Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / July 15, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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.. .1..:? ANNOUNCEMENT ' 1. mm i T3 DAIT,y' JOURNAL' la pobll.ked r : '.erw-rx Monday at 5.Q0 per year; $140 Deiirered toeitysul)erier St h) rrg r-r month. I laE WEEKLY JOTTCNAL I psblJalies' rery Tharaday at f L80 per una. I Notice of Uarriagesor Death sot tos ten line wiil be inserted ire. AU ad ditional matter will be charged t eta. pet line, i JPajrmenU for UtuieotadTertieiuentia ft aude in adraoee. Regular adreiti. neat will be collected Peeiptiy at the ead mi each Booth. Communications containing new of "A stent public, interest are eolicited. No eoa. Buoi cation must be expected to be publUhed tnat eoataina objectionable peraonalitiea, or withhold the nam of the author. Article longer thaa half eolamn moat be paid for. , Anypereea feeling aggriereu at any aoony jDoaa communication can obtain the name of the author by application at thia office and skewing wherein the frieranoe exists. THE JOURNAL. f t HARPER, - .Proprietor. CT-HANCOCK, - Looal Reporter. i- 1 ' pmEnlmd at th Poitofficc at Xf Htm M.C, ui end-dam WUkUtr. Tho product of gold tu the United Eta tea tho last 16 years has nffjjrojratej (bo enormous amount of $572,900,- m. A man over in Australia had a new and brilliant idea not long ago, chron icle the Argonaut, in regard to t ho interpretation of the clause iu his mar riage vows, "till death 11 9 do part." His wife died, luckily for her, us tho following facts demonstrate, ani since he was bound only till death to bis wife, tho husband refused to pay her funeral expenses. The antipo dean courts promptly decided that n husband's duties only cease when tho undertaker's bills uro paid. i Sir Douglas Fox has forwarded to London an exhaustive report on I ho plans for constrncting the proposed tunnel between Prince Edward Island and Now Brunswick. Ho declares the scheme to be practicable and estimates the cost as follows: Tunnel of twelve feet, to be operated by an electric motor, $5,000,000; (nnncl of eighteen feet, to be operated with American rolling stock, $11,000,000; (nnncl of sixteen feet, 10,000,000. The tunnel Would be chiefly constructed of brick. ' "The growth of Now York, as will as the beautifying process that is go ing on, is shown," suggests tho Xew York Xew9, "by the fact that plans and specifications for 314 new build ings, of tho value of 9,010,850, wero filed in the building bureau during tho month of May. Many of these arc to be erected on ground hithorto unoccu pied and others will take the place of old structures in the business portions of the city, where the changes during the last ten years have been little short of marvelous." i An Alaska explorer 6ays of his voy age down tho Yukon river: "It was the grandest journey I ever inau, and I doubt whether there is a river in the world that cun equal it for magnificent 6cencry. For miles wo floated down between two huge rocky banks that lowered fully 3000 feet above our heads. The bky looked like a blue slit and the echoes between the stony ramparts were something that wouid have driven a solitary man crazy. Tho same sound was then hurled back at you a dozen times, coming from far and near at the same time.'' 1 Paris has been peculiarly fertile re cently in swindling schemes One of the cleverest was played by two sharpers upon a large linen manufac turer in Southern Russia. They claimed they wero commisssonors authorized to secure a cloth case for the Eiffel tower in winter, and, after displaying ninny credentials, secured f 1000 as a guarantee from (ho manu facturer that he would fill the big con tract, lie never discovered (he cheat until he reached Paris to measure the tower. The fellow who devised this fraud should turn his attention to fiction, for he has n rich imagination. The woman's rights question is making itsolf heard in Vienna. There was a large meeting there tho other day, in which women of all classes of society were represented, and at which resolutions were adopted demanding that the middle and lower schools be opened gratuitously to women, that the number of professions opened to women be increased, that women bo allowed to take part in political affairs, and that "all Austrian subjects of age, without consideration of taxation, position or sex, bo admitted to equal and direct parliamentary suffrage." 1 Tho resolutions have beeu forwarded to (he llcichsrath. The varied tastes of humanity add greatly to the spico ot llf, remarks the Chicago Herald. While we think that apparently every one who crosses the Atlantic is pushing to lake passage on tho fastest steamers, there aro many who are just as anxious to dawdlo over on the slowest b nts. There are enough of theso to keep I ho crawlers going yoar nfter year. Such passen gers are those who lovo the sea voy age best of all, or who are in poor health, and need the complete rest of a long voyage. Passage on the slow goers is cheaper by far than on the last ones, yot it is not by any moans the poor or tho economical who use tbem. Some very rich Now Yorkers traveJ that way by preference. - A Sana. . .-' -Lore Is Hie these: the bubble on the stream ;. Kuw seen, now gone; . ".; : , The wild, red ffoah that sets the east ajtleam At stormy daws; : ',: A wondrous Wy, blooming out to die; ., u Sprung from strange root, . V A purple flower of goMea eye And pobjoa fruit; .,, ,. v A rare red roat that shelters into hand, - Bot keeps Its tborn ; A laughing mirage mocking thirsty sand ;' In deserts k-ra ; Th carol gay of blighaome summer birds . At winter fled; The painful sweetness of remembered words From Bps long dead. And yet and yet, while summer stars shall shine, Or breezes blow. Love will be king, and rule by right divine O'er blub and low. 51. Williams, in Harper's Weeky. LOST IN THE BUSH. UY AMANDA B. HARRIS. One summer morning a man started from a public house in Australia to walk to a certain ostrich farm. lie had not been long in the country and bod to inquire the way of the land lord, who told him it was seven miles by the public road ; that there was an other way by a path through tho bush, which would save him about three miles, but ho should advise him to take tho road, "for," Faid he, "it is nothing but scrub and jungle out in the bush, and all looks just alike, and it's a little blind to anybody who is not used to it. And it's lonesome. Thcro ain't many go that way, and perhaps you won't seca man after you leave hero. There's plenty of birds and snakes, and that's about all the life there is." The mention of birds decided the man, for he was a na'uralist. but he did not tell tho landlord. When he came to the place where tho path branched off, he turned into the bush and began his four inile walk. At first he idly sauntered along, for had he not the day before him? He remembered that ho had three or four Liscuits in his bag, and thought it was no matter if lie did not reach the farm till after dinner time. Ho would en joy the shrubs and flowers, the birds and butterflies, all of which wero new to him. Over and over he said to himself that ho was glad he choso that way. The sameness! Ho did not find it tiresome in the least. The lone liness! He rather enjoyed it. Was th path a blind one? He did not tiud it so. It was narrow, to be sure, and wound in and out over the same coarse grass and among the same thorn bush es and furze and scrub and tangle of vines with the samo low (ices over head, but he found it easy enough to keep in it. He was thinking this when a bird, bright as a jet of flame, flashed before him and into the thicket to the right Ho turned aside a few steps to look nfter it. And in that moment lie was lost. Now the "Australian bush" is a dangerous place to be lost in, but ho was not aware of it; in fact, he did not know ho was lost. It did not even occur to him that he was out of the path; anil, if it had, he would have laughed at the idea that he could not get back into it at once. He was a man who had spent days at a time for many summers in exploring wild places in (lie 6tiuly of botany and or nithology, audhc had never lost his bearings. He was not in tho least disturbed, although a little surprised at not being able to step back into the path. Ho knew he had not been ten feet away; yot, somehow, he could not seem to see just where it was. He knew (hat be had turned to tho right; why, then, of course, he must now turn to the left, and he did so, but it was of m use. There was no path. "Why, whore is it?" he said to himself. "Why, how absurd this is? lint I shall And H in a minute." lie stood still and considered the situation. lie looked up and saw the samo kind of branches of the same low trees. He cast his eyes (his way and that, and saw the samo kinds of bushes; and under foot it looked tho same. Ho then recalled what (ho 'andlord had said about things looking just alike; but reassured himself by saying: "Why, I hardly stirred away from my tracks. How could I have got far from the path? It must be right here." He shaded his cyos and gazed in tently; this time to the left, "be cause," said ho, "I turned to the right, and that was nil I did. Now I will stand still till I know just how it is, for if I move I may yet bo lost." Ho had not used that word before even in thought, and he turned hot and co'd by turns as ho said it now. "I saw tho bird," he said, slowly, ns if stating tho caso very minutely, "and I turned to tho right; now I have turned back, but where is the path?" Then it occurred to him that per haps ho bad come a little too far to the left, so ho moved to Ihc right cautious ly, step by step, earnestly scrutinizing every object. It was of no use. Not yet was he really alarmed, for it seemed, as ho kept repeating to himself, "too absurd." He pondered the matter; he moved this' way and that, always with care, and gazed a1 each bash oud tree. And the day woro away. He began to feel a strange fatntne. It was not hunger, bat a sickening dread, yet he wae dee poratcly in need of food; he had often two of bis biscuits, and now he took out tho last one, but luatlnclively put it back, for a foreboding of evil was beginning to press heavily upon him. lie wondered, as he had done twenty times before, If somebody would not be coming along. . And then it oc curred to him that he might be so far away from the path that it would make no difference. . Thinking so. he determined to try If he could not make himself heard by any possible traveler through the bash.' ' - '. Twilight came on, then dense,damp 'darkness. Voices of Insect and creat ures of the night; voices strange to him broke the stillness. Now and then a branch snapped and leaves rustled. It was dark, mysterious and awfully lonesome, and bo was to cold to sleep. When morning dawned he fe!t unnerved, chilly, half famished, shore tick and thirsty. Ho looked at liU biscuit and put it back, then lapped the moisture from somo wet leaves as a dog would and rose and moved on. He must start, but where should lie go? He worked along, (earing his clothing, scratching his hands and face and every now and (hen calling for help. And another night came, and he ate I ho biscuit, looking greedily at (ho ripe berries growing about, but not yet daring, half starved though ho was, to taste them. Ho knew well enough now, he had known it for twenty-four hours, that he was lost. He knew nothing about Ihe-lav of the land,"or how far 'the bush" might ex'end, and ho was completely turned round, utterly be wildered. That night ho dropped into a heavy sleep, haunted by terrible dreams, and woke more weary than before. Ho began to long intensely for the friends be loved. Ho grew heart-sick at the thought that he must perish there. Itnt there was no way out of the trouble; and he rose in the morning nnd wandered round and round nil day, mid again night found him sitting on the ground clasping his knees iu utter despair. All at once the flight of a bird overhead caused him to look up, and he saw something which sent the blood pulsating through bis veins, and he rot-c to his feet Yes; it was n telegraph wire, and if lie could but pierce the jungle and fol low the line ho should eventually como out where wero habitations of men But in a moment ho remembered how impossible that wa, and felt with tho bitterness of despair that he must die there alone, even when messages from friend and friend, from 0110 home to another, might even then bo passing over his head. Ho was so near the mean of communication with bis fel low beings, but forever cut off. Then, quick as lightning, another thought flashed upon hi in if he could manage to cut the telegraph line, it wa certain that tho repairers would be sent out from headquarters to fol low (ho line till they discovered (he cause of the interruption, and they would (hid him! He sturtod up, and with almost superhuman strength cliiuhe I up nnd cut the wire, and there he lay down on tho spo(, weak and exhausted, but full of courage, till in the afternoon of (he next day the men arrived and camo upon the lost traveller in time to save him. St. Louis Republic. The "Great American Traveler." Daniel P: att was an American ad venturer, born in Chelsea, Mass., in 1809. He was apprenticed to a car penter and followed the trade for some rcurs, but disappeared suddenly j and was not seen at home again for ten years. When ho returned his mind was unbalanced, and from that time he led a wandering life, being 1 known all over tho country as "Gen- j oral Pratt, tho great American travel er." For nearly fifty yours be thus went from placo to place, often mak ing long journeys and subsisting on what was given him iu charity as a return for the amusement his cccen" triciiies nllorded. He mado regular tours of the colleges, especially those iu New KiiL'laml, and his arrival was always tho signal tor uproarious mer riment 011 tho part of the students. He was usually attired in scini-railitary garb, and wore enormous shoes, filled in with straw, while his breast dis played a curious array of burlesque decorations. His lectures, which nsa nlly treated of some gigantic invention be had just perfected, wero an inter minable string of high-sounding but meaningless sentences. He died in Boston, Mass., June 20, 1887. De troit Free Press. A'at Interchangeable, Cholly Choliiioudelcy The wow wics of this world are past cowwect ing. Harold Harrington AVot a misan twopho you havo become; wherefore philosophizing? Cholly Cholmondeloy The wing I bought for Alice Scott doesn't fit Minnie Itenee. Joweler'- Circular. To Preterv Peache. . 'How do yoa preserve peaches, Aunt Maria?" - . Mi - 'rl Wall, when th' ,boy appear,', we let the dog loose; air th' picket on th' tree 1 all made o iteel, an' kepi sharp." Harper Btar. - ' t -J KIZSTISIG 8CBAF& ;. Tin average weight of an adult U ISO lbs. 60s. ; . .;..;. -v ; About oneaeventcenth of a grain it palladium will,' by" electrical depo iltlon, coat he works of an ordinary watch.': .,Vyi -.ji.vr ;; J .: ; Sir ' - The average ot (be pnlse In infancy Is 120 per miuute; in manhood 80; at Uxty years 60. Tlie pulse of female ti more rapid than that of male. ;-- ' An eminent ' physician " says that sen's stiff hat , cause baldness and jatarrh. Another doctor claims that toft hat produce catarrh and baldness. MTOlszewski ha found that liquid xygen, lustead of being colorless, has bright bine color. ' He concludos that the bine of the sky may be due to the air's oxygen. A method of covering toft oolitic limestone with a chemical solution gives It a thick skin which is said to make it impervious to damp and at mospheric influences. A Newcastle, England, inventor has applied for a patent to construct cycle wheels without spokes', using instead two disks of very thin stool rivotod together at the rims and axle holes. The first known weather record was kept by Walter Merle for the years 1337 to 1344. A few photographic topics of tho original satin manu script, now in the Bodleian Library, auve just been made. A vast "banyan" tree, covering be tween six and seven acres, has been discovered 011 tho liny Lord Hcwo Is land, 300 miles from Port Mncquarie, in Australia. It is surpassed iu size Dnly by the greatest of those in India, Analysis of individual beets indi cate that maturity, more than size, de termines the sugar contents of tho beet. A high weight of leaves, as compared with tho roots, was 110 evi dence of higher sugar content, but rather tho reverse. One of tho recent inventions for life-saving apparatus is tho Irvine pneumatic gun for throwing a Hue to ships in distress or to pcrsns in a burning houe. Tho air is admitted from a reservoir to (ho chamber bo hiuddie projectile nt a preseuro of 2400 pounds to the squaro inch. Tho now equatorial tolescopo re cently mounted in l'aris has its tubo bent at a right angle, and tho imago of the sky formed by the object glass is reflected to the eyo of the observer. It is the largest of its kind in the world, its optical powers being very fine and the images of the planets re markably distinct. The flora of Europe embraces about 10,000 species. India has about 15,000. I Tho British possessions in North 1 America, though with an area nearly as large as Europe, havo only about j 6000. One of the richest floras is (hat of Cat c of Good Hope and Natal, I which figures up about 10,000 species, j Australia also is rich in species, about 1C ,000 being now known. The "gliding" railway, exhibited at Paris, in 1889, lias been established as ' n short length at tho Crystal Palace, I London. In (his construction the ! conches are without uhojls, but a "glide" on a film of water between 1 the "skates" of the carriage and the ' broad flat rail which supports tho ' weight The motion is effected by a 1 which are brought into play as train proceeds. tho A Spanish American Dainty. 'Tho most delicious thing I ever ate was roast monkey," snid a drummer at the Anderson yesterday, who occa sionally tnkos a trip through tho trop ics. "Talk about chicken aud turkey, or even canvas-back duck, they are not equal to (ho flavor or tenderness of a young monkey. Tho natives in Span" ish-Amcrica tire very fond of them, and they never hesitate about rating (hem. They scoop out holes in tho ground and mnka a small bake oven in which they ioat them. Sometimes the animal is boiled, but no matter how prepared the meat is always a palatable dih." Pittsburg Dispatch. It Felt Good to Stop "Once upon a time," said Marshall P. Wilder (o a group in his hotel, "a Hide boy sat at a tablo pounding his thumb nail with a hammer," and the famous story teller screwed his face into comical grimaces expressive of recurring pain while diie hands went through tho motions suggested by the story. "Presently," he continued, "a maa asked him what ho was doing that for." " 'Cuuse,' whimpered the boy, 'it feci so good wheu I stop!'" New York Sun. Church Slngcra' SalarieB. Two women In New York receive over $4000 a year for their cbnrch singing. One is Mmo. Clementine Do Vera, of Dr. Paxton's church; the other i Miss Jennie Duttpu. Both have all the concert engagements they cau attend to, and probably make M much more during tho year by this mean a they are paid by the congre gation of their respective churche. Church tenor receive tfiO ,8anday, alto $6. ani, tfieT aamtC) S Stephen' paid young Oodln $3600 when Dr. MoGlynu wa pastor there New Tork World. , ' . - " . -; : A Wa- of X at are. ;" :, , ' For fifteen yean Joe Duffy, of the Superior Court Clerk' office,. baa not known that he was hurt, yet be ha been carrying a part of a pane of glaa around in hi frame aioo March, 1876, ' .-The acquirement, concealment and final delivery are equally interesting. Nature' hide and seek game with the injured man was prolonged and filled with wonder. It kept Mr. Duffy guess ingwhat wae the matter that censed the peculiar yet not painful aeosation which gathered around his wrist and ran a race up to his shoulder.making an oocaaional jnmp at the elbow and then resuming the chase all over hi body, " "I attributed these sensatiou," aaid he, to an' accident whica caused the dee traction of a large pane of glass and left several jag -on my arm. These quickly healed, and I thought noth ing more about the : matter, . until about m year ago I gave my arm a sodden wrench a I. was getting on a atreet ear. I remember I let go ot the car, impressed with the idea that an eleetrio light wire had eome in contact with the track, and through the ear with me. After that I had sensations, sensation of the sort that makes a man feel that he is a walking storage battery and all he ha to do i to touoh a button to make him hop. Doctors were visited. The incident became a ubjeot of consul tation for soienlits, and I don't mind telling you that I am called to the Col lege of Physician and Surgeon to be the subject of a pow-wow. The glass was removed yesterday and is now un dergoing scieatifio examination by mi c roe 00 pic and other methods known to the craft'' The piece of glass was triangular in shapo with an acute angle, the longest leg of which was an inch long and the base half an inch. It bad traveled three inches from the dace of entry and had become imbedded between the hones of the forearm. The turning of the arm and the rolling of the bono had turned , the sharp angle of the glass toward the .nrface, and the efforts to cut its way cnt had caused the eleetrio sensations which had so moved Mr. Duffy. 1 Two weeks ago the arm became irri- : tat;-d and the foreign substance made I trouiile. A poultice fetobed the ugly thing to the surface, and Dr. James A. ; l.eyuolds, of No. 400 Oakley avenue, went after it with knife and tweezers. I He was successful and now the doctors and snrgeons will write volumes on the , facts concerning the retention of sharp j foreign substance in the human body ' for years which will tend to upset all preconceived theories heretofore ad- 1 vaucod on that subject. Inter Ocean. . Mies Alcott An Author and Woman. Miss Josephine Lazarus publishes in Century a thoughtful sketch of the drcn's author from whicb we quote these I paragraphs: Strangely enongh, tnher works, which are the counterpart of her life, ber de fect becomes a merit, and accounts for their phenomenal snccoss. What was it in Miss Aloott's books that surprised and delighted the children of a score of years ago, and that still holds its charm for tho childhood of to-day ? Was it a new world that hbe discovered a fairy land of imagination and romance, peo pled by heroos and enchanted beings? Far from it. It was tho literal, home spun, child's world of to-day ; the com mon air and skies,, the common life of every New Eug'and boy and girl, sucii as she knew it; the daily joys and cares the games and romps and jolly com panions all the actuality and detail of familiar and accustomed things which childreu love. For children are born realists, who delight in tho marvelous simply because for them the marvolous is no less real thaa the commonplace, and is accepted just as unconditionally. Miss Alcott met the children on their own plaue, gravely discussed their problems, and adopted their point of view, drawing in no wise upon her in vention or imagination, but upon the facts of her own memory and experi ence. Whether or not the picture, so true to the life, as she had lived it, will remain true and vital for all times can not now be determined. For the litera ture of children, no less than for our owd, a higher gift may be needed ; more finish, and less of the 'rough-and-ready,' of every-day habit and existence; above all perhaps, a larger generalization and suggestion, and the touch of things un seen as well as things familiar. But whatever the fate of her books. Miss Alcott deserves the niche she has won, and the monument built for her in tho record of a life which is a protest against the doubts of the age the fear Ue.t duty may have lost its sway and character its foundation, and that happi ness is the sole measure and rule of livimr. Ahead of Time. Thousands of everyday things would be mysteries to ns, only that we happen to be in the secret of them. Now and then something happens, either to ns or to our neighbors, to make us aware of this fact. A lady went to a photographer in Birmingham, Conn., according to the New Haven Palladium, and sat for her picture. The next day she appeared again for the proof, which was given her in the photographer's business en velope, iu the corner of which was printed, "Ketnrn after five day to- ,- Birmingham, Ct" She kept the proof much longer than cnslomers usually do,, and the photo grapher remarked the fact, because she had told him that she was in special haste. On the fourth day she came to the stndio, and apologized for being one day ahead of time. She had business in town that day, she explained, and so ventured to anticipate his appoint ment It took the photographer twenty-four hour to see that she had lakeo the five-day retnrn notice as fixing the date when the pictures would be done which shows that he was as dull as hi customer. A Kapoleon or tb Air. Griggs See that young man? He's a genius. Inventedtn air-ship, he did. BrigK Was it a suocei ? -: " Grigga'Well, rather.- Briggs-But I haven't heard of an air-ship flying. - ; Griggs-Well, his didn't. But the stockholders' money did.', : NEXTU . Prof. W. Hr SHEPARD and sonpeteat tasistanU la th tsaaacial art will fit yoa a - v Hair Cut for ". " ' SO Cent. it:!r. -. " - is " far I nfantg and Children Hasr1ahseadtcManntait r in 1 -j- r, ham ." .A.JJMBsa.M.IL, vtv: WfcOifae Brooklyn, B.T. . A was oT'OnaJerla'ai swrl j mmm m well known that a a wej 11 j nil T " r Oaoteria new Mwrm Taa Oaarum 03VU ENJOYS Both tie method and result when Byrap of Fig is taken; it is pleasant tnd refreshing to the taste, and acts rently yet 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 01 its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in. its action and truly beneficial in its effect, 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 Fig is for sale in 60o and tl 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. BAM FDAHCISCO, CAL. taumtOB. Kt. kY YORK. M.r. ' bouon Habit. BAunrewoirui masSMifroiretuu DHMiTE5 GOLDEN SPECIFIC It ch bo (Wen I n coffee), tea, or I n articles of food, without tho knowledge of patient If ntoetsaryl It m atwoiuwiy narmieai ana win eneci v perma Btnfe and speedy care, whether the patient le a moderatodrlnkeror an alcoholic wreefc. IT NEV ER FAIL8. It operates no QnleMy and with iticb eertalnty that the patient undtrjoee do incon venience, and soon hie complete reformation H affected, a page book free. To be bad of R. N. Duffy, druggist, New Bern N.O. jyl5dwy OLD E0MIIII0N Steamship Company, SEMI-WnEKLY LINE. The Old Dominion Sirainniiip Vompany'a Old ami FaojrUr Witter Kout',via Albe marle art L'huupt'ake Canal. FOR Norfolk, Blllmor, Xcvr York, Plilln ilclilila, Bo.tou, Pi'tM'liieMur, aiacl Wn.bliigloil City. And all points Norlh Kast and Went. and sTUflcr OulTsDAY, APRIL 14, 1S91 S'aincr EWBERNE, Capt. Son; Wll from Norfolk, Vs., lor New Berne, N. (' , (It-cl, cvrry Mom!:y ami TltnmluT, m.ikhij: clf'K" connrctioit With the A. fe N. ''. K., tor nil Minion 011 ihit road, and with th Statin rs Kinit"!t iuit llownrd tor Kin-;-, Trtnt"R, him nil other luudins on tiie Ntnw ami Treui Kivers. r.c!iinii. .: ill b'KOM SEW BEKNE. FOR NORFOLK direct, at 2 p m., Tuesday and r rtfior.. milking connection with the O. D. S. SLOi-'tardpalarNew York, B. H. P.Co.' steAjNct for buuimore; C ytlc Line Ship lor Philarie'iihia. M. M. T. Co.'i ships fur 11. s- ton ann f rovitlenoe. rteamer Kinsion, Capt. Pixon, will sti 1 1 for Kiimtnn on arrival ot Hi-Huirr Newherne. ( r ler all Boods care of O. D. 8. S. Co.. Norfolk, Va. Pa'sengeis will end a good table, eomfr-t-lle rooiim, and evciy couit sy and attention will be paid thein hy the otiti s. E. R ROBERTS, Agent MussM.CULPF.PPEB & TURNER Agent', Norfolk, Va. W. H. STANFORD, Vice-Preident, New York City. Boot and Shoe Maker. All Styles of Boota and Shoeo mad to order and on Short notlo. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. N. ARPEN, CBAVH ST., eppositi Inrul QSc, K. R. JONES, HEAVY AND'TJGHT GROCERIE S. LoTlUard ui Bail A Iz Snuff, Sold at Manufacturer' Price. Dry Goods & Notions. Full Stookand Large Assortment, Prloes aa lew aa the Lowest. Call and Examine my S tee a. ' ' Satisfactlen Guarantee. J. B. BUOWN, '. '' fibstciiss .i BARBERSHOP. : jTeatlr atM up In Ik bat of atyk. Bala rM wiia sot a4 esU wal, '. ' MRUNMESS yi bouon Habit. rm OaTe, OuaXtiiaelw, . Bear Saomanh, PaMrfan. fcrncuuon, Kill Won, (in sfcHff, ana Breast a Ter am! years I ha war '"Wa,' an anall aim W en it ha lanarlalay BOO alwan cetmaue nanaagr Braouoea 1 1 Bamr.riasaa.aT.rx, TtoWfcn?OfV,lBHhatoMa"dTihATe, KowTsskOiir. Oeawawr, TT Kctuut traanrr, Xa Ton. A. GREAT BARGAIN I : 327 ACRES : WILL BE BOLD AT A ' " GREAT SACRIFICE!; A VALUABLE PLANTATION situ ' ttedonithe South side of the Neuae river, three and-a-half mile from the City of New Berne, N. C, One huadred ' and twenty-five acres cleared. Good Land, waM for TrocUng, Tukaeeo . ; Eaitinf, or any kind of farmtng. The balance, iwo nunureu auu . . acres, heavily timbered with Pin0i , cypres, another kind ot Umber. j ' It is also 'lino Graxing Land. Good dwelling, outbuilding, and a .r. fine orchard. It has a fine FISHEKY fronting half mile on the beach, where ; ihoro nm hich hank of marl that can J never be exhausted, from which vessel - ' can load with ease. Tt ia a verv beautiful and healthy lOv, cation. Dresentinjr a near viow to the ,;' passing vessels and the A. 4 N. O. v Railroad. For terms apply to P. TRENWITH. 0pp. Hotel Albert, IEW BERK, 1. 8. - ' JOE K. WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF MarbielVorks NEW BERNE. N. C.V Italian and American Marble and oil ' . Qualiliet of Material. ' Orders solicited and given prompt at. :.- tention. with satisfaction miaranteed. - "Terra Cotta VMerfbr Plants and Rowan . hirniahed at th yttj lowest rata. ' MRS. J. M. HLNE3' Boarding House: Mrs. J. M HINES has reopened a Firtt-Claa Boarding House in the city, ; oppi I te Baptist Church. . r Tie Pioneer Dayis Sewiii Macniife, Can i hrui nt Out anmt nlnae. J.M. HINES, Agent, ClyiB's H. C. FriStIM, . i , wx Stealers G. H. Stout, Defiance J Vesjcr un ana alter feDruary ist, leal, this - line wili make regular - ' SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS ' lTVM! " ' , Baltimore and New Berne Leaving Baltimore for K Heme." WED. ' KESDAY, 8ATURDAY, at ti 11 Leaving New Bern for Baltimore. TDES - DAY.SATURDAY.-at FlC , ercaanla and ShiBari. Taka Inline Tab lathe only DIRECT line oat of fTew ; Berne for Baltimore wtihout chnge,toplng ,: only at Norfolk, easneotin; tha lor Boston. PrM.n... 1L. jl..!..4.1. 7) ! 1 I a .if . points North, Eat and Weit If aklng clone -oonneotion lor all poiota by A. at N.C. all road and Rirr out of Ksw Berne, - - Afeatr are at follow! - m ; Riubm toTaa,Oto'liraamr, ' , ' w" a ' XJffhtbt.. Bahlmor. 4. jAa W. MoCasSICX, Agent, Norfolk, Va, W. P. Clyde A Cs rbiladelphia. 0 South wbarvea. . . . ...... ..New York sad Balte. Trass. Llne,trUr -i North river, j i- , . :s- - . K Blmneoii, Bottoa, M Central wharf 8. H. Rockwell, ProTldenee, B, I. D V. I 1 T M . i jn. ....... wt uosivn, t dhom nsa oaiuraar. " " New Vork daily. " " BaltoWednwaar ASatnrday. " rhiladelphta, Monday, Weduec - v d.j-s, BaturdaTs. ' " ' Froridenc, Batnrdaya. ' ' . Throngli bills lading ginn, and rate gnar anteed to all point at the different offlo of the companies, - : VST Avoid Breahagef Bulk ahd Shit ma N. C. I.tne;--h: fy. - U. QUAY, Agent, New Btrae, N. 0 .VERILL P.-.i: 7 OUTWEARS ALL OTKT nu. In. .k. I . . . ja ' Mr. Slow buj, aa UHttsUi anlcle andhaitopalntbwrtlmMlDabriBf perioi and 70U bttj the "A.rlll"aiia p(n 7j fnct,0o you Hot n 7Sf ArwTa pT, . haa a beauuful mint It toprerea tiav ' Marajioa aod IponaM the vain of jo r fA5Wl-,,k,?.b" ""' ' lw...,biut.na , it ,(,, a-' -J of At si f attoauT.4.
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 15, 1891, edition 1
2
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