Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Sept. 1, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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. U-.it.r.i'A.NNOUNCEMENi , THE DAILY JOURNAL published i'ily,ioepUodTt5.00p year;i64 lor iii month. Delivered to citi subsenbu I 80 cent per month. . .. . THE WEEKLY JOUKNAI. ts published vary Thursday at HM per annum. , ,. Notices at Marriages or Death not to e keed ten line will be inserted tree. All ad ditional matter will be charged 5 cts. per hoe. Payment for tranieotdertienxeiilniti ,W made in advanoe. Regular advertise neat will be collected promptly at the end af each month. Communications containing; new of uffl. t dent pablic interest re solicited. No eom. anauicalion must be expected to be publlahed ' ihat eontaiu objectionable peraonalitiea, or ' withholds the name of the author. Article : longer than hall column must be paid for. Any pernon feeling aggriem. at any aoony- ' metis communication can obtain the name of " the author by application at this office and thawing wherein the grievance exists. THE JOURNAL. CE. HARPER, C T- HANCOCK, - . Proprietor. Local Reporter. pMKnUr,A at the Pottoffuc at Neu .Bern . C at second clou matter. A New York newspaper man estimates that American tourists spend 100,000, 000 annually in Europe. The greatest number of Eres in Ihc world per 100,000 inhabitants is in New York City, being 141; the least i-i St. Louis, forty-nine. Tho New York Pott avers that the iron trade is usually taken by statisticians as an index and thermometer of tra lc in general. Physicians of this country arc paid ,, , a. -An nn. , , annually nearly l,a00,000 for medical examinations for life insurance compa nies. Three companies pay over 250, 000 each. A scheme is on foot at Ottawa for promoting patriotism among young Canadians. A committee of leading ed ucationists have in hand a proposal to Issue a text book ou Canadian history, shewing the patriotic deeds of the piist three centuries. They intend offering a prize of 2500 for the best manuscript. Dr. Ernest La Place, of the Philadel phia Mcdico-Chirurgical College, says that within a very short time the world will hear again from Dr. Koch. He will make important scientific revelations that will prove he is on the right road toward acurcfor consumption. The importance of this statement is due to the fact that Dr. La Place keeps himself fully informed of all that is done iu the studies aad la boratories of European scientists. Cincinnati's first year's experience with the Truant Law, requiring all children fourteen years old and under to attend school, is said to be satisfactory. The enforcement of the law has increased the school attendance by more than a thou sand pupils. Fines to the extent of only $150 have been collected fiv the infractions that have been detected and punished. Nevertheless this sum does not represent ail the cases of the employ ment of children wh.i should have been in school. The Trua.'it U.ii er charged with the enforcement of the law finds many pareuts s avaricious or so in dif ferent to the education ot their oTsring that they have not hesitated to falsify age, and detection has n t always bejj possible. The manufacturing estai!i.i!i mcntsthat heretofore have been accus tomed to employ from one to twenty five "minors" have been obedient to the law. Reformation plays no part in the work accomplished by Hamilton County's workhouse in Cincinnati. James Mor gan, ts superintendent, tells the Tines Star of that city that it is an invariable rule that a person once placed in the in stitution will be returned. " Once a thief, always a thief,' " he says, "and if a man is arrested for beating his wife, he will beat her more than once. A niau who is disorderly enough, when diunk, to be sentenced to this place will lie seutenced more than o;ice From this city, I suppose, that there have been nearly 50,000 con,e to this workhouse, and you may be sure I am well ac quainted, because I see workhouse faces more than once here."' The only excep tion that Mr. Morgan c in remember is the case of a in in arrested f r ste iliii g a watch; alter serving his term, he went to Philadelphia and bjc.ime the prosper ous proprietor of a large restaurant. The counties in Kentucky tint own stock in the turnpike companies, which are doing so much to provide th; Stat-j with good roads, regard their invest n? i' with much satisfaction. Iu Warren County, for example, states the N'e.v York Pott, this metho 1 of encouraging road building has worke I so satisfactori ly thai the people will vote shortly on the proposition to take another 5'S'J -000 block of stock in the turnpikes, and there appears to be no doubt that it will be adopted. The county is now pro vided with fifty-nine miles of turnpikes, and most of them are paying goo 1 divi dends to the stockholder.--. "Warren County," says the Bowling Green Timet, giving the results of the county's ex perience, "never took a wiser step or one fraught with more beaelits to tha people of the county than when she got an act from the Legislature enabling her to induce the building of turnpikes by taking stock in them. At the first elec tion under this act $30,000 were voted for pike construction. In a short while this amount was expended, and after wards an additional $30,000 was voted, aad all this, except f 1,000, had been put Jj pikes." WEALTH IN WOODS. THE ENORMOUS VALUE OF THE - COUNTRY'S FORESTS. Their Annaa.1 Increase Worth Tea limes tho Output of Gold and Silver Some Siiiincaut Facts and Figures. "Did it ever occur to jou to consider what an enormously valuable inheritance man has received in the 'forest prime val?' " said Professor Ftrnow, of the Department of Agriculture, in conversa tion with a Washington Star writer. "Of all the natural resources-reserved by nature for out benefit they are the most directly useful. In the woods we find ready at band and obtainable for mere harvesting materials applicable to all needs and means to satisfy every imme diate want. "Probably you will be surprised when I tell you that the annual increase of the forests by natural growth, representing the interest which wc ate at liberty to draw without impairing the principal, exceeds in the United States alone tea times the value of the gold and silver output of this country and is worth mie than three times the product of all our mineral and coal mines put together. If to the value of our total mining product bo added the value of all the stone quarries and petroleum resources, and this sum be increased by the esti timatcd value o all the steamboats, sail ing vessels and canal boats plying in An.er.can watcis, it will still be less than the value of the annual forest product of the nation by a sum sufficient to pur chase at cost of construction all the canals, buy up at par all stocks of the telegraph companies, pay their bonded lel)is and equip all the telephone lines. i rn i , i t .i . . j ue miuuai lirouuct oi tnc woous is , , . . crop. It exceeds the gvoss income of all the railway and transportation com panies and it would more than wipe out the entire public debt. "More thin 300,000 people are occu pied to-day in the direct manufacture of lorest and saw mill products alone. Were I to attempt uu enumeration of tho uses to which the product of the woods is put, it would be necessary for me to mention all the phases and employment of human life. Railways annually con sume 500,000,000 feet of timber. The same material builds the houses anil yields 1 r two-thirds of the population the fuel necessary to warm their dwellings with and to prepare their food. Upon char coal the iron industry largely depends. Net only in its natural form does the substance serve our needs, but our in genuity has devised methods for trans forming it into all sorts of useful things. Paper is made lrom it, and even silk, while lately it has become possible to pieparc from brush wood a food for cat tle as nutritious as hay. By distillation are derived from it alcohol and acetic acid, w hile the barks yield indispensable tanning material, resiu and tar for pitching vessels, turpentine, sassafras, oil and cork. 'The decayed vegetation of forests has furnished to the fields their present fertility, upon which man depends for food. In tho tree growth of virgin woods and in the iloor of lotted foliage beneath are stored the accumulations of centuries. Nature dees not care whether this growth is useful to the human race or not. It is left for us to eucourage the growth of such trees as we find val uable, to the exclusion of others. Thus an economical use is made of the re sources at Land and a new conception of the lorest arises. The forest primeval becomes 'woodlands,' while the new 'lorest' includes only cultivated woods. -if left without interference by niau nature would keep the entire earth cov ered with forests, save only a few locali ties. The treelessness of the great cen tral plains of the United States has been accounted for by the deficiency of rain fall, aud the belief is generally held that by reason of this lack of moisture trees can never grow there. Nevertheless the conclusion does not of necessity follow. There is excellent cause for believing that these prairie, were not always tree less, and that their nakedness might once mors be covered by the adoption of proper means to that end. The barren ness occasioned by prairie fires aud herds of trampling buffalo may yet be made fruitful. You must remember that the entire earth is a potential forest. Where ever there is stifheieut depth of any kind of soil for the roots, if it is not too frigid a climate aud a man does not interfere, arborescent growth will ultimately pre vail, on account of its perennial character and its power to shade out lower vegeta tion. In such localities as the interiors of large continents forest planting must progress by gradual advances from the borders of the unproductive territory. Once let woods be spread over the now aiid plains of the west and there would be rain in plenty there. But success in this matter can only be achieved through co-operatiou systematically and methodi cally carried out, commanding knowl edge, means and power such as a Gov ernment, whether of the nation or of States, can aloue control. A step pre liminary should be the establishment iu the region of arboreta, where experi ments can be made for the purpose of finding out what trees are best adapted. Many valuable suggestions can bo ob tained from abroad, where forest plantiug has become a science; but there is no use in even the best possible methods, nor hope for reforesting the prairies, so long as those destructive agencies, the reckless ax, fire and marauding animals, are permitted tet do mischief unim peded." A Boot and Shoe Museum. ' One section of the great historical col- , lection at Dresden, Germany, is literally a museum of boots and shoc3, being, it is bslieved, unequalled in the world ns a repository for the footwear of celebrities. Among the things of interest shown aro a pair of shoes worn by Martin Luther at the Diet of Worms, and tho toilet slip- ! pers of the great Maria Theresa. Iu a sealed case are shown the boots worn by Napoleon at the battle of Dresden, and ' the jack boots of Peter the Great. How Webster Hnn; His Scythe When Daniel Webster was a farmer boy he was severely anuoyed one hot day while haying by being constantly told that his scythe did not hang right, lie finally hung it up in an apple tree and stretching himself out in the shade, taid: "I guess it hangs all right now." The "god-like Daniel" was a far greater success at cod-fishing than at haying. AJ Orleans I'icyitht. . .VOIMCf VLS-w . , Kittling- can cost so much as sin. . ' No man has a right to be a curs to ni neighbor. ' .: f" :.y' No man can lire low who Is always looking high. .-. People never get the big head because they know too much. A lie is one degree worse than the tin which it tries to conceal. If there is death in your heart there will be death in your life. The evil that is the most dangerous is the one that looks most harmless. Nothing can make us richer except that which makes us more thankful. A poet is a man who lets other people look i:t things through his spectacles. The only joys which live and grow are those which arc shared with others. It is as much murder to kill a man with a pill as it is to do it with a cannon ball. Pjll off the masks that pfople wear and nobody would know his next door neighbor. Spend as much time in counting your blessing! as you do in worrying over your troubles and you will soon be rich. litdia,iajolu (lad.) Hain't Horn. A Master of Toiijnes. One of the finest linguists in the coun try is tho fifteen-year-old son of Max Dieulafait, Baltimore, Md., whose pow ers are describeel by the papers of that city. The boy is a very intelligent lad, with a mania for acquiring languages aad now speaks eleveu, including Eng lish. His parents are of French and German birth, so that Henri has spoken the native tongue of both since a chilli. Latin and Greek ho learned at school, while an intimate frieuJ, an Italian, taught him that language. Visiting the Indian Territory for the restoration of his health, after a severe illness, he learned to speak Choctaw and Cherokee. Spanish was taught him by a tutor and Portuguese by a sailor employed as a ser vant at o.ie time by his father, while from a Polmh music teacher he acquired Russian. Youug Dieulafait claims that it is no trouble for him to master a tongue and that it has never taken more than three months for him to acquire any of those he speaks so fluently. His pa rents, who are very proud of his attain ments, propose sending him oa au exteu sive tot.r through the Civilized worid that he may further gratify his. linguistic taste . The boy is a modest, wcll-bo-liaved lad, inclined to be studious, but exhibiting line business talents and de voting only such time to his hobby as he would give to any other recreation. c-tt.i t'niuciico EvmniiLcr. limiting the Ka'igai'na. Away the quarry goes, propelled by ; his great muscular tail, in a series of I enormous leaps, and on his track two or ' three dogs of a breed known as kangaroo 1 houuds, half greyhound and half wolf hound, and after them the riders. If he cau be run dowu on the sand plain his doom is certain, but if he can get into ; the bush, where the trees are thick and i many fallen trunks, or an extent of rocky j ground will delay bis pursuers, he may ' ese.ipe. His bounds are wonderful; no impediment can stop him. 13.it the dogs ami horses that are after him are nearly as well aecustomed to ths bush as he is, and can last longer. They are gaining on him now. His game is up. As he feels the hopelessness of his escape he suddenly stops and stands at bay, with his back against a tree. No.v lie is a most formidable foe for the hounds, which try to seize him by the throat. With the great nail with which his middle toe is furnished he rips their bodies down, an 1 they fall help less by iiis side. But just as he seems ia a luir way to demiiisli the last of these enem es, up ride the huatsmau, and his line run and noble fight are ignominious ly re varJcd by the dashing out of his brains with a stirrup iron. Oo'.iiand Luxurious Life in tho Army. Said a prominent army officer in the Southern Hotel recently to a group of officers and civilians: "Service in the ar.uy for the private soldier is a delight to what it used to be before the war. There is not a post, scarcely, in the country, not accessible by railroad, and which has not a daily mail. The quar ters or barracks to which he is now as signed are simply palatial. At Fort Riley, for instauce, the men's barracks are splendidly arranged and handsomely fur nihud. Each company quarters is fur nished with a library, billiard room, gymnasium, marble tub bath rooms; the squad rooms or dormitories aro nicely furnished with iron bedsteads, and the walls are huug with pictures about army life on the march orin battle. The mess hall at Fort lliley seats 1000 men at each meal. The chef dc cuisine is a civilian salaried at $150 a month. A mess hall of a like capacity is to be built at Fort Leavenworth, and the posts, r ort Sheri dan at Chicago and Fort Logau, near Denver, are being built with every con venience. Jefferson barracks, near this city, also is to be put in thorough repair and modernized. " St. IovU Ulobs-JJtm-oera'. An Armadillo Found in Texts. Mr. E. C. Culleu, who resides about eight miles from Austin, near William son Creek and Oatmanville, brought to town this morning a tough looking cus tomer in the shape of an armadillo. Its back resembles that of a tortoise. It has a nose resembling an alligator or opossum and has long claws, which resemble those of a bear. The armadillo burrows in the ground like a ground hog and is peculiar to the South American country, whose inhabitants esteem it good food. It is rather an odd find in this country, though. Mr. Cuibn says thpre aro a good many of them to beseeu ou Williamson Creek in this county. Fort Wrlh (Texan) Ga tJtc. He Learned From the Tall ires. We hare a bird man among ns, writes a Paris correspondent, who asserts that he has invented a perfect flying machine. To make studies he went to Africa and watched carefully tho flight of vultures. From them, he says, he learned entirely new theories among others why a bird cannot rise without taking a run, letting the air come under its Wings. The mo tor is in the body and is worked bj steam. At tho held arc- a screw and rudder. He bat already ipent $130,000 and asks th Ministec of Public Work to let him bava the use of a large bild ing. Jfmi Ytrh Herald, .i.. Oxygen Is tho most abundant of all the ctementaV' 't.'i-AO ' ::; ' 0: Th number of tsgt in a six-pound eel in November is fully 9,000,000, y-k Princeton College will send out an ex pedition to Western Montana in search f fossils., r The City Council ot Elizabeth,' N. J. has voted to have alarms of fire sounded in future by an electrical whistle. Recent calculations show that the elec tromotive force of a bolt ot lightning produces an energy of upward of 3,000, 000 horso power. Vue phonograph has been employed to register the conversation coming over the telephone wires so as to keep a record of the day's business. Recent observations with the Lick tele scope ot the shadow of one of Jupiter's satellites are said to show that the tiny moon itself is double. The electrosta'ic resistance of the At lantic cable reduces the speed of tho elec tric current more than one-third, requir ing three seconds lor it to travel to Europe. The suffering due to a felon on one's finger has been successfully relieved and a rapid cure made by means of electricity. Salt and turpentine or a fly blister will check afclon at the start. il. Pictet, a Swiss scientist who is trying to make pure chloroform, says that the fatal effects following the use ' of this drug are not due to tho chloro form but the impurities it contains. Recent experiments show that an elec tric current will travel over a good con ductor at the rate of 500,000 miles a minute, or around the earth in three sec onds. Light travels at the rate of 1,000, 000 miles a minute. Experiments upon the phosphorescence of gems shows that it varies according to the origin of the stone. Cape diamonds show blue, Brazilian stones red, orange, blue, or yellow, and thoe lrom Australia yellow, blue, or green. Experiment has shown that when coal is burnt in an open grate from one to three per cent, of the coal escapes in the form of unburnt solid particles, or "soot," and about ten per cent, is lost in the form of volatile compounds of car bon. During the past winter the earth of the village of Kiruujarwi, near Paja, Lap laud, became suddenly very hot, the ice and snow melting immediately, and the application of one's hand to the earth was liable to result in an uncomfortably warm sensation. In England leaflets are being dis tributed on the subject of the destruc tion of crops iu the rural districts. Posters showing magnified illustrations of the Hessian tiy and tho winter moth are being displayed iu the postoBico to enable farmers to recognize them. In tho Argentine Republic the loco motives on the Argentine Great AVester.t Railroad have been fitted to burn the heavy petroleum cil found at Mendoza, on the line of the road. This costs, as an equivalent for coal, about 3 iu gold, while coal costs from 15 to 25 per ton. The source of all the world's energy comes from suu-hine. The energy of the zinc plate of an electric battery comes from the coal with which it was burned when taken from the mines, and the energy of that same coal conies from the sunlight that originally nourished it when it was formerly iu the form of growing plants. Many years ago an ozean steamship made only ten or twelve revolutions of the engine, using only five pounds of steam pressure. With this she averaged about eight knots. High-powered ships of the present day uso thirty-six times this pressure and make seven times the revolutions. Their speed is only two and a half times as great. The following metals will conduct elec tricity in the following proportions, viz. : Silver, 100; copper, ninety-six; gold, seventy-two; aluminium, fifty-two; zinc, twenty -six; platinum, sixteen; iron, fifteen; nickel, twelve; tin, eleven; lead, seven. Of the above, copper and iron have the greatest commercial value as electrical conductors. The flora of Europs embraces about ' 10, 000 species. India has about 15,000. The British possessions ia North America, : though with au area nearly as large as . Europe, have only aS rut 5000. One of ' the riches floras U that of Cape of Good : Hope and Natal, which figures up about j 10,000 species. Australia also is rich in . species, about 10,003 being now known. A recent eleparture in obtaining extra draught for furnaces on steamships with- ; out the use of blowers or other device ( has been successfully tried on the Scot of the Cip5Iail Line. This vessel has been furnished with smokestacks 120 feet high above the "grates. The increased draught is equivalent to a water pressure of three-fourths of an inch. The vessel speed is nineteen knots. ' A Carious Property of the Diamond. George F. Kantz, well known as an expert in gems, recantly called atteatiou . to a property of the diamond which may be employed as a means of distinguish ing it from other 'substances. Experi ments mads by Mr. Kuntz demonstrate that the statement (made by Ribert dujic Us luu ajju as luuuj tunb suuic eiiamouas pnospnoresce in tne aarir. alter exposure to the sunlight or an electric arc , light, is true, alto that all diamonds ! emit light by rubbing them on wood, ! cloth or metal. This property will prob- ' ably prove of great value id distinguish ing between the diamond and other hard stones, as well as paste, none of which exhibit this phenomenon, and will be welcomed by the general public who do not possess the experience of the dealer in diamonds. The property is evidently not electric, or it would not ba visible on being rubbed on metal. Brooklyn Citizen. Apparatus fur Tre.ttluj Djafuesa. An electrical apparatus for the treat ment of deafness has been invented by one George F. Webb, of Jefferson, Ohio. It comprises a batter-, a belt, an electrode supported upon the belt and shaped to rest upon the ear, and having an opening on one side to receive the ear, and connection between the elec trode and battery. An efficient and simple device b thus provided for con stant dm to remove the source ot deaf ness, one which nay be lafel applied, and ii dusigned, while serving a a rem edy, to enable the patient to hear ditv tinctlj. Btttoit Ttonvript. ,.,, Lik to b liumbUfcgntl. .. A woman physician in the city told a roost remarkable thing a day or two ago. "It takes a deal of eonsoientione ness to keep a pbyaisiaa front Incom ing a quack," ah said. ' "It' anoh an easy thing to qnaek when yon know your patient want yon to, it w ould par haps be beneficial in tha end. By qnaoking 1 mean resortiug to elap-trap and nnscientiflo methods, inch as the faith cure and its like. - No one bat a physician has any idea how great a de mand there is for this among intelligent people. they don't want the honest, straightforward exhibition of the ac tion of drags on the body. They want a mystery about it, an exhibition of healing as a divine force something that appeals to the imagination. Aud because it' a subject for the immagi nation the demand comes not from the ignorant and unthinking, bnt from the most intelligent and best-informed peo ple. "I have known some of the most log ical and clear-headed people in the city to offjr such a resistance to scientific rational measures in medical treatment and insist so strongly upon some illegi timate and inadequate course, as to rrat the honest physician' patience to its last resort, "It isn't quite that they like to be humbugged. They don't know it by that, though the physician does. They want something for the imagination to work on. And that's the stronghold of the quack praotioner. It takes an hon est man or woman to praotice medicine honestlv. "rJiew Tort aenina Sun. Tbt It-illa Queitlon. A Detroit traveling man met a Ken tucky colonel recently on a train headed toward Toledo, and a traveling men are liable to do, he made the acquaint ance of the Kentuckian, and they got to talking about the late Italian racket. "It isn't all over, either," said the drummer. "I noticed only a day or so ago that a lot of Italians in New York bad beaten a doctor almosfcjo death for refusing to take a drink." "Is that so?" exclaimed the colonel, eioidedly, "Of course it is," asseverated the drummer. "By gad, sir and the colonel slapped his hand down on bis leg with a thwack "why didn't they kill him?" Free Press. "Is practicing the banjo," writes a teacher, "don't get discouraged." Thais wise. Yon can safely leave that for the persoss who have to listen to you. W. D. MclVER, Attorney-at-Law N-W BERNE, JM. C. may22dwtt C. R. THOMAs7 Attorney aul Goaasal.r-aM wr 'Office, Craven Street, Stanley liuiJJi; f ; NEW BERNE, N. C. j Prnctices iu the Courtsot C'mvfii, Ca t n t, Jones, Oiilow( Lenoir iiiul I'aimit-u counties, . the Supreme Court of North Oir.iiin.'. mu) i the U. fci. District and Circuit Courts, jlyl l ! H. L. GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Crave.. i St., next to Journal Office, NEW BERNE, N. C ! Prneti je in the Courts of Craven, Carteret, Hytle. Pamliro, Jones, Onslow, and Lenoir counties, and in the Supreme and Federal couris. adi&wtf .1. R. BKOWN, FIRST CLA BARBER SHOP. Neuly i it"I up in (he best of style, Bath (H)iim hi h h.t nnd cold water. BfllCK BLOCK, MIDDLE ST. GEOrHEERSONT (Sumatnr to Roberts fc Jcudn-80it.) Gisral iutcih lout, Ki'presen.inj Insurance Company of Xorth America, of i'hilndelpljin. Home insurance Com) any, of New York. Queen li aurnnce Company, of Knglaml. Hartford l're Insuruuce (Joitiuauy. of HarllirJ. Nor h Carolina Home Insurance Company, of llaleih. Green itch Insurance Company, of New York. I'hirnix Insurance Company, of Brooklyn. United IjiMicrwriterg Insurance Company, of Atlanta. lio-tou Murine Insurance Company, of llus:on. ju jdwtf Furniture! Furniture! FURNITURE! ONE OF THii LARGEST STOCKS In E stem North Carolina. COMPLETE in Eyery Department. A 'mi, vr now linve the Agency for the cel clinit. il WiiKKi.En.t Wilson and Standard Skwinu Ma(.'iim:k. They are the latest itn provil l.iaht ltunninjr and are unsurpassed iy any machine ever placed in this market JOHN SUTER. NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. An Edaaatfonal Mtittoi for EaSTERI I0ETB CAB0LII1 MALE AND FEMALE. KSTAHLISHKD 1889. Eight Distinct Dep-rtments. Primary, Jntcrmedia.'ey Academic, Col legiate, Art, Mmc, Industrial and Business. TEN EXPERIENCED AND COM PETENT TEACH EES. . ' Voatl and Instrumental JIuiie Prominent Features, under the. di reel iou of a male pro fessor, with efficient assistants. Special Course of laitruction . for those ' desiring to become Teaeuer. Expenses Very moderate. Board from $8.00 io 10.00 per month lacilitie good. ; Special inducement to indigent student, Fall-Term Opens Sept 7, 1891. ' For further information or lor catalogue, tflf 't:3, -y,l-m,i G. T. ADAMS, A. B.," (Trinity College), PRINCIPAL, for Infants and Children.' Ktatarfa-wvnapMteUUmaas IrMounedtti4ik-tapraipica h-swatem." 4 Q. A. A en, K. ft, IU go. Oxford SC. BraoklTB. K. T. Ta M Os-serfa' Is so mlrmat an II urn so wU know that It im work if suMnroatkm tomtom lt; nin iti""'" '," Hw York Cy. tat faster Woomlnpl! KatocaM- Cauroa. Tea Oamavn HUMPHREYS' 'vnTRIMARYSPECIFICS Ta Hflnea, Cattle, Sheep, Bogs, Bogi, . AXTD POULTRY. SOO Face Book Treatment f Aalatal uu ckart Beat free. B.B.xfetratns, Lweieu, Rbeatl, CC UiateiBr, Kaul Bloeharfe. D.D.-Bot or ;rnb, Warms. K.B. Csha, Heaves, Paeraaata. F. F. Colle r Grlvem Bellracye. G. O. Miaearrlare, Hemorrhagon. H. H. ITrioary nad Kldurr Disease, ErPtlve Dleae, Mange. .K.lleaeof llsttn, faralysl. Single Botttedmr W dasesX - - ,60 Stable Case, with Bpceiac. Muad, . Veterinary Core Oil and Medloator, 67.09 Jar YeterUary Care Oil, - - I.eO Sold by TrngIts; or Sent Preps! anywhers HUMPHREYS' MEDlUljaJJ UU, Comer William and John Sle., New Iwt HUMPHREYS' HOMEOPATHIC fj7 SPECIFIC Nu.iO la me so years. Th onlr nicowsfal remedy for Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness, and ProBtmtlon, from over-work or other causes, ft per visL or 6 vials and large Tint powder, for fs. Bold bt druggists, or sent postpaid ou receipt of prioe.-aUMPHHEYS' MEDICINE CO , Oor, William and John Bta, H. T. All of oar Veterinary Preparation! ran be had of J. V Jordan. Druggist, N. W cor. Broad and Middle street, Newtero N.O L. S. WOOD, Formerly IS years with Geo. Alien & Co. , DEALER IS General Hardware, AND C-U-T-L-E-R-Y. Harness, Saddles, Bridles and Whips. FARM RQ IMPLEMENTS, Pollock Street, next to national Bank, NEW BERNE, N. C. june20dvtf iRUliKENffESS LIQUOR HABIT amm wesio aateSBifroMarKB O'tUlrfES GOLDEN SPECIFIC It cad vn 1 n cofTee, tea, or 1 n articles of food without tti knowledge of patient If necessary It ii abaolutely harmless ana will effect a perm nnt and speed y care, whether the patient Is I modertttedrinkeroranalcobolicwreck. IT KKV ICK FAILS. It operate) so quietly and with lack certainty that the patient undergoes no incon venl4nce, and soon bis complete reformation fe effected. U pase book tree. To be had of B. N. Doffj, drugit,New Bernt N.O. jjlSdwj OLD DOMINION Steamship Company, SEMI-WcEKLY LINE. 77 Old Dominion Uteattigtip Company's Old and Favorite Water Routf,via Aloe mxrle ami Chetapeake Canal. FOR Norfolk, Baltimore, New York, Phila delphia, Boston, Providence, and Washington City. And all points North, East and West. Oiuinil after TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1891 until lurtiier notice, the S'eamGr NEWBERNE, Capt. Sonttote, Will ill from Norfolk, Vs, for New Berne, N. C , ilir. ft, every Monday and Thursday, .miLinjr close connection with the A. & N. C. '. I' , fiir nil rial ions on that load, and with th learners Kington nnd Howard for Kin - n, Trnilon, and ail other landing on the N't untl Trent Hivers. J',. nriiii.Lf. will ss.il FltOM NEW BERNE. FOlt NORFOLK direct, at 2 p in., Tuesday inn r i :iinv, iinfuiiig connection with theO. O. 8. aCo.'sshipsforNew York, B. S. P.Co-'s -iBincis li-r UuUimnre; Clyde Line Ships for Pliiiailc'i.hiH. M. Jt ii. T. Co. 's shinji for Bis. ion and Providence. r tenner Kinslon, Caj t Pilon, will sail for Kii'stnu on arrival ol Meainer N'ewberne. ( r or nil goods care of O. D. S. 8. Cos No-1'..ik, Vn. P i seinjeis will-End a (rood table, comfort, i ii- rc.i.n.s, and eveiy eouit sy and attention tull te paid them ly the orhVers. F.. B KOBERTS. Agent Messrs. CULPEPPER A; 'fjRNEBV Agemn, Norfolk, Va. fV. H. STANFORD. Vice-President. New York City. Boot and Shoe Maker. All Style of Boots arid Shjea mad to order and on Short notlo. REPAIRING A .SPECIALTY N. ARPEN, CRAYEI ST., opposite lonnul 0IDe K. R. JONES, ;' HEAVY AND LIGHT GROCERIES. Lirfflarl; ni Gall A iz Saul, , Sold of Mamadurm9 Price -i ' f -..l .- -rT "-'-W v . v. - -.,-'.- v '. Dry Goods & Notions, full Staokand Laraa Aaartmnt, - , ' Prlowa tha Uwofc Call -. -MNllH M StMk. v : ' " BatiafMtUa GaarantaatJ, Ctt ta tmm OaHa, Oonttfp-Moa. Sour Stomach, Siwrhoa. bneuuoa, - -Kill Wara, (tvs (toep, ana promote dfc .WuEStiJjorloBs Vr smnl rears 1 hn nnnnnM mm f tm- m mtmmSmt - : wr - 'kMorw. ' an nu miwmjw eoouawe u So n ! UmuSM prod acq hwitlt . - Kawnr.P-uea.LD lHaOvop'UM. Itrnt and Tth Ave. KwTerk0lti7. Cwn irr. It Hoaa-t.Braaa-, Haw Tome, A GREAT BARGAIN!, 327 ACRES Wlli BB SOLD it a GREAT SACRIFICE! A VALUABLE PLANTATION situ ' itted on ,the South side of the Neuga river, three and-a-half miles from th City of New Bcrae, N. C. One hundred and twenty-five acres cleared. -6"ool Land, suitable for Trucking, Tobaeet ; aiting, or any kind of farming. Tho balance, two hundred and two acres, heavily timbered with pino, oak, cypress, and other kinds of timber. . V 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 vessels can load with ease. It is a very bcaullful and healthy lo cation, presenting a near view to tha passing vessels and the A. fe N. C. Railroad. For terms apply to P. TRENWITH, Opp. Hotel Albart, ICW BCBIE, 1. 0. JOE K. WILLIS,: PROPRIETOR OF lii Garble Works NEW BERNE, N. C. Italian and American Marble and all Qualities of Material. Orders solicited and given prompt at tention, with satisfaction guaranteed. Terra Cotta Vases for Plants sod flewer furnished a the very lowest rates. MRS. J. M. HINES' , Boarding House" REOPENED. Mbs. J. M HINES haa reopened Fivst-Dluaj Hoarding House in the city, ; o;ip. I te Baptist Cnurch. Pioneer Dayis Imi MatMno, v Can Ce had at the same plaat.j : ' v.',.. J.M. HINES, Agent.- Steam S, H, Stout, Delnitt S Vesjcr i On and after February 1st, 1891, this line will make regular . , SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS BKTWVEX ' Baltimore and New Bern a Licavinir Dan i more tor new uern, VIX,U . KESOAY, SATURDAY, at4 P It. ' Leaving New Berne for Baltimore, TUES ' I)AY, SATURDAY. at PIT. . Eerchanl isd BUtsers, Take lottce. ; ' This is th only DIRECT line ent of New"l Berne for B illlmore without change, stopping. J onlyet Norfolk, connecting then tor Boston, Providence. Phi lade) phi. Rioiimond, and all point North, Kast and Went. Making close -connection tor all pointa by A. A N. C Kail . -road and River out of New Bern. Agents r as follow ' "W - ' Rauiuui fosTEB, Qen'l Manager, , Ml LlffhtSt, Baltlmora JA. W. HoCaaaioK, Agent Nerfblk, Va. W. P. Clyde A Cev, Philadelphia li South wharves. ' : - --' - - " v. New York and Elite. Trans. Llne,iXHr i , North river. - . . , - V . StniMon, Bosjfon, H Central wharf. 8. If. Rookwe)l, Provldeuee,R. I. Ship leave Boston, Tuesday ad Saturday. " New York dally. . , " " r Balto, Wednesdays 4 Saturday. " " Philadelphia, Monday, Wednes days, Saturdays. " ' " Providence, Saturday. Through bills lading given, and rate gaarL anteed to all point st IU different oitloe of 1 1 th companies. , t tUT Avoid Breakage of Balk and Shij via f. C Ur: - - .aJLGaiY,At-t,Nw XUra,V.Q AVERILl PfllHT LI OUTWEARS ALL OTHERS Then lrat It the beat and most eotrat ml- cai r it r. mow ouys aa unitstra article and has to paint .four times Id a brief peril . and roa bur the "Avertl!" and oalnt but pue. do yon not tare ml Ararlll Paint kaa a beautiful lustraj It lmprovea the ap pearance nd Increase, the value of your eulldlniri. It haa been lufrd by Uwul tor It's been la nse M rears, Sample card ot fashionable Unta and positive proof of the durahiiiurot Avwill Paint to any addr. fj -.ij.if attOiuiLiUi a Burling Slip, uw mota. , . ioiiy:, .. f , X. EL crixsm. , .-i-v .r Kass.sra. w. n.
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1891, edition 1
2
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