Newspapers / The New Bernian (New … / Aug. 3, 1882, edition 1 / Page 2
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( I'VULIMIV-HS' ANSiOl'SrKMKNT... THE T.TT.Y .tOf'ANAI., a Stralniun jar, ililtslinl 41; itiiUoii Mowtay, nt inXtipvr tr,M0 lor nix months. lMivonM ny .ncrilMT nt 5i Cfiits wr myiitli. THE NKW 11F.RNE JOV'lJNAl.., '! " liaper, l piibllshwl pvpry Thni Hil:iy at 2.00"'t annum. ' AITi:UTISINa KATES (DAILY) One inch onnlny 60 coats; one wk, -.Xi; one mcntli '.; tlm mouths, 1(V 0: six month, tl.'i.W); , vrelvc inuiilUs, 2u.00. , AJvertiwincnls nuclei- tn-ail of "City Iti'ms" I cents er line lor-each Inx'rtioa t No mlvcrtisomriiis will "tin iu.i-itil hi'twoi'ii I.ix-.-U Matter at any priie. , Moiiemidf M.irriairi'8 or l)paihs, not to exci'wl Ifii Unc will Im inswli'il frw. All additional matter will be rhnrgi'tt 10 cents jier line. Payments fur transient advcriisemenK must e inadi' In n.lviiilw.-" I!e:'iilar ailvertisemenls will lie rollerleil jinmitly at Hie end of. eai li nionili. Comiminieation containing news or a discus sion of liK'nl matters are wlii ited. No eoinimini ealiiin must expert to bi pnlilislii'd that contains i nbjietionahle pernonalilirs ; vitliliohU I lie na'ie if tlie author : or that will nviUc more than one toluninnf this paper. THE JOURNAL. NEW BERNE, N. C, AU(i. 3, 1HS3. Entered at tlm Post office at New Heme, N ('.. - aa second-clasil matter. It is thought that the present . disturbed condition of K&ypt will liiive a disastrous effect .-on .'.the wops, owing to the neglect of irri gation. It is an ill wind that Mows , good to nohody, and it is to be hoped that Southern col ton will get the, benefit -of the breeze from Egypt. ''. The Sultan is reported to have ; ottered Egypt to "Great Uritian on the same terms as those wherein ",.'.. Cyprus was acquired. John Hull ' .found So little profit in the transac ' "itipn of four years ago that lie. will '; l)rolably hesitate about buying a V ".bigger and more troublesome ele phant of the same. sort. He may think it cheaper to use cannon anil ironclads than Jlritish gold. And then the English sailors ami sol diers need a little actual experience in the open field. Immigration. The New South has a well con- sidered article on Immigration and near the close adds the following: We sincerely hope that Ibis editorial may cause Governor Jan-is ami the Board of Immigration, if it still exists, ; and tho Department of Agriculture to consider the arguments which we have advanced and may such deliberation result favorably for the immigration . prospects of the. State. . Vain hope. Governor .Jams has something else to do in the next few months and has no time to spare on trilles. There are polit ical speeches to- be made, and can- ..... didates for the Legislat ure to' iie seen, and wires to be pulled all over the State. Some people think that a Governor of a great State ought to have too much regard for ; the dignity of his high office to take the stump and fight and wrangle with other politicians. Tint we ' suppose he could get an opinion .from the Attorney General, if it were necessary, stating that it was part of the contract that lie shofild wage .a . vigorous canvass in the sumnier of 1SSL. A HAULED MEALER. liobert Arnold stood in the door way of llodick's Hotel, taking in the scone. .Nothing but log had been visible, on hisarrival the night before, and all was new and inte resting. His eyes dwelt with de light on thej plumy islands, the il lumined yacht, the exquisite blues and ocean greens, and noted with amazement and curiosity the sin gnlarities of I'ar Harbor archil ee, tare. -'Fresh from a long course of study in Swiss Seminaries and Gei man mining schools, America to him was less the land of his birth than a pi'oblem to be investigated. America and Americans. He had been at home too short a time to feel familiar with either, ami his shy and studious habits . and lack ot tainihanty with . society were a barrier to easy acquaintance. Ho lingered now.,, watching .'with n veiled interest the crow d descend ing to breakfast. Fa pas and main mas, with their broods of lively, noisy children ; college students brown with tan and .muscular with oar practice ; girls innumerable, in all styles, of blonde and brunette, but all pretty, as it seemed to him, marvelonsly pretty, and wonder1 fully well dressed, with ease of man ner and aplomb such as no other girls of his limited experience had ever possessed. , There was a diffi culty in this universal prettiness. Like a bee in wilderness of flow ers, his eyes hovered over 'the broad Held of beauty,' sated by possibility, and puzzled where to alight, while gay good mornings were exchanged and an increasing clatter from the dining-room beyond showed that the morning meal was weft under way. .... - - j A rattling: sound attracted his at: -J tcution; ud looking out, he behcbl a most astonishing carriage draw ing tip at the door of the hotel. Iti was simply a broad ' clast ic plank swung between four wheels, titled with a couple of seats, and drawn by ,i rough small hot se a. "bnck- board." in short, familiar enough to New England eyes, but a most re markable vehicle to those of Kobert Arnold, who had never before seeii anylhing like it in any. quarter 'of the globe. Its occupant, besides Hie boy who drove it, was a young lady in a careless wtrp er shawl, ami a hat, tied on "anyhow" over a thick knot of anburn-clicsti.ut hair, who de scended without a word, and float ed past him without a glance, but whose face anil air produced a sud den excitement in the breast otonr young metallurgist. ''Who was that?" ho" demanded of the hotel clerk, a true son of the soil, who, availing himself of a brief leisure, had come out to sun ft' the morning gale. "That ! who Oh, ha: She's one of them h; ulctl mealers."' .7 "One ol'i 'hut did you say ?" "IWcaler hauled "tnealers." "What under heaven is; a hauled mealer?" dcir.iiidcd Robert, .com pletely tnysf ilieti. Tin' clerk surveyed him with a contempt but slightly tinged with pity. , "Why, where were you brought' up V he said. "Hain't you never heard before of a niealor ' .Mealers sleep out, and come in for meals. hen t hey re hauled in buekboarus like that one, they .re. hauled meal ers. See ? Guess you ain't one of our country' people." "les, I am. I was born one, at least; but it's fifteen years since I've been in the United States, and I never came o Mount Desert be fore, and never heard of a nioaler. Do you know this lady's name "Well, yes, but it'skintlol slipped my memory fort he moment. 31usly Mustard Miisgrove. , 'J hat's it Miss Miisgrove. She's si ayin' over fo one of them small coltages on the bank, and she's made an' ar- rangement with Ira Higgins s folks til lii li'lulml iliiu-ii tti lnii' lmwitc " l!y a happy chance, as liobert I considered it, he found himself, when he -strolled in to a belated breakfast, 'seated opposite the "hauled mealer." She seemed to have no party wit li her, but a pretty girl' in a blue boating suit had pulled a chair close to-hers, and was chatting away in girl fashion, while Miss -'Miisgrove frilled with her toast and languidly stirred a enp of ambiguous coffee. A fortnight passed, and fhe situ ation remained unchanged. Shy by nature and stiff by habit, liobert made no advances to the closer. ac quaintance of his fair neighbor at table. A. bow when she entered the room, another bow when she left it t hat was all, yet, gradually there grew over him a sense of inti mate relation with her. He knew her dresses, her attitudes; -he guessed at her moods, and followed the slight and mobile changes of her chi'i'iniiigfaco. Miss Miisgrove neither detected nor suspected this close ebservationon the part of her silent rh-a-eix. She saw only a gentleman-like, taciturn young mail,, absorbed in his breakfast or his dinner, "liai her an uncommon face," she said to, iierse.KV. "not quite America'!," and then she for got him. She usually brought a, book. or newspaper with her fo ta ble, and busied herself with it when no one was sitting with her; but Ibis was not often, for she had a large following of young girls, who were forever running across the room to discuss plans or whisper important secrets. Several of these girls were pretty, and more than one bit of graceful by play was aimed across Miss. Musgroye's shoulder at 1 he insensible liobert, but he never found this out . The "hauled mealer" was the first wo man whom he had ever looked at closely, and he did not seem able to see any face but hers." Motherless, sisterless, brc tight up in an almost conventual 'atmosphere' of study, he had seeu but shadows in a glass so far-; now the shadows were tak ing substance, and likel'hilanimon, the youthful monk of the Laura, he was filled with zeal and bewilder ment. How many things there were that he had not even suspected ! Was it possible that fhe world was full of women like this women, so sweet, so noble, so entrancing in all their looks and ways J And then he told himself that this could not be. There was but one; she was' unique, incomparable, .not merely a specimen of a type. How many youthful lovers have thought and will think the same as flic tide of life Hows on ! Accident did our shy hero a good turn at last, as accident sometimes will.; -.Walking by; himself one af ternoon along the wild shore be yond Saul's CI ill', became upon the lady of his thoughts, at a moment of evident difficulty. Her little dog had slipped and fallen to the bottom of a rather high shelving cliff, tide wasjuakingin fast, ami she was evidently hesitating whether or not tT climb dw!i1tniis'a:ss1sfaHC4w;r question-complicated by the doubt as tb whether,' once - down, sh6 would lo able to climb up again'. lioWrt grasM'd the situation promptly, and proffered help, whieji was gladly' accepted. To bis expe, rienccd powers the cliff presented) no difiiculties, and in Jive minutes the rescued tejiieiuwas- in his ni.! tress's arms, and the sweet .voice which liobert knew so well was ut tering cordial thanks. The dog 'had lamed liinvsell in bis fall and.limped and whined when set down. Another opportunity. ';May l not carry hint home, for you!" liobert asked. "You "are quite loo good. I foaryon will find him troublesome." . '()h,:not at all. 1 like dogs." So fhe two walked on over t heel ill's, with sea. vistas on one , hand, and mountain glimpses on the other, and before they i cached the Utile brown cottage in the field, Jiobert's shyness had lied under fhe spell of his companion's cordial ease and tact, and he found himself talking lluently and with '--pleasure as he had never talked to a lady before in all his life. "What a beautiful view!" he said, gazing seaward front fhe door of f he cot tage. "I think so. It is my favorite of all the many beautiful views at T.ar Harbor. Vou must come and see if often, Mr.-Arnold.'. 'My little pi azza is quite nt your service any afternoon if you want a quiet place in which to study or. smoke, and can not find one to your fasfe .at liodii'k's. I never use it myself, except in fhe morning and evening; but 1 hope- you will occasionally conic there also to see ice. Thank you so much for. vour kindness to Tatters." , . '"What a Trankj charming crea ture!" thought liobert, as he made his way across the stubble fields to ward the hotel. "How few girls are capable ot such unaffected sin'; ecrify, without' any hesitations or (iiriom pcHsres. Hoar me! if .they only knew what an attraction it: is!" Which relied ion might lead to a doubt as' to' whether Mr.' Ar nold's experience of the sex at liar Harbor had or had not been blessed to his perceptive 1'acultios. "Saw you walkin' with Miss Miisgrove, and carryn' her d;twg," remarked fhe clerk, with a grin, as he came in. "Didn't know you at lirst. Thought nia,bo 'twas him come back." Ilim? who? liobert was too proud to ask, but the pronoun rankled in his mind. .Not for hrig, however. As time went on, and acquaintance pro gressed with his charmer, and no "him" 'appeared to mar the harmo nious How -of events, the circum stance passed from his memory. He went often to f he little brown cot tage in the st ubble field, spending solitary al'len oo'is there with a ci gar and a. mineralogic.nl -treatise, and now and then a. morning tctc-a-tvic witli its fair 'mistress. Sunset usually brought a rush of idlers to the .piazza, and their appearance was his signal for lliglit. Quite at his ease now wit h M; :s Miisgrove, he was shy and difficult of access as ever to all others. He invaria bly reconnoitred the premises from a point of observation in the fields, and the lliitfer of alien petticoats on tho porch would srdicti-to send him back again to the hotel. Miss Miisgrove, who treated him with the fran. ::ess of an older, sis ter, rallied him occasionally on this peculiarity. "I can't help it," he would say; "it is my bringing up." " ' "II ut you are not shy with me." "No; but that is different. You are so what, shall I call it ? so siwjxilicfi. You understand you put me at. ease." "So would these other ladies pretty soon if you gave them a chance." ... Ilut liobert only shook his head. So, lapped in a foolish paradise, unwilling or unable to analyze, the deepening spell which held him, liobert Arnold drifted through .Ju ly, through August, and into the. heart of that golden September which is only known to the dwell ers of the North lands, and sudden ly, like a frost in ripe roses, came the blight of hope. ; Miss Miisgrove. went suddenly away for a couple of days ;o Portland, her maid said. People were quitting fhe island in shoals by that time, the hotels were nearly empty, and. the loneli ness of those two days was in part accounted for by fhe empty fables and the closed rooms. Put when the third morning came, and liob ert, with a sense of reviving life, stood ready to help his friend from her buck board, the appalling appa rition of a gentleman sit ting at her side, presented -: itselfa broad shouldered, handsome,1 brown na val oflieer; with an evident air, of proprietorship about him, . which was as unpleasant as it was unac counf.able. . . - , i ."Who is that?" liobert demand ed of t he clerk, who had come .out, as usual, at the sound of fhe wheels. r , ' (i . : .' "That? why that's 'him." ".. . , ' .-"Her brother r. . "No; she-.hain't got no brother as ever T heard. That's him I fell yon Miss Musgroye's f husband. He's a loofenant or soifiethin', and his ship's been t ruisins down to theJsthmns." ;;i ' v " 4 I "You said she was Miss Mill j grove." t, i, .X::. i--. J i "Wa'ai, so she is." ' ' 4 j And.then it flashed 1115111 linbcFt that in the island .Aernaculav -mary fied women ' and girls werjc nUkf fiuiss," -.with the, diffcivine of a letter in .orthography, but no dif ference at all in pronunciation. He saw it all How. . Such" a - stupid, such a ridiculous in "stake, as it was ! Hut fhe consequences wore m less hard to bear. . ' ' He went lo his roiiln, and sal down to think it over. The 11101 c he reviewed t he niaticr, the more unnecessary his sufferings- seemed to him, and Hie more distinctly his own- fault, lioginnihg - with ij wrong impression, he bad never given himself' a chance to correct it.' lie had shrunk with. a. foolish shyness from people when half an hour of their company would have revealed tlie truth. One, question, the most trilling accident, would have revealed it; rbnt he had never asked the 'question,' aiiil' always prevented the accident. The girls called her Lila; he had avoided using any name, with the instinct of a lover, when he spoke to her. and had. said "you," w bile of het he never spoke except to himself. So he had gone on and on, plung ing deeper and deeper iclo a vain affection, and wtat a fool he had been ! The only comfort, was 1 1 hat she had not been in fhe least to blame, and that she never kiiow his .mistake, of the pain it caused him. A little note reached I he brown cottage that afternoon. "Dkau Mils. Muw;kiv:k, I am leaving Lar Harbor so . suddenly that I have . no opportunity to make my farewells to you. A chance has offered for 'a niineralogieid four in the' provinces, and when this note reaches you' I ' shall be on my way to fhe Uraiid Monali. .'Please ac cept my most cordial thanks for all your many kindnesses fo me, and with my .congratulations, on Lieu tenant Musgroye's safe return, be lieve me, "Yours laitlifully, ! Jioi!Ki;T AtitnoM)." Mrs. Miisgrove, sitting on her piazza with her sailor beside her, read this fareweu mile! smilingly. "He was really a nice boy," she said, "shy and stiff, you know, but of good stiill" You would have liked him, Ned." So, with an unconsciiis heart on shore, anil a sad and sore one a( sea, ended (he brief and tragic ro mance of the "Hauled Mealer." )'irr'v f'lirnr. W. M, POWERS, Tin and Slioct-Tron Worker. Hoofing, Onttcviii.T, and all kinds of Tin Work done. ''" "'. Htnyiiii rpviircd at rhort nolice. : (live me ii trial. Kit-sit. door vest of (Joi ner of Middle and South Front si reels next, to bein ster Hull'y. jljS iKim Oregon and WaKliinglon, "the land of never foiling crops," where giasf hopp(;is, chinch bugs, 7 drongjit j or Ittiid winterf! are unknown, ofior.t free homesteads lo all, on feili'o rvern- inent. Iiunls uailniail laiuti m de sii'ablc loc.-itiiins can be ' pun han-r-d 011 ten, vcarK time, in casv inivrn'erits. ICvei'v iriduslrioim man can ' become iiitbiienilentlv wealthy inn very short lime, by settliiij, in the l'neifie North west,.- Address a postal card to I'aui. Seiitir.zi-;, lojiTi-ANn, Oiik;on, ami ask him to send you a copy of The West Shore n. fiaiid.fiomely. llUisLr.'ited journal, containing lull iiHorniai.ion. Hi nghmn School, , ., - ltnblisfied 17;)J;. MEBANKSVltLH, N. 0.,.-', is PRE-KMINENT among Southern Boarding Schools for Boys, in ago, num bers and area of patronage, ; j-' .j The 177I.W SoshIoii will begin (in new luiiUilnm-.) Jills- 2fif.li, 1883. , ' 'Foi' catafivfltn 'giving full pnrlicylat'f), julyfi-lm 1 Maj. R. Uinouam, Snp't! Mvir: sultan,: MY MOTl'(V- !( .1011 QTJAlJTlEfi, , Till HKST ANfl NliW EST STYLES, i ! ' AND CHEAP mtOES. ! 7 H' avk .ivt'st nraifiNKn rnm nohtii mi Ii n ami liiii' i'l('0t.(Ml ..Jtnr lv of Lfidior,1 Dress Goods. ' Clothing, Boots and Shoos, Hats find Capri, Trunks and - ' ; 7 .. i . : , Valieosi, Notions, &12., &c. COM E A NT C'OMPA TIE : ri7 ' ' ' f : ; AND YOU WILL PE TO PUY FliOM ; , ..;;', 7 ; II. SULTAN, April 1-U-ly NEW ItEKNE, Jf. C. ni r,i it .1 . a li '3 fe, u,l- Cosii!i Sorn! Corn! nAYv-IIAYv-HAYf lVY; -HAY. " CORN ANJ),MEyL IN O AR LOAD LOTS, f rl'i"si . I'oV ( '.ovn nrul Solicited, - ''- "' ,;" ' ' '"".' " '"'i'r-' " -:. ""''' ,:" "' ; ' ' v . No Goods QiiGtcd MHz cii'W. "Prompt Sliijmciit Gaawntcei.- ;' V Ilavc also on lmiid ;i. l,trq. mipj lv of Ohoic rVi mot liy Hay and nil kinds of Scroti, ,.; I'tivilins-erK will 'do wV.tt trt enlPat, 5 J ' -".- Unioii Point Steam -Hour tag -Mill's, Smith Wont Stftpt, is izxi 5i3 U ;.iv. XY,.7'-rii'('y w 7, rm L A :jt (i- JS-i1- .7A IN THE Kccpa always in Stock large CLEARS, ;FL0UH, SUGAI1, COFFEE, BYRUP, y LORILtARD AND GAIL & AX SNUPF, n . . r ; - ; also a, largo stock of . .,T,,;:;1o....:Bi.,; ii;-,:,,c.::of;; DRY GOODS, ' BOOTH, SHOES, and Arbucklo's' Ariosa I JO A SI1 11) CRACIIEM and CAKES in groat-variety.-. -fA largo Stock of - KOTIONS 'A'NJ) LIOSIIOK V. ' Wholesal.0 buycra.will iiiid a large STOCK at lowest prices. Don'l, l'.iil t:. so in,' before jdnlaij M 1 1 !!.! STIflCIil'l, M ir. . ly tl w N. S. Iiichardson, I'l.'ACTll'AI, HOOK AND ,l()l! llI.MTKi:, 0'osit' Voil Ofl'M'o, ,'. . - KPAV IflOBNH, N, C. 7",.; G0()) STOCK,; : N MAT WCII K, LOW l'lil(EK7 Cfr?f Onleirc i-'olicitcd and tii:np(lv '--- -' -. -: r Apr. -HI' ' i , 7 NOTICE! .Tn Ilitrrii-ll ( loralhur, liolicrf f loiild nml Iuiii: (iunlii .liis. Mite lit-l; y I JtKxihi nnij . l-lflvnt'il l'(M I.Cf: K ilifiloll. vim in'" lifivlir iinliflfil Id i.t .a- miiLiI iito" ri-'dliu if, 'it(lin; in i In :ul iti i-niirt, : iV (.'in vi'ii t-. ti 1 1 1 1 v scbi-n-in ( '. T. W afsnii.i-t -plirinliil' Mini Tims. I'1. ( ! v 1 1 1 1 yiiiiiM-lvi's ;inil itl hi r.i tii'i' (li'li'inhintf-. Mr-ldll;; 11 till' ,:ll't i l iiMl of :K.i:ll't lit I'll 111", ill. l'nlliM li, .Mllil JVI .-l.-JXl I 'Strii'lK ; ill fill' ('ily nl Ni'W l'l-nii', .-. (!,, lii'iii" tin' :,;hiii wliidi ih'-i(..n(i.il tn ili'ti'tiiliMilfi nnd ruiot Imm-iim hrirs-nf M:irv !''.. I iinnlihiMli'i-i'rii-i'il. Vim iti-i i-t-. 1 1 1 i t Ui.:ti-:ir I'll On' 'Mu ilny of Ool.uli'V l:--'2 ut Hip oiiii'r il On' i-li'i li "I tin' Siiii'rim- cniii.l. :iml im-fiwi-r nr (li'iiuir lo the ci'inplii iht ;is: ynn inny ti' Mflvisi-il. H .V. ('ni-nrhtd-; July ISM.'t.a.vr.li ( (1 .-.':-. .v- ni , J. V. Wlt.UAMS. P., M. (1atksv , V. WILLIAMSCo. ; . COMMISSION MERCHANTS ... ,,. i h . i, i .' .1. AND, .' '- -. -sWHOLKSAliE DEALEIIS H Vs ?-:'r;oo;uN;.::V7;- C" Solicit CoiiHhrinn.TiK -; ' K.v" Solicit Oi-.lors. '"'. " "'7 ! - --Newborn,' N.- Ci.-! '" : ' j Apr. SI. !) 111 v '"' '-: ! ' ' -'", O. TJ. .': . ' .'. O. :-.'., ;OI'KN AT - V'"'-"", "And Don't, Yo Pdvt,' it',' ' TEAT E.- WHITMAN'S ; F.YF. OPENERS : 1 i - ' .,',;' ,,7-! .'. ,i !--.,. ..ll f'.-.A u..! , ': , . auk i7i.ci:i.i.i:i)t , 7-7 .1 :u.s- '1.,. -..:! v.. ......li: Middle Street, 'near Covrcr,.,Sputh front, N KW DEUN'I'V N. C, f 7 ! 1 Noxt door, to K.' It JmHci'i Apr. 13-d & w 12 in. f.l . sE M tl J ; 4 '. If 2 N:I) ;': 0 L D1CHT CITY. r - O duantitios PORK, LONG ( XXF KKK, . . , ; - N is w Hkb?; iE , N..0 , .A ,,'l.KJIII.INIilN . Steamship Company. j i'or .Nny Voi u, Jiai.Uiuonvjior- lolK, l.osfoii,. 1-llixalH'Ui Ciiy, Miilal Ijiliia, IVovidoiuo, and olhtis Cities. O N . A IS' I ) A IT E II . luly 28(.h; 1.882 ijN.TI Xj jU llT.ll ER7N O TIL'E ' ST'R SHENANDOAH Will liavr, imii siiTivnl of train 'on Norfolk niidk l:ii- il.,'ili rity i;:,iii:ii ,,i v;liz:liK.ii oily, .-v.ry r Ni'W 1!( mo ' i:i ' N'.V..S" Hi.;iil. i;(t it rn ill? :viv Ki'- lliMu,. (in- J.liz.-ib.'tli Pit v vi i' N:irs )I,-:i.l. in i'v.v -. - - Tnliiv anil I' ritiav li Ti ji .m.-, Hi:iliiii. fin..,. "rnnni'i'tlnn u-illi'iVnrfnlk BEEN, u! KliitalioUiOitvR.ltr'fnrNorllifm-dhxil. (!! . cmini'i iinn vii:iili' at N,)W liimio will! u-am'i- for Kiiislou, t'ollolcsviile, Ti-i'iilon nutl 'iOI.iikI-iii!!-:'on I jii' Nciii' ninlTiTiit H'ivcis. -; -J FifiL-lit. nvniVnl 'tli'iilV an til fi 11. nl:. fin-wanlnl iioiiiitly and lawiictr.-ttPRun.-irnnli'od tiidi'sliii i tioii. -, l-'iiri; tn.Kliz.OM'Ki Oitjvind r.oliil-ii. k To ,; Nmj-s Jli'nU. :m,l i' t " ny H, , Tq WiVjhinj; km, i I. ; , " 'V ,KKn A', New lltnie, '''i-1'1-1 '''-'I 4TvNKI!,i- , :: , - :';, - .i.j , .- ' . "'' A t-. N,if,.lli, V. A .. W.. I. StAwoitn, csAi'.l fr't As't, '' , , IlM.r. :U) ly ,1 .;; ' ' ' Now York City. ',,uOmm AS "WASHINGTON. Lvery oncj;of our readers shonhl I J lieronifl infoi-modabont (hcwoiidciful K'Soiiicesoi'Orpoivmnl WasMi'igl..n,: : wlioro the wlo-at prtMlnrtimr ia' larger a ad, Uio 4letUh.;rafi.t.-loweri tlraii in any' oilier tieelion of United Slates; vyiere rood 'Government liilld run ' ti hml tor the laliinj, and railroad Jands be bought ni ten years time. Industrious men neernive independently ' wealiby there' in a very- f-w"year.s. ' t'ljll in I'ornmliim iii Uic il'ext Sliorl rtiriely: llliliil rated iiirrtal iiibliHUed i. j uiuitim, uie meii'opolis ot tr.o r;cifie,i North west, at, 2 OHyear or the pnliliwhefH'will wnd two speeimen eopiei", of diirereiildat.es, for 2.r) rents. Address i AVknt Hhojie,1 'Portland Oregon. , -,tJ-. i .m-,, - . ...n - WM. l.OIK'JI, - OENKUAi; MERCHANDISE .' V fiAEf '.iwBSB ACCOMMODAVlONSir; ' yV Biboii St, New Berne, N. C. F1 dwMnr. 80, 1 C.
The New Bernian (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 3, 1882, edition 1
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