Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / May 11, 1883, edition 1 / Page 1
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. '. , V - . . -- ' - - -. . - - - y ' 5 4 r 7 n il i v . '. vol ir. 4 4 - . t 't. b- ----- -w I i T .to ' A!:: r 1 1 w ' V- V t 1: 14-- ' LOCAL NEWS; 1 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ' ':. N. M. Gaskill Coat hands wanted. Watson & Churchill Bath house. Journal Miniature Almanac. Sun rises, 4:57 Length of day; .' . , Sun sets, 6:55 13 hours, 53 minutes. - Moon sets at 1 1 :8I p. m.' ; . i - ' V This is a Memorial paper.. ... '. L k The Harper tree was handsomely deo "' orated yesterday., , a i . ' , , N. M. Gaskill wants hands to help him i make coats. ;! He offers good prices. ., - Mr. Amoa Simmons of Jones exhibi ted some Irish potatoes yesterday fully as large as a hen-egg. -1 y " The shipments over the A. & N. C. It. B, yesterday footed up 1950 boxes of pons and 90 crates of cabbage. , - i .' We were shown on yesterday a bunch of garden peas of the Meadows Extra , "Early variety which "were very fine. Many of the pods contained eight well grown peas. ' Mr. Thomas Daniels expressed on yes terday a pair of tame Wild geese to L. L. flassell, Proprietor of the Mansion House, Greenville , S. C These geese were purchased from Mr. J. H. -Smith of Clubfoot creek. This sale is the re sult of an item furnished the JOURNAL 'in February last by one of - its special canvassers, who delivered the geese to Mr. Daniels yesterday morning and re- " ceived in exohange. five hard dollars. ft Othor sales will probably be made, s So much for publishing news. . i- It was rumored in the city last night that a demand had. been made on the r Receiver of the A. & N. C. E. R.'to turn over the property to the Directors. "We r,w1-hope to be able to ascertain the facts before pur next issue. Telegraph NoUce. , r , Miss Cuyk, the telegraph operator, ' "at this place requests us to state that the office is closed every day from 1 o'clock p. m. to 2 p. m, and from 6 to t p. m. She also wishes to give notive that she attends to business at the office and not at her boarding place. ' -,'. -' t n ' . ' The ItleuorUl Service! caterday The Memorial Services of yesterday , ..differed from those of former occasions in that the services, excepting " that of strewing of the flowers, was conducted on the Academy Green instead of with- In the Oometery. - The number : of at- tendents was large and the musio very fine and much improved by the better position occupied by the choir than on other occasions. ? : The address of Mr. Long was very good and frilly up to the standard of his . eloquent productions. ; ; : " ; ' The musio by the cornet band was well rendered, and added greatly to the beautiful ceremony of bestrewing the graves ef the departed heroes. ,:.';., The floral offerings were very elabo rate, and displayed great taste in 'the preparation by loving hands and tear ful memories. ' " ; -, The grives of many that were not sol i diers were handsomely : de'iorated,: es pecially we noticed that of John D. Hughes and George Bishop, two young 'men" of the ' city'and that of Miss Ida B. Amyette, whose, memories are still cherished by a large circle of friends outside of that of their immedl ate.families.: V4 Vr'i 4' - The People will Aqnleace. f-' ' ,l f : "Trustee" need have no fear that the city council will act without good ad' vice in regard to the Graded School tax. Nor need he feel any alarm about Fidu ' ciary Agents, liability under the law un less they should expend funds in need' . less resistance to taxes paid by princi pals without resistance. , ; . ; , I No guardian administrator or execu toj would beheld blameless, was 'he to use fiduciary funds in contesting a tax while the same was paid by thd large . . body of tax-payers without complaint; nor could any but representatives of large estates offer any excuse on the score of saving money to them: because the legal proceedings would be much more burdensome than the tax itself, unless Hie amount of taxable property was very large. There will likely no contest arise from that source so long as the council pursue a course indicated by such novels, as the decisions of the supreme court of the United States, it wiil be likely to find a pretty general ncquioicence m its action.' And now who is "Trustee?" It is con In 1 to be difficult for any man, who writes continuously for the press t ) conceal tlio authorslnp of his produO' - i i. Now if the renders of tho Nut ' yo followed up tl: a articles writ ' r vtix-erxes, S., X. Y. Z., Tax I nil of t'ehool they will not - ' 9 ia com us;? to the con ' p"il "Trustee" are one i -i. The author of i e ! , , , ' , i" is faf more dif- . I ' t t : 'i m'.or of these 1 ' :' ! i . i from a serine i . J , u ; .,.'3. "Come ; f MEMORIAL ADDRESS, -u : Amid the gleumine lights and radiant landscapes of the new world , which has sprung from the desolation of war, we are met to-day to-remember the old world which has passed away. . The warrior banner has been caught up to meet the warrior soul. . The restless changes of diplomacy, the sturdy con flicts of battle and of siege, the mourn ful tears of fair women and the martial cravings of brave men, have been sealed up in the book of History ana of fate. A new creation, fringed with the rosy faces of happy children, bordered by the scarlet splendors of purity and youth, and pervaded by the celestial airs which blow over a land girt in by Heavenly sympathy and peace, is stretching its golden capes and silver seas on every hand. ' Night has given place t day. On every hill-side the merry snout or tne hunter responds to the babbling musio of the vale. The rivers gl6w with the opulence of com merce, and the far wastes of waters smile unde the rich heritage of blessings which they bear, where now is the sad memory of war? : In the midst of the fruition of the new world, shall we forget the wrecks of the old? Is there no voice coming out of the realm of shadows, which was dear to us before? Has the gallant form which wore its suit of gray , at the suggestion of our patriotism and pride, which went out from us brave and strong with its love of country and of home, and never re turned again to the fair hands which decked it for the strife, never the power to visit us even in our dreams? Away with such a heartless retrospection of the times that are dead. To-day we are renewing the wedlock of our hearts to the vanished joys, which shall never come to us again in this world. This is the holy Sabbath of domestic memory and grief. To day "the warrior ban ner" returns from behind the clouds of the setting sun, unrolls its streaming stars from the shadowy ramparts of the spirit land, descends amid the roar of unseen artillery, and is grasped on the field of ' Clorv by s the hands which pressed ours with so much tenderness and love. To-day we are keeping watch and ward" by the sweetest graves to us in all this land. They are the graves of knights, of martyrs and of heroes. Their dust is dearer to us than the yellow gold,, which lured the steel clad followers of Pizzaro and Cortez, in the days of chivalry and romance. But men say that this is a utilitarian age. The iorests are Deingieveiea,new mines are being opened, new ranroaas are being built, explorations into every recess and secret of nature is being made, uncounted millions are being invested m property which nut yester day was the mere vision of the dreamer's brain, the teeming mynaus oi popula tion are crowding with their industry and skill everv acre of the virgin soil, and men stand amazed at the material progress of the nation. Even the South itself, in the very region oi uie country where the institution of slavery was the strongest, and the shocks of battle were the nercest, is Deginning to Dioom u&e the gardens of Damascus, under the touch of mechanical genius, and by the application of capital and labor. The cotton mills of New England, for the improvement of the fabric, and the in crease of profit, are being removed to Southern coes-ana towns. , money, hitherto invested in Northern .inven tions, factories and mercantile enter prise, is beihe bestowed for the expan sion of Southern ventures and the de velopment of Southern resources. Add to all this, that tne tair-nana goaaees oi learnmor hath descended in our midst. and is erectine her brieht temples in every grove and by every nowing stream, kindling . the eostacy ,of the nnAtialvre. excitinir the eenius of the Historic muse, arousing the intellectual aspirations of the gifted and the good, pouring the limped streams of eloquence like the Gods poured the waves of Pac tolusover its yellow-sands, and we have a picture of material and intellectual progress and advancement, which the most extravagant thinker could never have anticipated. ' But it is precisely at this point, reiiow citizens, that we construct the argU' ment of our indebtedness as a people. and discover the fitness of the memorial tribute which we this day pay to our honored dead. No talents or cultivation of our own could have produced the nrosoeritv which now greets us. Im- poverisnea, scarrea ana proxen Dy tne calamities of war, we should have stood upon the utmost verge of . eur stranded fortunes. J and Biehed in vain for the vanished good. . But when back of us the whole country has .been planted with heroio bones; when every stalk oi corn and blade of- wheat is nourished by heroio blood when that single fiery atrucele of four years eave the South an immortality of fame, and a moral armorv of imperishable lorces, we started out with a capital which no ad versity could reduce and no misfortune despoil of its energy. - The force of moral example does more for the civilization of a people than lit' erature or art. The Italians had the splendid imagery of Virgil and Dante of Raphael and Angelo and yet not even the valor and patriotism of Rienzi could save i them fronv slavery and chains; while the j English, with the memory of the gallant defence of Har old at Hastings, of Alfred against the Danes, and of the royal Elizabeth, when, mounted at the head of her own troops. Bhe inspired them with courage to meet the Invincible Armada, which came to launch itself against their altars and homes, have grown stronger, more enlightened and powerful with every passing year. The southern sowier, after being stripped of his property and nride. and left only his livery of honor, can point with a: noble gratification to the. glorious example set him by our der;trtod braves.; And we ourselves while treading the ceday alloys of peace, and weaving our rosy chaplets for the richest, the most sacred and hal lowed dust in all the sepulchres of this world, can Btrike again-the grandest chord in all the harmonies of earth. Where is the race of men who ever struggled, suffered and died like our Confederate soldiery? Even amid the electric; lights and overflowing riches of this new- World which now flashes around us, we return to this question again and again, for m it is concealed the purest gem of Southern excellence and honor. Were they the men of Camden, ? Trenton ' and Valley Forge? Nay, verily. ' The soldiers of that heroic time contended against a powerful foe, but he had to cross three thousand miles of ocean before he locked bayonets with our patriot sires, while the Confed erate soldier was always in the presence of cu enemy who outnumbered him, cut him off from his supplies by his cruisers and ships of war, wore him out with his superior equipments, and left him not a single advantage with which to meet the emergencies of the struggle. Were they the Federal participants in the CivikVVar? These came out clothed in purple and fine linen, nourished upon the fat of the land, armed with the most effective weapons, and recruited from yery .quarter f the civilized world, while our poor boys often won their grandest victories upon on empty stomach, shivering in rags, and with the defective muskets ot a vanished age. Who does not know of these facts, which we have repeated again and again to our children? And yet they consti tute the proofs of a moral courage, which has done more to arouse the Southern people from their reverses, to stimulate them to a fresh activity and labor, and to crown them with the most brilliant successes, than all the capital, patronage and material resources of the country. Close by the side of the forti tude, the courage and endurance of the Southern soldier, is the far-reaching ef fectiveness or the battles which he fought. The victories of Blenheim and Malplaquet not only built the luxurious castle of the Duke of Marlborough, and enriched the fortunes of his family, but they imparted such an esprit du corps to the character or. tne English people. such a breadth and fullness of self-con fidence, and elevation of national pride in all their relations to the world, that such illustrious battles came as it were to 1 inaugurate a system of military glory, and advanced the English Em pire on every possible road of material and social development. So the battles of the Confederate soldier, whether he lost or won, were fought against such tremendous odds, with such a storm of enthusiasm . rocking his embattled squadrons as they dashed on the foe, and with such a reckless disregard of all the deadly perils of the stricken field, that even in the gloom cf defeat they have given him a military pres tige, a royal and holy occupancy of the land, which is the basis of all his dawn ing prosperity. So that the blood winch hallowed the soil of Manassas, of Shiloh and of Sharp8burg, has built the facto ries and cotton-mills of Georgia, trans ferred the looms of Massachusetts to the Pedee and Savannah, peopled the orange groves of Florida with the pioneers of agriculture and of commerce, and sent tho fresh streams of a higher life Into every vein and artery of the south. Yea, moro, the loftier plane of manli ness to which the victories of the war, won out of the yery jaws of poverty, penury,' hunger, nakedness and cold, brought the gallant people of the South, has opened a wider - intellectual area, where the blessings or education have fallen upon them like the manna in the desert. . So that it has come to pass that the thunder of the guns at Chicamauga and Reams' Station bath built the fair est temples of learning in every city, village and hamlet, caused the humble poor to flock to them like doves to their windows, and set in motion the forces of social chivalry and pride, which will yet redeem us from the last abyss oi disaster in wnicn we ten by the nam ships and sufferings of the war. . Said I not, that we - were indebted to the Southern soldier for almost every bless ing, we enioyr And is it not fitting that the memory of the dead should be pre served as a sacred legacy ( . , . One of the most startling consequences or the war is tho exalted respect cher ished for us by our great adversary. If the Southern soldier had not been braver, truer and greater than all other men, like the defeated adherents of the House of Stuart our brave veterans would have fallen under the last pains and penalties of conquest. But it was not m human nature to exterminate a race of men who had proven the truth of Homer's Illiad,'and embellished mod ern history with unparalleled examples of fortitude and yalor, And now that the excitements and prejudices of the conflict are flying like the bats and owls into obscurityj nowhere is the southern soldier valued so highly and honored so greatly as among the generous people of the JNorth. The recent nattering enter tainment of our own knightly Fitz Hugh Lee by a Brooklyn regiment, in the very heart of ail the wealth, splendor, lux ury and political Influence of that im perial country and people, is a tribute to the undaunted courage and energy or our soldiers. Fita Hugh Lee was only one among the gallant riders, who out rode the fiery storm of shot and shell from Bethel to Appomalox. Though from spur to helm a spotless soldier, full of all the high and generous qual ities of & leader amona men. vet it was as a representative of his people, bear ing the scars of their battles, mustrat ing the virtue of their sufferings, and speaking the words of their hope and courage, that he received the hospital itv of the North." This spirit of respect and admiration for the conquered ia growing everywhere. In the earnest language of the pulpit, in the epigram' raatio sentences ot the daily press, in literature, in the forum, on the platform and on the bench, irt every stratum of society and in every relationship of business, this respect for the vanquished is made manifest. And thip is credit able to them and to us.. It shows that defeat does not always bring infamy, nor victory an eternal vanity and arro gance. It shows that the people of the North, as great as they were in that tenacity of courage that never gives up, but fights onto the end,' were greater still in that princely magnanimity which can appreciate and dp justice to a gal lant toe. : And this also we owe to the bravery and fortitude of the Southern seldier. Such men as Stoneman and Rosecrans, Slocum and Hooker, who crossed swords with him across the red tide of war, have by their generous praises helped to weave chaplets for him amid the harmless . activities of peace. And whatever respect and admiration have been given to our sunny land, are to be credited to his heroio deeds. But, fellow citizens, as golden haired morning springs from the loins of night, so is meek eyed peace the first born daughter of war. Night with its horrid tumult of bitterness and strife is gone, and the radiant day, as' we step upon the shining marge of the new world which dashes into space, breaks upon our vision. What of the day, and what of its signs of promise? A complete unification of every language and race, tongue and people, literature and cus tom, temper and thought, on this conti nent, ia the first necessity of this people. There must be no more talk of cavaliers and Puritans, witch-burners and slave drivers. There must be no more mixing of the poison chalice of jealousy and hate, merely "to point a moral and adorn a tale." Tho old oracles of calumny and spite, maintaining their feartul mytteries by the Ashley and Massachusetts Bay, like the vanished oracles of Delphos, must surrender their priestly robes. A universal brother hood, linking itself with every sacred interest of the family and the home, stretching its loving arms around every altar of religion and every policy ofihe State, touching with its magic pity the very hatchments of the grave, and climbing the very steeps of the beauti ful world, must now surround every community of this nation. And then, the pure chrism of education must be bestowed upon every palace and hovel in this land. There must bo no more prisons and hospitals built up by the hands of ignorance and vice. The Southern soldier never died for such homes of wretchedness as these. The pure light of mental culture, streaming over every hill-top and vally of this new world that dances under our feet, must be sent into every secret recess of its forest paths. Every brain must catch the reflection of the newly risen glory, and every heart must burn with enthusi asm for the goodi the beautiful and the true. And then, over all this ecstatic scene of universal harmony and culture, the consecrating influence of the love of country must pour its liba tions of sympathy and affection. No Manlius on the Tarpeian rock "in the brave days of yore," nor Wolfe on the Heights of Abraham, nor Sergeant Jas per with his heart of lire, should eclipse the grand devotion of the Southern patriot to his native land. In .the proud cathedral aisles ot liberty and law, be fore the dazzling altars of civil purity and truth, with the glowing vestments of priest and acolyte filling the chancel, and clouds of incense rising to fretted roof and swelling dome, let the. sublime patriot hymns or our- earliest brother hood lift every worshiper in a chariot of flame. Then shall our country bo as good as it is just, and as true as it fs powerful. But, fellow citizens, while dwelling on this conservative theme, let us not forget the gifted Southern statesman, who, on last memorial day wreathing flowers for the Confederate soldier, is on this Memorial day standing on the sea of glass, hearing the harps of Heaven. Any notice of the Southern soldier would be incomplete, which has not to-day a - tribute to Alexander Stephens. Let us uncover before his mighty shade, mere was a time in tne wildest tumult of the struggle, when we thought him untrue to our tempest tossed flag, uod lorgive us lor our un- iust and ungenerous suspicions. We have long since learned to Know petter, Never ultra or radical in his sentiments and opinions, conservative in every fibre of his moral and intellectual nature. perhaps however he was not fitted eith er by his character or political educa tion to play a successful ' part in a struggle of giants, like that into which i he ' ' ytat . thrown. As a matchless parliamentarian ana political thinker, equipped for all the dirhcult arts and winding ways or di plomacy and state craft, he was richly furnished for the piping times or peace, and stood first among his equals in genius, eloquence and learning. But to drive the flying steeds of war over bro ken and trampled ranks, to hold the reins firmly and bravely in the presence of victory or defeat, and to command the resources of a leader for , every emergency whether in the cabinet' or the field, was altogether beyond his capacity; f But t what -an orator he was. He was an armory,' of celestial lightning 1 from his feet ' to his crown. We heard him in the autumn of 1861, standing on the platform of the railroad train in Goldsboro, when the whole ait was charged with electricity and a vast, excited multitude was crowding around himt It was a scene never to be forgotten." His voice rang out like the battle cry of one of the old Greek leaders on the Trojan plains. The very car seemed to rock under the sweep of his imagery .and the rushing in fluence of his impetuous thoughts. And no popular audience, under the spell of any speaker, and' living in any age was ever more completely under the en chantment of a human tongue than the audience that heard Stephens on that- stormy , day. And what writer" and thinker he- was Never writing histories of , himself, like some of the other great leaders, of the war, bis eminent talents and great lite rary resources were devoted first to bis beloved South, and then to the history of the whole country. And if he had not distinguished himself as one of the mightiest orators and statesmen, of the Kepubuo, these literary efforts would have made him, immortal. ; Let iis not forget to drop a tear and weave a chap let to-day to the memory of Alexander Stephens. ' !". - - . i : - Fellow citisens? ft is meet and proper that we should scatter flowers, beauti- ful flowers, over the' graves of "our Southern dead. : Only let the incense of our hearts mingle with the tribute, and sanctify the sacrifice which we offer, to their illustrious memory. ' All, races and nations have had tears of sympathy ror those who have suffered, and those who have attained to exalted places in the world's history. In the Pere le Chaise at Paris, where the dead, of that brilliant capital await the resurrection, is the tomb of Heloise and Aberlard. The deep pathos of the French people as made it a Mecca for all that is true and touching in the passion of human hearts, standing by it the traveller re calls again the suffering of the beautiful novice, and the superb rhetoric of tne wonderful churchman. He 6eea Heloise fair and innocent as the morning, filled with every grace of intellect and char acter, moving .like a Greek Goddess in the proud . statelmess of her youth, faithful,- generous and pure, with the lights of home gleaming around her like angels', visits, and herself the central object of every affection, sympathy and demrtlon;Out of ' her- dreams tho elo quent voice of Aberlard awakes her. It breaks upon her like the song of night ingales, under violet shadows and sap phire skies. And when the gifted rhe torician, smitten at last by the ligntning of his own eloquence and the paralysis of pain, falls at his post, the sorrowful woman buries him under the. shadow of her own altars, and fasts and weeps by his tomb until she dies. Can we not emulate the fadeless remembrance of he French people, and of the beauti ful mourner of the Paraclete for our heroic dead, who were greater in their lives than all the masters of eloquence, and more pathetic in theif death than the fairest victims of suffering and grief. Let us bring flowers, then, the brightest flowers for the soldier's grave. Let us scatter them with a lavish hand over the noblest dutt ever placed under the funeral canopies of this world. And then as we sing our paeans of victory for their valor and their glory, let us en shrine them in our heart of hearts for the sacrifice they accomplished. Making Sugar. The caue-stalks, from lour to eight feet long, cut and stripped of its leaves, are brought to tlio mill, Then, strowu on a broad belt, work ing on the principal of an endless chain, they aro passed between three great rollers laid very close together and worked by steam Thence the trim watery fluid, very sweet to the tasto and yellowish in hue, passes to a succession of boiling-pans or round caldrons, where it is boiled down by slow egrecs, until the crystallization point is reached, much the same as is done with the maple sap ot our country. When the last boiling act is ended tho product is a mass of crystallized sugar, soaking in mo asses. To get rid of the molasses. tho old plan, and the one still adop ted on unimproved Cuban estates, is to pour tho mixture into hogs leads and let the syrup drain off for several weeks through the cracks. his produces the Muscovado sugar, an article interior in saccharine strength to tlie "centrifugal" pro duct, to make the latter the sugar and molasses mixture is placed in a huge perforated cylinder, which may bo likened to a great size This cylinder revolves on an upright axis m another large cylindrical vesselWhirled then with an.enor- mons ' number of revolutions a minute, the liquid is thrown out oaving the sugar crystals dry, and doing in a few minutes, and far more effectively, the work of weaks by tho Muscovado method. The crystals left behind vary in size from a mere, speck to a small pea This crude sugar has a burnt brown tint, and tastes much like the rock candy of the confectioner. The scum that rises during the various boilings, the refuse mice and ' fer mented molasses is treated by dis tulation to make rum: COMMEKCIAL. NEW BERNE MARKET. ' . . . CoTTON--Middling, 9 7-8; strict ilow middling 9 3-4; low middling 9 5-8. , Seed cotton Extra nice, sc.; ordl- nary2Sc. : ; ' .' J.--A , uorn in sacks, oio.: m nunc oac i . kick ou to uoc. per Dusnei. Toepentdhs Receiptsmoderate. Firm at $2.50 for yellow dip. ; - t -; ; , ' TAE-i-rirm at 1.00 and &1.75. ; ; Beeswax 22o. to 25o. per, lb. , Honey 60o. per gallon.' ., , ' 'l 1 Wheat 90o. per busheL ' , ' Beef On foot, 6o.' to 8c. ' 1 ' c i ! - i ; Motion $2a2.25 pet head.-.!i wrc ; :' Hams -Country 12io.. per pound. t ';''. Lard Country, 13o. per tt j ; Fresh Pork 7a9o, per pounds", " 1 s f : EcraslOo.'per 'dozen.' ''" " '? '",' "." ! !! rPEAOTTS-$1.50per busheL- - " vi ;, , Fodder $1.25. per hundred. : -1 V, ., onions 4c. per bunchy; , PEAS-HJl.00al.25 per bushel. ; , hides iiryytto. to llo.t green oc. v. ; Tallow Co. per lb..' .' V .; ' ; Chickens Grown, 60a70c. per1 pair. 1 1 Turkeys $1 ..75 per pair.i J ' .-. : ,'. - Meal Bolted, 75c.;per busheL i. i 1 ' Potatoes Bahamas, r 50.; yama 70c. pernusnei. .. t..- ; , lUKNiris oo. per nuncn.. r 4 'Walnuts 50o. net bushel. ' . SHJNOLES-Weet India,dull and horn, inal; not wanted.'.' Building ' 5 - inch, hearts, tf3.WiBapg,.2,oo Der M. .;, ; V..'."a.-'-.'.:'.-:i.V. SKIN.,- -0i . ? .Coon, 30o.: fox40a50tr.;mfnki SOa-tOc. otter, ?2a5. ' ,' V? ;'i v 1 ' -i city, items.:, ; Thi column,' next to local newt, is to be ax-d for Local Advertising. -'' - .-. A. H. Potter ia making soda, water does not use pump water but pure cis- tern water. . ; .- ...tf. - For Sale. A desirable dwelling and lot on Union street nexto W. Walker. Armlv to tf A. M. Bakeh. TO TRVCKEBS. ' -'Dally Line.; " A. & N. C. R. R.;" ' ' ; ) Office of Gen. Freight Agent; . Newbern, N, C , May 1st, 1883. J :' Ship your.Trnck via A. & N: O P and Atlantic Coast Line as follows: - ' For Washington, Baltimore and Phil adelphia, daily, except Saturday and Sunday. . . .. . , For New York. Mondav Timoto. Friday. 3 - Boston and ProyWtnce; TIoKTfy W iruck shipped as above .will . go through promptly and without delay . ' O. Li.. VUAj, ,' ap29-8w Genl Freight Agent. Grand Tri-Weeklj Line. Office of O. D. S. S. Co,, ) Newbkrne, N. C, April 22, 1883. f On and after Sunday. Anril 29th 1RS3 the steamer Shenandoah will sail from Old Dominion wharf for Elizabeth City direct every Sunday a. m. Passengers desiring to avail themselves of this op portunity can learn hour of sailing by aipyuciuiou i vompany s office. This trip is especially for the benefit of the trucking in this section, as coupled with the trips on Tuesdays and Fridays it thus affords those raising or dealing in perishable freights to have a safe, sure, swift and grand tri-weekly connection wn me maricetsor jew York,Philadel phia, Baltimore, Norfolk, ete. For other information apply at Company's office. tJ. IvObeets, Agent. Mm. Dewey did not sell out, and if you will call at her old stand, you will find she has just received her new goods, and if you want cheap hats call to see her. Coal Hands Wanted TWO No. 1 Coat Hands will find steady employment at N. M. GASKILL'S on Middle street. GGooil prices paid for good work. maylOdlw .. BATH HOUSE. The Bath House on East Front street will be open during the coming season, commencing NEXT MONDAY. From 8 toll o'clock a. m. devoted TO LAlttiS, ' the ballanoe of tlio day to MEN and BOYS. Admittance FIVE to , TEN CENTS. Season Tickets $2. 00 Resp'y, ' maylOtf. WATSON & CHURCHILL. 1,000 Lbs. OF CHOICEST BUTTER. W. Pell Baixanck & Co. may6-dlw For Rent, The Dwelling House' at the junction of Craven and Middle streets, recently occupied by Hill Humphrey. A pply t to ma3d2w THOS. S. HOWARD. CALL ,i vr -..; CIIAS.IIDLAnK'S. 01 ;' AhdVxnmtee V'Hjstock of '' Sugary f'"'"y.(;t'- KT V.i CM' hwciru'laiou'j,' : 'i.j , 1 r'H izwM iWn v Lard. and Lincts oi ,jjlteat8 Lorilhuot Snuff andTobacqo, and a full line of Liquors, all of which are being sold low for' 5 ...Wf 1.1a GEO, B. QTJION: hM removed his Stock of Merchandise to the Brick Building at the corner of Craven and Pollock streets (known as the McLean! building), where he Will be pleased to see those; Wishing to purchase in his line. ces -i a 3 i uj c r ' S ' ' 1 IV' .'(-;l mayO-dlw ;-":' '..,;"'. i'i:
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 11, 1883, edition 1
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