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- Vv i- --WiV 1 Vi-"U t?"?i 4 NEW BERNE. N, C, THTjESDAYj AUGrUST 13, 1885. a- n n t i i f " ( i - v II :v v i-.--.x-.-:.. -.. :. LOCAL NEWS. 1 .'-! New Borne, latitude, ' MP 6' North. ' . " v Jongitude, 773' West. ; . f tSun riaee, 8:18 I Length f diy, sun m'u, 6:51 1 13 hqur,3 minutes. Xixm fi-ta t 8r58 p'. m.' 7- ...,.'. .,-.-!.-!- . Flno Bhowere yesterday morning. ' The Tgier y ie on Howard's ship ,Th fruit, fair rened at Greensboro Councjlmart 'J,' , W.- Moore is acting . Mayor during the abaeneeof Mayor Meadows.;, .f)-,:::J 't. ", A large lot of excursionists from :.( Gpldsboro and other points pasoed down v-io Moohead City yesterday,. v , Tie cotton platform 1b being repaired. Front all report it will be used more the coming season thaii for several years Mayor pro rm $. XV. Moore held his Jiint court yesterday. Those who are f disposed io Jen jay themselves by vio- , plating the city ordinances jn the absence "j, o( the Mayor, will find it rather costly. ' x h ' Mrs. Susan Stanly and Mrs. Eliza vi Dillingham beg to roturn.their heartfelt - thanlti US the entire' community for the nubstantiaK id nd aost acceptable Sympathy tendered them in their late v:''. affliction. ' - ;':': - The imp, ression that the season at MoTeheadU over is a mistake. It is true a largo part of the young people VhaveRftrTbift there j16tstil at th lantio some 'iwo'hundred quiet p the At- people . who are enjoying the unusually fine Y pouth ftind&reezea intensely. Host or I '' ;' these will remain, we learn, till Sep- ; VteiBherf : Now j to, we think, the ' v. ; best . ; time for our people to : MeM Jhe,,,,. 4ea8krev . We also learn the Atlantic Hotel has reduced ;. p Tftt" 'or j months of August and ;i' Ueptember. ' New' Berne is represented ' : . 'at this delightful hotel by the families 0 ;of Mr. ' James A. Bryan, Capt. J.;A. Richardson , Messrs E-foy, T. A. : , Green, Miss "Kate Carraway, Mrs. Ilar- rletFoy;and Mrs. Sophia Stevenson. r j -Ti. ktaadard Draautle CeaaBaar , p lMr. Chas.' j. Warner, the clever agent "of ihe'Btandard Dramatic Company, is . s la the city, posting bills for the Com- v a ' panyrwhloh will be with us next week. JTrCompany has reoently played suc- ! .oessfully in Raleigh for tw6' weeks, V , having good, audiences - every night. , Tlmv ara ffivinor a series of entertain ,- ,'iiMr. -" ments at summer theatrical prices,, 20, 25, and M center and the liberal patron- "''ge i which they recoivtjd in Raleigh at - , .teM the popularity of the plays and the vi'iligb merits. oJL . the performers. . Save -c your quarter for next week and enjoy yourselves, v, ,., 'C..'Jro Rmh, :' " n Jlr.., John JBimmons of Jones, near Folloksville, states that in his immediate neighborhood crops are needing rain, but from Pollokeville to New Berne -. 2j C$hey are better than he has i seen for . W years, and Mr. John Pearce has the best ;0 I xotton crop he has ever seen on the land. iV W. B. Lane, Esq., of Cobton, Craven V I i oonnty ,' reports cotton good but early . - v .wr not 'to good.!'. i- -! . TlrrCalvln DeBruhl, of Deep Gully' reports everything looking lovely, i I " Freeman Ernul, Esq.', residing a few .'.miles from the city, ' reports marked im , . provements recently in sotton. . it r 7 Jt ; Mr. John Dilliard of Croatan," Craven 1 .., -county, reports lootton good, and he backs up hie' teport with a demijohn of good cider to Dail Bros." store, where a ( ,- Joubnaj. .reporter, wae- allowed ? to 'J-mample i.-A'-?' ;,-if-Vlv. Mr. S. D. Pope of :La Grange, Ltnoir county vroports corn ,very good and cot ton also pr6mis!ng. ' ',''. . .. P.raonal. : i' . :r;';;s- F. -W, IHaucooW Esq:, and ' Mayor Meadows are. attending the meeting of tha . Pharmaoeatioal Association at ' Oreensboro,., ,' ;- " ' - . !. ' Mr. J. J.' Bntgoss of Norfolk arrived ta the city yesterday, having made the tr!p overland by private: conveyance. Ha says the cropa along the route are vry i-romJBiBg.1' :' 1 v ... 1'r.. J.. J.'Wolfendenhas returned - '-fro.a .New, ' Viprk. :,IId was present at tfl proat funeraj procession of General i, ant, and says he never saw and never erpnets to see pain, . anything to equat i;. lie verifies the statement of the ' ' Yr rk papers that General Fitzhugh the finest looking man present, c rybody wanted to see him. 1 iy I r-sio' Whitford, who has been k far some time, was out rid ' ;y evening." " ' , ; ' : ' !i r-fan, Esq.,-returned ' ; i ,i t3 t o mountains,' where ; j si; ling summer, last 1 . .i r, ,t' that Mr. r 'i t V ' city, is serious- Ilcllfflona R.Tlval In Pamllea. " , We learn from our neighbor, the Free Will Baptist, i that a recent revival at White Childrene' school house in Pam lico county," conducted by Elders Panl and Stilley, resulted in forty-eight ac cessions to the church. 4 ; " , . In this connection we wish to say that the Free Will Baptist is a neatly pub lished paper In this city, and is worthy of a hearty support from the members of that connection. ; i, i. : , v An Baalcra Frail Pair. ' The following item from the Wil mington Review shows- the necessity of organizing an Eastern Fruit Growers1 Association: . " We regret to know that Cant. 8. W. Nobles will not be in attendance at the Fruit Fair at Greensboro, with his fine display of grapes. The fact is his grapes are all off and marketed, the greater portion of them having been shipped to New. York, where he received 25 cents per pound for them. As this section of the State is at least from two to three weeks in advance of the middle and western portions of the State we think it would be advisable for fruit growers to organize an Eastern fruit fair. Under the present organiza tion the fruit fairs will always be held about the middle of August for the reason that the nurserymen in the mid dle and western portions of the State have no fruit until about that time, While friiit growers in this section have been selling their products for nearly a month and their best varieties are all consumed before the western crops be gin to ripen. We are ready and willing to join hands with our Wilmington friends in starting this organization. If vegetables are added and a Fair held sometime in the month of-July we think oil our truck farmers, who are to some extent fruit growers, will heartily co-operate. A man with energy and determination, like wo know Capt. Noble to be, would be the right man to place at the head of it. Mayor's Caart. . Business is picking up in police cir cles. There were four cases before the Mayor's court yesterday and there are others for today. Three of the cases yesterday were for failing io pay dog tax. . The parties were discharged upon payment of cost and procuring the badge required by the city ordinance. There was one case of disorderly con duct, or rather there were two, cases against one defendant. He was fined two dollars and cost in one case and five dollars and cost in tho other, which made a total of somewhere in the neigh borhood of twelve dollars, which the defendant , had to shell out. But , he shelled, and sends us the following his tory of his case: 1 ; VOELaTS VX OFFICIAL aUTTKBS. 1 "Run in at 10 o'clock p. m. . Not 'set on' until next morning, then without knowing what was the charge. Was 8eton,xhorbuantry..!' This defendant doubtless thinks that the court should be In perpetual session, or that the Mayor should crawl out of bed even at the hour of midnight to set on" the case of a gentleman who has been so unfortunate, as to become disorderly. Well, the constitution guarantees to every citizen ' who has boon deprived of his liberty the right to confront, his.; accusers and to haye 4 hearing without delay, but wo have not yet heard of any requirement of a judicial officer to "sot on", cases at midnight. We think the defendant had a speedy trial and was 'sot on" very lightly. . I . - -- T ' ,t0 Duck Creek Items. Considerable sickness around bilious and malarial fevers. . :'.'". S Some .'onions here weighing two pounds, and I hear that tho Journal, is to receive a specimen by first chance.' Fish scarce and hard to get - Eddie fished all day and said he only had three nibbles..;. Hope he will do better next time. :. f , 'Cant. Moore will fish on the east side of New river, at Fonveilie.ft Hurst's fishery, where he says he can beat Goose bay all "holler. '? , u , ; Mr. Reid Whitford, Asst. U. S. Engi neer, was surveying New river last week for the purpose of estimating upon im provements to mouth of river, ; j v. V ( We had hoped that the young man who was captured at Kinston would have- had the self-respect to have re mained under cover -a little -while. Hope the sermon did him good.v - T j 9 IT. S. Signal Station baa been removed from the house of E. W. Ward, by Mr. Coburn, to horse ford road to the banks. lie has new building, stauies, etc., ana would be glad to have, his friends call on their way to the banks. This move is very gratifying to our people. Crops are damaged somewhat by the drouth. .No rain for some weeks except little showers, which do not do any good. R. G. Ward says he would have made 500 barrels corn, but his crop is cut off at least 75 barrels. Andrew Hurst has good corn and cotton and the finest riee I have seen in a long time, L. O. Fonville has fine collardB; some stalks five feet high. ' The postofflce department is informed by telegraph of the srreet of Thomas J. Greer, a postal clerk running between Gainesville and Social Circle, Ga., charged with opening and riiling or dinary letters. Kinston Items. Kinohen Phillips, a well known ool ored drayman of Kinston, died on Sun day. ' i)' - . The widower, of whom we wrote last week as - having gone west, has gone northwest. ' r, Mr. John O'Connor V went to New York, ' on Tuesday,, by way of New Borne, Nags Head and Norfolk. ' Mr. Bryan McCullen, sr., and wife have returned from alenghtened visit to their son, Oscar McCullen, Esq., city manager of Western Union Telegraph (JO.,Kaieign. ' Dr. H. D. Harper has returned from Johnson county. He war called there suddenly last week to attend a sick sis ter. We are glad to know that her con dition is better. Any one of the candidates for post master of this place would have made a good officer. The Democratic party is to be congratulated on having so many capable men in it. Young Kinston had a match game of baseball on Monday. The up-town nine engaged the down-town nine. The up-towners made a score of 64 runs; the down-towners a score of as. The umpire was master James Wood. The up-towners played five men against nine of the down-towners. ' We saw two magnificent lemons, Tuesday morning, on their way to the Fruit Fair at Greensboro. They were grown by Mrs. Egbert DaviB of Lenoir county. One measured fourteen and a half inches the long ciroumferenoe and twelve and a half inohes the short, and weighed nineteen ounces. The other measured thirteen and a half inches and twelve inohes and weighed sixteen ounces. In Craven county near Pitt, two and a half miles from Jesse Quinerly 's store, on the farm of Mr. G, E. Miller is an immense deposit of fine marl of grayish oolor and very easily crumbled. Dr. iJabney, the Htate Chemist, pronounces it of yery fine quality, containing 60 per cent of carbonate of lime. There. is an unlimited amount of fine marl in our section of the State, and if means of transportation were to be had, a thriv ing trade might be established with up- country farmers. Prof. W. C. Kerr. Raleigh New and Observer. Prof. Watson Caruthers Kerr, who died in Asheville, Sunday morning, was born in Alamance county, IN. v., in 1827, and was prepared for college under Dr. Caruthers. of Greensboro, N. O: He entered the University of North Carolina in 1846, and graduated at the same with high honors in 1850. He caught school at Williamston, Martin county, N. C, for one year after gradu ation, ana on going to Texas wnn a let ter of recommendation from Gov. More- head was at once, in 1852, elected to a professorship in Marshall University, that State.. While holding this position, and through the influence of Hon. Wm. A. Graham, then Secretary of the Navy, he was appointed an assistant on the Nautical Almanao, then published at Cambridge, Mass. He went at once to Cambridge (in 1858) and continued at work on the almanao five years. During this time, while making a support by his work on the almanao, he devoted a large part of his time to the study of Ueology and natural History under tne illustrious Agassiz. In rebruary, 1837, rror. Kerr was elected to the professorship of Chemistry and Geology at Davidson college. This position he held until soon after the breaking out of the war, when, largely on account of poor health, he resigned his professorship, entered the service of a private company, and superintended the manufacture of salt near Charles ton, B.C., . 1 In the latter part of loto he was ap pointed State Geologist by Gov. Vance, and continued to hold this place until 1S8U, when ne resigned to accept a po sition on the U. S. Geological Survey. This latter position, like all the others he held. Prof. Kerr filled with ability, but on account of failing health he was able to continue the work for but a short time resigning in September, 1888. Kinoe that time he has been spending his winters at Tampa, Fla.. and his summers among the mountains of North Carolina, hoping to regain his strength sufficiently to enable him to complete the work he had already begun. But death, long expected, has at last over taken him, and his work remains unfin ished, lie has left behind him many notes, maps and other materials collec ted for his final Report of the Geology of the State. ' These have all been placed in the bands of Prof. Holmes, of the University, and the report will be pub lished at the earliest practicable date. , . Asa worker in Ueology Prof. Kerr baa won a well-earned reputation among American geologists. ' He has long been in correspondence with leading natural ists of this and other countries. He has read . a number of papers before the leading scientific associations of the United States. Among his publica tions may , be " mentioned a . num ber of , - artioles published - in the leading scientific journals of the country, two small , reports -on t tne geology of the State published prior to 1870. and Vol. I of the final report oa the same subject published in 1875. i In addition to these he prepared reports on the soils and cotton and tobacco inter ests of North Carolina and Virginia hlch were published in a part of the Tenth Census Report. r - : . As State Geologist he has done a great work for North Carolina as well as in what has already been accomplished, as well as in the benefits which will result to the State in the future. ' His corre spondence concerning the - mineral, mining and other economic interests of the State has been exceedingly large, and with men from all .parts or tne United States and Europe. The bene fits of this work to the State cannot be estimated. They have neyer been prop erly appreciated by the people of the Staw even those best informed. No one save Prof. Kerr .himself has known how muoh labor tbis correspondence has entailed upon him. Prof. Kerr has been ever awake to the development of the natural resources of the State and many and various have been, his under takings in fi this ! direction. ' He has labored conscientiously and persistent ly, often in ways that others know not of, for the accomplishment of this end. And it is to be hoped that when more is made known of this work for the State the future will have a more just appre ciation of it than either the present or the past. 'As a Christian gentleman, those who have known him best have admired him most. His heart was warm and gen erous, his mind was clear, active and progressive, his conscience ' keen and inflexible.. He was honest in every sense of the word. There was nothing of policy in his thought or action. On the contrary he was frank and out spoken, attunes even to a fault. In Prof. Kerr's death the State has met with an inestimable loss. In some respects be has liyed ahead of his time. He is, in his own department of work, more widely and favorably known, and deservedly so, than any man the State baa produced, or the State University has graduated. NEWS BY MAIL. Pkovidence, R. I., Aug. 11. A note of the Valley worsted . mills has gono to protest, and other financial trouble will probably fall upon the company. Asheville, N.. C, Aug. 11. This morning at 2 o'clock the main building of the Haywood White Sulphur Springs hotel at Waynesville, took fire from the kitchen and was totally destroyed. The furniture'was saved. There were about 200 guests at the hotel. They all escaped and saved every thing. The loss iH about 80,000; no insurance. Berlin, August 11. The National Gazette states that Prince Dolgorouki, aide-de-camp to the Czar and military attache of the Russian embassy at Ber lin, had gone to Gassion to arrange for the meeting between Emperor William and the Cza 'after the meeting of the latter and Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria at Kremzier. Gen. Possiet, the Russian minister, and officers are al ready at Warsaw making preparations for the Czar's visit to the Emperor of Austria and the Emperor of Germany. The army is being mobilized to occupy the lines of railway to be traversed by the Czar and to guard bridges, tunnels and orossings. The military precautions taken last year to protect the Czar against outrages by nihilists are being repeated on a larger scale, owing to the authorities having received information to the effect that the nihilists in Europe have recently shown great activity, and have plenty of money. London, August 11. The Times pub lishes a letter from Meshed, Persia, in whioh it is stated that the Afghans are acting in such a way as to give the Rus sians no possible excuse to make any attack. The writer says the Ameer's troops do not pass the frontier which Russia admits in Afghan; that they re frain from moving their troops towards the Russian positions and even from strengthening their own outposts. The letter also says the excitement among the Turcomans which was recently attributed by the. English to the alleged brutality of the Rus sian soldiery towards the native women is really due to the warlike preparations which Russia is making throughout the Turcoman territory .- CLIPPINGS. Base ball is now played in Siberia, the game having been introduced by the military authorities as. a recreative re ward fof meritorious convicts off duty. Copying letters in the Treasury i at Washington is now done by caligraph on separste sheets' of paper for binding in . volumes The hew process saves time and money, ' The six-feet gauge is rapidly disap pearing from American railways. The five-feet . guage in the South is also be ing replaced, and the probability is that the standard gauge wUl soon be a rule to whioh the narrow gauge will be the only exception. : : . ' A oitizen Of Kansas has in his posses sion the ballot he cast in voting for Gen. Grant in 1868 It was printed on. silk, and after it had been kept on file, as the law required, in the office Of the clerk, he obtained it, and will hand it down to his children as an heirloom. ' i The deepest sea soundings known were made in the Pacific,? where, the line reached down 4,575 : fathoms, and off the east coast of Japan 4,600 fathoms. Thus it seems that the greatest heights of mountains and the greatest depths of the ocean correspond ory nearly. A ' little knowledge" Is a dangerous thing among the Nevada Piute Indians. They recently; killed a; squaw and her little boy because sne oouid speak French, whioh- they thought was the language of a witch. . Her husband as sisted ar the sacrifice Tr his wife and A larmer near-auaaietown, n. - x ., who wee losing his potatoes by parties- digging them: up at night,, resolved to watch bis paten, ne and a ' friend. armed whh guns,' took a position near the patch, but both fell asleep? and, upon awaking, found, that two rows of potatoes had been, dug and, their guns were stolen. . i , The soldiers' monument at Atlanta ie to have statues of Grant, Lee, Johnston, and Sherman around the base of the column. Near the top will be two sol diers, the blue and the gray, clasping hands, and above tne globe that crownB the summit will be, the Goddess of Lib erty. The atruetntvwill-.be 180 fset in height and wilt cost K4000.- - , ; , In the northern part of Nebraska an Irish colony; called Jackson, lias been settled for twenty-nine fears, six of the colonists: of ' which ere" wroth, from $40,000 .to 1 139,000' each. 'They were very poor when they arrived there, and were so discouraged by the desolate appearance of the prairie and the lone liness and desolation, which effected the Irish so much that if they had the money they would have left. Fortu nately they had not. They had come up by steamers from the Southern States, where they had been digging ditches. . Among the professional journals compiled in Paris in MS. is the Son Ouiae, the organ of beggars, containing information of great utility in' their calling. - For a subscription of eight sous month they may consult it for a few minutes daily. It does not contain literature or politics, and all the articles are to the point. One may read: "To morrow at noon, funeral of a rich man at the Madeleine." "At 1, marriage of a clerk, no importance." "Wanted, a blind man who plays the flute," or "A cripple for a watering place." The village of Ems worth, in England, was recently visited by a remarkable plague of flieSf- which simultaneously covered an area of one mile. At some places it was impossible to move with out closing the eyes and mouth. Around every lamp in the town the speotacle was most curious. Attracted by the light, thick swarms abounded, and their buzz resembled that of a hive of bees. At the Postofflce, where the upper portion of the door is open for ventilation, and where necessarily the light is kept burning till the early morn ing, the insects covered the sorting boards, letters and bags, and had to be continually sweept off with brushes. Atone lamp they simply hung down in clusters. DIED. Tuesdav. at 11 nVlivlr n. m At Mia residence of his parents, on Pollock Street. Philnmnn. inn nf UnhAn TT and Sarah Lane; aged one year. The funeral will be held this (Thurs day) evening at 5 o'clock, from Neuse Street Methodist church. Friends and acquaintances of the family are invited t3 attend. COMMEKCIAL. Journal Oifici, Aug. 12. 6 P. M. COTTON. New Yobk, August 12. Futures closed easy. AuguBt, 10.42 November. 0.64 September, 0.97 December. 9.65 October, 9.68 January, 9.72 Spots firm; Middling 101-2; Low Middling 9 3-4; Ordinary 9 1-2. New' Berne market quiet. No sales. Middling 9 7-16; Low Middling 8 7-8: Ordinary 6 7-16. DOHESTIC miBKir, Cotton Seed 810. 00. Seed Cotton $3.50. Barrels Kerosene, 49 gals., 85c. Tubpentini Hard, 81.00; dip, $1.55. Tab 75o.a$l.5. Corn 60a7oo. Beeswax 20c. per lb. Honey 60o. per gallon. Beef On foot, 6o. to 7c. Country Haks 12c. per lb. " Lard 10c. per lb. Eooa 13o. per dozen. Fresh Pork 6o. per pound. Peanuts 60c. per bushel. Fodder 75o.a$1.00 per hundred. Onions $1.00 per bushel. Field Peas Hides Dry, 10o.; green So. Peaches $1.25 per bushel. Apples 30a50o. per bushel. Pears $75c. per bushel. Honey 40o. per gallon. Tallow 5c. per lb. Chickens Grown, 40a50c. ; spring 30a3Oc. Meal 65o. per bushel. Oats 40 cts. per bushel. Turnips 50c. per bushel. Wool 10al6o. per pound. Potatoes Sweet, 25a50c. Shingles West India, dull and n m inal; not wanted. Building. 5 inoh, hearts, $3.00; saps, $1.50 per M. - wholesale priors. New Mxss Pork $13.50. Shoulders Smoked, No. . 3, 16c.; prime, fto. C. R. and L. C. R. 6!c. Flour $4.00a6.50.i Lard 7Jo. by the tierce. Nails Basis 108, $3.50. , Sugar Granulated, 7io. Salt 90o.a$1.00 per sack. New Berner Theatre. A m DOLLAR PMUIAIGE fOIKc STANDARD DRAMATIC COMPANY - " ' COMAElfClNtt MONDAY, AUG. 17th, ' In the celebrated English Drama, ZII2GARA; " . ob ; Flowers of the Forest. Admission 8Se. Gallery c. Reserved asata, without extra ebarge, can be (eeured at K. H. Meadows' Drag Htore. Tbe mtnaeement with It dlatlnotlv nnrtar. stood that while they hare eut tha prima of auiuwiun mj oDe-roarin uieir. maai prices, there will be no cut In the performance. -p-.! aulSdtf ...... County Farm For Bent ' FOR YEAR 1886. 1 ,' .. .: . ' i The County Farm, situate abort ene atUe watt or Newborn, on Hoaee, road, will be rented for the ensuing year, M8S, to tha high eat bidder, at the Court House door, in New born, on MONDAY, the SEVENTH day of SEPTEMBER, 1885, at TWELVE O'clock, M. - Note with food teen ritr Will be required, i ' By order or Board of- Ooonty Coaualtaloa era of Craven County., , ; ." Job. nelson, V .. . ,.j ... . . ; - . amk . Sewbern, Aug. Stb, lafc- .' '-, eu7 dtd! : Trenton High Schccl, TUBS TON. W.c. - .'..;.' VAI.f. TS'IITU rf TBur. will h.hi. ;.V.,. Slut. Theachool Is 8TR1CTLV NONHKCTA. dree arcul"n'- Klv,DK fU Particulate, ad. W. K. MKWHORN. anl2dotw2t ITlndpal. NOTICE. ThejjMjterBi(!iicd, N. H. KirhBrdson. haaduly i c; , - i . i . .1 in i (i u enuiie oi Ann Rebecca Scott, rtec'rt, and hereby glvea .v hii permits lutviiig claims aiiftiiiHt the ornate of the mid Ann He. becca Scott to present ilioiu to tliogaid Ad mlolatrator. duly authenticated, lor payment on or before tin; 1st .Iny f Aimuat, ItBW.or elue this noll.e will be pleaded in baraT re covery. Persons Indebted to the estate must pay without delay. ' N H. UICHARHHON. Administrator. CHAS. C. !LAUK, AUorney New Heme. N. C, July iist, 1KS6 w Assignee's Sale! By virtue of my appointment as as Bienee of U. S. MAnrc i u-m on close up said truRt, The Entire Stock of U. S. MACE, " in the Storo in the Market Dock, in the City of New Berne, AT COST FOR CASH. SAID STOCK CONSISTS OF Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Varnish, Hardware, Canvass, Ship Chandlery, Etc. Parting denirin(? a Bargain will find it to their interoat to call at onco and ex amine said Stock. JOHN WALKER, auO d4w Assignee of U. 8. Mace. X.1L BROCK, LIVERY STABLES, ON MIDDLE STREET. - Good Horse. c;0od Vehicles for hire Cheap. u7 dtf NEW BKRNE. W. C. BENJ. W. DAVIS, Commission Merchant AND (SHIPPER OP BANANAS.) Southern Fish, Fruits AND Produce a Specialty 106 Barclay St. NEW YORK. - CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. PROMPT RETURNS MA UK. - ,eNfw,X?K KKFRRKNCEfl-K. O. BlaRkford 75 to 7 Fulton Fish Markot; Drohan a w?f,1,n2l4.Wu"n,n8ton Bt-: Wm. Uaafrer Co., H2 Harrison at. WILMIHOTON (N. C.) RKfKRKNrai . K. Rlirruaa Petal. l.... l.i . r. ton dimming A Co ; W. K. Davis A Hon. nviv uoin Aurora Academy, AURORA. N. C. The FALL SESSION of thlH Fclinol will open August 31st, 1885. This Institution is situated in n growing and progressive tow'n. a T. HONNEU. Prlurlrml. Una. R. II. LANE, Mnslc Teacher. For board, tuition and term, aond t R. T. UONNEU. Principal, auglOdwtf Aurora. N. CJI J.B. Whits. J. C. Ktiikhiihik, Cnrrltuet Co., N. C. Norfolk Co , Va. White, Etheridge& Co., Commission Merchants,' 110 WATER 8TB.EKT, NORFOLK, VA. flneetal Unntinn ,UAM ... .1. I.ivi TON, CORN, PEANUTS, POTATOES, and all Kaferenoea: Williams nros., B. R, White Br. Marine Bank, Norfolk, Va, juiWdwty Boarders Vcnfcd. At BEAUFORT, N. C, on Main street, near the Ocean View fiotol, . ' 'A Mrs. WALTER DUNN, . Will socommodate Boairdora with com fortable rooms and excellont Table on Seasonable Terms.' Ur n3 dw9w - . '-''V ' J. V. WILUAUS, .Ui . headquarters' for, , 1 " Pork, Side Meati liard
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
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Aug. 13, 1885, edition 1
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