Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Sept. 9, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT Tfflt DAILY JOURNAL ii p.blished daily, exspt Monday ato.U0 per year; JJ tot mx months. Delivered to eity subscribers at SO eenla per month. . . . THE WEKKLY JOURNAL Is published aver Tburadav at tJO ner anions. U Notion oi Marriages or Death not to ex Mi fcn lines will be inserted tree. All d tieuai matter will be charged 5 eta. por line. Payment for transieutdertisemeiitsmust .fca-saad ia advance. Regular advertise- sneata will bo coiicctou promptly at we eiw , each month. Communication containing ews of sum- 1 wient publio interest are solicited. No eom saaieation must be exDceted tn be nubliibed that contain objectionable personalmes, or withholds the name of the author. Artioles longer than half column must paid for. - -Any perwm feeling aggriev at any anony , anoua cowmuuicatiuu eau of au the name of ; the author by application at this office and bowing wherein the grievance exists. THE JOURNAL E- E. HARPER, - Proprietor. C T HANCOCK, - Local Reportar. KnUrri at Hit rottoffice at A'ew Jicrtu, (X, as ucomi-ctalt matter. General Booth,?! the Salvation Armr, who asked for five hundred thousand dollars with which to regenerate some of the social conditions of London, an nounces that he has received fifty thou sand dollars more than that su n and is promised an additional fifty thousand dollars more. , 'One of the best laws against trusts," Clinks the Boston Cultivator, "is that passed by the last Illinois Legislature, Which went into effect on the first of ojj. It void all debts for products Tw.ich the trust controls. The result is that dealers will not handle trust goods. The natural caution of merchants acts as an enforcer of the law. Why should they sell what is quite likely never to bo paid for? A further provision of the Jaw makes those who organize trusts to put up prices guilty of conspiracy, and prescribing a penalty on conviction of the effendcr." The determination of the height of Mount Orizaba, located about 100 miles east of the City of Mexico, is the object of an expedition that has left Terro Haute, Ind., under the charge of Dr. Scoville of that city, who is accompanied by Professor Seaton of Bloomington University and Professor Woolman of De Pau University. It is believed by Dr. Bcoville that the single measurement that has been made of the mountain is inaccurate, owning to the defective in struments used. lie holds that more accurate instruments will show that it is higher than Mount St. E'.ias, now re garded as the highest peak in North America. They will establish them selves on the timber line, and besides measuring the height, they will make a collection of native insects, snakes, fis'.i animals, and plants. The Mexican Government, which takes a deep interest in the success of their work, has facili tated it by granting them special privl- Says tlic Wafhington Star: That singu lar Chinese revolu tion which aims, it ha? been said, at striking don-n the existing Manchu dynasty and substituting (or it a native dynasty by looting the foreig-i missions, that have nothing whatever to do with Chinese politics, is still revolv ing in the provinces. The Imperial Government hardly appears to realize its danger, if it be in any. The celestials are a people of fixed habits and idea?, but they do change their Governors once in long ages, retaining the childlike no tion of a kingly ruler who alone can com mune with the Supreme Being in the temple of heaven. For the rest they havo the Confucian philosophy, the Taoist mysticism, the worship of ances tors and the widespread doctrines of Buddha imported from India. Supple menting all these moral, intellectual an 1 religious conceptions and practices, the Chinese have the thrift, the industry and the toughness of fiber of all other east ern peoples combined. A change of dy nasty would mean no change of the na tional characteristics. In the estimation of the Boston Tran teript "one nf the most significant of possible indications of the genuineness of the bonds which unite Germany and Austria was furnished recently on the battlefield of Koniggratz in Bohemia, where deputations of officers from the various Austrian and Prussian aud Saxon regiments met to commemorate the twenty-fifth anniversary of that conflict which crushed all the pretensions of the Hapsburgs to authority in Germany. Per haps the idea may have been gathered from America, where Gettysburg and many other fields have become fami liar with the spectacle of such re unions of whilom antagonist. But the thing is absolutely novel in Europe, and the fact that the Auttrinns and Saxons on the one side could bring themselves to drink with the Prussians on this scene of their historic humiliation helps us to measure how truly the world has been changed since the Bonaparte empir; was demolished in France. Perhaps the Saxons' part in tho celebration is even more remarkable than that borne by the Austrians, for Saxony still recalls with bitterness how barely it escaped the fame of Hanover after the Prussian victory. After this there eon be no question of , the entire homogeneity of the interests and aims inside the German Empire. William is, as it were, to put the oflcial ' seal Upon this complete unification of his , Bavaria' two army corps, something no . German Emperor heretofore has done out . of fear of wounding South German tni WOMAN'S WORLD. I'LEAiAXT LITEKATCRB (FOB VKUINIXr. KEADKB3. TUB OSLT WOMAN LKTTBtt CA-RRtXtt. "Postmaster Rupp, of Hummelstowo, Penn.," notes the Philadelphia Inquirer, "has appointed a woman letter carrier under the law allowing experiments to be made in that direction. Hiss Edna La Ross is doin? the work: with effi ciency and dispatch. She is the only i woman letter carrier in tho service of ' Uncle Sam." E30KOMT IN GT.OVSS. There is an economical beginning in gloves. The very long gloves that com mand prices as leugtuy as themselves are giving air Ay to the short- wristed ones. The fair maidens in the upper circles have come to the conclusion that there is something hypnotic and magnetic in the I touch of the wrist when shaking the ! hand of a friend. Neut Yorb Recordtr. CXTEHTAIN.iE3T9 Foil YOUNG MOTHERS. The latest fashion in Parisian society is to give "entertainments for young mother?," to which only young married couples are invited. Tne dance becomes a secondary consideration, and only square dances are tolerated. Instead of the customary favors in the cotillon chil dren's toy's are distributed, which the youn.; mother's take home. The follow ing day the participants of suc'a enter tainments call with their children on a "visile de reconnaissance." Chiciqo Timss. WOMEX IN CHrxA. One of the weakest parts of the Chi nese social fabric is theinsecurity of the life and happiness of woman. But no structure is stronger than its weakest part, and Chinese society is no exception to this law. Every year thousands upoa thousands of wives commit suicide, tens of thousands of other persons are thereby involved in serious trouble, hundreds of thousands of yet others are dragged in as co-partners in the difficulty, and mil lions of dollars are expended n extrava gant funerals and ruinous law-suits. And all this is the outcome of the Confucian theory that a wife has no rights which a husband is bound to respect. Missionary Review. OXT.Y THE FISGEH Tir3. A woman's make up is a fearful and wonderful thiug because there is so much m it and so many drugs and chemicals are involved. Take, for instance, the simple process of manicuring and see to what an art it is reduced. First the linger tips mast be soaked in perfume 1 water, then they must be care fully cleaned with an orange-woo I stick to help. After that come the red pa3te, which must be thoroughly washed off. Following these is a pink powder, then a perfumed soap with a felt polisher. Lastly is the enamel, which is brightened i by ths brisk da-th with a kid polisher. So much for the finger tips. Will any one dare to reveal the rest of the toilet I mysteries? St. Louis Post-Disa'.c'i. A DAINTY JEWEL CASS. Here is a jewel case, dainty enough and pretty enough for Queen Titania ! herself. And this is the wy it is made: Take a piece of white kid twelve by five inches and hem the four edes with yel- low embroidery silk. Make a small bag of yellow surah silk and stitch it on the kid veiy firmly. There must be a nar row yellow cord in the top of the bag so I that it can be drawn tightly together ' anil fastene I securely. Over this is painted on the white kid in letters of gold the legend: "For rings and thing?." Under the bag there is a yellow cushion. This is very flat; in fn".i, it can scarcely be called a cushion at all, but it will be found a most useful articlo, as on it are put all the st'.cic pins and fancy pins so dear to the feminine heart. And last there is a larger silk bag. This can hold bangles aud all large pieces of jewelry. Sometimes a piece of chamois skin, some jewelry soap and a small brush are kept in this big. Cut another piece of kid the same size as the first. On this paint either goldea rod or daffodils. The two parts are stitched together with fine yel low silk. This little jewel case can be rolled up so as to occupy very little space in a grip or trunk, and when opened it makes a pretty toilet accessory. Atlanta Constitution. A SENSIBLE PL VH. A little story is afloat about what some call the freak of a wealthy New York woman, aud some dignify it by a more respectable name. It appears that either through liking for a tims-honoicl Ger man custom or of her own wit and in vention it has occurred to this society, leader to put her daughter, who has just left a fashionable boarding school, in a position to learn certain domestic accom plishments respected in tradition, such as cooking and mending. For this purpose she has installed her iu the house of au old friend, dear to her since her own school days, but whose husband is the counterpart in real life of the country clergyman in fiction, pos sessed of a few dollars and many chil dren. No servant is kept in this estab- lishment, and the wish of the society j woman is that for the space of a year her I daughter shall be her old friend's help, using the word with tho honorable sig ! uirication it formerly had in New Eag ' land. I What will be the issue of this experi ment is a question a number of other girls are asking. It is not in any way likely to set a fashion, and yet it might, for the story as told includes several sentences about the jewelry and travel bribes offered to ingar-coat the pilt of twelve months of dusting, marketing and bread making to the .taste of the 1 young woman who, until recently, sup I posed she was coming out next winter, i Chicago Herald. i FASHION NOTES. , Grenadine is the most popular material ' for the ladies' cravat. Fan-shaped skirts of hair cloth give a very graceful swing to the .fashionable gown. Gloria, a domestic silk used for some time in umbrellas, is being brought for ward for dresses. A quaint conception is a searfpin fashioned as a dumbbell, with a diamond unk into each end. Mother-of-pearl buttons, half as Urge as the moon, are much, used. The are in questionable taste. - -, -..'.'' ferge it the most popular material for mountain and yachting drosses; wash flannels for tennis suits. "The ladies' frock coat" ii the espe cial success of a certain prominent tailor for women. It ia Tory cbic. Very many of the newest skirts are gathered, instead of the plaitings, which have had such a run, being used. White ribbon, broad and heavy, it much worn for belts, especially with the new silver buckles, which reach almost under the arms. There is positively no limit to the amount of cut jet beads and lozenges to be employed in decorating a stylish gar ment of the moment. Only two colors are admissible for reefing jackets, coachman's drab and navy blue. The former in smooth fin ishes the latter in rough. Real pretty are the wash dresses of madras and cheviot, white and blue or white and gray stripe, made plain bell skirt, shirt waist and belt. Real lace is beyond all manner of doubt coming in again, much to the J07 of the womau wo, more than all else, desires her dress' to be ladylike. Kibbons in pale shrimp shades pow dered with pale brocided flowers are in high favor. Pale silk chemisettes are dividing favor with the mare masculine shirts. Delicate sleeves of mousselino de sole and other like tissues aro kept in an up right position by the use of a small spring, which is sold for this especial purpose. Silk cord and button aro greatly U3ed on tail jr male suits for decoration, and, to save labor, silk cord button holes at tached to silk buttons can be bought in any of the principal stores. Bodices with basques are either fullel around the waist like a flounce, or. are cut and curved to fit the hips almost as tightly as a cuirass. The bodices with flounce basques are particularly suitable for ginghams and thin summer materials. Castor gloves have been brought into general use for shopping and ordinary wear, and they are very durable, may be drawn ou or off the hands with free dom, and can be submitted to regular washing without interfering with their good condition. There have been many changes in augurate! in the methods of coiffures. The hairdressers have taken au excursion trip back, to the seventeenth century,and arc showing favor to the high puffs and orna mentation by use of flowers, velvet bands aad knots of ribbons. The present season has brought fresh life to the silk trade. The use of silk for linings, underdresses, and foundation skirts, the combination of silk with other fabrics, and the revival of the all-silk ! gowns, have created a demand for silks j which promises to increase rather than diminish. Gauze embroidered with cut steel is made use of ou the Brest afternoon reception dresses. When sewed tightly and smoothly about the hips it gives an exceedingly graceful, symmetrical ap pearance to the form and brings out all the subtle, willowy movements of the wearer when walking. Princess dresses are coming in again, and the faultlessly formed, graceful woman will rejoice. A beautiful dress recently finished in the universally popu lar gray aad yellow, was a gray benga line, bordered with straight rows of gold braid, and having a bertha and full puff.id sleeves of yellow crepon. Every well dressed society woman car ries a silken purse now. Ono of the daintiest models is made of gray fine, silken floss, crocheted in slip stitch. The beads are strung on gold wire and ornamented with emeralds. On the in side there is an opening nbiait three inches long to allow the money to be put in cither side. S';nj cf tho new nets for veils havo dainty tru-j-lovsr's knots scitterel ove.' them. Another net that is also fashion a'j'iu is tli 5 spider's web; aud one tiny black snider placed somewhere on the net, s as to accentuate a favorite dim ple or so ne peculiarly good point of tho face, produces nearly as quaint an eject as tho patches of Madame la Marquise. A new fashion in skirts is to make the front very close fitting, this extending welt round over the hips, an! to set the back fulness in one large full box plait, with many folds on either sido, and to fasten each side over on to the fronts with the simulated buttonholes and but tons, or to trim the edge and place over the front, us if it really fastened so when on the wearer. Flo vers no longer figure in the com plete toilet. Tais is due, probably, to the misuse of roses, which ruined the dress and destroyed the beauty of the figure. Kilined women no longer adopt the huge bouquet for the corsage. Tiny posici are pinned in the bosom, tucked in the bdt aud pinned in the loops of the sash ribbon. Field daisies, poppies, dahlias and carnations are sought for this purpose. In the Hawaiian Islands. A r 'cent letter-writer in Honolulu says: "I.i traveling about these islands, the observer is struck with the simplicity and generosity of the Hawaiian people. "A una may journey from one end of the Archipelago to the other, in opeu day or midnight darkness, and he is as secure as if he were in his own house. A foreigner never thinks of carrying fire arms, lor there is no one to molest him. He never goes hungry, for whatever the Hawaii in ha', whether poi, laro or fish, it is shared with the stranger. "Wuen they were a wealthy and pow erful people, when almost every foot of laud was cultivate ', aud there were from 300,0JU to 400,000 inhabitants, they killed fat hogs for their guests; but those halcyon days are nearly passed, because in nine cases out of ten they are now too poor to afford that luxury." Three Thousand Volcauo33. The San Diegan, of San Diego, Col., publishes adescriptive account by Colonel Allen, a well-known engineer, of a phe nomenon in what is known as the vol canic region of the Cocapah Mountains, situated sixty-five miles southwest of Yuma in Lower California.- Colonel Allen says there are over 3000 active volcanoes there, one-half of which are small cones teu or twelve feet at the base, the remaining half five to forty feet at the base and fifteen to twenty-five feet in height. The whole volcanic region it encrusted with sulphur.. One pecullat feature of the region is a lake of water jet black, which ia a quarter of a mile In length and one-eight of a mille In width eemingly bottomless, 'The water it hot and ealty. . ALBUQUERQUE. ROMANTIC SURROCNDIKOSOFA MUW MEXICAN TOWN. Kara Plctnreeqaeanea of the Rio Grande A Klne Region lor the Cultivation of fine- ' 1 Flavored Fruita. The new town is built after the modern fashion, its main streets Railroad and Gold avenues with their substantial business blocks, presenting the usual ap pearance of a thriving young Western city. All the principal streets are graded and provided with sidewalks. Many important additions and improvements have been made during the past year, including the expenditure ni $50,000 by the city government in beginning a com plete sewer system for the town. In Al buquerque are held the sittings of the District Court of tho Stcond Judicial District and the United State Court. The court-house in the old town, a modern and handsome building, contrasts oddly with the vista of antique ' portals which front the street, with a wind-mill in the background. The scenery about Albuquerque is strange and picturesque. Eastward a mesa ten miles in width extends south erly, parallel with the river, between the valley and the mountain bases. In the northeast the lofty oblong summits of the Sandia (Watermelon) Mountains rise above this table-land, their rocky, partly timbered sides revealing in the after noon sun varied hues of blue, brown, red and gray. South of the Sandias lies a lower range of mountains through which Tijeras, Coyote, and Hell canons afford passage from the eastern plains down to the valley and its city Mnong the sands, and to the southeast ot these mountains rise the far-off crests of the Manzana range. The western bank of the long southward stretch of river is marked by low rolling bluffs, back of which rise from the plain the peaks of the detached mountain group, the La drones, a rendezvous in former times for robbers. Westward a chain of brown hills breaks the view, and in the north west arc seen, blue in the distance, the San Mateo and Jemez Mountains. Rising among the mouutains of Colo rado, at an altitude of 11,920 feet, the Rio Grande, on its way to the Gulf of Mexico, flows through New Mexico from north to south a distance of 360 miles, measured on the meridian, with a fall of 2200 feet in that extent. Much of its volume oozes under ground, percolating the sands, so that water may be found anywhere in the valley by digging to the depth of the river's surface. In the spring and summer overflows its muddy current deposits in the valley a sediment ol volcanic, granitic, and siticious soil, forming alluvial bottom lands of great depth and inexhaustible fertility. The Rio Grande in its landscape setting' has a rare picturesqueness as un usual and individual as that associated with the scenery of the Nile Valley. Along its waters, deriving their suste nance from fields enriched by its over- ttnw flrft Rnanieh-A mnripun find Tnilinn villages of low rectangular adobe houses I about the quaint massive chinch stand ing against a background of mesas, ! mountaius aud sand-hills. The stretch j of thick, muddy water, with its distant sheens of blue and silver, winds its .long j way amid prevailing gray and red land scape tints interspersed with the deep ! green of Cottonwood groves and low j thickets which fringe its banks, and the lighter verdure of growing crops. Mud walled fields and gardens, irrigated by , means of rude ditches which conduct tlie water from the acequia madre, or main ' ditch, leading from the river, surround the adobe houses scattered along the valley. j Tho vine and fruit lands along the river begin at a short distance above the town of Bernalillo, seventeen miles north of Albuquerque, and from that point ' southward are many orchards and vine yards new and old. Apples, pears, quinces, apricot?, peaches ana plums have been abundantly raised here, with little care, by the native inhabitants since the first settlement of the country by Europeans, and now all the small fruits are successfully cultivated. Especially is this part of New Mexico favorable to vineyard culture, and the grape of the Rio Grande Valley will compare favor ably in juiciness, sweetness, and flavor with tho product of any other locality in the world. The variety most generally cultivated is the Mission grape, intro duced at an early period by Franciscan friars, but the Muscatel and other kinds of recent introduction are also found. By the aid of irrigation every plant of the temperate zone may be successfully raised in the Rio Grande Valley. Corn find whpnt. vipM Ahiirulnntl v. nnrl nnt.a. hnisiiv Vienns Mnd fllfntfn urn af:flnlp'l crop3. Vegetables of all kinds grow to great size, and are excellent of quality. All the New Mexican fruits aie of fine flavor, and they bring a much higher price in market than the similar Cali fornia productions. Harper t Weekly. Light and Electricity. Philadelphiascientistsare preparing to find out how fast an electric current travels. Au experiment will be made, probably from the Franklin Institute, by connections over the Atlantic cable to Liverpool and return. A recent test ap peared to show that an electric cuirent shuffled over to Europe and back in something like a second, or at the rate of only some 400,000 miles a minute, while light ambles along at a ten-million-mile-a-minute gait. American scientists are not willing to give up the aecord to sunlight. The most recent experiment was tried at McQill College, Montreal, to Liver poo' and return. The distance traversed was 8000 miles. Time, one second and one-twentieth of a second. The con ditions were not good. Hence the neces sity for another experiment. Some en thusiastic electricians claim that a cur rent will speed around the world in a trifle over three 'seconds, or cover the distance to the aun, 96,000,000 miles, in three aad one-half minutes. Chicago Herald. . .;--: -- Queer Bain Superstition. The telegraph wire between Madison and Greensboro', . FIs., .were disabled a few days ago, and the manager started out to discover the cause. . 'A few mile from Greensboro he found two. mam moth snakes hanging across the wires la such a manner as to connect the current of each, - The makes had been killed, tied together aud hung out to bring rain, the work being done by colored . people in the ' neighborhood. ;& JVa-icript. -j Tn CattlBf M 'Wtmstj ; The finest diamond entting in the whole civilised world -ie done in Boston, writes correspondent Amsterdam has been for centuries the great dia mond center, and nearly ail the dia monds famous ia history have been' eat 'there, bat to-day stone cnt in Amster idam are sent to Boston to be reont Originally diamonds were eut by hand. The Pitt diamond was ent that way. It took nearly two years and a tedious job it most have been. , It was a Boston Jmaa who invented the dimond-cuttiDg machine and the gauge to determine the angles giving the greatest refractive power. It is the nse of this gnage that brings about the vast superiority of the Amerioan-eot diamond. Yon may not think it, but for centuries these Amster dam Dutchmen have done all their work entirely by their eye dependent entirely on their judgment for the size and angle of every facet A diamond in the rough looks like any little piece of pebble, but a diamond cat, however poorly, will sparkle, of course, but to out a diamond so that it will sparkle ."for alt that it is worth" requires not only the finest of mechanical work, but a thorough knowledge of the laws of light and accurate measurements of the facets. For the sparkle of a diamond is nothing but the light refleoted from the facets. In a perfectly cat brilliant there are fifty-eight distinct facets, each 'with a different grain, and a facet can be polished only with the . grain. But jthe diamond is a useful stone as well as an ornamental, and ia U3ed in glazier's tools, dentists' drills, granite-cutters' saws and other snch things. Most of the stones nsed for thee purposes are of the grade known as "bortz." They are brown, rusty little atones, and are actually harder than .the white dia mond. For use in stone-cutters' saws are set in the saw teeth, one at the point ot each tooth, and they will cut the hardest granite. Rock drills are pointed -in the same way with three or four stone. Some people might think it extravagant to nse diamonds in a granite saw or rock drill, but they should realize it is another sort of dia monds from that which sparkles in beauty's ear. Most of the diamond cut ters of Boston are comparatively young men, and the occupation is a fascinat ing one. Von see the dull, pebbly looking stone gradually becoming a glittering gem, aud feel that over your work time has no power; that the jewel will be as brilliant a thousand years 'hence as when it first leaves your hands. iTime's tooth touches every one's work .but the diamond. W. D. MclVER, Attorney-at-Law NW BERNE, N. C. uinjdwtt C. R.THOMAS, Attorney aud Gouiiselor-at-Lai , Office, Craven Street, Stanley Building, NEW BERNE, N. C. Practices in the Courtsof Craven, Carteret, Jones, Onslow, Lenoir and Pamlico counties. She Supreme Court of North Carolina, nnu the U. S. District and Circuit Courts, jlyll H. L. GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Craven St., next to Journal Offica, NEW BERNE, N. C- Practicc in the Courts of Craven, Carteret, Hyde, Pamlico. Jnnei. Onslow, nntl Lenoir counties, aud 111 the Supreme and Federal eourtx. ad&wtf .1. 13. BKOWN, 'FIRST-CLASS BARBER SHOP. Neuly tilted up in the best of styls. Bati rooms wi h hot and eold water. BRICK BLOCK, MIDDLE ST. Furniture! Furniture! FURNITURE! ONE OF THE LARGEST STOCKS In K item North Varolina. COMPLETE iii Eyery Department. Also, we now have the Agency for the cel ebrated WiiEEi.F.n A Wilson and Standard 8ewi.no Machines. They are the latest im provrd Light Running and are unsurposed by any machine ever placed in this market JOHN SUTER. GEO. HENDERSON. Succennr to Roberts ie Henderson.) General tarac? loH Kepreaeniine Insurance Company of North America, of Philadelphia. Home Insurance Company, of New York. Queen Insurance Company, of England. llnrllord Fire Insurance Company, of Hartford. Non Ii Carolina Home Insurance Company, of lUleigh. Greeuwitcl! Insurance Company, of New York. I'hrenlx Insurance Company, of Brooklyn. United Underwriters Insurance Company, f Atlanta. lio-ton Murine Insurance Company, of Ronton. juiygdwtf NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. In Etalioial Imtitntioi for EASTERI I0BTH CABOIIIA. MALE AND FEMALE. ESTABLI8HBD J889-. v' Eight Distinct Departatntf ; Pn.uary, Intermediate, Academic, Col legiate, AH, Music, Industrial and' Business. TEN EXPERIENCED AND COM PETENT. TEACHERS. Vocal and Instrumental Mtu'e Prominent Feature, under the direction of a mal pro fessor, with efficient assistants.' - Special Course of Infraction for those desiring to become Teachers. . a . . .Expenses vry moderate. 'Board from 13.00 to10.00permontb tscili ties good. . Bf ecial Inducements to indigent students, Fall Term Opens Sept. 71891, For farther Information or for estalofue, apply to- ' G. T. ADAM 3, Al D.f ; (Trinity ColW), FPfNCIPAt,' for Infanta Cisirnptltchndistt IwsmmssiltasprtortoayiMiipWa asMratooM." B. JL Aaeson, K. Ul S. Oxford SI, BroesJra, K. T. Ito m ef 'CaHorle'ii se atonal aa4 Urn writs so well know, that It mtna week Caaua Hams). TX S., Asa Osdtavb HUMPHREYS' Da. Bnnum1 SMn are aoiew tincHT and cWuUt prepared pracrlptlons l used (or masy iSut la pflrtfe practice with suooMS,uid fororsr ThM. IpMlflcs out without drusguw, y"K dSdtaTorolBrdlcfthWrld. TorrnmoDMLHos. coaas. WarsMi Worm Fever, Worm Col la. . r7..1T!rV!.ii.. nrTMthln at Infants uiarrkea. ol Children or Adult..... H? ".rt.'afvffiSLi3';:: Coavsal, Ooid. Bronchitis fie.ralila, lMsh,amobS .... ffyspes-aTamom Stoinaoli.,.." iamreaaed or Palafal FeHada. LV&ftM. taa Prof um Periods i Oraaai Co ash, DHHcbH BresthlM. .,. Halt uaaasa, ry.iia wuuw Rheamatiam. Kheumatlo .Pains.... 40 Wkoonlna Caaaa, VlolcntCough.. . uJiSSii fKfcVmyTpiysloalWeaaaess . 2T KldaorBlspase '29 Nomas Webllttr . ..... Bold by DnujglsTS, or sent postpaid ( prloe. Da. HowiraiYs lUHpiL, (it PfW wi&j bound tn cloth and gold, mailed tree. HUMPHREYS' MBDIOIHB GO, , Oor. William and John Birasts, New Tot. SPECIFICS. AU of the abore medicines are for tale at the drag stores ot F. 8. Duffy and B. Berry, Middle street, New Berne. N. C. L. S. WOOD, Formerly 18 yean with Geo. Altm & Co. -DEALER IN- General Hardware, AND C-U-T-L-E-R-Y. Harness, Saddles, Bridles and Whips. FARM HQ IMPLEMENTS, Pollock Street, next to lational Bank, NEW BERNE, N. C june20dtf RUNKEHffESS LIQUOR HABIT. ' muntewaiio mastsuiroMtanu BHMfES GOLDEN SPECIFIC It cmn bQglvon tn coffee, tea, or tn artlclM of food, Without tb knowledge of patient If necessary! H la absolutely harmless and will effort a perma cent and speedy cure, whether the patient Is a moderatedrlDkeroran alcoholic wreck. IT NEV ER FAILS. It operates so quietly ana with such certainty that the patient undergoes no incon Tenlence. and soon Ma complete reformation ft affetiUd. a page book free. To be haU oi B. N. Duff, druggist, New Bern N.C. jjlSdwv OLD DOMINION Steamship Company, SEMI-WEEKLY LINE. The Old JJoim'uion Hteinis?iip Company' Old and Fa write Water liout'tvt'a Albt m.rle and t'hetsapctifce Vunal. FOR Xiiifilk, Biltlmurr, New York. PMla tUijmU, Bo to ii, Pris vUleiiua, and WHt.hiitgtoi- City. And all point Nrth, f'.aat and HVarf. On and aftei; TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1891 sleaiier NEW3ERNE, Capt. ScnlliiJat3, Wi! Mil from N'irdtik, Vn., lor New Heme, N. C'.ilirci, cvrry Monthly mul Thurailiiy, nuking rinse connoctiiiii tv.ih the A. & N. 0. " 11., lur all Mniiuns on l hat .mul, and with th Sleinii'rs Kii!ntu nivl HohiiiiI lor Kin k.ili. Trillion, and nil other landings ou the NVuse ati'l Trent Hirfrn. lleiiiniim-.will Mi, KUOM SEW BERNE. FOR NORFOLK direct, at 2 p m., Tues.iay ni1 r rmo v". muKint; t'oniiei'tmn wit Ii Ihe O. P. S. P.O'f nhipilnrNi-w York, 15. a. P.Co.V Rletmipis f"r lJuitimort-i.C yde Line Ships for Philadelphia. M. & 11. T. CVs ships for B s. ton and Providenee. ftentoer Kinsinn, Cnyt. Dixon, will soil for Kineton on arrival ot i-teamrr Newberne. ( rr nil goods care ,f O. D. S. S. Co., Norfolk, Ya. Pa'seugers will find a good table, oomft -t-shle rooms, snd eveiy couit sy and attention will be paid them by the ottU-efs. E. B ROBERTS, Agent Messes. CULPEPPER & TURNER Agents, Norfolk, Va. W. H. STANFORD, Vioe-Preidnt, New York City. Boot and Shoe Maker. All Stylaa of toots and Sruoa mad to order and on Short notloo. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. N. ARPEN, CHAYEJ IT., tppoilt hnnd One K. R. JONES, - HEAVY AND LIGHT s GROCERIES. LoriUard ind flail 4 Ax Snnt, Seld at Manufacturer' Prim. - ' Dry Goods & Notions. fall Staakana Larga Aaaartmant, ; ' Prlaaa aa law aa tka Lawast Vail atit) rmla ttaak. and Children. i Oolto. fluastlusttua. BSlomiPiKTfcoMLlructWioB, Kite Wsnssv gsres staspt sad prsaMttfl . WlsiS'aOaitwsss Far imnl nut I hen i Mar 'raMsnt.' ana shall always eeatunst f. osoaastbaaiBvai lawntr.rAana.Itll; ' XlMwlslu'st"Isttaltmtas4TthAm, ' - KewTerkCtta-. OssnMsnr, TT Moaaar tnaan, Haw Tn L GREAT BARGAIN I 327 ACRES WILL B SOLD AT A . GREAT SACRIFICE! A VALUABLE fLANTATION situ ted on !the South tide of the Neuw river, three and-a-half miles from the) City of New Berne. N. C. One hundred and twenty-live acres cleared. Good land, suitable for Trnrking, Tobacot ; Sailing, or any bind of farming. Tiie balance, two hundred and two acres, heavily timbered with pine, oak, cypress, another kinds of timber. It ts also fine Grazing Land. Good dwelling, outbuilding, and 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 rery beautiful and healthy lo cation, presenting a near view to the passing vessels and the A. fc N. C. Railroad. For terms apply to P. TRENWITH, Opp. Hotel Albart, MEW BEBIE, I. C JOE K. WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF tern lit Caro'ina Marble Works NEW BERNE, N. C. Italian and American Marble and afl Qualities of MaieriaL Orders solicited and given prompt at tention, with satisfaction guaranteed. 'Terra Cotta Vases ror Plant and rTbrwer famished at th Try lowest rates. MRS. J7TS. fllNEST Boarding House REOPENED. Mks. J. M HINES has reopened First-vJluoji Hoarding House in the city, opp. te Baptist Ciiurch. Tie Pioneer Daris Sewing Kackine,- Can be had at the lame plate. J. M. HiNES, Agent. ElyislCFFeiptun., Steamers G. H. Stoat, Defiance & Vesjer - - On and alter February 1st, 1891, tbil ' line will make regular SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS BliTV."EN . -f Baltimore and New Berne Laarinff Baltimore for New Bern, WED- ' NESDAY, 8ATUUDAY, at P M. Learing New Berne for Baltimore, TDES- . iiiiAiviuui.itor Ja. . Eercliaiita and Shipper., Tike lotlce. This is th only DIRECT tin, oat of N Berne for Baltimore Without change, stopping only it Korfolk, connecting then lor Boston, -Proridenee. Philadelphia, Binlioinnd, and all : pniut North, Ksst and West Making (Ion couneotion (or all points by A. AN. C. Bail road and Elver out of New Beine. .. , -' Agent are a follows . ' -Kbvbm Fostek, Gb'1 Manager, ..r . - -v WLightStlBaltlm . Ja W.Mor A jtRiCK, Agent, Norfolk, Va. -W. F. Clyde Co, Ithlladelphla, U Boats wharves. New York aad Bait. Traas. linaPUf - ' Karth river. K. Simpson, Bostoa, S3 Central wharf, 8. II. Koekwell, Provideaee, R. I. ' .... Ships tear Boston, Tuesday aad Saturday " Nw York daily. - Balto, Wdneday Saturday. " Philadelphia, Monday, Wadaw dsyi, Saturday. -, " Providence, Saturday.' . , ,. . Through bills lading given, and rate giar- . ntd to all poluta at th different offlee a! lb companies. , . - -, . VST Avoid Breakage of Bulk and Shit via X. C. line. - , i - , ft II. Q&AY, Agent, NW Berm, V. Q , iVEdiLL r;i:3T fcl, 0UTWCAR3 ALL OTHERS .J5.,'S'' ?" mo eoonowi. and has to Mlut Amr una In a brlof p ,L na you buy the "Arsriii" and tA?h 1 m do you not save 76 t Awiil tau a bMutlfiil ln.tr; it Improves the partioe and Increases the value at r It s bma In m S yw (,'., j fMMoriahl tints si t r , f lOML aMVut, - '.. lata. . ... , " . "-. , Im IVC'tv- Kjt:b!!itieat
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 9, 1891, edition 1
2
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