriers the re ports of a few of these are incomplete and so had to be retu'-nd State Auditor DL'ron who ja very popular as a speaker has a number of invitations p deliyer addresses at. vari ous points' but says he lias been com pelled to decline all of them except one to deliver an address at his home town. Shelby, on the occsion of what is known as the "home , coming" of Clevelanc people' August 16th. State Treasurer Lacy has returned from his mountain trip which occupied just one month. He went r.s the guett of Marshall W Bell of Cherokeecounty into Graham county, on a 40,000 acre game preserve, the other members 0. the party being the sister of . Mr. Bell and Mr. and Mrs, Sake HilliRrd. They lived in log cabins and had a grand time in the primeval forests, in which no axe hasever felUd a tree. They c tught more trout daily than they could - eat and enjoyed that grand fish three t met a day. Mr. Lacy says his trip was, a delight from start, to finish. On the way home he ttopped at Marion and visited the Elhanan orphanage of which Miss Perry is the head. There are 160 orphans end she receives in gifts $10,-1 000 A year for them everj'th'rrg coirij in response to prayer. He says tba. though sometimes there is hardly any thing left to eat yet a fresh supply comi ) and that it is one of the most re ma rkable places he ever visited. . . Judge Allen did not teke sny furthei step today so far as the sentence oi Rowan Rogers and J. P. Sorrell is con cerned. He gave them six months in jail yesterday though a longer sentence was expected by a good many people. It has been said that the Judge said he would mitigate the sentence but he did not really mke this statement Th grand jury today continued its investi gation into what may be back of th action of Rogers and Son ell !n talking to jurors In the Gattis-Ki'go case. One of the closest friends of Claud Bernard said today "He is In good life good spirits and good health and soon will return to his home here. I have een him within a few days but will not tell you where." rr Labor Commissioner Vamer says that replies have come in from 600 fanners regsidirx wages, labor, education, etc. and that a very large inajorfcy. favor compulsory education with the negro left out. : in ine east snq in a good aeai ot the center of the state t?ie objection is almost spiel; on account of the negro as a great many farmers claim that to educate the latter ruins him as farm laborer. A great majority of the farm ers therefor favor., compulsory educa tion and in fct education generally for the whites only.'' A few favor it for both races and say the negro ought to have a practical education. Very near (y all the farmers complain of tend en cy on the part of. wage , earners both whit and black to leave the forms and sro to where there Is labor In ' factories, saw milli, railways tiu There b great a id ine -al complaint of the shortage of labor thu coming from everywhere. It is somewhat signlnck nt that some of the most ardent supporters of . com' ju'sory education declare that tie hav this Idea because they beliave it will benefit wag earners by preparing them for more nsef ul work on the farm where It is felt that an agricultural ed ucation is of special' value, . The farm ers In a number of cases express t ieir ap M-eciation of the instruction givenat th Agricultural College her. The abor commhsioner says lie is Impress ed in looking over these letters ftia over 1 0 1 farmers reporting from every eainty in th state by the Im provement In ponsmanship, exprtalon. tc. This fact amounts to a revelation The replies have also been marked by promptness The Editor has received a fin large baket of tomAUw grown by Mr. T. J. Baxter, thM tomatoes, tlii'ir size snd goodmt being due, Mr. . Baxter . snyn to the benpfiruU efTects of Die MtHulows guano. P. st CTree Notice. r Bwntorg nf.ldiii at the pi ct office are notified that the rent for this quar ter is pwl duo mid muni l. j.fml nt onre. BEYMOl.Tl W. HANCdcK, I'..' !.m,!-r. Vxirn f,l,e V-:.l t I l-f. t I BYNUM SUBMITS TO MURDER. In Second Osgre for IKIllInf His PartncrV : ude Will Fix tsrm Mondav; Nor of - E-nbracory Cass, Special to Jou.Tlal. y- - Raleigh, July 15.-rjuge Allen in the Sogers end Sorrell embracery case to day, ordered a ' subpoena for a' new Mid perhaps inportant witness named Banks, who had a brother on the jury in the GaUis-Kilgo libel suit, and who is said wrs seen by Rowan Rogers and asked to take a message to Jmyman Banks. As yev the subpoena is not ssrved. The grpid jury vill on Monday re sume I'.ie Snvesr'gaiion of this matter. Nokwyers have yet been exeminedby it, bet t'r judge gives it full authority to S'in.mon siy. Judge. All'sn directs it to il .7 probe iio mat:pr. " It is the conr:nnt here feat Sorre;! does not know who wented jurors seen, and that Rogers doeB know but will never, tell. This may checkmate the investiga tion. . . y Raymond D. Bynum submitted in the Superioi cou t here to murder in the second degree forNshootiny. his aged parinor Deacon James H, Alford, in their printing office di'ring the last holidays. The juc'ge will hear evidence Monday to fix the term of imprisonment The dofer.co is that constant and heavy drinking made Bynum irresponsible. Rr ess Clash in Hew York Streets. New York, July 1'4. "San Juan 11'," the district bounded by Amster- lam and West End Avenues and Sixty lint and Sixty-third streets, so callet 6ecause of its notoriety - as a battli ;n und, was the scene here tonight of a irious race riot, which required twe lundred and fifty , policemen to quell. after many shots had been fired and everal persons had oeen seriously in jured. The trouble began Bhortly after 9 clock, when a policeman arrested Ed ward Connelly for attacking Henry Williams, a negro, and was pursued to the station house with his prisoner by a mob of Connelly's friends, hurling thowere of stones and other missiles, When the station house reserves turned out, the entire neighborhood was in an uproar, and whites and blacks engaged in desperate struggles in the streets. Torrents of missiles (were hurled from roofs and windows. Within three muv utes not less than a thousand men.boyi and women, black and white, were en gaged In furious combat. Approaching Nuptials. Friends in the city have received the following invitation: Dr. and Mra, Charles North Mason ' request the honor of your presence -' at the marriage of their daughter Rosalind Dee to - Mr. Louis Morgan Baxter Wednesday evening, July twenty-sixth one thousand nin hundred and five 'l, ', at halt after eight o'clock ' ; at their bom ' Harlowa, North Carolina. . 1 . 'Miss Rosalind, who is better known a Miss Rossi Mason' is well known her and ha a host of friends every where In this section..' ' , 1( )LD NEWSPAPERS 15 cents per 100 for sale at Joomni .office. j -, ' . AN ALLIGATOR COUNTRY, . . ;.r .. , .; ';.r' Big taurlsM sr Stts Is tits Cross Trlbii- - - ' tary NtuM snd 'ItuA.l'i Every little whil the ' Journal pub lithes an account-of th killing of a large alligator In som of th neighbor ing streams emptying either Into the Neus or Trent rivers. ; It is said that many streams abound in thesd saurian snd that)that they are multiplying rapix" ly. They grow to a large six but ther has yet to be a report of any de predation if by them. last Thursday Shad De Loach, colored man living near the head of Scotu Crek saw a big alligator mak ing its way clumsily across the creek to small pond about a mile from the creek Delwen got his gun and put two charge of No. 4 shot into the animals pyx and head, the shot entered its bruin and killed It- It measured elht fM't long and was the largest that has hp,.n twen at Ik-rc In this section at any lime. The animal was skinned and the hide was brought her snd a go(xl pric ' paid for it, arlri K'dycit, Coloied, Dead. 1h f n.-r:il ,.f 1.art- !,.!!, rol- nrr I, I..'," 1 nf f'lii.t-in f'l A. M. !'. Z. 1 ' ' h, !' V s' a! 1 , ' . : . 1 ,:. -icv:!' I !..) NORTH CAROLINA . AHEAD. Rich ' In RssourcH th Stat Has - Prsductd Many Marvslou Things, but Nothing of th -Kind Ptrhsp Ui Equal of Buckhorn ; Ltthls Spring Rectntly Dbcovsrtdtn Cranvllls County. A Wondsrul Mlntral Water Which Work ' Mlraels In Dlstass ol th Kidneys, -Bladder snd Stomach. RICHARD R. MANNING. (Editorial artiele from Henderson, (N, C.) Gold Leaf of September 15th, 1904. ho State in the Union, perhaps, has a greater diversity of resources than North Carolina. And in nothing is it richer than in mineral waters whose curative properties are recognized far and wide. The latest discovery of this kind is that of the Buckhorn Lithia Spring, one mile from Bullock, Gran ville county, on the line of the Durham & Keysville (Southern) - Railway; be tween Oxford and Clarksville. The story of the discovery and bene ficial results obtained from the use of this water make interesting reading, The sons of Mr. B. T. Hicks, on whose land the spring is located, while working in a field nearby dis covered a small stream gushing up out of a rock. The water looked pure and and sparkling and being thirsty, they stopped to drink. It had a marked ef fect, and they drank of it again and re peatedly. Mr. Hicks was away from home at the time, having gone to a well known spring in the-Western part of the State, seeking relief from an ag gravated case of catajrh of the stomach At the end of three or four weeks; he returned home, apparently no betu r and edjected in spirit. When Mr Hick reached home the b .y told him about the water they had founo and the peculiar effect it had upon those who drank it They suggested that he cry it, but he had lost all hope. If th' water and medicines he had been using tor so long a time were without avail surely he did expect to find relief frorr any water, or other thing,' on his owr. premises. But, incredulous as he was like a drowning person grasping at e atraw, he determined to give this water ,a trial. There was no spring there merely small stream gushing up out of a rock. Perhaps no one would have thought oi taking notice of it or drinking at such a place hut boys. Mr. Hicks began drinking the water, and soon commenced to improve. The effect was marked from the very first. The man who went home, a wreck, is today a well man, strong, vigorous, hearty a walk ing, living illustration of the marvelous curative powers of this wonderful water after six or eight months use of it After using the water awhile and finding there was virtue in it, Mr. Hicks cutaway the rock through which it had forced itself in a tiny stream, all through the ages undiscovered and unutilized, and released a bold spring, which flows at the rate of a gallon a minute. This, in brief, is the story of the discovery of this new elixer of life. . A gentleman from Baltimore come out to Mr. 'Hicks' on a hunting expedi don last falL 80 impressed was he with .thpextraordinary activity of - the water from this spring, that he took a sample bom with him and had it ana lyzed at his own expense, at a cost of $75.00 . . . '.. - . .'After having the analysis made, the gentleman In question sent It to Mr. Hicks and . advised him to hava the spring capitalized and exploit the water for th benefit of suffering humanity. This, Mr. Hicks has done, Messrs. J. A. Kelly and R. H. Hood, of Henderson, purchasing an interest in the spring. Th nam "Buckhorn" ha been given to it, and Buckhorn Lithia' Water wjll be vigorously pushed by these enter prising gentlemen. . That it is destined to attain a wide sal and a great repu tation admits of no doubt, The ana lysis - shows It to . contain double the quantity of lithia of the most celebrated lithia waters known. - Aa a diuretic, alterative and laxative it has no superior Its effect upon the stomach, bowels, kidneys and bladder is very pronounced, and its use is attended with the most beneficial resulls. A number of per sons in Henderson hav been- drinking Buckhorn Lilhia Water for som . time and enthusiastic are th praises be stowed upon it t.", Henderson will b th principal dis tributing point, thus adding another im portant industry t our town. -: For sale by Davis' Pharmacy and F. B. DulTy, New Bern, -.', ., Colored Man Drowned. , Will While, colored, of New Hem, working with t'-olvin & Dsvis, bridge runt rnetors buil'lintf H steel bridge for the Ai'Miitic 4 North Carolina Company ovr ' f.'i ime rivnr nrar Kinslon, fell I f,..m the loi.!,- whon at work' Kriilny pv s.iiig ami a drmnfl. I -.,( tr.T..v..r IhoWy hy dm?- - f .r il 1 f f- 'I .H , ,- ; 1 ;. 1 i I i ' I I V- v . - ! . ' I- ! : 1 . 1 I I n Portsmouth A Few Nice ones just Received. Also a NeW Barrel Fulton Market Corned Beef. 300 dozen Mason's Fruit Jars, all sizvs at prices lower than you ever bought them at before. iJ.L.McDaniel H WhoIeHitfe A Retail Grocer. Tarker Store. - " "Our . Perfection Tray Trunk." J L. HARTSFIELD, (ontractor und Aluilder. OFFICfc ).') 1-2 MIDDLE ST. Would be glad to have any one inspect my 'toork as it goes mvVVvTTTyTTTTTT?TTyTTTfTTTTTTTTyTTTTTVTTTTTTtry JUST RECEIVED A Fine Lot "Busy Bee" Hams English (Lured Should ers, Breakfast Strips and Picnic Hams. And a Complete Line oi Staple and Fancy Groceries continually on hand at Reasonable Prices. IIEABQUAETER3 FOR FINE BUTTER AND CHEESE. 8atifctlou 'Guaranteed. r '''Ar;;;mii tf.tl L.. llnvlnir AiiAoA fn diiuvinHnti our ouni COST for CASH, our entire stock of Crockery, Cutlery and household furnish injs. We slso offer to the right prty upon rery advsntaseous trjn. th whol of rsid stock vi our lxnj lsbliKed business. ,. . -.r-- M. ! Whitehurst & Co., 45 Pollock Street., iiiiure ana I'vcryVMr.", to vavMo a homo coi:ifortabl3 and 'r.::.;, '.v 1 ;:t Ii r.a booU caac3, China IClcctts, 1.) r.:Mlothcr3. , . ,-!' i- 1' ': ' of .:iv'i 'j will do well to see nt before they Corned Mallets v viiii nuu UrtUUlKJJt CIS. hiMm Tray Tronks. Superior to any pat ent tray trunk on the market Strong and durable. Belore buyiDg call and inspect itM merits. COrU)KMONCAlUrETS. Splendid wear and chnap. John B. Ives, Successor to Disosway 4 Taylor. 98 Middle St. PH0NI 238. up. Trs. .1 1SS n - iwtsll tuialnMa a will ull at nrfill at ' ' ' ' misnii Q

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