lirMl HttltivtUwaMT ;V xt -n i.a,:ij. Kn av Vau . "iun rise. 6:20 I Length of day, ' H?ni -settr, 8 :88 1 1 hours. It minute. itymnjisaUa!,, J . j I, s J . - i .... i.. . i h finanrKea rvn A T o BmT i HQS. WjJfTKP-orA- ganilenaan who has considerable experience as it nierchmt i4pte nituatioa in a dry Kood stored fs WlnteglttrJwork for moderate lyiBori f onhet" mf ovtnn lion epplj.eAJareiUi. office. . BathiDr8aiUmttl,O0, summer neck imr. Whiu Iavn Dude Bowl. Sum war Uodarwew.Tan'nie Shirts, Plaited Bosom Shirts. Teuriet Bags, etc., at ' " OOWABP JONES. 'Ko IraU South of Wilmington. 1 Mr. S. S. Street returned from Dao- thF Dssnoofatic judicial convention of the id district will meet at Weldon The steamer Stout arrived yesterday qaeaotpg, with a fill cargo of general merchandise ,.. - The steamer Uaroliiuj left for Snow Hill "yesterday evening with a full carte pf fperil raereheadiaa. We call attention to. Mies Mollie Heath school notice. She is a good teaottr and worthy of patronage. Mr. O"! W. Houston, of La Orange, U Ipth5ejr exhibiting eeme very fine specimens of wax work. He ie a teacher -Jt,. Jf,G. 1Mhhob announces his readiness tb deceive cotton and other produce 6ri conaignm'snfc. Be keep thoroughly posted on the markets add knowebow Jo. obtain the beat price. Wfih Latham from the first district, Bhnsnoee.fipin the second, and Mo Clammy from the third, the interest of anafcej-n Hrt Oejottria and the State s lfce will be in good hands in the Fif. titfhtBboH. .i 1 Ws arnrtqjatetod taaanaenoe that J. ByftHtrtN owe of the- BepueHcfcn ftm d (dates for" Congress, will address the cltbieafof even eotrety at James City oa tdlmjk alibi,' Sept. ' 10th at Fort lUrnweU.'l&fAir'aV. Sept. 11th, and at New AerMSeinrday night, Bept- 11th. iwluma ii n in Imut . ruWItosa. -. llo.followJng delegates left for the .;t&Mki(. yeetardai:" Maj. John Uogbtes H. R. Brytn, Esq., Get! & D Hancocks Clement Manly, Esq., Htn C.V:,for,'Y. JL Pelletior, Esq., Mfs Ar tt' Holloa, M. DcW. Stevenion, Esq ft-M. Simmons, Esq., Messrs. Tbos. Daniels and TJ. W. "Wahab. Thil ii Ji atwnfc delegation; one that would reflect honor upon Craven oounly in any contention. : - dition of another teocwer-to the AfUt; merly a urflf 1AMh4, and Ute. 1 6he .wjcije taeistaoc in the hlgoJradejtU. L ,rVr..?, . r hf folTbwlng is the list of -leachnre no' ' VoMM- Ft, , -i Ferret Jl&lel Bto. el J Ch4 wiok1 Boltiatar, GKtnr and 'Alien,-and Vt, aitfee'Thoinas. rl ' ' 'Id reoaoniaaci fe rarge pat- S&iSSiSl . rc iyd a dtplamaj irouHonr graded 4 1 thif 4T not?irUnd In the front rata at ine cuurts. i.ni,r.n - .We'feel thAtiliiA great miafortune 'tht tfetehecl Cannot be tdBdactea tt It hae WetotoiVtiWto1 all within the chopl.4liFtiict..,Te.Popteia: Cptiit hjtf decided aralnst trt u the toattef 6f tait!c 1 aXl Ahee piareJffbeed ' to mil S hiont -Wtn US tirW it oi:;ati4!:teut6i4htr4eletf,to eoUtftt it chargthg- Wtloir, for thOeo. Jtowarf Co!' adTerUatog h! tT"4ea.' TV ith soon, a MtMiing ati c ; UacteH as hatt the r.?-- 1 '. l x rl Tatrooage. and vetrvt I- rr ,11 l-e a larre upresenta tc! at u t, x.-. t,a XloiOaivUic) UJL - At t U di et ! f c J..' urrh,.. iWeiUit-wsy t. W, KeM,. Ur. Fredri,h R r. tsa Vw, Wiiaoe, a : i .-a '.rr Were j rport towit -T-"yJ and they hare the -s . f, t'-.eir ' numtroui 1 we ,'fi.i i, those of . lie iDTIt in T'.arintia." - -V( , . . J r f" ' V. Br lllflini HAMTH A W Ik i 4 jkJegr&mvfrom "Wfleon.yeaterdiy evening informs us that the Democratic oonrention nominated by acclamation F. H.jaunons,J$q., as a candidate for tSectooa to the Fiftieth Oongreea. In this convention did. welt :Ha Dewno- crU, and the wholf people o he dis trict, naye in nlm .a candidate worthy of their support, and we predict for him a triumphant election in November. Fnrnifold -ttcLJndetl ; Stmrnonit wsi born in Jones county on tbq farm near Quaker bridge which was then and Is now owned by his father, Mr. F. O. Simmons in the- year 1854. He received his early education at the country schools while yet on the farm, and was prepared for college by Prof. Joe. Kineey, now of La Orange. He entered Trinity College in 1370 and graduated therefrom with honor in June, 1873; studied law under the late A.. O. Hubbard and obtained license of the Supreme court to practice before he was yet 21. In 1874 he married Miss Elisa Humphrey, daughter of Col. L. V7. Humphrey of GoldaborO, who died in April, 1883, leaving three children. Recently he married Miss Belle Qibbs, daughter of ex -Sheriff Oibbs, of Hyde county. In 1875 Mr. Simmons wag the candi date of the Democratic party of Jones county for a seat in the constitutional oonyention of that year. Ilia opponent was the late Jacob F. Scott, one of the shrewdest and most popular men of hU party of that day. The county being strongly Republican, of course it was a forlorn hope, but he entered into the oanvaM with such vigor and determina tion, and discussed the issues of the day with such force and eloquence that his commendation was on the lips of every one. In the winter of 1875-76 he removed to New Berne and began the practice of law, and in the fall of 1870 the De mocracy of Craven called him to the front to help lead the fight in the famous Tilden campaign. As a candidate for the Houbo of the General Assembly, he made a thorough canvass of the county and aided materially in bringing out the Democratic vote of that year. In 1877 he removed to Ooldaboro and formed a co-partnership with Hon. W. T. Faircloth in the practice of law. In In 187S he returned to New Berne and formed a co-partnership with the late Judge M. E. Manly and his son Clement Manly, under the firm name of Manly, Simmons & Manly. Since the death of Judge Manly the firm has been known as Simmons ac Manly. Mr, Simmons' uocees as a lawyer is well known throughout this section. He has deservedly enjoyed a fine practice from the beginning. 'Whatever he un dertakes he does with an earnestness that is bound to snoeeed. lie is a man of great . force, of character; of broad and liberal views; of decided political opinions and a sound Democrat. If elected to the fiftieth Congress he will represent the 2d district ably and well. BRIKPa. A Chicago' mdy says she can jump from the Brooklyn bridge and will for Ground has toeen broken at Richmond for the erection of a city hall to cost half a million dollars. Five men wore killed and two injured by an explosion in the Fair Lawn col liery at Scran ton, Pa. An anarchist den in Chicago was raided by police, in whifh-three prison- - l2-. -port. . eol4 cold wave maamg this way from the. North- woat'i Montana reeorde sewi pentose tot M degteea 'and : Wisconsin a light frost. . Geronimo has seat word to Geo. MUee . Jhat he to '"willing to arrange terms of peaces Whenever the old chief and his hand get into- eloee qnar- tern they are4 quick to "offer surrender, but when; free are bold and defiant, ' ; i torn Toledo (Ohio) Evening Dtt speakl in. very complimentary terms ef M agents of ! Spruce street; New Tork Utr, we nave nan ootutderabie nuai nean with thin Arm. and find them reli able and clever gentlemen to deal with. nr. peegwicKj tmw American special agent te examine the Cutting ease, has arrived at the City Of Mexico and was tfve-nj (Mvefj( hrtr-ered Wpit)rv ,H witf-ee-arer witn Minister jacrsou mere -and make therongh -mtestigUesi Into theMesioan laws bearing upon the ease. From thence be will -proceed to -Chihuahua and Paso delKorto. -"--' 'b'i '" ' snt sil.M-f ' J ;k Jki Wi ftkweriwtf.1 Jnv I. . li f noon ht, ti.Xi UArcn it vmj. b ! For fitte T"r my liver and kidney have been badly affected-not a dar m that time without the be4ftcbe. . Since udini tb n. "B, B.i-nolriic Bieod Bah k MveibeeiienUr1yreneved:ao rin, no trout' i ft 'l. 4 I Jfeel ai mmi like atxn.;.-r )rul I am one ' Ttnnt the rTttt advocate of B.B. j ;t, arid yon are t l-berty to nee my r (at, i r!-:. V. II. WAT. : w :.. ,r,i tf k. i;; Duffy Tns karUiqnahe -SheeK. lite (opto or . oonreraation on our streets throughout the day yesterday was the earthquake shock felt oa the night before. It was a severe shock and for a few minutes "created oonsid arable excitement. Those who had re tired "were aroused and were bewildered by the rumbling noise and the violent shaking of their buildings. For nearly an hour after the shock, ladies of ad joining buildings stood at the upper windows and conversed wftli wonder about the strange occurrence; the guests at the Central Hotel and Gaston House rushed out when the buildings began to' quiver, some of them, who were about retiring, very unceremoniously; on Ute sidewalks groups were tone seen discussing the causes, history and effects of earthquakes generally. HOW IT BTBUCK THE PKOPLE. Thomas H. Davis was on the street going to a drug store for a prescription for his mother, who is sick. He states that he first heard a noise, then felt a trembling of the earth, followed by a rolling sensation which so benumbed his knees and legs that be required help to sit down. A part of this he thinks was owing to the excitement it produced in himself. A number of gentlemen were sitting in Mr. R. N. Duffy's drug store at the time the shock was felt; they made for the street with but little ceremony or standing on the order of going. The clock at the Southern Express office was stopped by the vibration at three and a half minutes to 10 o'clock. The clock at Green, Foy & Co. banking bouse was also stopped. Mrs. Ferebee's cjock was also stopped, while Capt. E. B. Roberts has one that had sternly re fused to run for two years instanta neously started and has been running on time ever since. At Dr. Clark 'b the family thought it was him practicing with dumb bells. Half a dozen or more persons thought it was "the dog scratching fleas off of himself. " One went so far as to go to the door to stop the dog, but found he was not there; then thought some one up stairs had a fit and had fallen on the floor with jfearful convulsions, and starting up there was greeted with inquiries from that locality ss "what is the mat' ter?" Upon the subject of file there was a diversity of impressions. Some thought others had a fit, and one or two thought they themselves had a fit. Four men were sitting together; two of thm , thought it was the other two shaking their feet, while the shaking feet parties thought a very large wagon was ooming down the street. Some thought they were dying, and but one that we have heard of expressed a desire to die; but getting bo immedi ate assistance in that direction, expe rienced a change of mind and showed visible Bigna of wanting to live A gentleman and lady were walking up Broad street and their attention -was very slightly attracted to the event nntil a number of persons greatly excited brought it forcibly before them A gentleman who had recently moved into a newly-bought house thought it was haunted, but on examining the window and seeing it quivering like an aspen leaf , at once advised his wife and guest tq try another move, which was unanimously agreed to and acted upon in light marching order. A great number of persons were or dered to quit shaking the bed, and in some casee warm discussions ensued as to who was shaking' It, but when the disputants discovered that it was more i one ordinary shake, each struck out Jor the tomes stacles of the dwel ling- As ia valid ladr who had been oa bod ail the day previous in an attic room with an attack of rheumatism, waa the first of the howeehold ia the kail oa tfc first floor of the dwelling. ' " HOW TH1 Bill KB STOOD IT. Mr. C E. Foy and Book-keeper Styron were at work, in the banking house of Green. For & Co. Ther deputed at short notice through alt open window, waving the three-ton safe to care for itself. Up to last account it is uncer tain, which went between the window frames, first, the aahiex os the beokjbniidiagsi Keener. . , ! At tl Katmnal teak, fa the baiiding lemporarQx used ,; by? that, institution, Mr. J." Bi W Catreway,- boox-keeper was writing late than msnal, it being tha amd of the month. Be eouffhtref nge ia tt street and rushed! around to th JoWKfti ffic ttfletra the new. returning oon efbtr ihis deslj for the evening. ; ,m;tv.tid itjrt.je .- ring that two' trains, ran? together M Wei don and csueed the Jar.,'.1 1 i ,T tf de people wonldt he deia1 good aM de ticce," said an' old colored lady; "sey woulJa't be aieered when deeo things come along." "Dey weuldat eoae" aaid tnother. in reply,' "d things wonidn j eome. te) skeer people ef dey were dot' good alt de time. ' Mr. Geo. Henderson says thererere eight distinct shocktvall alight' after theeoondvand occurring sttesimin-J utesapart., "v . .f;, Mr. Johnathao IItM:who'' has felt many shocks befqrj on the Pacific ooast, says the course of this was frprn South toottfir "V -tf ' J . . . uspt. Tbos. B. Howard says, s stmuar shook was f sit here iri l83.; Mr. Geret Vyne, of HavelooJt, writes us that the shock waa felt there for near three minutes, and that the sway of the buildings was very pexoepeiMe and they appeared to rock North and South. There was considerable difference of opinion in regard to the time the first shook lasted, varying from a bajf to five minutes. The dock at the Sonthera Express office stopped at 31 minutes to ten, and the depot time keeper struck ten just as the shock subsided; the severest of the shock however did not last exceeding a minute. Among the colored people up town great excitement prevailed . Divine services were being conducted at Rev. John Johnson's church and when the shock was felt the audience rushed out, many of them screaming iidly. There was not much sleep among tbem during the night. BaeklCK's iralu tialve. Thi Best Salvk in the world for Outs, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Sau Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Krupbons, and positively cures piles. St is guaranteed to give'perf ect gatuf ac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. for sale by -Hancock lSrtw. ly J'ha WUhb Cauvulloa. pecial to the Jouun al. Hugh F. Murray, of Wilson was made chairman of the convention. Major John Hughes placed F. M. Siuimuns in nomination in eloquent and becoming remarks, whioh was seconded by Judge Gilliam and John Woodard in appro priate tributes. Capi. Darden moyed that the nomination be made by accla mation, whioh was done' amid great applause. C. E. Foy. Krvsa ike Quar City. Philadxlphia, June 1, 1885. My daughter. Lvdia Ann, has been affected with a running sore under her ohin, which has proven very stubborn, Hoe nas used four bottles or a. a. a., and I am glad to say that all ulcers have healed. 8he is enjoying good health and a fine appetite. I attribute her cure to the B. B. B. Botanic Blood Balm. Taoa. A. Pickett, No. 401 N. 48th St., Philadelphia. Bold In New Berne by R. N. Duffy and E. H. Meadows. THE EARTHQUAKE RaLMQH, N. C, Sept 1, 1888. News received from nearly all points in this State shows that no damage has been done beyond throwing down of chimneys and breaking .glass, and crookery. Shock was felt '$re as greatly as at any place. It threw down about twenty chimneys. Several, per sons went into convulsions 1 through fright. West of here the shock was not o violent. There were shocks at about 1 o'clock, 4 o'clock and 8:8Q o'clock this morning and at about 5 o'clock and 5:15 o'clock this afternoon. Great fear is yet expressed by many people of recurrence tonight of shocks. Reports from Charles ton show that perhaps fifty people have been killed, and that loss of property aggregates five million dollars. Reports of great disaster at Columbia, 8. C, were received this afternoon. It is there stated that over fifty people bad been killed,, and that the city was in ruins. A dispatch received tonight ap pears to modify tki The thocksiwsrp unquestionably 'the 'most ' violefiY on record in the Atlantiq Sutes, and were VJnrfnlV vnna than ant nnial In Call. forV-UaM-l Idering aid and asking If be needs It F. A. OLDS. Charleston, 8. C, Sept. 1. The earthquake here was, terrific. Houses fell on every side. Great consternation rnnilad. The streets were filled with thawCraaJnournlngitheMbple who were utterly "unmanned at the terrifld oataetrophe. Sixty people were inatantlT killed: mAnr others injured. The streets are filled with the rains of and - f aibn eiumners. Fires occurred in several places and the city 1 u) now on fire, bat ander control1. .;7) ui! i Saw yoxk, sepc, r.-rne pomt irom whioh the railroad lead Lag into Charlssv Ion the Savannah & Charleston railroad, about eighteen smise atstant rrotn tne citTr- It-ia probable that part of the tree-: aader water tnst nas oean pov srei th eaM.o kwris) hvthfc SAVARKitfOa.., Sep J a. m. Three distinct shocks have keen felt here since midnight. The iat occurred st 8:40 a. m. All the. shanks were of short duration and not violent. .The people are stilt greatly, excited and are sitting oat in the sweets aad sqnarea,or crowding . around tbe telegraph ' and newfTper office.. No vordcan,b ob taiol from Cuarleston.i ne general imr reioa te tt&t the eity has suffered seriously, t tt is supposed that the table under the Ashley river ia broken. At gybes wlad, at the..mouio of the Savannah river,, the lenses in the light house were destroyed. ' The' people on the, island telephone-to thia efcyt&al the are in a state of terror, t ' rim mum mm, in mw mmh wj imlwi mvm m L M ute innaDitanis are land. The island wave in August, 1881, and the peoplol fear a similar disaster now. : Charleston, 8. C-, gepfc, l.-rA earthquake, such as. has never before been known in tne bistory of tins city, swept over Charleston last nigent snoroy after 1 o'clock, causing more loss and injury to property and f sa more lorn of life than the cyclone of the rear before. ge city is wrecked, the streets are ea rn be red with masses of fallen brick and tangled telegraph and telephone wires. Up to an early hour it was al most impossible to pass from one part of the city to another. The first shook was by far most severe. Most of the people with their families passed the night in the street, which even this morning are crowded with people afraid to re-enter their homes. More than sixty people were killed and wounded, chiefly colored. Among the whites killed and fatally injured are: M. J. Lynch, Dr. R. Alexander Hammond, Ainsley Robeson. f ire broke out in different parts or the city, immediately after the earth quake, and some are still burning, but there Is no danger of it spreading. There is no way of leaving the city at present. Twlegranis from cities in south Caro lina and Ueorgia say the utmost con sternation prevails on account of tne non-receipt of newi from Charlenton, and many fear that a terrible calamity has happened. Like au Earthquake Explosion of Dynamite and (Junpowder. Chicauo, Aug. 29. A severe shock like that of an earthquake was felt in every portion of the city this morning. The cause was the plosion of the Ijarlin & Rand Powder Company 's mag azine ou tne Arcner road, near the Mc Connie k Reaper Works. It is supposed that a bolt of lightning struck tha mag azine, and the concussion exploded the dynamite and the gunpowder stored there. The shock caved in the two magazines of the Oriental Powder Com pany and those belonging to the Warren Powder Company, the Uaaard, the Du- pont and the roroite dynamite com panies' storehouses. The .fHtna, which stood about three-quarters of .a mile dis tant, was unharmed. The Laflin & Rand Company magazine was the only one which exploded. The house of John Ouhl, a driver from the Oriental Powder Company, was flat tened upon the ground, a mass of kind ling wood. Ouhl and his wife were fatally injured, and Carrie Era worth, their servant girl, was metaatiy killed, The residence of Mrs.' Derma waa de m? fLf molished in the same way. Mrs. Derine had her leg broken and her body bruised but suffered no other injuries. She was dragged out from under the ragged heap of splinters and taken to the hospi tal. A farmer, whose name' could not be learned, was driving past toward the city when the explosion oocurved. Ui skull was fractured and his bach badly lacerated by blocks of stone. Be died tonight. The horse he was driving was instantly killed and the wagon smashed to bits. The whole side of Justice Michael Tearney 'a house, near the Oriental magazine was ripped off and the roof caved in, but not one of the household was injured. Little Tom Tearney, 9 years old, was lifted bodily from the back stoop on to an outhouse about ten feet from the dwelling. The outhouse collapsed, but the boy came out unhurt. Several people received slight wounds from falling stones and a number of barns were riddled. The scene of the disaster was crowded with people this afternoon. Where the Laflin & Rand powder works had stood was a deep hole in the clay. Not a ves tige of the building remained. Over the prairie for half a mile were scat tered bits of stone and slivers from the roof timbers. A block of stone, mid to weigh nearly 150 pounds, went through the wall of the Grand Trunk round boose, about a mile north, and another dropped through the roof, smashing in the oah ef an engine. The Chicago and Alton round house, nearly a mile north east, was riddled with small fragments and svery window smashed to pieces. John Shannon, aged 10, and Willie and Dan Kelly, lads of about the same age, found a oan of black powder on the prairie, about three-quartern of a mile ras .sum not, to know its eon tents. 1 They pried it open, and the powder exploded, sooroniag them severely about the face and hands. They may lose their sight on account of their barns. , Throughout the southern and western portions of the city damage to the ex tent of many thousands ef dollar was done by the explosion. Plate glass windows ill along state and Halstei Streets aad on Clark, Madison and sev eral other streets fully six miles distant were demolished. , Two '-plate glass windowe in the rmerdt ef Trade build-ins-, and one in the John won building opposite were destroyed. The oongratu. lattonaat Su Patrick's Chnroh, oorhar of Desplaines and Adams street, and at tfae Jcsmfe ofcureh on West Twelfth street, were panto stricken and stam peded. At the . Jesuit' church a boy named Fitzgerald- waa thrown from s waxtew oy tne concussion." - jV-.-! .ft i flia... i ,11 in ..' mi-iCHlT tHatlnir? that other stodeote wilr be taken at my studio., at, the, Baptist- Pareonata.i In struction will be given in Drawing aad Painting.-ia , Oil and Water Color; crayon urawiag front ntoaeia ana rrem Lifefrom 6 till Life, and in the Priaor- Painting- and Other Decorative works,! for which orders are solieftftdt ..!.t Tttl augsdlw j am, A. M. Wbtttikld, A Lares Una of India tineas. Cheek ! loo. Torchon. MrdlcJ. EgTpUaa Ortasv J.'fcKZ3.'. I " Om raioea. REPORT OF THE C0H9IT1QI , or THE HATIOHAL MBK At New Berne, in the State, of Kotta Carolina, si the close 'of wueiaessi Auk. .-187. 18c. RESoL'RCES Luuns and diaoounu - (140,529.10 Overdrafts 1.(178.08 U. 8. Bond to secure circu lation .... 100,000.00 Other stocks, bonds and mort gages .... ll.M9.85 Due from appromi reserve agenus .... 1.18117 Due from other National Banks .... H. 578. 54 Due from State Banks and bankers 1 .785.06 Real estate, furniture, and fixtures ... 21.788.00 Current exiwuxttH &ud taxes paid .... 416.i7 Premium paid 1114ft Chec ks and other cash ltema S90 M Bills of other Banks i,2aT.O0 Fractional paper currency. nickel , and centr 50.01 Hpecie ... 36,871 60 Logal tender uotee 85,300.00 liedemptiou fund with 17. S Treasurer (ft per cnt of cir culation) 1,500.00 Due from V. H. Treasurer, other than 5 per cent re demption fund 540.00 Total fwos.tmio INABILITIES Capital tx'k paid in - $100,000.00 40,000.00 18,108.87 Surplus fund Undivided proritn National Bank iioIih ,ut- standing Individual depoditu subject to check .... Demand certificate f do- 00,000 .00 109,141.08 10,08101 4,84180 1.0M.W posit, Due to other National Bunks Due to .State Banks and banker ... Total, . S8,B80.1 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, I uountt or en van, I, Jno. HcoiiKS. President of the above-named bank, do solemnly ffiost of my knowledge and belief. Jno. Huuhks, President. Ku I won boil and sworn to before me this 81st day of August, 1880. K. W. CAHPlllTCa, Clerk Superior Court. Craven Oountv. Correct Attest: Wasbinotdn Buy AM, I- H. Cltler, J Directors. 1HOS. UANIKla, School Notice. MIHH EMILY yKBEBKK wtU Nsum bar School (on Broad street) BKPf. U, law. ep aid School Notice. MI 68 tfOLUB HEATH wtll'ropn fcr Bekooi at her hmMuw on Peltaek stress, MONDAY, SEPT. SWh. IS. Terms! Primary, U.l Mr month; aortaee in. lent. 81. &U per mouth. sstiSaiw COTTON iBRQ&SR. CkHtslK-ntnenta SellcIleL Oinoe at W. U. BRYAN'S, on Mfltalk mat street, two doors wet of Qreen fey a Oa.s eePmaaDt attoattnik mm tnaaabai OotsonandMhsrnoduoe,, . sMtdwiBV . i.i i, Miss FAKNIE a. MTnina- W "' -' ' w. ep sarty in SfwpmMs yst; nr- acinars apply at the realdsnes of Ma. JIVO,' ion: l expect to open aeeheel at the Chesel ek l"T mxtn of Boptenhac amteeibM te UmM rflwT" eseorains; te Uua0 sisasileation at U Qradeit HeboSl fmm us rwetiataeBlxttiOiaee. ' - r":! jTemMtl,eo per month. - T'.' i. . aulSdtd Mas. MABT V. WlLLlAJtB. . For Sale, r i Lii. n . - i,iJl k- "inraw Lrweuma; on norta suie ac Broad street, between George and Rama streets, containing six rooms In perfect; - ordea. Ooed well nf in: Mai. Address P. O.Bo, Ko. Vth e llmdl E.II.& rv a- (pmVensI s nsssaj J Coxruiiioil . n rf iaiwi lifj &n jhI: cultural Cncsileiliuw: .. iS . . tl i , .LnairmeetieaeeeV&f.' ' -V pmess atserner gettoek enfl imM t't aad Vb lea INairt, -i tiMtrt .r m- ! iU. J lii.) I VUlMMirhatakl.w. . I jr ey smt m i, by at tZxwZI. & and v aT!""" I waUtmm wtit 1 1 A-' .. . M, JAI stfeett MntfT Of HtM0Cat. Illd k l,tta ST ft ll r a

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