Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / April 23, 1885, edition 1 / Page 2
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CBLISS&a AHNOONCKnKNT. THE CAILT JOTJAriAi ! paper tbUshad Aaflf excvyt n ;.c y. at M.Oopar .tr, SS.OO tor sit month Leilvwed 1 to citj - t ,aenbrs at M sent per n acta, r ' paper, w paallsfcee' every Tnereday at ll-Maei aaaaa. ABVERTISINO RATCS DAIXY-On. lack f ixt fsia ; oae weak. I1M on to out t nontae, H.W; (is atontfca, HAW; elve m H-.lh. tiM ' Advilment ander W4 of "CUj Items eeaia tier lias for each aserttoa . . No adfertUeraeUe will br Inserted betweea thecal Mattel at any prize. - ' s ' f f f loties of MuTittN or Iteaths, not to eaed ' aa Usee wOl be inserted Ire. All additional aaattar wUI V charted 1 eaU par liaa. Piruiau tor transient advertisements mast M aiada la adranc. Reg alar advrrtisemeats : aiUhe collected promptly at the end ot each oaih.'v V:' V . .'' ' ; . OoaaaatetUoai containing sew oradiacat - Ha af local matter are solicited. Bo coronas e tuoa maat expect to be published that contain aiecUonabtepireoaalltiee; withholds the name . i UtaaaUtor; or that will stake or than on v. ilasH of tbis oaMtr ' -Any person feeling aggrieved at any anbny moua oomroonlcatioB can obtain the name of the author by application at tola office and allowing wherein the grievance exist.. "r THK JOUKNAL. . . KVH. Editor. SEW BERN S. N. C.. APRIL 23, 1865. Ka tared at the Poet oiace at New Berae, N a. a seoond-class natter. . r ; f BILL ARP. ? ; ' Chal ef lb Affairs af Home. , t From Southern Cultivator ) I was , thinking - about the odds and fends of time; how they may be ' utilized; not the days nor the hours bat the minute. It is wonderful what a habitual use of these scraps .may accomplish. There sits my good old mother knitting,1 for it is all she can do now,' and while she talks and : listens, her needles are ; crossing the stitches and every day . or two there is another pair of socks or stockings for some of the grand : children, and they are better than : any ' that comes from the stores. And' there sits my wife with her, day V work done, her sewing and , patching and darning and cleaning op and helping nnrse the grand ; children, ' and hearing Carl and Jessie say , their lessons, and now she is resting in the- same old corner,' - but she is working still, for she, too, has, her knitting and though the 'sock grows slow it grows sure, and , the stitches run with tho moments r and keep np with them and there is -no time lost or wasted. We men come in from the field, or the shop, or the store and sit down and do nothing; we smoke or talk or read ' the papers, but the old mothers are busy notil bed-time and make no fuss about it either. It is a world of work to keep the clothes in order aud to keep 'account of numberless garments that go out and come iu from the washer woman. Then there are the sheets, and pillow cases, and table cloths, and towels ; and nobody knows what all but the mother. ; The whole economy of, 'life is in little things. The farmer thinks bis cotton : bales a big thing, and struts around them with pride, bnt . the profit . that is in them don't amount to much. His wife has saved him more money by her year's quiet unpretending work. A long time' ago when I was a boy, my mother 'experimented in a small way with some silk worms and made a little sum of money, and she was very proud of her Buccess. It cost my father nothing and not much of my mothers time she reeled a few pounds of silk and sold it for $6 a pound. And so my father thought the silk business a big thing and he sent off and got cuttings from the Moru$ Multi-Caulis . mulberry and planted two or three acres and in a year or two they were all ready for the silk worms, and he built him a two-story house and filled it full of racks and hurdles and it took my brother and me and all . hands to attend to them. It was a nasty business and .wore us all out,' for when the worms got hungry and : began to cruise round for breakfast they had to be fed and fed all over, So after awhile the mulberries were stripped and the worms were still hungry and my brother aud myself bad to get np long before day every morning and go five miles to an other orchard after leaves and get back by sunrise and it wore us out. but we worried through with it and .then when the cocoons were all made, we had another filthy job reeling off the silk in hot water and we made 140 pounds and sold it for J dollars a pound and quit the bnsi ness. It was too big a business; and so it is with many things. They are too big. A little grist mill on a branch will make a man a good living, bat these big ones that ran bv steam are risky ventures. . A little 1 country . tan-yard makes money. - The farmers,' wives' make money: raising j common chickens ' and turkeys and selling seggs, but these big henneries don't do much. . Obmmou' folks can attend to little things and waste no time nor money, bat when a man has to neelecUhia regular business,, it won'pay.. My - .father's jsilk venture called; aim from his store about half bis time and what he madeos silk he lost -:' other. way8.v'-F tritv His next von tare was in the grape business. He got him some books on vineyards and wine making and how to make raisins, and so he planted four acres in English grapes, aod after they got' to bearing he pressed out the juice id large poplar troughs and strained it aod put it away in barrels in a cellar, and after so long a time he sampled it and found ho had a big lot of flue vine gar but no wine. He Wd ho better luck -with tis rats!ns,nd so he quit that business and, stuck to his store. Tha store made money good deal of money, and' he would have got rich but be was a Presbyterian and Presbyterians lire, too high when they have a store , oi their own. They hate one customer that buys freely and never' pays,' and that customer generally., keeps the con cern on a strain. So be dident get rich but he kept about even and we children , had a good .time and knew no wants, and did not learn much economy. - A 1 young man ought to be careful about marrying a Presbyterian girl if her father has a store; and a young girl . ought to be just as carefol about marrying a Presbyterian boyi ; Mrs. Arp made that mistake when she took me and I have kept her poor, all the time. We have. lived well, mighty well, but we are getting old now and there is not moch laid np for the feeble days that are to come,' never theless we ar6 by no means alarmed and we have , had a good time and seen our share of happiness. I think I know several rich men who have more money and less'conteur.; It is a 'mighty 'nice thing to have rich folks way but I don't know of but one class of people that can risk it without danger and those are rich folks who have no children.' If a rich man has children bo ought to raise them just as though he was poor. If ho doesent, they will be poor some day and then they are in a bad fix. , ; , ' I bought Carl a pair of shoes about a month ago and one of them is nearly worn out now, for it was a Yankee cheat and I have to have it half-sotedrbhf ifT was rich I reckon I wo'uld throw tbeitf away and buy a new )air aud that would be a bad esson lor Carl. I have to mend the chairs and patch the window glass, an r stop. the. leaks in the roof, and fix up the chimney back, and make new handler for tlw fake and. hoe, 'and fix tfie rollers on the bedstead, and do a thousand littlo things that cost money if yon hire it done, and all thi&ia, household economy and toast beL" practiced by ordinary folks, or they t will coino to grief. This is one of the advantages of iving in the country Where carpen ters ard not handy., Every farmer ought to be his own mechanic as much as - possible, and teach his ooys economy f ana contrivance. Little things make up life little things are bigger than big ones, for they come all the tune while big ones CQHaselQOUU.- y y - j. A Done tuac insect tuat lias a turning latbe in its . iaws .and cuts off the persimmon limbs, I wrote about in my last and have since re ceived a letter from Mr. Harrell, an observing 'friend in' New Orleans, who says be was raised in North Carolina woods and. had observed the same' thing, land 'was "for a long time perplexed' about it.: But be watched close and long and one day discovered that it wis a large beetle or what we would call a bic. black bug.' It had a curved projection trom acn jaw curved lite reap hooks and on the inner edges were fine saws, or notches like very small saw teeth and when bis buirsbir) tele like taking exercise, he grasped the limb between these saws and let all bold loose 'and opened his wings and flew round and round the limb with a buzz, holding on With his projected jaws all the time, ana as ue Duzzed, ne saweu, and as he sawed he buzzed,' so together it was the original unpatented buzz- saw. It did not take him long to make bis mark and cut in to the heart deep enough for the1 limb to faiVemd:8 it fell the bug-new away to parts unknown. " Now that is satisfactory as far as it goes, bat still the question comes up, -'what lor!" My conviction is that the bug had already deposited its eggs in that limb and instinct ' said the limb must be cut off so that when the egg , -. hatched, the lame could bed ' in the ground. The locust splits a limb and lays her eggs; the eggs hatch ' and the worm fastens its own, web and swings to the ground. , But this bug, I expect, has no web and so tho limb must be cut off and fall. Bill ARP. ' -M iTjw Grant Income. ( VfCila UIOUV O 1ULUU1Q U(M MOCIl ' ' lIAIt 'fltNltlat' ftltHld tinea Iaaasi derived iron the interest on the quarter million subscribed for him a le'yersftgOand'from Ills pay, lately, as a retired General. Col. Fred Grant' bar no means, all1 bis money having gone np with Grant & rWard.'-rUItiSsofl: S,, r.,' fs not lik6I Vah't; as bts,1'atBer-in-lawr ex-SenatorCnaffee, js yofy rich. Jess Grant is practically1 poor the only, really .settled child oi toe Gen eral being Nellie,' whose position by marriage, with a liieinbei; of an old and wealthy English family - places nor" beyond the reach of want. ThmUfilpliia 2'imes. Medical Ignoramuses. The eyes of all the world have been directed to the case ' of ;Gcn.1 Granu It will very Beriously im pair public confidence in medical science and skill. At the same time it will encourage afflicted people not to abandon hoDO of life because the most learned doctors pronounce their malady Incurable. ( H J f ; j When their doctors give them np they need not give "up themselves. That is the moral of Gen,; Grant's ease, it encourages tba eiefc and suffering to bopo for teoovery froth their .'disease.', however1 sad. 1 tle croakings of their medlcftl advisers provided they bavejtbe constitution to recover from their doctors and the good fortune to escape "heroic treatment.77 -'." ,!,?",-v! " Dr.Pordyce Barker, brie', bi the consulting physicians, still adheres to the cancer theory. ; But itj is in. the teeth of other medical opinion and is refuted by the faet that Gen: Grant is recovering 'rapidly; 11X s not a feature of cancer that as.' soon as doctoring ceases convalescence begins. -i: . "i g'.-u; ..-; ,y h-cc . The learned doctors who backed and tortured Door Garfield to get out of the front , of his body a bullet which bad boned in bis back and released itself, kept persisting that that the lead had in some myste rious manner found its way from his groin, 'Where their wonderful skill had mislocated it. i , "Throw physic to the dogsl'f was the ' exclamation v . of j Macbeth. Probably if all the physio tbo cancer-credulous doctors gave to Gen. Grant had. been thrown to the dogs and all their heroic treatment had been practised on eats tho distin guished patient would before now have been driving in the Park and indulging in the luxury of a Eeiha Victoria.,-' V;:r 'A'.Z.-J The whole of this prolonged case is anything but creditable to medl-,! cal science. , We cannot forget that at a consultation Gen. Grant barely escaped by bis pnysicat weaKness from a painful and terrible surgical operation for cancer,' which onld have left bim speechless for, the rest of his life, and it isnow.act; knowledge by some, of, these same experts that his is not a case oi cancer at all. . .. : i,. !j V,;. -.1'-. However, if our confidence in the doctors has been impaired, onr fear of cancer has also been shaken. ' It is not within the power Of "the phy sicians to tell us how many cases of so-called cancer have been beroje ally treated to death, which, had they been as publicly watched -as this, might have turned ' out 1 to be simple cases of ulcerated throat. V vr Tir...l.7 i i t i i ; . ' ' ' ' i.. J. . ivvrtu. , , -. . . ; A Young Law YEE.-B6bbyi bog ged his mamma to buy bim a drum. "I am afraid,Bobby,17 she replied, "that if I were to buy a drum grandpa might , not . like it Very Well."- ' ' , ,' -.vA-ui' vr:' ! i "That wouldn't make any differ ence, mamma," Bobby argued, "cos yon see, the drum ain't lot grandpa; it's for me." V. ' , ' 'r.:,'.' This conversation occurred a good many years ago, and Bobby, who is now a man, is 'practicing law suc cessfully in Philadelphia. Exlsr- ' To anv bodT who has disease of throat or lungs, we will send proof that PisO'B Cure- for Consumption has cured the same complaints in other oases. ' Ad dress, - IS- T. XlAZKLTINE, H ih :f i Afffi: Waxren, fa. ; BENJ DAVISr Commission Ucrchani AND :--'T1'' 1 ' r (SHIPPER OF BANANAS.) ! Southern Fish, Fruits AND Produce a Specialty. - 106 Barclay St. NEW YORt. . f CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. 1F . ' - PROMPT BBTTURN3 MADE. "W Nbw YoitK RBrKBNCM B. G; Rlockford, 75 to 79 Fulton Fish Market; Drohan A Powell. 214 Washington, st,; , WW. lisalrer (jo., si Harrison at. WlLMINOTOK (N. C ) REtKnKWCSEt-E.' E. Burruss, President 11 National Bank) Pres ton dimming Co ; W. E. Davi A Son, - - aplOdfim i CLOSING OUT 'Groceries, Tobacco, Cigars, Stoves, Etc. Etc. Having determined to close out our stock, we offer our ENTIRE STOCK by the package , , , , , At Cost for Cash Only. ' A rare chance to buy good Cigars, Tobacco and Groceries at COST. A few pne Cook Stoves at cost also .Wm. Fell Ballancs & Co. . ap8 dtf ' ' 1 1 v i , Many a Lady , is beautiful, all but her skin ; and nobody has ever told ' her how easy it is to put beauty on the skin. T. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia Bairn. , , ' " j0 "'- v , , .lit! .Tf , .. Mir wt 'WkWVi a i Absolutely Pure. Thi powder never-vane. A marvel of prity,8tren(fth, and wholesomeness. Wore eonomioal IUaii the ordinary kinds, and can not be sold in com petition with the multitude of low test, ohort weight, alum or phosphate pewdera. Sold only In cons. Royal Baking Powdik Co. 1UC Wall-it., A". uovls-lvdw fl !iss by Hoonlight. I from time immemorial, no one will pre- tend td deny' the fact .that hlssoahpve been held In high reputo by both sexes whether active or passive' Ifhas been decided that a lEGAIi KISS implies ACTION on both par ties; btit when a lady simply consents to bp kissed without' action ofter Hps, It consti tutes only a PASSIVEklss-a Bweet deprived of Its nectar. ' ' ; ' Snugly ensconsed within a moss-embowered and yihe-clad verandah, end almost hid from' View amid Bwcct-Scented honoysueklesi "wfts seated 'fulr Atlanta nymph, whose bentfttful d'lfk eyes,' alaboEtcr complexion ant voluptuous contour, seened to DAZE the young gent by ,Jer side, who over and ftnoniwilile circumnavigating her slender waisf.gaveheraBUSa and then a.KE-UUSS to the amazement of a pedestrian who hap pened to be phssing tliat beautiful moonlipht nights ' At that momunt the lover was heard to ask, "My deardarllnggarah Jane, you are becoming more bountiful every day; your eyes sparkle with more brilliancy, your once pale cheeks have been painted by the roseate hue of nature, and you seem to have entire ly regained your health, : Will you tell me the Cause of the change?" J 'I have simply used that wonderful lv ef fective blood remedy known a 11. H. li." fclo'ltf'.' t;Tlae : Atlanta Constitution, In o long article TeltHing to B. B. B., of that elty, sajm: ;-(.'' : .j: i The Blood Balm Company started one year ago with $163.00, but to-day the buslnesa can not be bought far 50,C00r .The, demand and the satisfaction given is said to be without a parallel, as Its action is pronounced wonderful. ; ' -' i We are glad to announce that onr drugglBts have already secured a supply, and we hope our renders vl II supply themselves atonce. It is said to be the Only sneedy and perma nent blood poison remedy oilered, giving en tire saiisiaotion in au c;ihos, ueiore one ooi tie has been used. For Wood Diseases, Kid tty Troubles, Scrofula. Catarrh, Old Ulcer, and 8kin Diseases, try one lottle B. 1!. M. : lilooduaim uo Atlanta, ua , win maurree of cost, a book fllied with information, about the blood, the .Kidneys, Hcrotuia. etc., etc. or sate m xewoern oy it. a. uut t x.. ; a " Green,; Foy & Co., BAKKERS and COMMISSION MERCHANTS i;OmqB,, Sooth, Front Street, ... Have' Flrst-ClaBS' Faculties for transacting ft General Banking Business. Will receive deposits subject to check or draft at sight; will, buy or Set. Exchange on New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore; will make loans on well . secured paper, and make liberal cash aduices in . Cotton, Corn, Rice and Naval Stores, and hold on storage or make sale for one commission, either In this mar, ket, NOrfotk, Baltimore or ew York. ' . feblvdwtf ' " ' .1 . Dail Bros., WHOLESALE GROCERS .'ltlil.. AND i" COMMISSION MEROUANTS. A I-O-fOF hNKvFjtlJfiil U'AY.'CnjSAP.' ' , ' SEW &EKNE. K. C ... , dw i-1 1 J , - .... ' f , -S. . UAVENS, BOOT AND . SUOE MAKEB, having escaped from the late fire; has found irefuge in the COHEN i 1.- rm 7i,:ii " t ': !! ", t BUILDING.' on- Middle street, eight doors north of bollock street, where he would be pleased to meet his old cusr tomers and public generally. (Jail and I oi fmh Peats, The Best the 'Market affords. I'ork, Qansagp and.Hecfcnnbefoumlat, 4t..,. i ,-i-K.J ,)u Broad Streetr JapW .u i ' u . At Old Stand. Offer Extraordinary, In order to reduce toy large Btock o 1, V I CIGAfcS 11 i. I , will 'sell for tho next thirty days, UJgara by thp Uox , t , , it i f ' tl'.TtiS' r if AT COST, and at retail I will sell cood Ten cent Cigar far 5 cts, and.Tivc cent fjigara nt cts. bmoKers to satisfy themselves have only to call and make ono purchase, ' - " ' ' " J " Remcctfullr. ' ' ' i i ..i ill". I ' .Notice. ' Certificate No. 80 foi one share of the stock of the Atlantio and North Oaro iina Railroad, having been lost, notice is hereby given that Ivill make appli cation for a duplicate or the same. ' , ."; JAMES C. JIAURiSON. ( , Administrator of J. A. Kuydam, Sr. npld30d - XT. .Mace: ; . , IS, XT . : V. j : . THE SrOTrr At Market V'harf, Selling Drugs, Paints, Oils, 'Varniah, Glass, Putty, and all kinds Seeds. if . ' . ALSO Canvas, Rope, Twine, Oakum, Galvan ized Spikes and Nails, and other Ship Building Supplies. . .. cHjEaf for cash. ' - dec.11-dw ' "Grace was in all her steps, Heaven in her eye, ' In every gesture dignity and low.": Bo appeared Mother Eve, and so may slilue her fair descendants, with the exercise of common sense care and proper treatment. An enormous number of female com, plaints ore directly cauced by dis turbance or suppression of. the Menstrual Function. In f.vkkv such case that sterling nnd unfail ing Speclnc, IIKADPIRLD'S Fkmalb Ukcolatok, will effect relief and cure, t . .. It is from the recle of a most dis tlngulshed pliyslclan. It Is com, posed of strictly olllolual Iniire- dlents, whose huppy combination hits never been surpassed It Is prepared with sclentilio skill from the finest materials. It bears the linlm fni omiutJifw.v ..f Btmnath certainty of eflei t,. eleguuc of preparation, Deauty or appearance and relative cheapness. 'Hie test! -mony in its favor is genuine. It, never falls when fnlrly tried. Cartersvllle, Ga. This will certify that two mem bers of my immediate family, after having sullered for many years irom menstrual irregularity, and having been treated without bene fit by variolic medical doctors, were nt length coMpi.ktki.y cobkd by one bottle of Ur. J. Brad field's Fe male Regulator. Its effect in such rases is truly wonderful, and well may the remedy be called "wo man's nest f riend." . i Youi s respectfully. . ? JAMES W. ST1UNOB. Rend for our book on tho "Health and Happiness of Woman." Mailed tree. I'ltADFIELD RKGUJ.ATOR CO., Atlanta, Ua, HEALTH RESTORED! JAMES REDMOND, Afent ami Bottler OF TUB BERGNER I ENGEL : . BREWING CO 'S PHILADELPHIA. LAGER BEER New Berne, N. C. , This beer took premiums at the Con tennial Exhibition at Philadelphia and the Paris Exposition. Keeps better than any other in warm climates, and is thi favorite brand wherever known. , : For sale in kegs or crates. dw . EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA MARBLE WORKS, XE1TJ1ERNE.N.C. ', Monuments, Tombs, 4d ajl H!n(is Qvave and Building work In ITALIAN&AMEB1CAN MARBLE Orders will receive prompt attention unu naiiiHiuoiion guaranteed. " JOE K: WILLIS, Proprietor w (Successor to George W. Claypoole) .: Cor. BROAD A D CRAVEN Sts. NEW BERNE,. N. L- Q. E. Miller is my authorized agent in Kinston ma30-lvdw J. fi. BROAVJN , " Barber ... and Hair - Dresser, With t went -five years experience, and the Neatest aud Best Furnished nloon lu the city, will give ns good a shave ns can he had anywhere for TfcM (3KNT8. New shop, new furniture, and satisfaction guaranteed- . Middle stre next door to Detriclc'a. 1 , I , "marlSfily 4 . : : . For. Bent, The Brick Store adjoining the Banking House of Green, Foy & Co., on South Front street. " ' Possession given May 1st, 1885. ! ! a3dtt JOHN A. RICHARDSON. STEAMEUS. " SKW-BESSE 1SD P1SL1C0 Steam Transportation Co'v.': BUMMER SCHEDULE OF THE STEAM EB ELM CITY togo Into effect on and after April 17, 185 Tuesdays j - , f ) Ieave rew nerne at o axrai, p. iu , tur Lake Landing, atopplng at Adams Creek, Vandemere, Stonewall and liayboro, ar . riving at Lake Landing, Wednteday, at l or lock, a, w. '. w l J Thnradaya ' t ' . ' ' lave uK uinaing ior new nerna ab 1.1niAlAi.1r ... .lnnnln0at.l?,vhnrn AtAtlA- . wall. Vanderaara and Adasaa Crekar- rlvlcg at New Berne, Fridays. 2 a. in. r Fridays ' ' ', ' ' ' ," ' " ' ' Leave ew e ma m d o ciock, p. m., ior Lake Landing, stopping at Adams Creek, - riving at 'liake Landing, Baturday, 1Q o'clock, a m. i )" j a v. u ti , w i n c rn muihrwh mill mvriiiu. r- Mondays ... ijeave LKm utnuiug at u o cioca, in., lur New Berne, atopplng at Bay bo ro, Stone wall, Vandemere and Adams Creek, ar riving at New Berne, 2 o'clock a.m.. Xuee- . ; .lava. v " . . .. i Rv this arrangement we are able to maXa close connection with the Northern steam era, also having good accommodations both for passengers and freight at very low rates, ask that the merchants and producers along its line to give it ineir cneerrui ' support. Freight received nnder cover every iy ot (1)8 week For further Information enquire bi the ot doe. Foot of Craven street. ' ' K. H. PIEKCE. Act. New Berne, N.C.. Or any of Its Agents at the following plaeea: ABIi LCI,, AQUIUtTIHlK, . O. I. WATSON, Lake Landing, 'i . U. H. ABBOTT, Vandemere, ', 1 C. H. FOWLER, Stonewall. : , . ' W. H. 8AWYER, Bayboro, ' 1 : 8. H. GRAY i ' -Ian21d&wly : i.- General Manager. ,THE Steamboat Company, , Will run tho following Rchedulr ou hod after Friday, August id,18W: . j . ,- ,v, Steamer Trep,t, , Will leave New Heme for f'olloksvllle, Trn- ton nnd Intermediate landing every Wed nesday and Krlduy, returning ou Thursday andSaturdiiy... . j .,.:, ,t ! Steamer Kinaton " ' ,; 'J- 'i"-'t-iiH-.l:' .,ir. ' Will leave Newbern for Klnslon every TU)Ss DAY and Kill DAY: reluming leaves Kin ston for Newberu every MONDAY aud THURSDAY: touohlnaatSollV Old Field and all Intermediate points both going and com- In . '1;. . . . 1 r . TJiese steamers make close connection with the (). D. 8 8. Co. nd North Carolina Freight IjIuc. Kor further information apply to W. K. BTYRON, Ja.,at Newberu. W. F. Stanly, Klnston, D. 8. BAUKU8, Polloksvllle.' 1 ..I I T. WILSON, Agent at Trenton,' -J. P. QoiNERLy.JolJy OWfleW..-! J. B. Banks, Quaker Bridge, " . ' ' J. M. WH'TE, Qcn'l Manager, eb7d&w : , Klnston. S.Q OL1) UOMllSlOiN 1 ' . ; i U'it. ... .,1 Steamship;; Cum jan. BEMI-WEEKLY LlW Fo. 'ew Yoi'K, lialt jiHort', jior iolk,; Boston, Elikabotli City, Pbtladftlphia, rrovVdeiiceV' anVT other CltieH. ' '" ' ... :. '. . ' - j .,1: ,.;''-, ijil'j0- '- ON AND Am:K ' ! ' Monday Jiky 2nd, . 1883 UN TI F Uli YII cK Steamer Sheiiandoah' iU Will leave, apon avtivat of traia on Norfolk Southern Bailivad at Elisabetk Olt . ever "! BtONDAV AMD TnTJRSDAr for New Berne. Returnia- lav New Barn tor Elizabeth (litv ar . . . TUESDAY AMD FR1DAT' ; P-m making closa counoction with' Nor folk' Southern R. XL inr M,.r,h Olose connection made at Sew nerna , with steamers- for Klnston, ' PollokaTllla, Trentoa and all landings on the Neuaet and: Trent RlTcrs. No freights received for shipment oa Tuesdays andFrldays after i p m. i !' Freight forwarded nromutW and laarut raiwa guaranteed to destination. Fare 'to Elisabeth City and return. 44. To Norfolk, 6. To Bal timore, $3. To New York, 1S.W. " K. B. nOBRltTS, kft New Barala, ' Ag'U.'Murfoli, 14 W. H. Stanford. an'l IVt Ag't, - , r -, New York City. thugiDf Pier aim Tori ' The N. C. Frfiight hiiiu FOR NEW YORt?, BOSTON, PilOVIDfljjQi;; and all naiq ) r iftet this date will receive .'lilt M V'i " for New Bero at , ! ' jl inn, i, xiuui'll.lfl VKlIt Office of New Yonk and Baltimre mertnants should remember that thi Is pas oi the best Steam Lines out of Mew York, msking dai y aonneotlon with Baltimore for Mtv Baraa; all inside, and only one change , SEMI-WEEKLY STEAMERS Between Hew, lerae - tad laltbsi,' . r (Touching at Norfolk r , -. j . Iie5S,Tl,,r.Iijw Berne tot Baltimore TUESDAY! r ,r y.?.4.1 P m- Leave Baltimore foi Sew Berne WEDNESDAYS dnd SATURDAYS .p.m.,,;) (i ySf ,kijt frii - AgenUareas lollewa;, ". , ',' : 0LgHtSI..BaP Mrf. AS. W. McOARRIOK, Ag'U Norfolk; l - ' W P. Clyde A Oc. VbHaaelphia, II ftouth- hurvus. ' , . 'i . . , ' ,Yo,,kBalto.TraB.. Mne, Pier '".NoWrivar S,SaI?pOT"' Boston, tSCentraiwkaH."! -1 . I. H. Rockwell, Providence il l .' ' "X Mink, Full River, Derrick wharf M I ' 8h,i" 'yr """IS". Tuesdays and Salartlaya.. New York dally. !', gtlmoiw, WMlnesdays aadSatanmr ' VFrldaya" Kiver' Wo,uy. Wednesday! . . . '' . Prov Hence, Satnrdsrs , -through bills lsdmr riven . ... , to all points, at the dlffereuf offices of tb vipanles. 1 . ... ., "iyoid Enah-e cl a:i b'tIi' u. Liar,; j' . Mar fUtyS If GRAY At NV Barna .Jf
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 23, 1885, edition 1
2
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