Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Aug. 16, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT i I tttr nirr.T jnn!r. k MiaW Jdatly, eioept Uondayat5.00per yean To ux month. Delivered to city subscribers 4 to cent per month. THE WEEKLY JOURNAL It pnbliihed every Thursday at tUSQ per annum. - Notices ot Marriages or Deaths not taex- 1 teed ten lines will lie inserted tree. All ad- ' sbtionaJ mailer will be charged S cts. per liue. ' - Payments for transieutadvertisemeulsinust v made la advance. . Regular advertise Dents will be collected promptly at the end W each month. Communications containing news of suffi cient public interest are solicited. No com munication most be expected tn be published that contains objectionable personalities, or withholds the name of the author. Articles longer than half column must paid for. Any person fccliug sggriev j at any anony mous communication cau ol' .tin the name of - the author by application at this office and showing wherein the grievance exists. THE JOURNAL. C E. HARPER, -C T.HANCOCK, T - Proprietor. Local Reporter. KiUerrd at the Postnfficc at Xev Heme, . ('., as second-class matter. i' A philological stnlislicL'.n calculates that In the year 2000 I hero will bo 1,700,000,00 people who spenk E:is lish, and that other Iv.iiopi'aii languages will bo spoken by only 600,000,000 people. I The New York Coineiciul Adver tiser nolos that ' Kentucky is waking lip to a realization of (lie imporlauco of public cduation, find the number uf Dew schools nnd Echool buildings is rapidly increasing." , Balmnce.ln, Iho rrcsident of Chili, is having newspaper men shot nt n rapid rate. lie probably agrees with Napoleon, suggests the Atlanta Con stitution, that four hostile newspapers uro more to be dreaded than a hundred thousand bayonets. i Says the Xcur York Xews: The siir nificant fact is stated thai iho sales of Stato and railroad bonds during tlic first Iialf of this year decreased nearly $104,000,000. The financial sitnaiiou is such as to justify no new pnj -els, and a curtailment in the deinaml upon the steel-iail mills, which is always a measure of prosperity, is noticeable. 1'onr new Norwegian railways arc proposed by King Oscar's ministers to cost over one hundred million kroner, but the Government is not in a hurry. It is not going to build them all al once. Something like thirty years will, it thinks, he about the linio it should take to finish the job with an annual outlay of three or four million kroner. The Thing is jet to pass Upon the plan. According to an eminent German statistician the world has had 2oo0 Kings or Emperors who have reigned over scvciUy-fotir peoples. Of these 300 were overthrown, sixty-four were forced to abdicate, twenty-eight com mitted suicide, twenty-throe became mad or imbecile, 100 wcro killed in battle, 123 wero captured by the ene my, twenty-five were tortured to death, KH were assassinaled and 10b j Were executed. A singular case was recently ad judicated in the sherill's court, Dum fries, Scotland. Twenty-live dollars was awarded as damages against a Woman who had slandered another by a letter referring her to 1 Cor. C: 10. in token of love for her soul's ever lasting welfare, the implication being that sho was a thief. "The sword of the Spirit," remarks the New York Observer, "was evidently not wielded by tho hand of charily in this in stance.'' ' The growth of Canada is shown in the remark of a hank manager al a recent meeting, lie said: 'Thirty five years is not a very long time in the history of a country. But I have seen tho deposits of Canada grow from $10,000,000 on the best d iy of 1855 to 8220,000,000 on the best day of 1890." Evidently the financial condition of the country on our north em border, comments the New Orleans Tinios-ltcmocial, is far from being desperate. The enoriinms commercial develop ment of the I'nited States can bo in ferred from the growt'i of the post office business. Take, for instance, tho New York cilice. Its receipts (luring the year ending March Hist last were $G,"u.),3!:), an increa-,o of $515,310 over 'the preceding year; Chicago's ice 'ipls wore S.1,422,400, an increase of $308,465, while Hiilade! phia, Boston, St. Louis and Washing ton showed increases respectively of $189,972, 125.120, 8100,110 and $103,200. tm Francisco's receipts WCic $7,11,077, an increase of $44,102. Tho Superior Court of Xew York lias affirmed a judgment for i?4"ti.C7 obtained by t'iarencc A. 1'arsons ngainst Charles Hobinson fur breach of contract. I'nrious agreed to watch the stork inr.rket 1'i.r Hobinson :,nd let him know when (here was a good thing. They were to divide the prolils. 1 'Arsons on October 5, 18St5. told ltobinson to buv 500 reorganization trust of the Tex us l'arilic Hailroad, mill iio did so. The investment was profitable, but ltibinsou refused to divide. Judge Cildersleevc, writing tho general ierm opinion, says: "Iw liablo information as to faefs upon which Iho fuluro pric.o of a slock woiuil uuiioi ill is a si i ill is e it eonsii torn. ; Hon to uphold a contract in relation (o liuch liock." v "li:"f- EXPBPtENCE. ' In the sonny yean of youth. When we battled for the I ruth. Sarins danger, toil, and wrath, Hope was dishing o'er our path, When our eager youth at last Into manhood's prime had passe 1, Btill we dreamed that we wera strong To loose the world from sin and wrong. Now the evening shadows play On our strength's declining day. Hope is deed, and well know we, What has been must ever be. The Academy. "GIN A DOPY ME ET A BODY." ET A. n. BTEKKK. You sec, it all happened this way: Nick Weybridge had been waiting at the Grand Central Depot for the arrival of the western express, by which was due his old chum, Reggie Bell. The express arrived up to time, but with no Reggie therein. At which collapse of plans Nick, mightily wroth, strode for the street, with hands shored -deep in his trAis-ers,' pockets and his chin stuck out squarely in front of him like the jaws of a surly bull-dog, muttering strong Words, about "that ass, Bell." "What's that about Belle!" fluted lorth a sudden sweet voice. Sulky Nick looked up and beheld two big velvety brown eyes smiling into his eyes be longing to a face that Ureuze would have loved to paint, with its dainty oval, its peach-bloom cheeks, and its hair whose silken net seemed to possess a magical attraction for gadding sun beams. The owner of the eyes and voice was, to use the language of art, a 6tudy in black and white; to speak : plainly, a young woman coquettishly ar ; rayed iu a widow's semi-mourning, i "What's that about Belle? Don't you blame me, sir! Why, it's all your own fault, you horrid impatient boy! Here you are, calmly strolling off iuto the street instead o( waiting where I could find you, and you look as sulky as a bear witu a sore head, too ! Nick's only answer to all this was blank stare. "Why, what's the matter?" she we on. "You don't seem to own cousin."' Then, with know your charming pout, "I'm surely not grown so very old i and hideous, Mort, that you can't recog- 1 uize me lu Here was evidently a big blunder. De- reived by some chance resemblance in leature, and misled by the chance re- mark about Bell which she had over- ! heard and which she took as an allusion I to herself, this charming stranger had mis taken Nick for some Western cousin she had come to meet. Now, if the tempted one for the girl was really uncommonly pretty had been a straight-walking, eober iniudeit young man with a modicum of conscience lie would have flouted the temptation and set the lady right with a pclite bow and explanation ; she would wive apologize;! as it there were any i need for apology bowed, blushed, and lied, aud Nick would have seen her face no more, which would have been a great pity. So he, who iu no wise resemble I the aforesaid straight-laced, sober minded young man, having no conscience to speak ot, and being endued with a forehead of bronze and the tongue of the Old Serpent, after the (irst shock delib erately up and spake: "Well, my dear," :.; calmly ns if he had known her from a child, "I waited and waited, and not seeing you, con cluded you wereu't going to turn up. But I'm awfully glad to see you." Which was true. "As for your changing, why. I never saw you look so pretty in all my ; life." And this statemeut also was, as ! Cliadband has it, "tcrewth indeed "You were very impatient though, Mort and stupid, too. So there! 15ut I'll forgive vou, dear. Where's your lug gage." "Oh, that'll be sent on after." "Well, come along then ; the carriage is waiting." ' Whew 1" whistled Nick, under his breath, "rlio carnage is waiting, en: ! This is a high-llyer and no mistake, j Wonder who the deuce she is for that matter wuo anil, too She s a thor oughbred, evidently; s'pose the 'dear del unci' was some bloated old bachelor who married her for the sake of her face, liy Jove! a spanking turnout, too. Shall I buck out here? May turn out auuther case of 'vaulting ambition,' etc. INo; I'll hold on. She can't eat me, in any case, I could cat her, though she's cjiiite sweet enough. Well, my Uubicon is this carriage step, aud here goes to cross it,"' and he followed the widow in to the victoria. "Wonder who on earth I'm supposed to. be, though? Jlort, she called me. Jlort.' Hum I' Stands for Mortimer, Morton and Mortuus, too, for that matter. Egad ! au omen. Perhaps I'll wish I were dead wheu she finds out the lay of tho land." "Well, Mort, and how is everybody at home .'"she began, as they swept up Madison avenue. "Oh, they're all right,'- answered the impostor with a vagueness perfectly touching in its inliuitudc. "I should so like to see the old place again. I must try ad get up there next fcisou. lluw long is it, Mort, sinca I was last there?" INo auswer from the nonplused one. "All right, dear I won't bother you now, as I see you want to look at the streets, you rustic old thing, you!" ' Ha! ha!" sniggered Nick in his s'ecve. "I am evidently a rustic. New York, I see, is the Promised Land tome. So be it, my newly acqufred coz." And taking the hint the wily Nick began to cxa.uinc the browu-stone fronts of the avenue with an interest almost suspicious in its intensity. He partic ularly delighted his innocent victim by the sublime ingenuousness with which he inquired, as they caught a glimpse of Central Park, what "that green place" was. The delight she took in tutoring his simplicity averted awkward questions. Besides, it was infinitely diverting to au old rounder eld iu experience like Nick. At last the carriage stopped be fore a handsome browu-stone hoiH2. "Ponr, dear Edward's sister is stop ping with me, you know, but she's out to-day, so we shall be all to uurselves to talk over old times. Won't it be jolly 1" Nick hardly sejmed delighted by the thought of the prospective jovially; iu fact, he heartily wished himself out ol his scrape. Hut there was no retreat now; he had burned his boats. Sj up he went to his dressing-room, ostensibly to wash off the travel-stains of a journey he had never taken, really to throw himself on a couch and rack his brain's for plausible .nyths about people and places he had never seen. The way of the wicked mad is hard. Kick fouud it extremely so, and he never l r enjoyed a good dinner leas. The inevi table examination bexan. "I'll try mur dering em,n he thought. ' So whenever he got raized on the genealogy or per sonal history of any harmless persou or persons he ruthlessly slew them and buried them away far out of the reach of all questions. Whole families went at a swoop; when necessary he raised an epidemic typhoid, cholera, grip ha didn't care what, as long as he go: awk ward customers out of the way. Sam son's biblical jawbone was au inefficient weapon for homicidal purposes compared to Nick's "jaw," and poor Belle was in an excess of grief an amazement at the recent loss of so many friends. Finally, he struck oa a jnag in the ships o( a young lady whom he had consigned to an untimely grave. Unluckily the fair Belle had had a message from the dead m a week: old letter. Then, things got worse man ever for the culprit. He got inextricably entangled in the prickly branches of the family tree; honelesslr lost iu the lanes and by wars of the local topography. Still, with courage worthy of a better cause, and a supernatural calmness born of despair, he lied on by the car load. "How's Zozo?"' asked his uncocsciou torturer. "ZozoP dubitatiyely. "Wonder who Zozit can be? So silly to give any one a name like that! S'pose it's a baby. I'll chance, it, auyhow!" Then, aloud: "U.i, Zaoi Zozo's all right." "How cau you say so, when you your self wrote me he was ill, poor dear!" "On, yes, of course! flow silly I am! He caught scarlet fever, but he's much better uow." "What do you mean, Mart? Scarlet fever! I never heard of a horsa with scar.et fever." "Great Soottl" groaned the pseudo Mort, "here's a how-de-do! Er sr Oh, yes. Don't you know! Er Horses often ge: scarlet fever, my dear, but of course you couldn t be expected to know I that. Why, that bay inaTe father bought ! only last year " i Uelle started up from the table with a shudder and stared at her visitor as j though at a maniac. 1 "You must be mad, Mort. Poor ; uncle has baeu dead these tea vcars. I ' don't undersiand you at all." And her I frame shook with excitement. Nick nerved his flagging wings to still 1 higher, more cerulean nights ot imagina tion. 'i'm awfully sorry, Belle, darling" (and the villain liugere I over these words as over sweet morsels); "but duln t you hear of my tcrritic nccidunt? I fell down an old quarry and hurt ray head very badly. Why, at times, espe cially wheu I'm fagged a bit and both ere 1 with questions, my mind becomes a perfect, blank, and I ina'ce a horrible hodge-podge of everything. My head feels as tli iug'n it would burst at this very minute." This last with a groan of most ghastly dimeasions. The poor girl was completely hocused, and was amazed and indignant that she had not been told of the "terrific acci dent before. Then she cooel, "Pjoi old boy, poor old head!" so soothingly that it sent a thrill of rapture down Nick's worthless frame. And she stroked that head, hard as the nether millstone, fo lovingly with her soft i plump nana that the Machiavellian one i felt his crest rise, and patted himself on I the back, all of which only hardened him in his sin. Aud when she refrains 1 from asking any more awkard questious ! he gloried in his successful villianly, aud laid himself out to kill. And as he ; looked well, and talke I well, it was not ! long before the fair widow lav meta- phorically speikiug, of course at her fictitious cousin's feet in an excess of reverence and devotion. She could hardly conceive the great change that had taken place iu him since she had last seen him. "You've developed awfully, Mort, iu the la-t two years." "Mort," with a grim smile, thought to himself that the next two hourr, per haps, would sec even a more awful de veto era!. ment, of himself and things iu gen- lie p it the fiuishing touch to his woriv just in he was leaving. lie would : have be in content with a hand-shake by ' way of adieu, but poor Belle, with a ! charming pout antl a most provocative raising ot her blossom of a mouth, de livered herself iuto the hands of the 1 enemy by pathetically remarking: "You're very mean, Mort; you haven't 1 kissed me once yet." Nick quailed; even ! he was touched by this absolute trust, i He felt almost inclined to blurt out the, I whole truth and then run for his life, ; but that sunny, inviting smile would ! have incite 1 an iceberg; at all events, it 'melted his scruples, and the caitiff i pre-sc I his lips to hers in a mostuncous iuly way that is, if cousins kiss as cousins should. The idea that something was wrong thished for an inconceivable moment across her mind, but flashed away as quickly, and after giving him ! copioiii but more than nee Hess instruc tions as to his way houu bade him to ' liincli next day. Nick walked to his lodgings in a hard : ly enviable state of mind. "I've made an infernal brute of my self perhaps worse. But I really couldn't helji it; she's such a dainty lit I tie thing. Why, hang it, I'm over head and car-i iu love with her already. She'll ; never forgive me that kiss, though. I Wuat mi earth must I do! I can't dc i prive the poor little woman of her newly acquired cousin without any explanation. Heigh, ho! I must make a clean breast of it to-morrow." With which virtuous resolution he turacd in. But, alack a day, Nick wai a bold, bad man, and at heart quite un rcgenerate; so next day, instead of plead ing guilty and throwing himself upon the mercy of the court, o she should haVo done, he lapsed into error and marched into my lady's bower with a cousinly swagger, which abated the moment he ' saw the inmate, for there was an omin ou Hitler in that little woman's eye that gave him goose-flesh. The game was up, he saw at once. "Goxl-d.iy, sir," said Nemesis in a morning gown. "Kindly explain this to me." And sho handed him a tele gram "Mrs. Brathwaite. Sorry couldn't come. Mother ill. Comiug noxt week. "AtoBT WBrrTJLKEB." V Not that Nick read all this. Ho felt so ashamed of his ignominious position that the letters swam before his eyes.. All he could see was a cruel linger and con. tcmptuous eye directed toward tho door, ' which enunciated 'begone" more point edly than any words could do. Nick's first impulse was that of headlong flight Then bit forensic instincts came back to him for he was a rising young lawyot and he resolved to make a speech for the defense. ' So he came to grip with Mr. Brathwaita without mora ado. ' ' . 'My dear Mrs. r-r-er-BUnkR (this in the most dryly comical way that made the widow, even in her anger, bite her lips, to prevent a smile; and won a hear ing for Nick), v VMy dear Mrs. Blank, I will offer no excuse for my abominable conduct and extraordinary tissues ot lies, though I have ono which ought to plead powerfully in my behalf." Here ay made a motion as though to point out his client, and gestured at . those silent jurymen not more wooden than many live ones the cbairs. "That excuse, madam, is your own face. Yes, mad dam" nnd he grew aptly alliterative "your face was my fait and will ever be my fate." Sotcto voce "Sounds like Jine of poetry, and ought to fttch her." As a fact, she did seem to be softening somewhat. Then our Choate in embryo went on, just nickinir him-Slf up in time from starting his per-) oration with a "Gentlemen of the Jury." "Madam, speaking frankly, I regret to nave io suue in it i am not one bit re pentant as far as my own sin is con cerned for what I have done. In suchi a cause, and for such a reward as a few words from those lips, though I may say I am naturally truthful, I would perjure myself any and every moment of the day. Any mau would have committed the same lault, tried by the same tempta tion. No man could have helped him-1 -.- . . . . ' self. Simon Htvliroi hinvwlf" atwt ha ndled off the name in a most sonorous' fashion "would have shown his appre-: I "lnge witn wuioli to apply black ciation of your charms in the same wav ! lag i , . V.v A 8tlff."I1. snch as is as I did if you had come up to that; ascetic old party and looked and talked' as you did with me." And so on, and so on, for half an hour, ending u; with patching together Viola's two sentences, "Though I am not that I ln r .. ..l." i -r. 1 r.,, . ,,UuhCU,, oiie-i nuieu stmate, a lew drops or kerosene oil pat came his pedigree from the first genera- on the stove cloth will remove them, tion thereof, sj that he overwhelmed the , The ground edges and rfickel work o( poor little woman iu a torrent of words, j the stove should be rnbbed off at least Then, too, she was half in love with him ' ouce a week, besides the monthly clean already, and secretly admired his con- ing when the stove is blaoked. summate cheek. Finally ho left his card, begging to be allowed to call, hav iug obtained her assurance that sho would think over tho matter of a freo pardon. Less than a week after this came a note for him : "Dear Mr. Weybridok: Out of my great msrcj you an forgiven. I shall ex pect you to fl v-e o'clock tes. Yours, etc. "Bkllk Brmthwaitis." Nick went to that five o'clock tea and to many other five o'clock tons and othei functions nt tho snmo address. The re sult of all these visits is that an argu ment hasprung up between them. Bello has been bitten by the sacred Egyptian bug that the Bernhardt brought over, and is mad to visit the Pyramids and the Nile cataracts, while Nick says that the "doing" of Switzerland and Italy is the proper thing for a newly married couple. 2VmI' Leelie't lUmtralei. Tiretl Gold Fous. 'There, that pen is tired is tiroa aacl will have to rest a month or so." T.ie speaker win the mortgage clerk of one of the principal savings banks in t'uis city, and as lie spoke he carefully wiped a lare gold pen anl put it awuy in a case. A Pout r-'portar, who had just catered the bank to have some back dividends entered in hia boo'c, overheard the re mark and smiled. "Oh, you needn't laugh," said the clerk, "for it is the true business I am telling yo j. Gold pens have to rest now and then. Here I have, I suooose, two dozen gold pens. If I use one for sev - I eral weeks or so I lind it will not write to my satisfaction. Sometimes it is too soft and sometimes it is too hard, or the ink does not seem to flow well. "For a long time I could not find out' what the matter was, but at last I went! to a jeweler, who, after examining my' pens, said, 'Give them a rest aud they will be as good as new.' " ; He then explained that the constant j use of the pen had the same effect ou the, metal as is the case when a razor is used wkh great frequency. "SDmcsort of the electro-magnetic ac-i tion takes places in the metal, which has a', tendency to bring into parallel lines all! the particles, and in that condition ai razor cannot be uiad to hold edge, and; a pen is equally refractory. "If the razor Is laid aside for a tims the particles of metal gradually resume a more or less confused arrangement and, razor takes on and retains a keen edge. "It is the same way with agold pea.. Now, if when one of my pens gets to acting bad I lay it aside for a month or so it will be all right again. That's why I said that pen was tired and wasted a rest." Sm Franciico Pott. Coffea-Cup rtiirotueter. According to the bright little Span ish building journal, the Qicela de Obrau I'Mictis, a cup of pure coffea, with the addition of a lump of sugar, forms "an excellent barometer. The ,sugar should be put into the coffee without stirring.and, a moment afterwards, a quantity of bub bles, due to the air contained in tho sugar, will be seen to rise to the surface of the liquid. If the bubbles collect in the middle of the cup, the weather will be fair; if, ou the contrary, they leavo the centre and adbero to tho sides of the cup, forming a riug of bubbles, with a clear space in the middle, there Will be rain ; if they scatter themselves indiffer ently on the surface, the weather will be variable, while a cluster of bubbles at one side of t'ae cup indicates rain. No one, apparently, hai attempted to ex plain the connection between the bohav ior of the bubbles and atmospheric con ditions, but it is said that the indications of the coffee-cup barometer generally agree with tho3e of a mercurial barome ter placed near by. ' Virtues of Yicuy. 'Viehy water is besoming a Tcry popu lar drink," remarked a soda-water foun tain attendant to a Neat reporter. "I( it was only more palatable more of it would be drank than of all . the othci waters combiucd. It possesses -wonderful thirst assuaging properties, and is the favorite driuk ot all who are aware ot this fact, among those being every phy sician whom I have ever seen-, drink at this fountain.; They certainly wonld not ue it unless the water was beneficial, Of courso the liking for fruit juice syrups and other sweet drinks which mt peo ple possess retards the growth of vichy in popular favor, but it is only . question of time until it wilt supplant many of the fancy drinks, ns people realize that it is the healthiest drruk known for the not wcathor. ! A. good . way ia reader ' the vichy palatable is to nave few spoonful i of acid phosphate of some tort put in th glau,"-iVte York Ji'evst. : t I m wt store, .-vs-. ,' The) - Canadian Queen gives the- pratical hints as to the best method to follow to keep a stove looking bright and olean: - rf:v--;.. "-v-: . Every good housekeeper dislikes to see grimy stove, yet often dreads equally the grimy hand acquired in the process of blacking. A pair of thick gloves is, of course, a necessary part of the outfit of any woman who does kitchen work, and yet desires, as sho should, to keep her bauds dainty. : As a rale, fax; too much blacking is need oa stoves. A cake of blacking such as is sold for eight cents ought to last a year for blacking one. stove. If more blacking is used, it will not be rubbed into the surface of the stove as it should be, but remain aa a fine dust to be afterward blown about the kitchen and cause a generally grimy appearance, so often seen in nncared for kitchens. A fresh coat of black should not be ap plied oftener than once a month, when the flues should also be cleaned out and the interior of the stove thoroughly brushed out. Before putting on new blacking, the old blacking should be washed oft The new coat must now be applied and the stove thoroughly pousuea. The edges of the stove, if they are of polished iron, should not be blacked, (rat oteaued like a a' eel knife with eapolio or briok-dust. The niokel knobs ! and other nickel parts of the stove must ; " rnbbed bright with chamois skiq or 1 .1 1. 1. a i . , - viu iiuhuiwi muuei, jxn urainarv uat .,nd whl,10g b- i one of the ' fTuZ VVe' '.V"8 ? bI?? for polishing. Duriuet the month, polish the stove with the polihing-brush eaoh morning, just after kindling the fiio. Keep an old cloth always on band in cooking, to rub off any grease spot as nnnn Unit, nennra Tf (h. ...nln ... . '.- " '" Just One Obslaeln. "Believe me, George, dear, the faot that you are not wealthy makes no dif ference in my love for you," she said. "1 love you for yourself alone. I would choose love in a cottage rather than a union withont affection in a costly man sion." "Darling," he said, "I am glad to hear you speak thus. There is now bnt one obstacle to prevent our marriage." 'And what is tbat r she asked. "I can't raise half enough money to got a cottage." Voiton Herald. W. D. MclVER, Attorney-at-Law NW BERNE, N. C. mny22l-tl C. R.THOMAST Attorney au3 GoMssir-aM w, 'vOHice, Craven Street, Stanley liuilJii g, NEW BERNE. N. C. Practices in the Cmirtaol Cr.iven, Ca trn-t. Joih-S, Oiisluw, Lenoir sud Pamlico cuunurs, the Supreme Court of North Ciirnlinn. mm i the V. S. District and Circuit Courts, jlyll H. L. GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Craven St., next to Journal Office, NEW BERNE, N. C pr,i- '" '' Courts of Craven, Cnrteret, Hyde, l'amliro, ,Tone, Onsrow, and Lenoir uu iu ine supreme ana federal courts. ail&wtf .1. H. BKOWN. -FIRST CLASS BARBER SHOP. Naitly tiitwi up in the bei-t of style. Bats rooms i h hut and cold water. BRICK BLOCK, MIDDLE ST. GEO. HENDERSON. ISuceaiir lojlubirtxt HaidaeoH.) 1 Mm t, Representing Insurance Companyof North America, of Philadelphia. Home Insurance t'oni uny,of New York. Queen Insurance Company, of England. llnrth.rj F.re Insurance Company, of Ilartti.rd. Nor.h Carolina Home Insurance Company, of Italeigh. Green uitch Insurance Company, of Xc York. I'liicnix Insurance Company, of rtrooklvn. United Underwriters luuraiice Cornpaiiy of Atlanta. ISoxtou Marine Insurance Company, of Boston. jujtidutf Furniture! Furniture! FURNITURE! ONE OF THi LARGEST STOCKS In F. stern North Carolina. - COMPLETE iii ETery Department. A!sw, we now have the Agency for the cel. ebratni Whkri.krA Wilson and Standard Sewing Machines. They are the latest im pruvd l.iKht Running and are unsurpassed by any machine ever placed in tbis market JOHN SUTER. NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. ii Etatioial Mittttioi for EASTERS I0HTH CAE0LH1 MALE AND FEMALE. ESTABLISHED 1889. EigW Distinct Department; lrimay, Jntermedia'e, Academic, Col legiate, Art, Music, Industrial and Business. TEN EXPERIENCED AND COJI- ' I'ETENT TEACHERS. Vocatand Instrumental Afut'e Prominent Features, under the direction of a male pro fessor, Willi efficient assistants. Bpecisl Course of In itractioa for those desiring to become Teas tiers. -- Expenses very moderate. Board from 8.00 to flUOO per month tacilltieai good, gpeoial inducements to indigent (indents. Fall Term Opens Sept, 7 189f . For farther- Information or for catalogue apply to rk&.-wy-'tivk .: i -, :' G. T. ADAMS, A. B.f - (Trinity College), PBlNCfPAt,t InlylUwtr - bw Bum, N, d I-'" , , 1 . . . - I . for Infants atwtfeBnwdaptedtaUmtka t imanad it as superior to aay snsecipMco Wwatorn"- H. A. Aaewaa, IL 111 So. Oxford St., BrosUjra, H. T. Tswssf 'Castorla'h sevatrsnal aa4 a BMrisi so wtll known that it sosms a work f sopanraratlontocadonsit. Fowaratk sMH4rt feroutaa who do aot kasp Oaatoria wssaassarnson.' - . - . .. ' KewTorkOwf. tats raster Bloomlnglsle Bsformod Churaav Ant CsMTAim YETERIMARY SPECIFICS Ta Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Sogi, Bog) i AND PODLTKT. Pace Book oa Treatateat of Aalatala mad C hart Seat Free. ma(FeversCmntlaaIalwnwBtloa A. A.J Hplaal MealnaUlo, Milk Fever. B. B. THralao, Lamoaess, RheaaMtUam, .'.('. Ill Bteinpor, Nasaniloekarcea, D.D. Boca or Grabs, Worms. K.K. Coasks, Heaves, Pneamoala F.F. Colic or Grioes, Bellyache. f.G.Mlsearrlate, Ilessorrhacos. B.H.-ttrlaar7and Ktdaev Diseases J. I. Eras-five Diseases, Manse. .K. DUcasesof Digostlon, Paralysis. SlBflo Bottle (orerWdosesJk - .80 Btable Oaso, with 8pecMtes, Manual, . Veterinary Core Oil and Kedlcator, 67.00 Jar Veterinary Care Oil, . - 1.00 Bold by Drvsslsts; or Sent Prepaid snrwhors and in any quantity on Beoeipt of Price. HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE OO Oorner William and John 8ts , New York. nuixrnEEYS' HOMEOPATHIC 28 SPECIFIC No. Ia dm 3D v(mm. Ths aniv iimcmw fwl nmMl fa Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness, i and F nutrition, from over-work or other causes fl per viaLor 6 rials and large vial powder, for fa Sold bi Druggists, or sent postpaid on receipt ofprlcey-tlUHPHRtYS' MEDICINE CO., Cot, William and John Sis, N. Y. All of our Veterinary Preparations can be had of J. V. Jordan, Druggist, N. W cor. Broad and Middle streets, Newborn, N. O L. S. WOOD, Formerly IS years with Geo. Alien & Co. -DEALER IX- General Hardware, AND C-U-T-L-E-R-Y. Harness, Saddles, . Bridles and Whips. FARMNQ IMPLEME'iTS, Pollock Street, next to Rational Bank, NEW BERNE, N. C. june20 dwtf iRUNKENtfESS LIQUOR HABIT. U All IXC WORM Tff!SBIfTOftaXg G'HMKES GOLDEN SPECIFIC Itcmn t given in coffee, tea, or In artlcleof food without tla know led co of patient If necessary H la absolutely harmless and will effect a perm nent and speedy cure, whether the patient In I moderate drlokeror an Alcoholic wreck. IT NEV ER FAILS. Itoperatemio quietly and with lucl certainty that the patient undergoes no lncon Tenlence, and aoon tola complete reformation If effected, il page book free. To be bad ol B N. Duffy, druggitta Ner B6rn N.C. jjlSdwy OLD DOMINION Steamship Company, SEMI-WcEKLY LINE. The Old Dominion Steamship Company'i Old and favorite iValer Route, via Albe marle and Chesapeake Canal. FOB Norfolk, Baltlmorr, Xnr York, Phila delphia, Bostou, Pruvldcnuce, aud WKihliigKui City. And all points North, East and West. 'On nnd after TUESDAY, APRIL 1-1, 1891 mini lurtiirr notice, tne Steamer NEWBERNE, Capt. SontHnts, Will s-iil from Nor folic. Vs., for New Berne, N.C, dir. ct, every Monday and Thursday, unking flout connection with the A. t N. C. ". It., for all stations on that rosd, and with th t-teniners Kinstoii and Howard tor Kin m ii, Tn nion, and all other landings on the Niui-and Trent Hirers. Itrtiirninir. u ill sail FROM NEW BERNE FOR NORFOLK direct, at 2 p m, Tuesday iiifi 1' i iiiuy., nutting connection with theO. I). 8. S. fa's ships lor New York, B. 8. P.Co.'s mchiihvs tor Ealiiiiiori'; Clyde Line Ships for PUiln.le'pliia. M. M. T. Co. ' ships for B.s twii and Providei:ee. J tearuer Kinslon, Capt Diion, will sail for l.mston on arrival ol Mcamer Newberne. r 'er all goods care uf O. D. S. S. Co No-folk, Va. P.i senpeis will lind a good table, comfort i le rooms, and ereiy couit sy ana attention ill he paid thrm liy the otti -era. R. B ROBERTS, Agent Messrs. CULrEPPKR A TORNEB. Agenis, Norfolk, Va. WMI.STANI'ORr). ' Vice-President, New York City. Boot and Shoe Maker. All Styles of Boots and Shaa mads to ordop and on Short notlo. t REPAIRING A SPECIALTY N. ARPEN, CRiYEI ST., apposite Journal Offici K. R. JONES, HEAVY AND LIGHT GROCERIES. LorlUard and Gail A Az 8nnt, : . Sold al Manufacturers' Price, "y . Dry Goods & Notions, Full StookandLarg Assortment, w Prloas low- aa tha Lowest Call and Examlri my Stock. - '. Satisfaction Caarantssd, and Children. if8a.OitrnaelMi. "- BonStomaoo, PUrrtaoMk aructation, . -Kill Worse, gfrs shop, aad proiaoiM A w4tEosataurlaaas Far sevrral rows I have nwranM v nur ' Autorla. ana shall always oonUnuo to do MteaSM UTariokijprodubcA Bon in rill Kawntr. Paaowa, 1L fit, "' Wtathrop," UU Itroot and Tin Ave ' - Xow Task Cii. Ooomurr, TT Ihnuuv iraarr, Vs Toasv 4 GREAT BARGAIN! 327 ACRES WIIX BR SOLD AT X GREAT SACRIFICE! A VALUABLE PLANTATION situ ' ated on (the South side of the NeuM river, three and-a-lialf miles from the City of New BerBe, N. C. One hundred and twenty-five acres cleared. Good land, suitable for Trueltingt Tobace i Editing, or any kind of farming. Tlio balance, two hundred and two acres, heavily timbered with pine, oak, cypress, and other kinds of timber. It is also fine 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 vessel! can load with ease. It is a very beautiful and healthy lo cation, presenting a near view to the passing vessels and tho A. & N. 0. Railroad. For terms apply to P. TRENWITH, 0pp. Hotel Albart, HEW BERHE, M. C. JOE K. WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF ilii MleWorks NEW BERNE, N. C. Italian and American Marble and aU Qualities of Material. Orders solicited and given prompt at tention, with satisfaction cuaranteed. Terra Cott Vaes for Plants and JTiowsrs furnished s' the very lori-st rates. MKS. J. M. HINES"" Boarding House REOPENED. ' Mas. J. M HINES has reopened a First-uiasd iioiirding House in the city, o;jp, te Baptist Cuurch. The Pionser Daris Eewini MacHine, Can be lusd at the tame place. J. M. HINES, Agents fs N. C. Stealers G. H. stout, Defiance & Vesper On and after February 1st, 1891, this " line will make regular , ' , SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS !. DtTWfBS Baltimore and New Berne - Luring Baltimore for New Berne. WED- MESOAY, 8ATU11UA.Y, at 6 P It LeaTlDK New Berne for BnMmora.' TIT Pa. . DAY, SATURDAY. ateViU v " , Berchanls and Shifpers, Tale lotica. 1 This Is tte only DIRECT line out of New k Berne for B illlmore without change, stopping 1 only at Norfolk, cimnecting then ior Boston. Proridenee Philadelphia. Rieboiond.and all points North, East an-i West JJaking close connection lor all points by A. A N. C. Rail' ' road and Kiver out of New Berne. . rfAeareMfoJIws!-;'.W,:i.'' ' ' Rauaax Foarsa, Qen'l Manager, , T WLighiKBaltlmere,-'' Ja W. UoTadsicC- Agent Norfolk, Vi W. P. Clyde Co, Pniiadelphla. li South srharre. . - ., .. . wNew York sad Bslto. Trans. Un,irie( - North rlrer. . . . K. Sitnpson, Boston, K Central wharf.- . - 8. H. Rookwell, ProTidenee. R. I. - iTe ioswn, x uesaayi ana eaiaraaya, " " New York dally. . . . .. . " " Balto.. Wednesdays 4 Saturdays, " " Philadelphia, Mondays, Wedne " days, Saturdays. -" Providence, Bstordaya. '. - u. Through bills ladiug giren, and rates gusr. anteed to all points at the different offloss of the companies, . - 1ST Avoid BreakaM of Bulk' and Shit via X. C. Lire. - . t & L CI11 Y, Agent, New Bent), V. d eJyVv fl 1 OUTWEARS ALL OTHERS - Then tsnt n-the best and most rcostmf cal P II Hr. Slow bays an untested article and has to paint four limes In a brief perkxL and VOU bUV thn "AVnrlll" Mint nAfnt kiii pos,do yon not save tuft Avtrtll Paliit wwuiirai instnt lmprores tne ap Pearanoe and Increases the value nf vour buildings. It has boen tested bu time, fur It a been ! use US years. Sample card of fasnlimaMe tints and positive proof of (he 2!'i,.,,,,1it!AT"1" nt to any addrw. MtUCX BBOTilKKffiBurung SiU). ,- In H. CCTtF,' '1 Kewerne, )t. O.
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 16, 1891, edition 1
2
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