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VOL II. NEW BERNE, N. G, FRIDAY, JUNE 22,1883. " : NO. 72. ,.OCAL NEWS. JO I! i .ml Klulatnre Almanae. i rises, 4:45 I Length of day, : i e ta, 7:13 1 14 hours, 83 minutes, u ri ea at 8:50 p. in. Y. rJay was the longest day and i 3 1 ginning of rammer. ' r r lit. Jno. W. Gannon, a recent gradu ate bf Trinity, is in the city, A t rl ; i ' The steamer JSTtnsfon will make, an excursion trip down the river to-night. The7m City arrived last night with Irish potatoes, onions, sheep, cattle and about twenty passengers. , ; tchooner May Fleetwood, Capt. Flow ers, from Hyde county, arrived yester day evening with beef cattle. ; Schooner Gov.; Vance, Capt. Bpenoer, On Wednesday, June 20th, 1883, of congestion of the brain, Lachlan Vass Humphrey, i aged 20 months and, 12 days, youngest child of Mr. and Mrs Geo. F, Humphrey of New Berne, N. C. A New Town. 'x'-V;. . J 1 .1 ' ' - Core Creek is soon to become a thriv ing little, town." Capt.: E. R. Page has donated a lot; for a school house and one for a church. These two things are in dispensable to the growth of a town. It has a good surronnding country for trucking and when the road is opened to Trenton, and some permanent disposi tion made of the A. & N. C. R. R. it will soon become a place of importance, .. river, whereupon the steamer was changed to her original course. : 5 ;: Capt. Gibbsj who has seen several water-Bpouts, thinks this was 120 feet in diameter and was within five miles of the boat when it was formed. It was a grand freak of the disturbed elements, a sublime display' of the power of mad dened wind, but it was not pleasant to all the passengers to be pursued by such a dangerous phenomenon. J. II. B. Railroad Talk. The communication which we give in from Hyde county, with corn consigned I another column on the Yadkin Valley to W. Pr Burrus & Co. and J. A. Mead ows. ' . r '. . '-. . ." .- ' ;. ' The large double store occupied by S. H. Scstt and C. H. Blank and owned by Mrs; Windley. ? is receiving a bran new cover of tin. . A fishing smack arrived yesterday evening with a large quantity of ; live fish swimming around in the well of the boat which sold very rapidly, . Maj. D. W. Hurt has received infor mation that his wife is quite sick at Middleburg, Vermont.' He will leave this evening for that place on the steam' er Shenandoah. , ' Mr. Joseph Rhem says he has shipped nearly three thousand barrels of cab baere this season and has jrtahzea a Road is written by .one . well versed in railroad matters, "and we ' think the ideas advanced are well worthy of the consideration of the stockholders of the Atlantic & N. C. Road. ' The scheme is a plausible one, but we dislike to see the A. & N. C. taken entirely out of the hands of the people of our own section If the Corporation now forming,, com posed of the business men of this city, Kins ton, Goldsboro and Raleigh, could have an understanding with the Yadkin , Valley whereby that road could be as- , sured of an outlet over the A. & N. C, a lease to them would be the best thing that could be done for this section. We have been told that the position of the Journal could not be ascertained on the subject of leasing, but really we larger profit from his cabbage than any- are at a loss to know how any one who other vegetable. Hancock Bros, shipped a half gross of their "Pile Remedy" to Salem, New Jersey, on yesterday and have received orders for it from Seneca Falls, N. Y. It becomeB ' popular wherever intro duced. " " ' . Maj. Harvey, C. T.j Watson and Joseph Nelson were at we market wharf yesterday evening amusing themselves in training a little dog in the art of diving for shells. They were succeed ing admirably. , $ . The Elm City rifles, having' disband ed, returned their guns- to Raleigh yes''' terdav. The Grays will send theirs in a few days, and the city will be with- VUt IUUIWUJ UlMVBa WMV V wvaMVWWW will hurry up its organization. .' Rakh Grav has gone In to the spider large, black spider with a large egg, he has read the Journal for the last three years can be in any doubt as to our po sition. We advocated the leasing of the road while at Kinston one, year be fore it was leased to the Best syndicate. And when the Best syndicate, failed to get possession of the W. N. C. Railroad, as they expected from promises made them by those in authority, we favored releasing them from their obligation to build to Salisbury and allo wing them to operate the road to Smithfield provided they would comply with the balance of their contract pay the.JleaBe money promptly and keep the road in good re pair. And as soon as the Best leasejwas declared forfeited we urged upon the business men of New Berne, Kinston and Goldsboro to form a syndicate and lease . thY property, believing . that it would be 4 good investment for them That our potution may not be misunder stood at present we say we are in favor has put them both in a bottle which he of a lea86) for e foilowing rea80ns says, when natcnea out, wm do inous- ' ands of spiders and there will be his ) profit. v:j.i; 4' Vj,XK'p.''.: The gentlemen who went to Golds- bero to attend a conference of the new railroad syndicate were very much en couraged by the interest taken in the matter by the business men of Golds boro. r They hold a ' meeting here on Tuesday next. We are satisfied these men mean business, and we sincerely trust that Gov. J&rvis will throw no ob stacle in the way if the private stock holders should see fit to lease to them. A remarkable marriage about "the year of 1844 Mr. Jno. P. Ives, who had been a soldier in the Revolutionary and was at that time ninety-six war, years of age, went wooing Mrs. Eliza- ' 1st. The presSnt corporation cannot, after paying the expenses of the receiv ership and the cost accrued in recover ing the road, run it without creating an additional debt. 2d. They never have been nor do we be lieve they ever will be able to make sat isfactory rates with connecting lines, There is no justice nor sense in allow ing the R. & D. two thirds of the freight on a car load of corn, coal or fertilizers from here ' to Raleigh, but they are bound to do it because they can't help themselves, , 3d. There is no stability in the man agement. The reason of tms is so ap parent from frequent political changes that we need not again point it out, 4th. The road can be leased for : more . - i .. .- . , .i , beth Ives, a widow then one hundred money man tne net earnings ny ine oia vears old. Thev were married and wt corporation ever amounted to. learn that they spent a few years very 6tn- If leased for B number of years nleaaantlv together. Mr. Ives dvine to a corporation composed of good bus K,f warf t... ness men, of financial standing, stabili- anH Mrs, Im at the aire of one hundred v management Would be 1 assured " lit. O M f XI. . 1 , , i rm, ok,- rnm tne connaence ui vue uBuoio wuuiu urn and eight. Mr. P.' Holland, of this city, and sup pose they are facts as Mrs. Ives was his grandmother.' regained, the stock would be enhanced in value which would redound to the benefit of the private stockholders and the counties that own stock. " - . For these and other reasons which we might give we are unqualifiedly in fa vor of leasing, and we believe if the peo- Kinston Items. Goldsboro have always cut us off. The North Carolina house. ' It is a beautiful Company is a solid, solvent corporation, gift book,' tq its inorocco dress," gilt in every way able to carry out its un- edgesi and gilt spray of passion flowers dertakings. , It is the , natural ally of ornamenting its back. Mr.' Hill is so the 'Atlantic. The same interests are wellknorq as aNorth 'Carolina poet blended in both; The Morehead interest that his poems need no comment from is largely represented in the Cape Fear us, but the whole '.'get up'! of thiivol and Yadkin Valley, through Julius A. ume is an agreeable surprise when we This column, next to local new, la to bo used for local advertising. Rates, 10 cents a line for first Insertion, and 5 cent a line for each subsequent insertion. . T - Boss Tray lor has left us and pitched his tent in New Berne. The man that can beat him on a horse story is said, to reside on the sea-shore. V-'- i- : The growing cotton in the Chinquapin section of Jones county and about Tren ton is looking finely. ' . The grass and the rain are about to ujae up wihejcprg xjrop m tne same region. Just now the small grain producers are reaping their harvests. Wheat is turning put very satisfactorially. Oats are doing very , badly not yet done sowing the wild ones, f ' '! , The Irish potato truck farm of Cum- mings and Davis, near Kinston, turned out very large potatoes, but only "a few ma hill." The frosts, the dry season and the realized price of potatoes taught the truckers how "to labor and to wait." The town constable, last Monday, whilst attempting to ''remove" a dog nuisance for failing to wear a town col lar, slightly peppered with squirrel shot a little colored girl, doing no damaee however. The inference is that colored girls, as well as dogs,, must wear , town collars or be shot. , Barna Green, who has been studying cooking and chemistry several years at Chapel Hill, thinks it will require two more years of severe application to graduate him. He is with us however, on vacation, giving the Einstonians the benefit of his skill and knowledge by serving them at their doors with delici ous ice cream. If all the -Chapel Hill boys are as proficient as Barna, in their studies,- the old University will soon regain its ancient reputation for talent and usefulness. George W. Rhodes, who carries the mails to and from the depot and post- office in Kinston, thinks cholera in hogs and chickens is produced by the intro duction of commercial fertilizers and the opening up of marl beds.' This disease soon attacks both hogs and chickens wherever marl beds are dug or fertilizers go. Fwls and hogs love the alkalines which constitute a ma terial part of all marls and fertilizers, Before the introduction of these articles of husbandry, cholera never appeared among either hogs or chickens, nor does it attack either now where fertilizers are not used or marl, beds are . not opened. : Limestone water superinduces the disease in fowls and animals as it certainly dees in man. , : k ., Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railroad. Gray, its able and effloient President- one of the first men Of North Carolina in every pre-eminence.' v- j . ; The Morehead and Midland vote com bined, would be almost if not quite suffi cient to effect the lease to the Cape Fear ana xacuin valley, and this is a con nection which Governor Jaryis desired brought about after the disturbance of the Midland lease. ' Every jnterest of 'our section now points to a connection with the Cape Fear arid Yadkin Valley system; - The extension of the1 Cape- Fear "imd Yadkin Valley Poad south of Fayett ville to the South Carolina line, and be yond, which work is now progressing, will open up to us the great cotton growing counties of our sister States, a connection that our port and transporta tion interests cannot afford to overlook. i If our people who are endeavoring to organize a syndicate to lease the A. & N, C. Railroad would join hands with the C. F. & Y V. people, they would accomplish a great end, and confer a lasting benefit upon their section. ' - ' ' ' Tide-Water. remember it is, as we said before, genuine North Carolina flower. ; . '; M. B. C. COMMEKOIAL. , v,,': Blank Boelu. Sheep, Canvass and Half-bound, Led gers Day Books, Journals, Pass Books and Stationery, tot sale, at lowest prices, at Mrs. Stanly's Book Store on follok street. v junl63t. A. H. Potter in making soda water does not use pump water but pure cis tern water. ... ... , tf. j . ,! Literary Gossip. Those of bur citizens who, two years hearts, ago, neard uen. ti. K. Colston lecture in Lowthrop Hall on "Egypt and the East," and listened to his conversations giving some sketches of life in those lands, will greet with pleasure "A Trag edy in the Imperial Harem at Con stantinople," translated by him from ine rencn, ana voucned tor as a cor rect picture of life in Moslem countries, He tells us in the preface that the au thor of the book was residing in Con- NKW BEBNB MARKET, i Cotton Middling. 9 1-2: strict low middling 9 3-8; low middling, 1-4. , r. uorn In sacks, etfo.: in bulk (J4c. Tdbpkntwb Dip, $3.25; hard $1.25. Tab $1.00 to 81.25. ' i t tab tirm at tfi.ou and $1.79. Beeswax 25jtvj 28c.per.lb. . Honet 60o. per gallon. Beef On foot, 5c. to 6c. Mutton $1.50a2 per head. Hams Country, 13o. per pound. , LAED-rCountry, 14o. perlb. Fresh Pork 7a9c. per pound. iwias ioo. per dozen. . , Peanuts $1.50 per bushel. Fodder $1.50 per hundred. unions 4o. per bunch. Peas $1.00 per bushel. Hides Dry, 9c. to llo.; green 5c. Tallow 6o. per lb. Chickens Grown, 60a70c. per pair. Meal Bolted, 75c. per bushel. Potatoes Bahamas, 50c.: yams"60c. per bushel. TUBNirs 8c. per bunch, i Wool 12a20c. per pound. Shingles West India,dull and nom. inal; not wanted. Building 5 inch, .50; saps, $2.50 per M. To All Whom It May Concern Any person having In bis possession a gun or guns, the property of the New Berne Grays are hereby requested to deliver the same to William Whltford without delay, or proceed ings will be had according to law to secure the same. Any person who is in wrongful possession of one or more of said guns is sub ject to indictment under the Militia bill passed in 187fi and 1877. and thev will UDon in stantinople when the principal events formation be proceeded against accordingly, Jtin21-2t WILLIAM WHITFOKD. BBLS. FINE FLOUR, 50 Bags Rio Coffee, Fine Syrup, etc., Ex Schooners Ella R. Hill and Addie Henry. 6iT Cheap Freights and Cash Buyers make Cheap Goods, 63T Come and see us, Wm. Pell'Ballance & Co. junl9dlM-wlt city; items.. A Firat Class ' ' Sewing machine bran new can bought cheap at the Journal office. be Just Received : Fine Sugar Cured Hams, Breakfast Bacon, ' Sugar Cured Shoulders, Choice Butter and Cheese, Best Quality of Lard.. ' HEADQUARTERS FOR FINE FLOUR. Catawba, Sciippernong, Sherry and Fort Wines, and a Complete Line of the Best Grades of Liquors for family use. CHAS. H. BLANK. narrated in it occurred. He thinks there is no 'solution of the "Eastern Question" till the Turks are driven out or Europe, which will not be till after a desperate struggle, for they will prob ably call to their aid the Mohammedans of the world, who number nearly two hundred million souls, and still possess immense vitality. "The masses of the people are almost as ready now to be lieve in a new prophet as they were in the days of Mohammed, and the con quest of Tunis and Egypt by France and England has revived hostility toward Christians not without cause." The Koran regulates the domestic life in Moslem countries as completely to day as in the days of the "Arabian Nights," and though there is much that is new in this book, the story is as sen sational as if it was a leaf from those tola to tbe Oalipn; It IS as lull or nor- Receives direct from the Springs, rors ana love mamng, ana only wanting garatOga Vichy , and Deep u vu DUl)C1u?ula4 01C.uBu. u , ur R()ck Mineral Waterg. ly gotten up iu papur covers vy uvnb-1 , m T ir i. im i. tt. I Received In block -tin lined barrels. uergerui iew lum, lurou ceuui. ami cures dyspepsia and diseases of the kidneys UINERAL WATERS. A. H. POTTER UuMjr Day at the Exchange. - Yesterday was a busy day at the Ex change. As no cotton was offering the operatives opened a factory and ; set. up ple o Craven, Pamlico, Lenoir and Car unaertne shea near by ; the employ- teret coui,j nave the matter presented ment was spinning yarns, and some old to them in its proper light, they would ' and experienced experts together with t&yQI by ail overwhelming majority, tne green nanas put in a gooa aay s work. vf' .. Some of the yarns were fine and high' ly colored, but the man who makes the whole cloth was not around, though it is intended to go regularly into the fab rication business before the summer is over and some very excellent fabrics are expected to be produced. The employees were interrupted by a discussion very improperly introduced , . A Water-Spout.' Passengers on the Elm City from Bay river yeBterdav had thfl opportunity pf beholding a rare sight of the' disturbed elements. When the steamer was just above South river a water-spout made up from the Neuse,' about five miles be hind her. ' For a few moments its movement was upward until it seemed in their hearing nnon the Silver Cur- 1 Bvn-ioreDoaing cioua aoove rency en- Uoa; for a time a. panic was a 8hort tirae' however 14 was imminent amon- the workmen when discovered that the mighty pyramid of f - y 1 J t the silver dollar was smoky-looking water; was rapidly ap- c:J v t ' t v-five cents, and a strike proacning ed. but unon an investtea' t' -1 i cf ( ' i f jui 1 tl.at three dimes two i t oi "i ones comprised the i c rency in poasession of , i -iive quiet' was re- ; !. - ' i ,'"; 1 bo eticour- 1 CO! ;' "IU- rv si :y- r tv. ! ;(!0 'i i . . 3 over- the steamer. 1 Capt. Gibbs ordered more steam in order to get away from the spout as fast as possible. Observing the dreaded visitor was com' ing faster and faster, the Captain changed his course in an opposite direc tion and."pulled for the shore," with the intention' of getting nearer in and running back past the ! water-spout. But it was soon discovered that the ter r.'..!e tower was settling down into the PROPOSED LEASE OF A. & N. C. R. R, Editor Journal: A proposition of Cape Fear, and, Yadkin Valley Railroad Company to lease the Atlantic Road, if made, should receive serious consider ation, and all other things being equal, su3h lease should bo prom'ptly effected. The Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Road runs northwest from Fayetteville through the counties of Cumberland, Moore,. Chatham, Randolph, Guilford, Forsyth, Yadkin, Surry, Alleghany, Ashe, etc., and when completed will constitute the shortest link, uniting the great Northwest and Upper Mississippi Valley with the Atlantic seaboard. As 9 route connecting Beaufort' Har bor, Wilmington, etc., with Cincinnati and the great Northwest, it is far prefer able, shorter, and has all the advan tages and facilities over the more south- westerly route of the Western North Carolina Railroad. The Yadkin Valley country is the most fertile and naturally the most wealthy section of the State: In min eral resources it outstrips all other por tions of our transmontane country, in the production of copper alone. Its iron is the most abundant and richest of all the ores of the State. It has gold and silver, and the chief mica mines of the world: ; The Cape. Fear ; and , Yadkin Valley Road penetrates and will tap, through its Virginia and Tennessee con nections, the finest and most prolifio iron ore and coal beds in the world. It the finest grain producing, stock raising and tobacco growing section on the continent; while the climate of this Northwestern North Carolina is unsur passed. Northwestern North' Carolina is the Eldorado of the State. " ' ' Should the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Road lease the 'Mullet " connec tion, it will unite New Berne and Fayetteville, to begin . with, a connec tion we should always have had, and open to us the trade of the Piedmont recrion, from which our connections at ia nnblishlnsr a number of translations I and bladder, " I Tufiji thft rnllnwlnor Professor or Chemistry, analysis nlversltv Read the followln Douglas, Pr of Michigan DEEP ROCK MINERAL SPRING WATER ONE GALLON. in cheap form, among others the fascl nating novels of George Ebers, all of which can be ordered of Miss Susan Stanly. The same house sends also '.'A Book About Roses; How to Grow Them and Show Them." bv S.' Revnolds Hole, an ... ,, .. . ... ,. I Protoxide of Iron Trace angiiBn auinoniy on mis interesting Free Carbonic AcidJot determined question. Not knowing anything our- 1X8 I Chloride of Sodium...... I Chloride of Potassium .... I Chloride of Magnesium... Carbonate of Lime . Silica Sulphuric Acid.... 308.183 Gre. 149,084 ' , .. 10,244 ' 18,191 ' - 71,098 ' .Trace 1,780 Death to Whitewash. PREPARED GYPSUM For whitening and coloring Walls of Churches, Dwellings, Factories, Mills, Barns and Fences. : ,u Beautiful, Durable ic Cheap. Its superiority over Lime is like that of Paint.- Furnished in several different colors. Does not Rub, Peel, Crack, Wash OA or Chance Color.- Send for prices and Tint CardB showing the different colors. For sale in bbls, bbls, M bbls and cauB, "By JOHN 0. WIIITTY, Newtiern, N. O., Agent for Newbern and vicinity. Total Solids In the Gallon ............559.180 Temperature, 50. . j ... As an antidote to thirst for alcoholic llauors nus no equai. junezu-a selves of the cultivation of roses, we turned this book over to a lady well posted in this lore, who pronounces it not only interesting but valuable, con taining directions not only for growing the most beautiful roses, but also for showing them to the best advantage after they are cut. . There is a list of rnana boat, anitari for ftrViihit.tnna. nmnnir L!A - U 1.1. : ,. pound by the tub. . . .. . BUTTER; Fine Cooking Butter from un couhtrv at 15 cents ner nound bv the kit. , ,. jNew xoik tate Butter at lo cents per pound by the retail. C. E. FOY&CO., H 'Brick Block, Middle street, d ' . Newbern, N. C. and beautiful ones which have recently won admiration as Maids of Honor in Queen Rosa's coutt." The lovers of roses will be glad to hear' that after many experiments in a multiplicity of manners, cheap and costly, home and foreign, the author decides that barn yard manure is the best food for roses 1 LL ll. n 1 nn nnAI. A -uCM,r iuuu uimca, DWt, U1 8u- Aa penoui under Schedule g jaz ano-all or wnicn are gooa, put none are hereby notlfled that they are required by the best. He tells of an old lady who, tow to list the same during the first TEN (10) Overhearing two gardeners talk of the m ""' ""on ung to list within 0 . '- tha tlma will ka h!.. a. La J.II..ha. 1l.t b. v"-"6 """land will be charged with double tax. I will decayed leaves, careiuuy couectea tne be at my office to receive the same. Blanks mornine and evening tea leaves and furnished. D. Schedule D. 1VOTICJE. put round her roses, to "transform them into tea-scented Chinas by next summer.?' (:,vij.A.M :. 'v,i.v J The best time and the best way to ap ply the mannre, and the different kinds suited to ' different ; varieties, beside many other valuable things, are all de tailed in this book, which may be had of Mrs. Stanty, price SO cents. , From roses we. turn to a "Passion Flower,' and speak with' pride of the beautiful one just published by G. P. Wiley, of Raleigh a genuine North Carolina growth, as the poems are by Theo. Hill, Esq., and the book printed and bound in ; excellent style by Junudtd JOSEPH NELSON, . ' Register of Deeds. J. M; SCOTT Has just opened, on the Southwest corner of Middle ana mum rroni streeu, a stock or First Class Family Groceries ' . . .; a Consisting of " Flour y Sugar, Coffee, Motasm Sy rjw. Meats, vanned (foods. CrdcTcers, Soda and Sugary, i Also Tobacco, Snuff and Cigars, "Will sell at BOTTOM DriceS for CASH. Call and examine before bnyin? else-1 where. ' ' . ' ' ; . juuel3-d&w(im , : '''.'( - "Excelsior" Cidfr Mills, "Kentucky" Cane Mills. . "Cook's" Evaporators. , &. SEND FOB PRICES. June20 , J. C. WHITTY. Just Received: ; A LOT OP Murchison's Patent Combi nation Hoes, Rakes, Forks, 6tc.t 6tC, ; r, ; , , This combination is indispensable tc " Gardeners and Farmers. Call early and supply yourself before they are all gone. . ... ' . J. U. WH1XTV, -mayS4dtf " " New Berne. N. C. .1 i Fulton Market Corned Beef, English Breakfast Bacon, . - Sugar Cured Shoulders, i ' Small Hams, . ..'.v i . , . . .. , i m ..." Smoked eef Tongues, English Island Molasses, Porto Rico Molasses, ; -Fine Syrnp, ' ' ' Choicest Teas, A .1 . . Fresh Roasted Coffee. ' THE VERY BESt BUTTER that can be bad. Irish Potatoes, , : ' i . n Cream Cheese. , . ! i The fbllowing are a few of the tanned Goods which I am offering so Cheap: . n - Tomatoes,, Peaches, Boston Baked Beans; Pine Apple, Corn, Succotash, Peas, Lobster, Salmon, Olive Butter, llllki Brandy Peaches. :3 I: My Spices are perfectly Pore.. ' Jftnll-dly E. SLOVER. ' t, Vt ' fl 'ft ' - s .;., A 'u;;jtwlil '. The Twenty-nlnth Annual MoptlnRof Ihe Stockholders of the Atlantic and North Cn o Una Knilrond Company will be held at MOUK HEAD CITY on .- ...... ....... ,l THURSDAY, the SSth day of June, 1883. " F. O, ROPERTS, may5dtd s . , Secretiuy.
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 22, 1883, edition 1
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