- 3 USHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT TIIE DAILY JOt EN al t.tr ui nmuih Dcl.veml toraty wbaeriber. WE?kT? VrXAL h p.UUd I NoIb-mi.iI tlrrii"v-t or Dvallw not to ex . . - . " - - . . I ceed ten lines will te inerlel trve. All duioudt mutter will be vhargnl 5 eta. per line. Paym'M fur transient dvrrtiw'iueiits must fee mauie in advance. Urgi-lar advertise nienta will be colltx-iwl proiup'.y at th end of eack month. Cuunuunimions containine uewi ot suffi cient Dublic luterest are noiicited. .No ooui tnuuiuauuii ion iuum be expected to be publuhed I tui;in objectionable personaliuet, or i, the name of the author. Articles , that coutai -witlihukii Die name longer lliau lialt culuuiit mut be paid for. Auy pwxm Iccliiij; agrievr . at any anony rnouiicuHiuiuiiieatiiiit van ti a i i the name of th author liy application nt i lus office auJ howiug wherein lilt- giU-vanec t iisut. THE JOURNAL E. E. HARPER, C. T- HANCOCK, Proprietor. - Local Reporter. . hi tin 'tfirt'i nt'Jtu i . ut . w Un ite Jut'., GEEEN -HAIRED PEOPLE. Ihe Transformation Worked b7 Cer.ain Ores on Nevada Miners. k The patrons of a down town hotel in , Sau I- ram iseo, lmu li frequented by i farmers ami mincr, wen considerably i Startled on Saturday attcrtooti. when a . tall individual with luiu'h' urcen hair, .. .H-hlskt i- and evilirow- walked up to the ilv-k an. I calmly registered ;u t'harits AV. I.ii;ir, from Lnnu', Nev. 'ihe i ierk, used to almost any kind of strange visitors, !ppcd short in the , midd;c o! a senteiu e inlended as an an swer to an iii(uii iiiLT uruet w ho wanted to know win u the '. o'clock train for tho north wo. dd leave, and with a pu.led look t ved the verdant arrival. The loungers around the lobby wc.'j attracted one by one. and gard with wonderment at the grei n ha:'.cd stranger, who, un conscious ut the scu-ation he created, quietly asked to be shown to a room. A repoiter ventured shortly afterward to interview Mr. Long, determined to find out what business a man with such a queer-coioied hirsute appendage had outside a dime museum, and received the loiluwing explanation from the emerald Lued individual's own lips: "I have lor some time been working in the Martin White mine, at Ward, Ncv., and what ap ears strange to you is a common sight where I came from. We " have lots of green haired people there. Every shade of green, from the darkest bottle color to the brightest grass-green, is represented in the men's hair at that mine. The reason for it is connected with the ore. The latter is ba-c and it is necessary to roast the whole ol it. During ihe roasting process nu disagree able fumes a.-c observable, yet the hair, the beards and the eye brows of all the men engaged about the works are soon dyed a bright and permanent green. "In s ires of Nevada mines ores of various kinds arc smelted and roasted, but at none of them is either the hair or tho beard of the workmen changed from its natural hue. "It is saiil that there is less arsenic in the ore of the Martin White than in that of many other mine., old -inciters say arsenic has no such effect on the hair, and all declare that the green color im parted to it is due to the presence id' some unknown and mvsteriotis mineral or metal. i " W'lr.te. ligh' or sandy beard and hair take :. grass-green, whereas black or dark btc. n hair is dyed a deep bottle green. The hair i- not injured by the. color. I n' retains its original strength nnd stillness." This i she manner in which Mr. Long explained his extraordinary appearance, lie will leinain here lor some time, and, even if he escapes the ever-vigilant agents fo;-'dime museums and is not hired as a freak for one of these establishments, he will certainly create a sensation on tho public Erects every time he ventures out for a walk. 1 San Francisco Chronicle. Schoolboys of Hexico. A public school in Mexico sounds like n large beehive. During one half the day the children all study aloud, each ono trying to make as much noise as possible. The rivalry thus stirred up is relied upon to make each one look at his book and learn sc nu thing, whether he wants to or not. The young children generally are quite as bright ::s those of the l uited States, and many a little Indian boy whose father can give him nothing to cat but plain takes of corn or wheat with a few beans and peppers c'.m read, write and spell as well as the boys of our own country. One of the n.o-t interesting things to a strange boy in Mexico is the regiment of the School of Correction at the City of Mexico. This is composed of nearly a thousand naughty boys wh , instead of being sent to jail or allowed to run the streets, are sent to s' hool and trained to be soldiers. They have n full lield uniform with little knapsacks and little rilles, and a brass band of some twenty pieces, which plays pretty good music, although none of the players are over fourteen years old, and few of them over twelve. The regiment is divided into compan ies according to the .c of the boys, the largest being made up of boys from twelve to fourteen, aud the smallest of boys from seven to eight. All the officers except the colonel and the leader of the band are small boys, and some of the officers are not more than ten years old. iicsides these there . is a battalion of boys too small to carry arms. These, too, are all in uniform, anil nave a unnti oi nine uugicrs. V" Every week or two all these little , . soldiers have a parade in the streets in r full dress, when they go through their : drill, marching and countermarching, I and making all the military movements, ''' both private soldiers and officers looking .: as earnest and proud as thoso of an army just returned from victory. Youth's fA Companion. The school attendance in the South "' has inoreased from an averago of 16.4 1 . per cent, oi tne population in low to an j1 jivewge of i8.7 per cent, of it in 1890. DBOWIIZD IJTDS 07 TLOBIDA. TIwTMtAmTUUi Rapidly Be- tag SselAlmed. J f? v; .1 I .. ... . - 1. 1 . ... .,. being sweetest of any that are sold in the Eastern markets. It has also become famous as a wiuter health resort. But its greatest distinction of all will bo the vast area of arable lands which it will be able to offer to enterprising men in the course of a lew Tears. A verr conslder- b, f s'0UtherB F0TfoA consists , I a , , . oflands overflowed or subject to over- flow swamp lands, in short, for tho most part, that at otic time wore the fastnesses of the Indians, who were not driven out of them until after several loti and bloody war. The massacre of Dade and his rotnmand, caught in an ambush, rivaled that of the masacro of Custer aud his command by the Sioux at a Inter date. These overflowed lands, with their lakes, of which Lake Okee chobee alone covers an area of 10Q0 square miles, were ngarucd as practically worthless, and efforts were made by the state to sell a part of them tj I capitalists who would drain and I improve them. Four millions of acres were offered to an English syndi cate at 25 cents per acre, but before the papers w ere drawn up there was a change j of administration and the contract was. repudiated. These -1.000. 000 of acres ( we're subsequently bought by Mr. Hamil- ; I ton Disston, of Philadelphia, and other Capitalists, who joined with him in the ! purchase. They were not the men to let ! I their property lie idle. Surveys were ; . made and a scheme of drainage adopted : which has been iu progress lor the last j ten vears. hat mitrlit tie called a eon structton companvwas organized, which "u,uil" lu,r' " agreed to umleitaketheworkof reclama- Innox, and tho worthy colonel suc tion it given a -rant of evcrv alternate cded m shooting away ouc of the square 'mile if redeemed. The under- i Duke's curls. It at once became the growth was cleared off, the lines of drain- 1 correct thing to wear a curl on one side age canals marked out and steam dredges of the temple only. set to work. These dredges are excava- wben Fox, the hrst of Quakers, was tin" canals from 8 to 12 feet in depth s'"ing in church aud the preacher said and rrom4()to 110 feet w ide, and the 1 anything he did not like he moved sol wnrk has so far progressed as to afford ! emnly, put on his hat aud kept it on un-passa-'C for low draft steamers from ! i' the disagreeable remarks coucluded. Charlotte harbor, on the sulf coast, to 1 Thus arose tho Quaker custom of wearing Kissimmee Citv, at the head of lake Kaliga. Th'is far the construction com pany, with its working headquarters in the t entral basin of the southern half of the peninsula, has received deeds for 1. 150,000 acres for the work it has done. Settlers are already taking up the lards that have been reclaimed and many more will follow as the work pro ceeds. Four thousand square miles have already been drained. An idea of the j magnitude of the scheme is given by Mr. j Kellogg, a correspondent of the Phila- j delphia American. From lake Little Tohopckaliga to the Gulf of Mexico via ! I ..I-a i L-i.prholwp 'A ilistiincn of 140' miles, canals have been dredged, or other I means employed to form a continual wa- j ..,. i!,.,Vi,,n;,r .k T ut.-,. Tnhmm ! kah"a.'tlie water of six lakes has been ! led through the Kissimmee river to Lake j Okeechobee, i i'ditv-five miles awav. and ' thence to th Caloosalmtehio river at Lake Flirt, twenty miles distance, and to the gulf. Mr. Kellogg speaks enthusias tically of the fertility of these drained hinds. The soil is porous, he says, and rich in phosphates and tlecayed vegeta ble matter; the region is more healthful than cither Cuba or Louisiana, and so suitable to the sugar cane, according to some tests that have been made of it, that he believes that Florida can be made to produce 00 per cent, of the whole amount of sugar we consume. Balti- The Loclestone. Xatur.il magnet, or lodcstono, is a mineral which has the property of at -Iracting iron and a few other metals. This mineral is an oxide of iron. It also has mother property by which, when it is balanced on a pivot, or suspended on a thread, or placed on a cork which floats on water, it points to a certain direction of the horizon. Where this property re sides, or what it really is, has not been definitely determined. The various ihcnomena which magnetisn exhibits , have been aecountod lor by supposing Ihe existence of two hypothetical mag netic fluids, each of which acts icpul dvely on itself, but attracts the other fluid; one of the-c is named the austral r southern magnetism, the other the lioreal or northern magnetism. Natural magnets arc not much employed in prac tical uses; but artificial ones, which have the same properties as the natural but ire far more powerful and convenient ire employed. As the magnetic needle ran no more take up a direction of itself done than a body can acquire motion of itself, it is considered that the earth is a great magnet ; and the points toward which the magnetic needle constantly turns are called magnetic poles of the earth. These xles give to the needle its directive power. They are called the north and the south pole. The north ern magnetic pole is situated about nine teen degrees from the north pole of the earth, iu tho direction of Hudson's liay. The south magnetic pole is situated in the Antarctie'contiiient. If the ordinary compass be carried to cither of these poles, it will lose its pewer and point indifferently in any direction. Courier Journal. Wet Eair in Winter. "What a foolish habit some men have of putting water on the hair in this kind af weather!" remarked one of the Du ;uesnc barbers, "Why put water on the hair at all? It is done, to be be sure, to make the hair lie down, but it is more of a habit than anything else. The hair cau be brushed dry as well as wet. "You sec men go out of barber sheps with the water running from behind their cars. In a few minutes it is changed into icicles. The next day they complain of earache, neuralgia or pain in the back of the head. Do you wonder why? The cause is not deeply hidden. It is not water on the brain this time, but ico on the hair." Pittsburg Dispatch. Mailing Cases for Sorting Letters As post-offices grow larger the size of the mailing case increases and the distri bution grows more elaborate. The mail inir case is a case of pigeonholes, set up jbefore the mailing clerk, each opening being labeled "Boston," 'Troviaence," York." "Boston and Albany etc into uia am are iiui ui me eucn for Boston, into the Fecond all those fot , Providence, while into the one marked "Bostoat and Albany" go ati ihe letter for the offices on the road connecting these two places, unless there may be among them cities lags as to have a box to themselves. Of course, the larger the office is, the more letters there will-be, and consequently a need for more boxes. Boston, for instance, sends mail-pouches directly to many hundred of the larger towns all over New England, and con sequently there must be, in the qisiiiag case of the Boston office, a box for every one of thoso towns. St. Nicholas. ki. k. m.rkt 1 Origin of Seven Fashions. Charles VII. of France had a pair ot ill-made legs. , He wore a long coat to conceal tlicm, and so everybody else ; wore Ions; coats. Alexander the Great had a twist in his neck. It was therefore fashionable for every one in th;it monarch's court to carry his neck in th same way. Tho peruko U s lid to be due to the : misfortune of Philip. Dukeof Burgiiody His hair fell out, and his physician ad vised him to cover his head with artificial hair. Francis I. of Franco was struck on tho chin with a tile. Of course, the wouuded part could not be shaved. Thus beards became the fashion, after hiving been out for nearly a century. The custom of the cardinals of Homo of wearing red hats at ceremonies aud processions was introduced by Pope In nocent IV. as a symbol to indicate the readiness of the cardinals to spill their blood for Jesus Christ. Duriug the reign of (ieorge III. tho I 11... l V...1, 1....I .. .l.,l ,. ak ',,l..r,l hats in uishcr. The Commerce of Finland. Finland is visited yearly by about 10, 000 vessels, bringing rather more than 1,250,000 tons of merchandise, and car rying away about the same. The exports from Finland are, for the greater part, forest products, half being of planks, deals, firewood, etc., with three per cent, of tar. Farm produce, chiefly but ter, forms an additional 15 per cent, of the whole; agricultural products I! per cent, more; game and fish another :i per t-'ent i"ltl V:"'"11S mauulactures-iron, "ss,lc't alld lpei In per cent. more. On the other hand, the goods brought ""t" tbe country are fabrics, grain, metal sugar, cotton, tobacco, wine, oil and orami). 1 he exchanges w ith foreign countries are made to the extent of 70 per cent, by the ships of Finland, of which the com mercial fleet numbers 1,000 vessels, hav ing 2)0,000 tons burden. There is no lack of communication by water. Har per's Magazine. Queer Wells. In Polk county, Nebraska, are many wells which exhibit very peculiar phen omena of intermittence. They vary from 100 to 140 feet in depth, and all ebb and flow either irregularly or as regular as tides on an ocean beach. The flow is ac companied by a roaring sound like that of the sea, as though a distant wave were coming in, and at the same time a 1 stiff current of air rushes out at the mouth of the well. The ebb is accom panied by a downward draft of air, as might naturally be supposed. The period of ebb aud flow does not seem to depend upon the heat and cold or upon the dampness or dryness of the atmosphere. I Some of the ow ners of these queer wells ' believe them to be in some wav connected i vvjt, t,e waters of the Platte Hivcr, while , others, with equally as gootl grounds for their supposition, declare them to be in direct communication with the ocean. St. Louis Republic. Beautiful Gray Hair. Nothing is more beautiful than gray hair. And did you ever notice that ono seldom sees an ordinary looking woman with silver hair? It is because the home liest faces arc made attractive by thi glorious setting. A few days ago a woman who must have been seventy years old at least, stepped out of a car riage on State street, and received more admiring glances than any young lady within the block. Her bonnet was gray velvet exactly the shade of the hair, and her suit was cloth the same color. She xv ore a long carriage wrap of gray cloth lined with gray silk, gray gloves and a fluffy gray boa. She 'was certainly a symphony in gray. Chicago Tiibunc. A Mon3ter Trap. A few weeks aero European papers mentioned the' apparently incredible fact that the fishermen of the Loffodeu Islands on the west coast of Norway had entrapped and captured one thousand whales. The report seemed founded on some mistake of the cable-telegraphist, but it now appears that the total number of the captured monsters was 1,122. They werecetaceaus of the variety known as 'caning whales," from fifteen to twenty-five feet long, and had been trapped by following a fhoal of herring through the narrow entrance of a' land locked bay. New York Voice. Burdens of Indolence. None so little enjoy life and are'such burdens to themselves aa those who havu nothing to do. The active only have the true relish of life. He who knows not what it is to labor, knows not what it is to enjoy.' Recreation is only valuable et ituubeiulit us. The idle know nothing of it. It is exertion that tenders rest delightful and sleep sweet and undis turbed. The happiness of life depends on the regular prosecution of some laud able purpose or calling -which engages, help and enlivens all our iower.-iThe Ledger. Mom la Eaflaa nail Aaaartca. It is now pretty well established thai .lo,.am.erlCM aonw gooa m aoy AT. a ; s dm Soared m the world, aa is proved not only by the race-coarse, bat bv th wonderful earalry marches in which th sorest pert of the contest came npon the mounts of the soldiery. Our ordinary field sports have, except lacrosse, bees derived from England. Even base bell,, w hich appears as a distinctively mec- lcen game, is but a modification of an English form of sport, which is really ol great antiquity. The field oporta which we may compare in England and America are the games of ball, in which base ball, because of onr customer, must take the place of cricket and foot ball, which is identical in the twe oountries; ride shooting, rowinir, and the ordinary group of athletio sports it which single contestants take part. We may add to this the amusement ol sailing, wherein, however, the qualih of the structure as well as thecerveand skill iu management play an importaui park It is now clear, however, that in there all the American is not a bit behind its transatlantic cousins. The most of th people have the sam spontaneous in terest in sports as their forefathers, anc they pursue thorn with equal success. It is unnecessary to do so, but we might fairly rest the conclusion as to the un decayed physical vigor of our popula tion on that spontaneous activity ol 11 hid without which games are impossi ble. Among its many beneficent deeds (he United States Sanitary Commission lid a remarkable service to anthro pology Ly measuring, iu as careful a manner as the condition of our knowl edge at the time permitted, about 250, JOo soldiers of the Federal army. The records of these measurements are contained in the admirable work ol Dr. B. A. Gould, a distinguished istrcaomer, who collated the observa '.ious and presented them in a great i-oiunie. Similar measurements exist which present us with the physical Uatus of something like an oipially large number of European soldiers, iiarticularly those of the British army. From Dr. Gould's careful discussion o) '.he?e statistics, it appears that the American man is on the whole quite a" well developed as thoso who ill the ranks of European armies. Tho Melancholy HKyclist. Did you ever notice the expressiin on the face of a bicycle rider? It is anything but happy. Ho or she looks as if life had but one object, and that was to keep from breaking his or her neck. The eyes are glued to the track, the lips are brought together in a firm, determined line, the features all have a set, strained look that are in perfect sympathy with the rigid back, that has the appearance of having caught the balance in some miraculous way, and a variation of an inch would moan de struction to action and bones. I wondor what the real charm is of bicycle riding. Is the fascination in not going over the edsre of the tnmble, or h the sensation one of spinning lightly and freely through the air? If the latter, how many years of practice does it take to get over that unhappy, agonized ex pression ? Chivaoo Herald. Tile W ay i.'l Done. Managing Editor And so the new addition to our staff? yon are Greenly Yes, sir. '" Well, what do vou want to go at first?" "I don't know, sir." "Well, what kind of work have you been doing?" "I never have done any kind of news paver work, sir." ''None at all?" "Not a line, sir." "Tuon sit right down tif re at that desk, aud write me two columns on 'How to suceeod in writing tor the press ; or sound advice to young be ginners.'" P R 0 F K S S ION A L. DR. G. K. BAGBY, Surgeon Dentist, Ojjhr, Middle Sired, op). Baptist Church, IV K. H It K It I), X. '. P. H. PELLETIER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, AND MONEY BROKER. Craven Street, T Poors South Journal Olllua. JT.&- specialty mailt; in iiegoliuliui; small loans lor xiiort lime. Wii! ipmtrlice in the Counties of Craven, Carteret, .bines, Onslow mill I'limlieo. pO.HU ' Slates Court ul New iieiue, uml Supreme Court ol the Stale. DR. J. D.CLARK, NEW BcRNE, N. C. CoT Oilier on Craven Street, between Pollock ami Jb'jtid. i iiiin.nit. twos, posit ls. vice-PRC. C. M HOBSBT, CaSHItK. The National Bank OF NEWBERNE, N. C. lCtPOUATHl) IMU). Capital, - . $100,000 Surplus Profits, - 86,700 DIRECTORS. Jas. A. Dry an, Titos. Daniels. . ClIAS. S?. IillYAN. J. H. llACKIiUKN. G, H Rodebts. Alex. Miller L. Harvey. "green, foy & CO., BANKERS, Do a Genoxal Banking Business. NEW BANKING HOUSE, Itlddte Sliw!, yh VodbeTow Hot&Aiberi. NEW BERNE N.'C. f t . . - - i s for Infants and Children; VaatalssswUaoaptedtaeUUraithat I recommend It m superior tuy preacripcioc kaowB to me." H. A. lion, V. IX, " Ul So. Oxford St, Broaklra, It. T. "n-eoMof ,Csatoria,k soinNaml aad It BMtrita as well kaowa that it MeoM a work of uprraroeatloa to Ddoraa It. Few an taa iatollicant fimillee who oaaM keep Caatoria wiUOa easy reach.' -' Cablo ""fJwrrifjT). T . New York Otty. Late Pastor Bloontlngdala Betamed Church. Tn Cornea A GREAT BARGAIN! 327 ACRES WILL BK SOLD AT A (JKEAT SACRIFICE! A VALUABU: PLANTATION' situ atcd on dbe "South side of the Netise river, lb roc and-a-half miles from the City of Now Ilcrnc, N. C. One bundled and twenty-livo acres cleared. (!otd l.itwl, suitable for Trinkinrf, Tubaeei, Jluiniitg, nr any iiiul nf fm iiiiinj. Too balance, two hundred and two acres, heavily timbered with pine, oak, cypress, and other kinds of timber. It is also line ("raiting Land. (iood dwelling, oulhiiildiny, and a line orchard. It has a lino FISHKUY fronting half mile on the beacli, where there are high banks of marl that can never bo exhausted, from which vessels can load with ease. It is a very beautiful and healthy lo cation, presenting a near view to tho passing vessels and the A. fe N. C. Railroad. For terms apply to P. TRENWITH, Opp. Hotel Albert, NEW BERNE, H. C. JOE K. WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF lit tlarbleWorks I NEW BERNE, N. C. Italian and American Marble and all Qualities of Material. Orders solicited and given prompt at tention, with satisfaction guaranteed. J. 11. CRAB'TEI'. BASH. MANI.Y. J01 H. CR5BTREE & CO. ENGINEER S, Founders and Machinists, Manufacturers and Dealers in Engines and Machinists' SnpDlies. Builders of Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Edging & Cut-off Machines. We are prepared to do Castlngsof all kiiui wilh promptness. Piirlicnlnr find immediate Attention given :o repairs of all kinds. We will be glad to give plans and estimates for any description of Machinery. We are the agents for the ait! of the Amer ican Saw. Also tor G. & A. ltargamin's cel ebrated Imlestructable Mica Valves. We give satisfactory guarantee lor all wtrk done by us. Boot and Shoe Maker. All Styles of Boots and Shoes mado' to order and on Short notice. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. N. ARPEN, CRAVES ST., opposite Journal Office. K. R. JONES, HEAVY AND LIGHT . GROCERIES. Lorillard and flail & Ax Snuff, Sold al Manufacturers' Prices. Dry Goods & Notions. Full Stookand Larg Atstortmant, - Prices a low at th Lowest. Call and Esmins my Stock, v, . '. " ' .Ui. Sstlsfsotlon Guaranttsd. Caetariaem-af OoBo, Ooaattpatloa, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoja. KructaUoa, Kills Wane, gives steep, and promote O Witjutaurious medication, For several years I have reeenimeadetl Seur "eoria, ' and eaall alwaye eoobaue to o o an it has toTiriablj produced benetkSal , results." F.di F. Farms, M. M The Wlnthrop,' laTah Street and Tth Ave, KewTorkCtty. Cokpaxt, 7! UuaasT Stbut, Kew Tobs. Fast Passenger Mid Freight Line between NEW BERNE, Eastern N'oria Carolina Points, aud all Con ucctio.is of the I'K.V.NSVLVAMa' railroad, INCl.lDJNli Stw York, Philadelphia, Norfolk, Bal timore anil Boston. The OXL1 Trl-Weekly Line Out of Mew Heme. J'A- Xcir and F.'.-'jantly Equipped Steamer Sails from New Berne I0NDAYS, WEDNESDAYS, FRIDAYS, AT FIVE P. M Slopping at. I'oanoke Islnnil each way and loriiiini; I'losr ciiiiiiiclion witli tlie Nuilolk Southern ItHiliontl. The F.nilcrn Dispatch Line, consisting nf llic- Wilmington S. S. Co., Norfolk Koiilliern It. U., New York, Phila. nnd Norfolk K. It., uml rcnnsylvania I!. 11., torni a reliable ami regular line, ollcring superior faeililieM lor iliiick passenger ami freight, transportation. No Ininsf'er except, nt Llizaln-lh City, nt which point freight, will he loaded on cars to go through, to destination. Direct nil goods to be shipped via Eastern Carolina Dispatch daily as follows: From New York, by l'eiina. It. 11., Tier 27, North liiver. From Philadelphia, by Phi In., W. anil Dal to. II. I!.. Doek St. Snlion. From llallimore, hy I'hila., AVil. and Balto. H. It., President St. Station. From Norfolk, hy Norfolk Southern It. Ti From lioslon, iiy Mereliiuils fc M iiiers Trans portation Co.; New York and New Fitgland II. It. KSfllntcs as low and limo quicker than by nnv olher line. For further information apply to W. 11. Joyck, fCoa'l Freight Traffic Agent, I'. It. It.) (ieneral Traffic Agent, (ll'o. S'ritl'iiHNS, Division Freight (Agent, P. W. .t It. It., I'hihidelphin. It. . COOKK, Cen'l Freight Agent, N. Y. I A N. U. It.. Norfolk, Vn. 11. C. lll'lHilNS, (ienerul Freight Agent N. S. It. It., Norfolk. Vn. UFO. 1IKNPF.KSON, Aoknt, New heme, N. C. NEXT! Prof. W. H.SHEPARD and competent assistants in the tonsorial art will give you a Hair Cut for Shampoo bhave 20 Cents. 20 IO GASTON HOUSE BARBER SHOP, NEW BERNE, N. C. MRS J. M.HINES' Boarding House Reopened. Tiiits. J. II. HINES has returned to the city and will reopen her First-Class Hoarding House about the 1st of October at same location, opposite BaptistChurcn The Pioneer Daris Sewing Machine Can bo had at tha ma place. J. M. HINES, Agent. O. MARKS' STORE. TheN. C. Freight Line Steamers Geo. H.S!oDt,Deflaflce&Elio.' On ami after Fcbrnnry lt, 1891, this line will ' make regular , 1 SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS JIKTWKN Baltimore and New Berne Laivintr Bnllimore for New Born' WED NKSDAY, SATURDAY, nt fl P M. tan vi tiff New Bernn'for RiiitimorA, TUES ' DAY.SAT UJIDAY, 4P M , merchants and Shippers, Take Notice. ;- Tliis ix te only pjRECT Ike out of New . Lcmc lor IS ill 'more without ciimi)i,1tjjpinj " ' cnly at Norfolk, coiiiiectiiiji thru tor Boston, '4 Piovideiice.I'hilitdelpliiB. Hifjiiiioiiil. and all . pi ints North, EiiRt nmi West. Muldnif cloe connection lor nil point by A. & N. C. Rail- ?: road mill llivtr out ot .New iierne. AivfttiM nrp am I'Allnira? I HicurjKN r'osTER, Gtn'l Manager, ' . 90 Light 8t., BalttaorK H Tl W ItnPlDOlPV ln.nl VAlnlb. V. W. P. Clyde Co., Philadelphia, 13 South : New York and Balto. Trap LW'Pier iTp 4 North river ';!; ?.. rrfyM'.ll, . K. Simoson. Bonon. 63 Central wharf. S. 11. Rockwell, Providence, R. I. , fl. Rhins lont Rnatitn TtiPrnHnvsi mid Kattivatta V 1 t S, ; ' -i" ": New York daily. V '.:v: 44 BsltoWedncrta-nff SatnrisnV'! " Philadelphia, Mondayi, Wcdnca- 'v i . . -" rro-naenee, Bstanuri, ; flfl;f -fl anteed to all noiuta at tho dilfefeut nMmw nr ':-HV.'f s&'Avoid Breakage of Bulk and Shii .,. K n Tin. .1 ..-.,.-..-.-: ...'.-i ii; B. H. GRAY, Ajent. yiw"Brai'N.' C "J? 1 rl fly S !' fl'i':