Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Aug. 2, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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fOBUSHERS" announcement THE DAILY JOURNAL U pobliihd ily,oepUndT t6.00per riittM for six month. Delivered to oitysubeerioers t 60 cents per month. , THE WEEKLY JOTJBNAL Is published . every Thursday at LfiO per anvun. Notice ot Marriages or Deaths not to ex ceed tea line will be inserted Ire All ad ditional natter will be charged 5 eta. per line. Payments for transient advcrtisementa must be made la advance. Regular advertise meat wilt be collected promptly at the end ml each month. Coumnnicatiens containing aews ot an In dent pablie interest are solicited. No com munication most be expected to be published that contains objectionable personalities, or - withholds the name of the author. Artioles longer than half column must be paid for. Any person feeling aggrievsu at any anony mous communication can obtain the name of the author by application at this office and knowing wherein the grievance exists. . THE JOURNAL. E- E. HARPER, C T.HANCOCK, - , Proprietor. Local Raportar. Entered at the Postofficc at JTew Serif, O; as second-class matter. An Atchison, Kan., girl some time ago married a man she did not care for. The match was made by her I parents, whom she told she would ' come back homo to live in a month, ' anyway. She recently visited homo i for the first time in two years, and was j so anxious to get back to her husband ' that she did n t remain a week. It -occasionally happens that the man 1 makes a success of it who does not wiu i a woman's affections until after he has I married her. A St. Petersburg lady of fashion bag invented an improvement in her turnout which, the local papers say, is likely to become popular with all ladies of rank. She has a mirror fastened to the girdle of her driver when she takes a drive. This enables j her not only to see whether her head- : gear and dress are in perfect order, but even to notice the cariiages and the people who are coming up behind her vehicle. Russia claims to possoss the oldest Eoldier in the world in Col. Uritzeuko, of Poltava, near Ode ma, who on Feb. 7 celebrated his 117th birthday. En tering the service in 1789, over one bundled years ago, bo received from the hands of Empress Catherine, after the taking of Ismail, where he was serving under Stiwaroff, the military gold medal. This beais the inscrip tion: "For exceptional bravery at th , a sault of Ismail, Dec. 11, 17o"J." j 31. De Tocqceville, fho celebrated French author, pays tha following ! jompliment to American women : "I , lo not hesitate to avow th.it, although 1 the women of tli9 United State i are i jonfined within the narrow circlo of j domestic life and their situation is, in ! some respects, ono of extreme dopond- ; Bnce, I have nowhere seen women i occupying a loftier position, and. if I were asked to what the s-ingu'ar pros- perity and growing strength of that ' people ought mainly to he attributed, I should reply, to the superiority of their women." i All Paris is laughing over tho joko about an American inventor who is said to have patented a corset that is to bring alout the reigu of morality at once. If one of theee articles is pressed by a lover's arm it at once emits a shriek like the whistle of a railroad engine; and the inventor claims that j he has already married three of his ' daughters, owing to the publicity thus thrust npon a backward lover. But the wits of Paiii, carrying out the joke ; to its utmost, profess to fear that soon the parlois will become unbearable, i owing to the t imultaneous and contin- j ued whistling of the corsets. j A crrtiors story was told on the streets by one John Sellers, represent ing himself at living in the Trinity bottoms about fourteen miles east ol Ennis, writes an Ennis, Texas, corro- i spondent. He said that a colored ! woman living along the river bank lost ! her 2-year-old child, a boy just able to ! walk, and search was made, but mi- j successfully, and the rnothor gave it up for lost. Further, that some tibhermen while returning from an excursion found the baby, alive and well, perched i on some driftwood, drifting placidly j toward the (inlf, about twenty miles ' down the river; that it took the fish ermen two days to discover the mother and restore the babo to its home. Some wonderful experiments in hyp notism were recently successfully given in the Coleman House, New York, by Prof. John E. Kennedy, be- ( fore the physicians attached to the Bellovue Hospital. One man, while 1 in the hypnotic state, had a needlaand thread run through his tongue and cheek without feeling it; another had the flesh of his arm burned with a lighted cigar and experienced no pain. One subject drank four ounces of cas- i tor oil, thinking it was beer; and three ; subjects were made to believe them- ; selves engaged in a yacht cruise, which closed with aa imaginary wreck, tho yachtsmen hurriedly throwing off their shoes and diving head-first to the par- j lor floor to escape from the sinking 1 vessel. i The truth of the germ theory of dis- ! ease would seem to be demonstrated, at least with regard to some diseases, ! by the researches of Dr. Koch. In cases of a few diseases, notably splenio j fever, there accumulates in the blood i and tissues, bnt more especially in the j spleen, a peculiar kind of bacteria. . Where animals are inoculated with fluid containing either the bacilla themselves or their spores, he has pro duced all the phenomena of splenio ' fever. From this- hypothesis the now celebrated micrologist has deduced the fact that by inoculating people offering with tubercular diseases with : ft lymph the bacteria of this particular disease admitting such to be of bao texiaa wigin-are destroyed effect- . nally, - 't'irt'ManiliMC ATH7 rnr.v tint ivin r ej tha pugilist, bat he has daily struggle with the prise-flab tap- - ; THE COMING JAPS. They Are Taking the Place of Chinamen in California. The Japanese Question the Problem of the Future. There aro over 5000 Japanese in San Francisco at the present lime, and probably there aro 5000 more scattered through tho Stale. In flvo years, at (he rale at which tho Japanese are ar ming, there will be about 20,000 Japanese in Cnllfornia. "The Japanese question is going (o be the great problem of Iho ftiUro," said Lyniaii I. Mowry Iho other day. "It will be a far harder problem to solve than the Chinese question. To regulate the matter there are special Itivs, but in tho case of tho former tin; immigration is unrestricted. Some peoplo say that Ibe Japanese nro the moro 'desirable' of tho two classes of people; that the Japanese assimilates and adopts our lmbils and customs. AVliilo that may bo tho case, tho Chi nese has the moro inlclligoncc and makes a far snperior servant. If wo must havo cheap labor, to the exclu sion of Americans, (he Chinese laborer is more desirable than the Japanese. "The Chinese arc going homo all Iho time an 1 very few are returning. There arj, therefore, none for hire in tho vinoyards and orchards of the Slale. The big vineyardists and cr chardisU must have cheap labor, and the Japanese arc coming In lo till the bill. It is these 4000 and 5000-ncrc fruit farms that bring the cheap labor to tho exclusion of tho American. If theso largo ranches were cut up into small holdings and farmed by Amer ican citizens then the labor question would be solved, becauso each settler would ho able to farm his own plot. It is thesc holders of largo trnct9 of land that havo overrun tho country with cheap labor. 'It is not, however, in the matter of farm work alone that tho Japanoso will enter inlo competition with tho American. They arc expert carpen ters, bootmakers, tailors and cabinet--makers. In Japan they earn about 50 cents a day and as they will cat almost anything, it does not cost much for them to live, consequently Ihcy will be glad to work in Ban Francisco for a slight advance on what they re ceive in Yokohama. Japan has hordes of poor people whose sole ambition is to raiso enough money to reach Amer ica. "When I was in Japan tho so-eallcil cholera was raging. It was not chol era; it was starvation. The poor peo ple were living on raw fish and rot'eu cabbage. Several of them I saw cut open, and (here was not nn ounce of mailer in Ihcir stomachs. In proof that It was starvation, not a whito or rich man died of tho disease. In proof that Chineso are superior lo the Japanosc I will tell you what I saw in Yokohama. In all fie 'go downs' and warehouses the Japanese are employed, but Iho over.ioer is always a Chinese Nino times out of ten a Chinese is the cashier in Iho stores. I only tell you Ibis to show you that while the Chi-ru-so question was bad enough, the lupanesc one will be far worse. "There aro over 5000 Japanese in San Fra cisco, and, judging from the manner in which they are flocking lo Hawaii, there will be at leant 20,000 hero in flvo years. Thero are 17,000 Chineso in Hawaii, and it look 20 years for thoin to grow to that num ber. In five years 18,000 Japaneso have landed in Honolulu. Onco Ihcy get well started toward San Francisco thev will como in droves." " I consider the Japanoso question a serious problem," said Collector Phelps. Tho Japanese aro coming in ever increasing numbers, andjust how lo slop them I don't know. In the course of anothor Iwolvc months I think tho question will havo grown to as grave proportions as was ever tho Chinefo. We nro doing the best wo can but oven that best does not amount lo much. Tho wholo mnttor is giving mo a groat doal of worry. I thought I had tho Chinese well under control and that I was going to havo a rojt, but here crops up tho Japanose question, and I Biipposo it will take mo a year to straighten it out." San Francisco Report. A Cliinese-Amerlcan Soldier, AVIicn the grizzled veterans of Indi ana Post, No. 28, (1. A. 11., rccontly laid to rest at Indiana, Pcnn., their comrade, Thomas Sylvauus, they buried a soldier whoso life had been of moro than passing interest. Sylvauus was a full-blooded China man about forty-six years of ago. Ho was born in Hong-kong, singularly enough, on (lie Fourth of July. In 1867 a Presbyterian missionary brought him to Philadelphia and taught him tho English language. When the war broko out "Tom Chinaman," as he was popularly kuown, went to tlie front OA a private in tho Eighty-first Pennsylvania Volunteers. Ho made a good soldier, but ill health compellod his dischargo late in 1862. Nine months later he had so far re covered that be re-onllsted in Com pany D, Forty second New York. With this command be fought gal lantly in tho sereu days' battle before Richmond, and did his part in the Wilderness and at Spottsylvanla, and la the series of eugagontent iu front of Petersburg. " v He Wot Corporal of (he Color Guards at Cold Harbor. When the breastworks were . charged, all the others detailed to hold up the flag fell, but tho plucky Chinaman waved the Stars and Stripes defiantly and sur vived. Dating the assault on Peters burg Tom fell into Confederate hands, and until the war closed lie spent Lis days in the prisons of Audorsonvllle and Jacksonville. Tom early been mo a Christian. For nearly twenty years ho had been liv ing at Indiana and was a devout mem ber of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He took out naturalization papers at Pittsburg in 1870, and is said to hare been tho first Chinaman to tako Ihat stop. Soon after that ho married an American girl, by whom ho had Ihreo children. Sylvauus was granted n pension eight years ago on account of disability, and only a few days before his death yio department grunted him an incroasc. Ho is said to linvn lienn ihn mill- ( lilnnsn rniiGinn. I or on the rolls. New York Times. Shrewd Monkey Generalship. In real military organization and strategy monkeys aro far ahead of all other animals, and notably the differ ent kinds of baboon. Mansflold Par kins gives an excellent account of iho tactics of tho dog-faced Hamadryads that lived in largo colonics' in tho cracks in the cliff's of the Abyssinian Mountains. Theso creatures used oc casionally to plan a foraging expedi tion into tho plain below, and the order of attack was most carefully organized, the old males marching in front and on the flanks, with a fow to bring up the rear and keep tho rest in order. They had a cede of signals, halting or advancing according to the barks of tho scouts. When they reached the com Holds the main body plundered while the old males watched on nil sides, but took nothing for themsolves. The others slowed the corn in their check pouches and under (heir armpits. They are also suid to dig wolls with their hands and work in relays. The Gel ad a baboons sometimes have battles with the Hamadryads, especially when the two species have a mind to rob the same field, and, if lighting in the bills, will roll stones on their enemies. Not long ago a colony of Gelada baboons, which had been fired at by some sol diers attending a Duke of Coburg Gotha on a bunting expedition on tho borders of Abyssinia, blocked a pass for some days by rolling rocks on ull coiners. London Spectator. Short llnlter. Butler is made in a peculiar wny in California, but it is sold in a still m ;ro eccentric fashion. Tho buttcrmakcr always turns it out in round rolls about a half-foot in longth, supposed to weigh two pounds. Tho dealer sells it by the roll and charge for two pounds, but tho roll ulnays lacks from six to eight ounces of full weight. This thing has been going on for years to the loss of the consumer, and without profit to any ono except the middleman. The latter buys butter by the pound, and sells it by tho roll, so he makes a cloar profit on the short weight. Whon a man handlos several Ions of butter a ' day this m ikes a large item, for on each roll ho will make from eight to ten cents, or at least 8100 on every ton. Tho dairy men can't prevent this, as, if they made butter in good two-pound rolls, no commission man would handlo it. What tho butter-makers propose to do Is to establish an honest mold for the rolls and then sell their buttor them selves in a co-oporatlvo market This will also run out tho oleomargarine which is sold by ninny dealers a first class butter. St. Louis Globo-Dcm-ocrat. A Sculptor's Rare Subject. Focardi was a poor Italian sculptor. Ho happened one day to bo in Preston, a grimy, smoky Lancashire town, casting about for work. One morn ing ho rang for his breakfast once, twice, but no answer came. Again he pulled the bell, and again, with the tninc result. S He was very angry at this inatten tion to his comforts, which is not uu- , common to thoso parts, so they say, ' and rushed down stairs to see about it. Ho passed an open door, when lo! what struck bi n? A gnarled old women fiercely scrubbing a very dirty boy, who squirmed under the rough usage, and screwed np his eyes and mouth to keep out tho soap. "Drat the boy!" said tho old lady; "stand still, do; will ho never come clean." Tho rage of the breakfast less sculptor turned to delight Hero was a subject for his chisel,' and it was soon arranged that these two should sit to him. Some difficulty was at first experienced to hit the expression on the boy's face, bat this was done by the application of periodic buts of cold water and soapsuds. Library and Studio. Why She Wept. One of the bridesmaids was softly crying during the ceremony, and her escort, nudging her, whispered: ; "What are yon crying for? It isn't your wedding." , x ,7 "That's whyTm crying," the (aid. New York Press. , '' - i - London was flew to accept tbe dec trie light, but is now making np for lost time. ,, - :. ..'.-, : Photographs of the sun are said to show that the groat luminary makes a complete revolution in eleven years. The great Kansas salt bed is S'O feet bcl w the surface, . 80Q miles long, 25 feet wide and 400 feet thick, Several Hungarian men of science and letters aro planning an expedition into the interior of Asia in quest of the original home of the Magyars. Tho dclolerioas influence of exces sive heat is most manifest in the fevers, dysentery, diarrhoea and ex haustion incurred on the tented field. A seal iu the Paris Jardin d'A eel i ra tal ion has given birth to a bub. Both animals aro doing woll. This is tho first time such an event is known to have taken place among seals in cap tivity. The cub is ten inches long. A swamp earth is usod by natives of the New Hebrides for smearing Iho points of their arrows. Dr. Lodantio finds the poisonous agent to bo tho organism that develops tetanus, and that this is devitalized by keeping, so that old arrows lose their virulence An investigator of the effect of per fumes on animals iu tho Zoological Garden, London, discovered that most of tho lions and leopards wcro very fond of lavender. They took a piece of cotton saturated wi'.h it and hcld .it between their paws with great delight. Strictly speaking, tho only precious stones aro tho diamond, ruby, sapphire and emerald, though tho term is ofton extended to the opal, notwithstanding its lack of hardness, and lo the pearl, which is not a mineral, but strictly an animal product. Popularly, a gem is a precious or scini-precious stono,whon cut or polished for ornamental pur poses. Hysteria is clearly a product of civ ilization. Nothing that in the least resembles it has ever been discovered among heathen peoples. It is i dis easo of tin imagination and is devel oped with it. The worst casts arc thoso persons who havo highly strung nerv ous organizations, who are emotional and impulsive without being w'oll bal anced. The Edinburgh Observatory Circu lar states that A. Stanley Williams of Burgess Hill, Sussex, has discovered three dolicatc but distinct markings in the equatorial regions of Saturn. Tho first and third of these are round bright spots, somewhat brighter than the white equatorial zone in which they occur. The second is a smaller dark marking on the equatorial odgo of the shaded holt which forms 'the southern boundary of the white zone. Dr. S. P. Langly, Secretary, an nounces (hat there has been established as a department of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington a Physical Observatory, which has been furnished with specially designpd apparatus for the prosecution of investigations in radiant energy and other departments of telluric and astrophysics. Tho communication of new memoirs bear ing in any way on such researches is requested, and for them it is hoped that proper return c.iti bo mado in due time. , Blarney's Famous Stone Blarney is a quiot Tittle Irish village, distant on tho left a mile from the station at which we alight half an hour aftor leaving Cork. Overlooking it from a slight eminenco is a ruined castle built by McCarthy, "Prince of Desmond," in tho early part of the fifteenth cen tury. No one seems to know Iho exact ori gin of the Blarney stone, or how it de rived its miraculous power, writes John Cod man in tho Chautauquan. It may have been iu tho ark ballast be queathed to the prince by Ids great ancestor. lis some way it found itself on tho very pinnacle of tho castlo tower, with Iho dato 1703 carved upon it. To kiss it has been tho ambition of many generations, who have laboriously climbed tip to its dangerous eminence. There havo been many accidents from fulling. The .fashion is to kiss it on bended knees, expressing a wish .it the same timo, tho theory being that tho per suasiveness is communicated to tho lips that shall be effectual, especially where love is tho ooject. Absurd as is the practico, the cere mony is almost invariably performed by all visitors Sir Walter Scott did not find himsolf degraded by follow ing the general example. The Blar ney stone is being gradually kissed away. Then some thousands of ycara hence, more or less, whou tho last atom disappears on the last pair of lips, the millennium will come, for as flattery brought sin into tho world, to whou flattery leaves It siu may be no moro. A Novel Glove Mender, Among the novel inventions torhioh have lately passed through the Patent Office is a glove meildor mado of nick el and consisting of two parls, which press against each other by means of a spring. Part of the top edge is pro vided with small teeth ranged close to each other. The (earn of the glove to be mended i Jiressed bfet wee a tho' teem, ana tne neoaio is passea in ana out at every opening. Brooklyn Citizen. :'j ' V-V ;" ;V- f ' " '-. scitirriric scnf ' MalriJrult la Hum, ; 'v. -. Frenchwomen devote good deal ot timo to the question r.f hair-dreming, and My so; for in good truth, how ever well-dreiaad sv woman may be, the looksi nothing unless she 1 oiera coiffee, and however elaborate the arrangement neatness ban principally to be consid ered. The clasme atyje adapted to tbe shape, of individual heads is the lead ing idea, and soft eurls and marteanx fill Bp tbe intervening space between the forehead and the crown of the head. An. easy coiffure is a elosoly-cnrled front, all the rest of the hair combed to the crown of the bead, and there twisted into ft noil surmounted by two hori isontal marteanx ot hair arranged in a teif i-ciroular fashion to adapt them selves to the ooil, and- to show above the bead in front ' So much depends on the length of the head;, but an easy way is to wave the hair behind the eurls, and bring that to the back. You never in Paris see a Frenchwomen with a knob of hair pinned carelessly where it accentuates the natural excrescence of the he vl; nor do they, when they have passed the hey-day of youth, drag sparse hftirs from the temple. I do not advocate French hair-dressing for En glih heads, bnt the dwellers i i Oaent Britain would do veil to study French modes and adsi them to their own idiosyncrasien. ( inselPs Magazive. He Broke Criminals on tko Wliejl. It may seem incredible, but it is trus, nevertheless, that a retired executioner is living in Belgrado to-day who, as late as 1S75, broke criminals on tho wheel. The name of the maa is Paulo Jovanovitch, and the executions toai place on the grassy slopes of the raui parts of Belgrade. The most noted exe cution of the kind was in 1873, whea two men, one a Turk, the other a He brew, weie put to death for murdering a whole family. The Hebrew was exe cuted first, and fifteen Minutes elapsed before the executioner gave him the coup de grace. The Turk made a violent re sistance, and had to be stunned into sub jection, although the stunning wis perhaps intentional. This mediaval punishment was abolished about 1878, when Servia asserted complete independence. Stran gling in prison is the usual capital pen alty. St. Louis Republic. Tho Illinois Central Railroad Company Is to replace its antiquated depot in Chi :ago with a new and handsome structure at a cost of some $100,U00 dollars. W. D. MclVER, Attorney-at-Law NFW BERNE, N. C. may22 dwtt C R. THOMAS Attorney ak Gonnselor-at-Liw, 'Office, Craven Street, Stanley Building, NEW BERNE, N. C. Practices in the Conrtsof Craven, Carteret, Jones, Onslow, Lenoir and Pnnilico counties, Ihe Supreme Court of North Carolina, and the U. S. District and Circuit Courts, jlyll H. L. GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Craven St., next to Journal Office. NEW BERNE, N. C Practice in the Courts of Craven, Carteret, Hyde, Pamlico, Jonea, Onslow, and Lenoir counties, and in the Supreme aud Federal eourts. adi&wtf J. U. BKOWN, FIBST CLASS BARBER SHOP. Ne.itlr fitted up in the twt -of sty la. Bats rooms wl k hot and cold water. BRICK BLOCK, MIDDLE ST. Furniture! Furniture! FURNITURE! .ONE OF THE LARGEST STOCKS In 7? stern North Carolina. COMPLETE in Every Department. Also, we now have the Agency for the cel ebrated YVlIEKI.ERifc WllSON and STANDARD Sbwino Machines. Thev are the lateat im proved Light Running and are unsurpassed uy any machine ever placed in this market JOHN SUTER. GEO. HENDERSON. (Successor to Roberts & Henderson.) General taw Ageit, Representing Insurance Company of North America, of Philadelphia. Home Insurance Company, of New York. Queen Insurance Company, of England. Hartiord Fire luiurauco Company, of Hartford. North Carolina Home Insurance Company, of Bnleigh. Greenwitch Insurance Company, of New York. I'limnix Insurance Company, of Brooklyn. United Underwriters Insurance Compnny, f Atlanta. Boitou Marine Insurance Company, of iltoston. juiy2dwtf NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. An Eflncational InstitQtioi for EASTEM I0BII CABOUM, . MALE AND FEMALE. . ESTABLISHED 1889. i. Eight Distinct Departments. Primary, Intermediate, .. Academic, Col Ugwie, .Ait,.. Musio,.. Industrial ' : ; , and business. TEN EXPERIENCED AND COM PETENT TEACBER3. . : ' : . , -- " ': : :' ' ... '.- .. ' Voeal and Instrumental llus'.t Prominent Features, nnder the direction of a male pro fessor, with efficient assistants. ,: ,s - Special Course of Instruction for ; those desiring to become Teaoliers. - ' . Expenses very moderate. Board from $8.00 to tl0.U0 oer month tacilitiea'a-osd. V - ; Blerial inducements to indigent students. Fall Term Opens Sept, 7, 1891.' ' For farther Information or for oatalogne, apply to :f"; .. w, f f G. T. ADAMS, A. BB : (Trinity College), PRINCIPAL, 1 nlyll dwtf ' "- New Berne. N. "C. tor infanta salaBMwaaafeptBdtotUdMtka IwniaiBiaaSltMsnpariortoaayia'aaailislaa aaswaSaaM." H. A. inn, If. D, IU Ba. Oxfard Bt, BraakJre. T. Ts ef 'Cmatorla' to semtvaraal aa4 a awrtai ao wall bm tha It semis wark ml inparenyation to aodoraa it Few a! Smft fcmllka vho tlo noi ksea Caataria watoaaVra(ii) p I) - : NewTorkCw. Lata faster Bieopalaglile Batnrmail Ctocctb Tn Cm urn HUMPHREYS' 'VETERIMARYSPECIFICS For Eones, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Eogs, I AND POULTET. SOOPaaf Book an Treatment of Animals and Chart 8eat Free, cms TererStOoBarcstlnSjIiiflamnatloa A. A. 1 Hplaal Aleninsttla, Willi Fever. 11. B. strain a, LamrirM, Kheamatlsm, C. C. Distemper, Naeal Dlacharsea. D. D.llola or Grab) Warns. K.B. Congae, Ileavea, Pneainonla F. F. Collo or tirlace, Bcllracfao. G. G. Miscarrturc, Hemerrhattas. II. n. Urinary ana Kidney Disease, Eraptlve Diseases, Manse. J.K. Diseases or Dlgsslien, Paralysis. Blntls Bottle SJrer SO doses), - .60 Stable Caae, wK i SpeciSea, Haanal. Veterinary Cure Oil and Medic tor, 87.00 Jar Veterinary Cere Oil, - - 1.00 Sold br Drvffffists; or Sent Prepaid anywhere and in any quantity on Beoaipt of Pries. HUMPHREYS' MEDIOIHE OO Ooraar William and John Sta, Mw York. nUlIPHEEYS' H0JCE0PATHIC ft ft SPECIFIC No.iO Is nssk m w Ar. THsi otIv wuaoaaMful remedy far Harms Debility, Vital Weakness. I asd Prostration, from orsr-work or other causes... $1 par viator 6 rials and laras vial powder, for S&, Sold by diiuooists, or sent postpaid on reoelpft of prloa--tlu'MPHREYS' MEDICINE CO.. Oor. William and John St., S. T. All of our Veterinary Preparation! con be had of 3. V. Jordan, Druggist, N W cor. Broad and Middle streets, Newbero.N.C L. S. WOOD, Formerly 18 years wilh Geo. Allen & Co. DEALER IS General Hardware, C-U-T-L-E-R-Y. Harness, Saddles, Bridles and Whips. FARM US IMPLEMENTS, Pollock Street, next to national Bank, NEW BERNE, N. C. june20 dwtf SRUNKENrfESS Liquor Habit. BAunewoxu) mvtFsewonuiu RIAIifES golden specific ItcaiiboirlVM. In coiTe. te,or tn articles of food, without tho know.edfto ' patient If necessary J tt is sbeolatelr barmlae ana will effect perm nent and epeedr core, whether the patient la a moderatedrlnkeror an alcoholic wreck. IT NE V KB FAILA. It operate no quietly and with audi certainty that the patient undergoes no Incon venience, and soon his complete reformation W Acted, ea page book free. To be bad ol B. N. Duffy, druggist. New Bern N.O. jjlftdwjr OLD B0MINI0N Steamship Company, ScMI-WCKLY LINE. The Old Dominion btcamtliip Company's Old and Fawritc Vater Jio&t'.niu Albe. mrle ani Chesapeake Canal Fort XurfolU, Bolllmorr, Kur Ynrh, Phlla dclilil4( Bwaloli, Prtivlitruur, and Wa.hhiglun CM). And all point ,Nrth, hast and West. and aTUfter On ESDAY, APK1L 14, 1891 lu... In. i- -i-i inflict?, me Slcamer HEWBEBHE, Cast. Soaliuate, Wil s iil ironi Norfolk, Vs., f or New llnrne, N C , dir ct, rvrry Moudiiy and Tlinrsdu, ui 'king clone connection w ill the A. & N. U " H., fur all stations on tlt-t iod, and with th s'ti-anuT'" Kittstnn an'i llowiml tor Kiu ii, Tnntvo, and nil other landings on tbe NVme and Trent ttiven. Kelnnii..!r.ill anil FItOM SEW BKRNK. FOR NORFOLK direct, at 2 p m., Tuesday and rriitsy". mnKliif cnnnertion with the O. D. S. 8.Co.'sliip"orNew York, B. S. l'.Cc'a steanieis fur Baltimore; C yde Une Shipi tr Philadelphia. M. : M. T. Co.'a ships Lr B s ton and Providence, f-teamer Kinston. Capt Dixon, wil! sfiil for Kinston on arrival ot steamer Newberne. Or ler all goods care uf O. D. S. 8. Co., Knrfolk, Vs. Passengers will find a good table, cointr-t-alle rooms, and evciy eouit sy and attention still be paid them by the othreiv E. B. ROBERt3, Agent Messrs. CULPEPPER TURNER, Agent, Norfolk, Va. W. H. STANFORD, ,c . Vice-President, New York City. Boot and Shoe Maker. All Style of Boots) and Sroes mads to order and on Short notloa. v REPAIRING A SPECIALTY, CBATZ1 BT., appodto leorul ' OSes) .. HEAVY AND LIGHT j, GROCERIES. IwlUara and Qali A Ax SnalL -, : "Sold at llanufacturtrt' Prictt. : , Dry Goods & Notions. Full 6teeknd Large Assortment, Prloea as low as the Lewsai Call mid Examine my Sioek. 'v '". ' '1 at!sfsetlon CurCR1, P'j mi l n T and Children. I aaestWekOjuattimelaa. Soar Stoavx, DUrrfcaB. IructaUaa, " KJUa Warns, (fees stoats sd praawM aV WlsSsjateMSBwllwatlos - . rer errrral years T have leuiineli ymt ' Aeaterla, aa4 akall always eaktaue M So ee as n see lawfcMr feodum beaaftatas ':'' ttmT.ruaMm.lLV'- : !JSWttt"tiweed ?,'. -IUwTerkCUY Osbmbtc, TT HonaT Bras. Raw Tei A. GREAT BARGAIN! ; 327 ACBES. : WILL BR SOLD AT A GREAT SACRIFICE! A VALUABLE PLANTATION situ " itedonlthe South side of the Neuso fiver, three and-a-half miles fromjho ... City of Now Berne, N. C. One hundred ruu invu-uiv WW. Good land, suitable far 7Vrtct, Tabacee l , Halting, or any hud of farming. A... - The balance, two huadred and two - i : i i.uAMr1 .:!. hlnA rva Ir cypress, a$, Other kinds of timber. , : It is also flno Grazing Land. Good dwelling, outbuildings, and a fine orchard. It has. a fine FISHERY fronting half mile on the beach, where, there are high banks of marl that can -never be exhausted, from which vessels . ran load with ease. - v acres, ntfavirr miiiuciw " 1 ,,.., It is a very beautiful and healthy lo- ( cation, presenting a near view to tho ,; passing vessels and the A. 4 N. 0. Railroad. For terms apply to P. TRENWITH. 0pp. Hotel Albart, HEW BEBME, 1. 0. JOE Km WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF UlarbleWdrlcs NEW BERN E, N. C. Tlnlinm, jtnA inmivHi ATnrhT jrnf nO Qualities of Material. Orders solicited and given prompt at-: tention, with satisfaction guaranteed. -"Terra Cbtta Yssertbr Plants end Flowsrs . fnrniahod t the very lowest rata. MRS. J. MrSlNES Boarding House REOPENED. r - Mbs. J. M HINES has reopened a First-UUsi Hoarding House in the city, opp. s te Baptist Church. TU6 Pioneer Daris Mm Marine, Can be had at the same plaoe. J. M. HINES. Agent. ciiiB's orFlitli. Steam S. I. M, Dtlute t Tt wr On and after February 1st, 1891, this line will make regular ' ' s . SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS BBTtTst , Baltimore and New Berne Lairing Baltimore for New Berne. WED -NES0AY, 8AT0RDA Y, at 6 ? M. . f LeaTlng New Berns for Baltlmert, TUEfl t DAY, SATURDAY, at 0 P 1?. , erckRBti Ind Shippers, Taks Istlco. - This la ths only DIRECT tins out of New Bemevfnr Baltimore without change,storrping vf ivia. vvniiei una: ines lorooawn. ' i roTiurni.'e.rnuaueipiiin. itirnmonu, end all poiuts North, Eaot and West slaking olos viniumiUH lur.NI, HIUIB UJ A. CS SI, V. OMlli road and River out of New Berne, " , . . r . "Agentl sre af fbllowst -' . RlOBM fOSTSB, Oral sfsnsser, ' ; Light St., Bsltlmore. ' 3ti?-. ' MoCabBICX, Agent Norfolk. Vs, - W. P. Clyde it Co, PluUdelnhia, U Bouth WharTes. . . - , trth rlvi? "B' Blt0' Tnu"' L,n,I'r E. IlrBjison, BottoB, S3 Central whsrt ' B. H. KoskwelL Prnvlilamo D I Bhips leare Boston. Tuesdays sod Satnrdaya. . New York dally. " Bslto, Wednesdays A Satnrdaya. " . PbJlaaelphia, Mondays, WW r' W ' 3yi,Baturdya, .. t " Providence, Saturdays. ns Threngli bills lading given, and rstes gus'. aatesd to all points at the different offloes ef the companies. - . . - WAvoid Breakage of Bulk end Shim Ufa If. O.; Lint. ft H- COAY. Agent, New Bsmt, S.fl nvEniLi f:i:3t 4 OUTWEARS ALL OTHERS Tie,'"2' ?, nd most eeon aTH h.VJ- ?VL!UL' , article and tissto patnt Amr times In a brief period, and you bujr the "Arertll" and nanTbS fodo jou not aare ISfTAnfS ffl hasabeamiful lustn; It unproreT the Tai- buildings. It has been lasted by Uml li t tt'a been In yi as reus. Sample card of fashionable tints and dohHIt. pfoof ot f I durability of ATerlll Paint to anraddV Z tj - Kew-bemo, K. ,
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 2, 1891, edition 1
2
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