.'-USHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT f TTTS DAILY JOURNAL to pnbHhd it, except Monday at00 per ymr, tAM t ij months. Delivered toityubcribei M rent per month. Tim WEEKLY JOURNAL li soblbhad ttt Thtraday at 1-M) per an-iam. Notice ut Marriages or Deaths not to ax "ed tea line wiiL be inoertet Irrc. AH d duioaaj aiatler will be charged t eta per liae. Payment tut tniusient i tertiaement a) da made in advance. Regular advartiae. aaeata will be oulleeled prompty at the cad f each month. . Communication containing now ot infi neat poblic imtreat arc aolicited. Mo com munication aauat be expected tn be published that contain objectionable ptraonali'.iea, or withholds the name of the author. Article longer than hall column must" paid for. Any pcroa feeling aggrievr .at say anonr bmus eommuiiicaliou can oh Jn the nam of Ike aatnur by application at ihia omce and aha wing wherein to grieTauc cxiits. THE JOURNAL. E C. HARPER, C T HANCOCK, - Proprietor. Local Roportor. jmEnttTri ml the rottnffkc at tfew Bern, . (It mi KtomdrtUui nutter. PEARLS OF TBOVOUT. de who follows a good example sets one. , Tlie needle guides tlio sli!p only by counselling the pilot. Happiness niihnppily often depend OB things that happen. He who thinks for himself and imi tate rarely is a free mini. The greatest truths arc the simplest : to likewise are the greatest men. Disappointed in two or tlirce, we often become disenchanted with all. The highway of scicnc-J is pared with rejected (licorice Knots nio steppiiig-sloutover which Ignorance travels to truth. "Adversity, in exercising her power npon u," Lnndor says, "loses her Dame and features." That is, by tliu reactive virtues which the experience develops in us thcnlDiclion is changed to blessing. A Weed Good lo it. One of the most abundant and in st toothsome plants is tho homely weed called pusslj', eays a writer in the New York Herald. As a table vegetable it is not to be despised. The succulent stems, with their leaves, are boiled tender and dres-ed with butter, the lame as spinach. The French market gardeners cnltirate it regularly and have different varieties. The young ! plants are used as a salad and arc very good when served with a bacon ' dressing and one or two hard-boiled eggs, chopped line and sprinkled over the salad. Pmely flowers are some times called wax pinks. When the plant is full grown t lie thick, fleshy, stems are stripped of their leaves, tied into bunches and served as asparagus. The leaves are cooked as spinach and 'by many are considered superior to that vegetable. A story is told of Benjamin Lo , Fevre in connection with pussly. At his Ohio homo tho genial cx-congrcss-matl bad a vegetable garden, which the more he cultivated the moro luxu riantly grew puslr. lie finally gave np the attempt at gardening and per mitted the pucsly to monopolize tho premises. He was one day bemoaning his ill luck at trying to raise vegeta bles from govern incut seeds, and was roundly accusing the Agricultural De partment of putting up packages of pnssly seeds instead of beet seed, when a friend informed him that as an article of food pussly was niorj valuable than the beet. Whereupon the distinguished gardener telegraphed to his head man lo weed out the beets and cultivate tho pussly. The order was carried out, much to the surprise of the man of all work, who had never before beard of any one eating pussly CaUfornia's Coyote Pel. Tho sheep owners in Meudocins County, Cal., seem to be having al most as much trouble wilh coyotes at their Eastern brethren hare with dogs. 60 many sheep have been destroyed by these depredators that the sheep mon are going to -'get together" and try to devise some efficient method of relief. But, badly offns they are, the Western folks are a good deal better off than their companions in misery. No one keeps coyotes for pets, but in this section any quantity of families keep miserable curs, in which they take a great deal of interest, and any injury to which they resent almost as strongly as they would if it were done to their own children. It is not so with coyotes. On the con trary, the Stale pays a bounty of five dollars, and the county adds another of six dollars, for every scalp of a coyote which is delivered to the proper authorities. It teems as if this ougM : : o secure tho extermination of the pests. But, bounty or no bounty, wo . would rather contend with the coyote than with a cur which has all the evils of ' a coyote, and also hat a master ' v who is read? to assert that he not only j does no harm, but that he is n useful; nd valuable dog. American Dairy man. rv m. a, "t , HtB Choice. Proud Father (-bowing off his boy before compan) My son, which would you rathor be, Shakespeare or Edison?; - Liitlo Son - (after meditation) I'd rather ba Edison.' ' Yes? Whyr ,' " - "Canse be ain't dead." Good TRAINING DOGS. " A Showman Tells How He Taught His Own Animals. Patience and Firmness Are the Only Requisites. Mr. Fred Macart is a. young man who ought to know all abont dogs. He his been teaching thorn and learn ing from tbem alt bis life. The phrase going to the dogs has no objectionable meaning for hint, for he expects to get rich by doing so. Mr. Macart's method of teaching tricks to his dogs is very simple. It consists in merely following the same plan by which the averago child is learned to read. The drat thing the pupil has to learn to do is to sit on a chair. Then he is taught to leave his seat and go back to it when he is told to do so. After that, he is taught to sit up on his hanches, to stand and walk ou bit for legs, and dually, to dance and turn somersaults backward and forward. If the dog is clever, he is rewarded wilh a pat on tin head. That, says Mr. Macart, is quite enough for a dog who loves his maslor. if he is obstinate, he is introduced to the whip. Owners of dogs will do well to fol low Mr. Macart's example in one re spect. Ho never feeds hia dogs be tween metis, but gives them plenty to eat nt regular intervals. There arc nine dogs in Mr. Macart's troupe three greyhounds, two field spume's, a fox. n Skye and a Scotch terrier and a Yorkshire or toy terrier. Otto of tit! greyhound, Bismarck, is the tallest do.; of his breed in the world, measuring 29 1-2 inches in height. Ho is a great jumper, ami thinks noihing of a flying leap over a pillar composed of a table, three bar rels and a cracker box. Hag, the Scotch terrier, is one of the most rotnarkable dogs in the world. She iias succeeded in learning a trick that is diroctly contrary lo the rules of dog nature, namely, to walk on her right fore and hind legs while she holds those on the other side in the air. Nearly all quadrupeds, when running, put the right forefoot and left hind foot down at the same time, and vice versa. Rag and Spider, the Skye terrier, in a double act. The master tils a pair of small boxing glovgs to the forefeet of each dog, and they go at each other in regular prize ring style. Spider, however, is too gallant to hit Hag very hard. He boxes in a listless way, and acts purely on tho defensive. In one respect Mr. Macart is preju diced. He doesn't like poodles, uol even tho big black French poodles, which can lie taught to do everything except to speak. He says that they are vicious, which proved that even Mr. Macart has yet something to barn about dogs. Mr. Macnrt considers a year neces sary to the proper education of a dog When leaching a dog, ho says, you must take care that he docs not get the idea that he is a dunce, because he would thin easily become disgusted and stop trying to learn. Hogs soon become ambitious. They which each other and learn more rapidly by imitation than in any other way. Dogs arc like children in many reject'. If you are patient with them you can leach them to do anything. But you might as well try to stand on your head as to leach them by cruelly. When you first begin to train your dog give him 20 or 30 lessons a day, but do not prolong any lesson beyond fire minutes. If you do tho di g will become discouraged, and all your time and labor will go for nought. New York Sun. The Making of Steel Pens. Fine sheet steel about eight feet long by tlireo feet wide, generally prepared from Swedish bloom, is gen erally used in the manufacture of slcel pens. It is clcatiod of scales by the use of sulphuric acid, and after being carefully washed is passed be. tweon successive sots of rollers until reduced to the required thinness. It is then divided int strips wide enough to allow the cutting of three or four pens. Theso are passed through a cutting machine, which, by means of die, punches out the pens, or blanks, as they ore then callod, for although thoy havo the shape of a pen 'hoy are still flat and have no holes or slits in them. Successive opera tions, usually by women or g'rls, first cut the side slits in the blanks and then the hole in the contre, all being done by lever a id bv the hand, the careful adjusting of each blank under the die requiring the utmost nicety. This work has rendered the blanks brittle, and thoy are now annealed by putting them into an iron box and heating them. The name of tho mak er or his trade mark W then stamped npon tbem with a die, and they arc at the same stamping bent into tho groved form in which they are known to commerce. The most important operation, that of iraking the central silt, lotiows, alter winch thoy are agai? .tempered, this time by immersion In oil, - and carefully polished' wilh emer powder, the pen. and powder being thrown into a large swiftly revolving cylinder. The nib are then ground to the ' re- qnired point, and the ' pent are again tempered in a revolving cylinder over a charcoal Are, until, Oiey acquire the, f brown or blue color, -when J hey are glazed with a solution of lao and naph tha, "-v They are thou examined, eonnt cd, boxed and delivered roady for itant tempering is the sate, xno constant tempering is ma solution or U10 problem wltfou troubled ibe ages, for steel pent were not matte, in a day, and for many years after they were attempted, the stubborn metals defied manipulation. United Stales P.-ier Maker. PrepariHQ Skins, There is a popular notion that the sealskiu as we see it at the furrier's Is just at it is taken offtlio animal. Noth ing, liowover, could be more contrary to the fact. Few skins are less at tractive th in this at first, as the fur is completely covered and hidden by a dull gray-brown and grizzled over hair. This mask has then to be re moved, and this is an operation re quiring a very great amount of pa tience and skill, with a consequent in crease in price. The nuhaiting is effected by warmth and moisture, which softens tho roots of the 1 vcrhair and enables it to be pulled out, or by shaving the iuuer skin very thin, which cuts off tho roots of the hair which penetrate deeply and leaves untouched those- of the fur, wliich are very superficial. Which- over method is cmnloved the hair ! i must bo taken off uniformly or the fur will never lie smoothly, but always have a rumpled look, which can never be col lected by any subsequent treat ment. This will explain to sumo ex tent the cause of tho high price of tcalskin jackets and cloaks, nud also , the cause of the different prices 0110 1 hears of, ns a good inanr skins are I more or less spoiled in the dressing. ; Another cause, loo, is the quality of the dye nud workmanship employed in its use. The liquid color is put on ' willi a brush, and the points of (he standing fur carefully covered; tho. skin is 1 lie ti rolled up, fur inside, and I then, after a little time, hung up and dried. The dry dye is then removed, ! and a further coat applied, dried, re moved, and so on, till the requisite shade is obtained. One or two of j these coats arc laid on thick and pressed lown to the roots of the fu , making what is called the ground. rrom eight to twelve coals arc needed to produce a good color. No wonder a lirst-clnss seal skin is expensive; it is just as true now 116 ever it was; but in these days of universal cheapness one is apt lo forget tha', if you want 0 good thing, you must pay a good , price. Dry Ooods Chronicle. The People of foiuiiir.is. The Honduranian, collectively, is hospitable, peaceful and exquisitely courteous; but he is also improvident, lazy and densely ignorant. He buys onlv the luxuries of life, the necessi ties grow at li is door. lie lives on tortillas and beans, coffee and bananas. These constitute his daily food, and they cost him practically nothing. He pays no house rent, for if lie has not a hut of Ills own he can lake p:irt of his neighbor's. Being n hot country. coal and wood are not essential, and lotliing n freak of fashion, not a requisite. His garments, when he has them, consist of wliitccolton shirt and ronscrs, sometimes a hat, shoes never. Even the army of Honduras is bare footed. Labor, what there is of it, earns about 40 cents a day in debased currency, a United Slates dollar being equal 10 12 reals, or SI. 50 Hondura nian money. The occupation of the women seems to be principally the making of tortil las, the bread of the tropics. During a month's 11111 c-back journey through the land, it seemed to inc that all wouiMikind was toiling under the sugar-cane roofs, grinding the corn ho! ivopti Blnnr alwl nliaiitnrr llm Inr. t i Has into their paucako form before placing thorn on heated stones to bake. The corn for this stuff of life is planted twice a year. The ground is broken by a wooden stick answering for a plow, the grain dropped in and left to nature and the rich soil. Agricultural implements of any kind are unknown. The corn is ground jmt as the Egyp- tians giound it three thousand years ago. In fact, tho traveler of today find Honduras just as tho traveler of four hundred years ago, before the conquost of Cortcz, mint have found it. If anything, llieio has been n gradual retrogression, for all the cn- terprise of the country is now in Ibe hands of the English-speaking people. ! Frank Leslie's. ! Ether av an Intoxicant. j A reporter of a committee of the British Parliament says that ether is used as a drink iti South Berry and a ' portion of Tyrone, but nowhere elso 1 in the kingdom. The ether used it generally impure and is made from methylated spirit; it has a specific gravity of v.720. The character of the drunkenness is much the same a wilh whiskey, but it I. more rapid in . uC, .,o. .o r."oi-u,eiundadd-thepriiiierfromirblch are not so disagreeable, a perton may ,t0M ,mvo heonmonil pota. get drunk two or three times in a day ,nt0 tnMI cnpg .. j . slmid , m a'acost of 6X Accordingly,' at the Bexl(lay; g.,.., wh,t whipped cream. Instance of tho Inland Revenue, ether 1 - -- . . f has ''been,' sclWdicA .underr, Jhe : pok j f Dr.' Hiucklo of AraerjoUty Ga., baa sous act, and since this ha been done t piece of chlnawaro 782. years old.' the sale tn grocera' shopt tins pracli- Tho date, 1109, it plainly stamped on eally ceased and that of druggists it !helottom, and Its only flaw It a bro largel) curtailed. ' , , . I k'i handle. FOR THZ Bovstwirx. W8H WASHING AND WHITE HANDS. - Ait excellent and simple, wash to keep the hands-white and smooth after j comet to almost all housekeepers it ' eqn, p.rta ' of yilKlpir ,hJ water. It eqlu pari, of vinegar u m e00Ji -.- to keeD , bottle of it prepared and standing in the kitoheii rloset Wash ibe hands first thor ought" in warm water, wipethem dry and rinse thoroughly in the mixture. Tho same preparation is good to re move tlaint 'from the hands. New York Times. A SEW IDEA FOR 8HOE BAGS; One's shoes to often lake up a largo space in the tummer packing, now that there are many necessary sorts of shoes to take away for the season, that perhaps a suggestion for packing them may be of use. It is not always convenient to have brown paper bandy to do them in, and then, besides, every time you pack or unpack ii means more brown paper, and to be thoroughly tidy, string as well. iNow, it you will look over your 1 piece bag, you aro almost sure to find i some pieces of chintz, cretonne or canvas. Cut it in a square about eighteen inches wide, hem it neatly around, and on one corner sew two tapes. Havo as many of these squares as you have pairs of slices and you will find I be 111 the greatest comfort jn the world when you conio lo pack up. Or, if you wish, you can make them in bags to put the shoes in, running st l ings in the top to lie around them. New York Sun. COHAL HANKING IJASKET.S. I hare been making an old-fashioned imitation of a coral hanging basket with very good success, writes Mrs. Steele. Years ago I made a number of baskets for friends, and al though the work may not be tho latest "craze" in fancy work, one who takes the very small amount of trouble to make one will havo a pretty and ser-. viceable ornament. The foundation ' for the basket may not be as easily j obtained now as it was years ngo ' when hoop-skirts were worn; how-! over, 1 found uo difficulty in procuring . hoops with the covering 011 ; -these 1 bent in a pretty shapo for a basket and tied with wrapping twine, j leaving the ends of the twine about a quarter of an inch long. When the basket was well shaped I covered it with knots and ends of string, nr. 1 ranging them about an inch apart all over tho basket, leaving ends of ir- j regular length, but none longer than an inch, and tying knots of different tines. When my basket was deco-1 rated all over in this manner I melted one-half a pound of beeswax in a , ihallow pan and stirred in enough ' Japanese vermilion to get the desired ' coral color, then by rolling the basket ' well in the melted wax it adhered to tho knots and hoops and completely . covered them. When the basket be came cool I had a very pretty orna- ' mcnt and a useful one. These bas- kets are very durable and will even ' stand the test of baing exposed to the weather a number of seasons. Prai- ! rie Farmer. j RECIPES. i Potato Salad Usn l he large, sweet Valencia onion sliced, boiled potatoeg ' peeled and cut hot and dressed with ! salt, pepper, oil and vinegar. In Ictluco seatou a fow of the white, ! lender leaves can be added lo the salad. The entrees may cither be served with the chicken or as a separ- ! ale course. Chicken Cu lets Aflcr dressing a tender fowl cut it in such portion as , will afford dices about an inch thick, ' for broiling, first dipping the pieces i in melted butter seasoned with salt and cayenne and placing tlicm between j the bars of a wue gridiron; broil the chickon just long enough before din- ( ner to have it hot, and serve it on a hot plate witb tart oranges cut in quarters. A potato salad ges well wilh the chicken. Nice Cake To one-fourth pound of dried and si f tod flour add one-half pound of sifted white sugar, cream one-fourth pound of bntler, and pour it into tho flour, stirring all the time; blend all well together; then add four eggs, well beuton, yolks aud wbi:u separately, and flavor with a little rat afia or vanilla essence; when tliete are well-mixed, place in a bowl near 'he fire to warm, then pour mixture into a well-buttered tin, and bake in a moderate ovon for half au hour. Prune Jelly Put one pound of fin est French prunes over the tiro with cold water to well cover, and simmer -not boil until very tender. Drain, and return the juice to the fire with that of two oranges and two lemons' two tablospooiifuls of sugar and half box of gelatine that hat toakod for ,,onr i a liMta cold water. If ,,.. ... m ot ,hU ,,, ,H(1 fttor. simmer until the gelatine HYPNOTI8M.. Bow tho acl.aevWaa Demonstrate! on a . .... .... ; Ctooraja Iialn. . ; . , A few week , ago a -well known PbUadelihian was traveling through Georgia in an exceedingly slow tiain. There were only two other passengers in that ear, and with one of the e the Quaker City man engaged iri conver sation. After a while they got to talk- vag about - mind readinp-, and Mr. Blaoke, of Philadelphia, expressed his disbelief in anvthioR of the kind. "Maybe you don't take any stock c hypnotism .either?, anggested the voung man. Mr. Blanks didn't. 'Veil," continued the other, "I am an expert hypnotizer and can prove it See that other passenger up in the corner?" Mr. Blanke looked and beheld a little old man. weiring a white felt hat, curled up in a eeat, sound asleep. "Now," said the young man, "I can hypnotize that old fellow so he will wake np when the conductor enters, knock him down, choke him, and throw his hat' out of the window." "I'll bet $50 to $15 that you can't," exclaimed the incredulous Philadel phia The wager was accepted, the money was deposited with the solitary brakeman, and then the hypnotizer crept softly up to the sleeping nassen-. ger, waving bis hands over the letter's head and whispering the proper in structions. Then he took his seat be side Mr. Blanke. In a quarter of an hour the conduo tor entered the car and sarg out, "Tickets!" The next second the elderly passenger awoke with a star t and leaped into the ai-le and struck the conductor under the left ear, knock ing him flat to floor. Without wasting an instant he seized him by the throat, and before Mr. Blanke or the brake man could come to the rescue the con ductor's hat was picked np and thrown out of an open wi dow. Suddenly the hypnotizer cried "Bight!" at the same time clapping his hands. The old man started, nibbed his eyes, and didn't know what to make of the conductor's anger until all 111 explained. The monev was paid over to the hypnoti?er and Mr. Blanke left the train at the next station. Then the old man and the conductor and the hypnotizer had a drink to gether and divided the $50. "Worked him nicely, didn't we?" observed the hypnotizer, as he whiffed the foam off hi) beard. "You bet I" ejaculated the old man. "I'll pick np my hat on the return trip," concluded the conductor. Pli ila delphia Press. , EMMA ABBOTT'S MONUMENT. An Imposing Shart Ereoterl by Direction of the Late Slng-er at Gloucester, Mass. The handsomest mortuary memorial ever ereoted in any cemetery in the State of Massachusetts is now in proc ess of construction and will be erected in the beautiful Oak drove Cemetery of Gloucester, to mark the final rest ing place of Emma Abbott, the famous opera prima donna, and her husband, Eugene Wetherell. The memorial is of the got hie style of architecture, and its total height from the ground is 57 feot. Five massive granite steps lead from the giound to the floor of the can opy, and under this floor the ashes ol the famous son c; tress will be placed. The interior arrangement of the tomb j is novel. The lower compartment con- ; tains the casket in which the body ol j Mr. Wetherell is incased; this in turn ! is inclosed in a catacomb receptacle 1 of pure white marble, hermetically Bealei, on top of wliich will be bnilt a unique Columbarium to receive the re mains of Mrs. Wetherell (nee Abbott;. The heavy slab of Quincy granite com posing the center piece of the floor will sccuratr seal the receptacle. From the base up the memorial is to be of selected Westerly granite. The carved pillars supporting the three sections will be highly polished, while the remaining decorative work shown in the cut is to be carved in the rough, in high relief. The apex of the monument will be crowned by a carving of the lamp of life. This memorial was selected bv Miss Abbott from a grett number of designs j submitted to her by the principal con- : structors of tni class of work, both at home and abroad. N EX Th ' Prof. W. H SHEPARD aud competent tssfctaat in the toaaorialarl will give you a t, ( - , H air Cut for ' 20Cent. riampoo- 20 " j. hava " - lo ' cuT3icyjsem:ns!!3?. fi, r. j Pan ly Lions. .... ' - A -, !-. .- -s - v.-:.- -..-;- , - - - - for Infants artartahnwdaaapMtooBBilroathat IreeoBimeaJltaapwlartoa7ieM(4iioB kaowatome." E.A. Aacwxa,ktD v: 111 Bo. Oxford &L, BrooUa, X. T. Tae oa of 'Castoria'hasmlnvaal and H merit o w.11 know, that It awn 7 foperoroa-ation to oadorae It Feware l gaESirtJamute. who do not k Caatoria mkiaByich. CamUM JfjtwnnVD. f lt Faor BlocnlngUl Ratonnod Church. new X or Tn OawtAoa 0VI$ ENJOYS Both the method and results vhen Byrup of Figs ie taken; it is plcasaut aud refreshing to the taste, and acts rentlyyet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Byrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the siomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Byrup of Figs is for sale in 6O0 and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept Any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAM FRANCISCO, CH. louimui. nr. new romt. H.r Liquor Habit aiAunt troiio jNoieisairTOJttarKe D?HUnES GOLDEN SPECIFIC. ; It Cavn bo si Ten 1 n coffee, tea, or 1 n rtl cl ea of food. ( without tb knowledge of patient If necemaryj i It li absolutely harmleBH and will effect a Derma nent and speedy cure, whether the patient Itt a moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. IT NEV ER FAIJjfl. It operate no Quietly and with each certainty that the patient undergoes no Incon venience, and aooif bit complete reformation it effected. 41 page book free. To be bad of B. N.O, N. Duffy, druggist, New Berne. OLD DOMINION Steamship Company, SEMI-WEEKLY LINE. The Old Dominion Steamship Company's Old ant Favorite Water Route, via Albe marle and Chesapeake Canal. FOB Norfolk, Baltimore, New York, Phlla drlplkla, Boston, Providence, and Waihtnglon City. And all points yorth, East and ll'esf. and aTUfter On ESDAY, APRIL 14, 1891 tititu iurt;it?r notice, me Stealer NEWBEM, Capt. Sonicate, Will -nil from Norfolk, Vs., for New Berne, N. C , dine'., every Monday and Thursday, linking close connection with the A. & N. C. It. I!., for all nations on ihat loud and with th Steamers Kinston anil Howard lor Kin mm, Trenton, and all other landings on the muse una Irenl mvers. Kclurnin? will Rail FROM NEW BERNE. FOR NORFOLK direct, at 2 p m., Tuesday anil r niy, malting connection with theO. D. 6. B.Co.'sshinsforNfw York, B. 8. P.Co. steamers for Baltimore; Clyde Line Ships lor Philadelphia, M. & M. T. Co.'a ships for B s ton and Providence. Steamer Kinston, Cast. Dixon, will sail for Kinston on arrival ot tteamer Newberne. Order all goods care of O. D. 8. 8. Co., Norfolk. Va. Passengers will find a good tabl. comfr-t-ilile rooms, and every courtesy and attention will be paid them by the officer. E. B. ROBERTS. Agent Mkmsrs. CULPEPPER & TURNER, Agenm, Norfolk, Va, yf. H. STANFORD, Vice-President, New York City. Boot and Shoe Maker. All Styles of Foots and 8Kea mads to order and on Short notloev REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. N. ARPEN, . GBAVEI ST., ippsslti Jotraal Offlei IK jfoBumqmfESS V Liquor Habit K. R. JONES, HEAVY AND LIGHT r GROCERIES. Xrorillard and Ball 4 Ax Bnai, - Sold at Manujadurm' Price. - Dry Goods Notions. . .,.... -....i.....:-.'V- V ...... FhII 6 took and Large Assortment, : Prion as low at the Lowest Vail nd Examine my Sloe. t' . ; ; Sntlafnotlon Gunrantond, 5 J'" B. IIUO WW," nOT CLASS- BARBER SHOP. Ne ill j HttcJ up In the hart of stl. Bati i-oom wi h h,t aud cold watsr. ERSCK BLOCK, r ! L TT. and Children. 1 Oone. Cbmrtealfoa. . .. ' gour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation, Kills Worn, fifes steep, and moot O. i nihoatofkna For amra! Tr I ham nemmnM roar ''"utoria.' and (hall alway continue to So an a it hat iavarlablj produce boanAeial nwmr.PjADam.1T. D- The Vlnthrop," ISMb. Street and Tth Are, . Kew York Cits'. Oamwt, IT-IIorba Bmawr,. Haw Ten. A, GREAT BARGAIN I 327 ACRES r n WILL BB SOLD AT A , GREAT SACRIFICE! A VALUABLE PLANTATION situ ited on lthe South side of the Neuse river, three and-a-half miles from the City of New Berne, N. C. One hundred and twenty-five acres cleared. Good land, suitable for Tricting, Tvbacet i Raiting, or any kind of farming. The balance, two hundred and two acres, heavily timbered with pino, oak, cypress, anfVbthor kinds of timber. It is also tino Grazing Land. Good dwelling, outbuilding, and a fine orchard. It has a tine FISHERY fronting half mile on tho beach, where there are high banks of marl that can never be exhausted, from which vessels can load with cose. It is a very beautiful and healthy lo cation, presenting a near view to the passing vessels and the A. & N. 0. Railroad. For terms apply to P. TRENWITH, Opp. Hotel Albart. HEW HEME, I.C. JOE K. WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF liT NEW BERN E, N. C. Italian and American Marble and all Qualitia of MaleriaL : i,larl)lGl7oi1(s Orders solicited and given prompt at. : -tention, with satisfaction guaranteed, i' , "Terra CottaTaseribr riant and flowers ' farnhhed at th vary lowest rata. MRSTjn. HINES'- Boarding House REOPENED. - Mrs. J. M HINE8 has reopened a " , ; rirst-uiasi isuardtng House in tnecity, sj: opp a te Baptist Church. .-. , Pha Dinnmn flnnio Cnnrinir Wnnhino' . - --'' .wit, h w ii '. -,-...r j in, i it u iiii nniift crniuu uini.ii i n.- caw ve naa 01 ine tame ptaoe.-v-.r, mm m t v t r- v. mj -i it n p ."L i : a vugs n. . mm imim; Stealers 0. H. Stout, Defiance & Vesper On and after February 1st, 18911 this line will make regular . f r V 'S SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS, Baltimore and New Berne Laavlni Baltimore for New Bern. WEB..'1 NE3DAY, SATURDAY, at 6 P iL Uaving New Berno for Baltimore, TUES DAY, SATURDAY, at 0 P if. r j S Berchanls and Saifpersy Take' lotlce. Thll tl. only DIRECT lbiioirt ;ofe Berne for B iltimore without change,sUnping , only at Norfolk, corned ine then lor Boston. Providence, PiiilRuVlphiir, Rlrhmond. and all '; points North, East and West, Making clot -connection lor all point by At N, C, Rail--, roail and River out of New Berne. .--;r:t '1 " Agents are a follow! ' - i ' ' Rauaca fosTE, Oen'l Manager, 'Hi t: B0Llglit8ttBaltliora,' Jab. W. MoCafbick, Agnt, Norfolk, Va. , W. P. Clyde it Co., Philadelphia, 11 Bouth I-"1 wharves. v .-,-:v'-T .-v..., New York ana Balta. Trana, LhMJPiart Korlh rlvr. E. Simpson, Boston, S3 Central wharf. ,i V ' .-. 8. H. Rook well, Providmioe, B. I. r -i i; ;')., Bhlp leavs Boston, Tactrloya and Saturdays. Lnlto., Wednesdavs A Satnriavai ? 1 . PhiladelDhia. MondavaWadoo. r Y. : " daj-s, Saturday. f.u;ie.- 'Frovidni RnltiMianL ':- Throngh bill lading given, and rat guar. ; anteed to all point at th different offloot ol , the eompanie. .. , . '., .".. i HSr Avoid Breakage of Bulk and Shit via If. C. line. ' ' ' v . ... . & H. GEAY,Aga, Naw Bern, K. 0 lawnan n -V Kii.. VCiilLL riilu I OUTWEARS ALL OTHERS c . u Slow duvb an uniattd ttrtii-i and ou imj Uie-Arerlll-and Dafnt SSi f"'; roi not atve net Avertll l'.iii h a onuilful instrrs It Imrrorei Y tL TiJ It". l'Lh""h,",n tat' "V ". 'or rM'i'i'V' ATrr.1" Pnt to nr xldreu I. H. ctrirn.. n f -ay - - tea'- -'f-.Vj .sV,v )

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