Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Sept. 15, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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BUSHERS' ANNOUNCEMCNi r THE DAILT JOUEHAT. ta paMUhei ally, tzoept UtwUf at 5.00 per year; il for six aaonth. Dcilvarsd to city ubcriuen at 80 rent per month. . , THE WEEKLY JOURNAL b published pverjr Thursday at tlM per anium. i Notice ot Marriage or Deatha not to ti ke ten line will be inaerte.1 tree. All ad atiUooal matter will be charged 5 eU. per line. : Payment for transient ad vertiaemeii Hurt k made in ad ratio, tegular advertise neat will be collected promptly at the end a eaeh month i Communication containing news oi raffl etentpulilie interest are solicited. No com BMnication most be expected to be published that eon tains objectionable personalities, or "withholds the name of the author. Article loafer than ball column mmt be paid for. Any pernoa feeling aggriere- at any anony mous communication cau obtain the name of lb author by application at thi office and Showing wherein the grievance exists. , THE JOURNAL. C- E. HARPER, - - Proprietor. CT. HANCOCK, - Looal Reporter. i i ' mfEntertd at the Postoffice at -Yew Jitrn B.V., a tecoml-ciau matter. The Atlanta Constitution avers that the unloaded gun has done more damago during the past twenty years than t!i3 Franco-Prusian war. The New York Times estimates that "the aggrigate capital represented by the various 'trusts' in the United Static amounts to more than $2,000,0'J0,00J. or more than two-thirds of our eatirs manufacturing capital.'' According to census reports, there are 12,500,000 families in the United States. Of these, 10,230,000, occupy farms an 1 homes that are either owned or rented by them unincumbered. The other 2,. 250,000 own home3 and farms incum bered by mortgages. For several years tho California C'.ii nese engaged in the fruit buiiness in a small way, but this seison they hivj gone into the larger districts and havq proved, learns the Boston Transcript, a decided thora ia the side of the whitu dealers. Their presence as buyers in stead of laborers has arousei the bitter est opposition from tho whites, who de clare that tho Chinese will ruin thq reputation of the California fruit trade. , Farmers and bank officers seem to bs given length of days. From recent sta tistics it is estimated that tiie average life of men in the different callings and professions is as follows: Farmers, sixty four years; bank officer i, sixty-four; clergymen, fifty-six; lawyers, fifty-four; merchants, fifty-one; physicians, fifty, one; carpcnters,forty-niue; traders, forty six; manufacturers, bakers, painters, shoemakers and mechanics, forty-three; editors, fcrty; musicians, thirty-nine; teachers, thirty-four; clerks, thirty-four; operators, thirty-two. The most interesting person in Wash ington at present is tho Chinese Min ister's little slant-eyed baby. Ac companied by her mother nnd nurse the infant takes an occasional outing in an American baby carriage, am! on such oc casions sh is tho cynosure of all neigh boring eyes. Sne is not much unlike other babies, except tor her attire, which looks rather odd to Occidental people. On her head she wears a littie silk can ot Chinese manufacture, and tucke I up iri der her chin in place of the u-sual white robe is a little spread of dark-coloie 1 material. The Minister's wife is m.ich like other mothers in showing her pleas ure when her baby is admired. , A wonderful example of patience in the Chineie is afforded by a consular re port dealing with the manufacture of salt in Central China. Holes about six inches in diameter are boied in the rock by means of a primitive for.n of iron drill, and someti lies a period of forty years elapses before the covered brine is reached, so that the wore is carried on from one generation to another. During this time the boring, as may be imagined, cocs down to an immense depth. When brine is found it is drawn up in bamboo tubes by a rope working over a largo j drum turned by bullocks. The brine is I evaporated in iron caldrons, the heat be ing supplied by natural gas, which is generally fouud in the vicinity of tha salt wells. The Kansas City r.nisi 3iijs: "Nearly three fourths of the men who have been chosen by the people for the great offices of the nation are men who were early familiar with wooded hills aud cultivated fields. It is an old story, but a lew names may bs appropriately recalled here; for example, those of Lincoln, Grant, Garfield, Hamlin, Greeley, Til den, Cleveland, Harrison, Hayes, Blaine and many others almost equally con spicuous in current events of living memory. Among journalists, Henry Watterson spent his early life in rural Kentucky and Murat Halstead was born and lived on a farm in Ohio. W. H. Vanderbilt was born in a small New Jersey town and early engaged in the business of ship chandler. Kussell Sage was born in a New Jersey village. Jay Gould spent his early years on his father's farm in New York State. Talmage first saw the light in a New Jersey village, and David Swing, though born in Cin cinnati, passed his boyhood on an Ohio farm. Whittier and Ho wells spent their youth in villages, the former divid ing his time between farm employment and his studies." In the South, adds the Atlantic Conttitution, this is even more conspicuous. With Tery few ex ceptions, our most successful men hare :'' 11 bcea country brei, . LITTLE THINGS. A gcod-bje kiss is a little thing; With your hand on the donr to go. Cut it takes tit venom out of thi. sting Of a thougtles wori ora trusl 9 Jts That you made an hour ago. A kin of greeting is sweet and rare, After the toil of the day. But it smooths the furrows out of the care, And lines on the forehead you once called fair, v In the yean that have Sown away. 'Pis a little thin t sar, "Ton are kind," "I love you, my dear," each niht, Eat it sends a thrill through thj heart, I f.n.l; For love is tender, as love is blln As we c.itn'j ll.Vs rugged height. AVe starve each other for love's carers, i We take, but we do not give. It seems so easy so.ne soul t ) bless. But we dole lovo gru lgingiy, less and less, 1 ili 'tis bitter an 1 hard to live. Union Signal. THE NEXT-OF-KIN. rY FKAXCES EI, I. EN TTADLKICH. All the legal quips and quirks are complied with ; at last I am a free man ! Young, rich, not so Tery bad looking, may 1 not now be the happiest man in America? I will. No inoro work for inc. boys!" As Flavel Ashcroft uttered these words in tones of exultation, he tore a cote into tiny fragments and threw them aside. Oue of his companions, Loins Jewett, b'.cw a cloud of lragrant smoke from his i tigar and said, flatteringly: '-.Vh, you lucky dog, you'll play tho -.lischief among lue girls! May 1 ask if I that is a love-letter which you have so thoroughly destroyed?'' "Cy co means. Merely a brief billet I from Huxley, my former employer. He ' says that if I don't appear at the store . to-morrow I may consider myself dis charged." I "Then you ha-en't told him " "That Uncle Roger died intestate and childless, and that I step into his shoes? ! So, no. Until this morning I feared ' some unknown heir might crop up and chisel me out of this money, and I didn't choose to tell of my hopes as long as i there was any chance that they might be delusive." ; "Did you suspect that your uncle left children or grandchildren?'' asked Har vey WiKou, Flavel's otiier companion, j "I was positive iie never had but one 1 child, my Aunt Kathleen, who was de mented for sixteen years before her ileiith, which took place about three years I ugo. It sue nan ever marricu, Her cnil- i lircu would, of comse, inherit this es- tate." , i "rtur uncle might, even in that case, ' have remembered you,'' suggested Wil- i son. 1 "Never! We were sworn foes. He wouldn't died intestate had he been as i ' far seeing as he was unforgiving. His ' lawyers tell me he had yielded to their j persuasions so far as to promise to make ' his will before the close of the year; but the year closed for him Ion ; before l)e ' ccmber came. Aooplexy, you kuow." I "1 believe run:or says you are sweet on the pretty typewriter at Huxley's," said Jewett, inquisitively. ' "Bessie Moore i All, I fear she is rather gone on youis truly,'' said Flavel, complacently, as lie caressed his luxuriant whiskers, "but that tort of thing'll not do now. Site's a nice litl.e thing, but the must marry some respectable lellow in her own station iu life.'' Wilson scowled at Flavel and abruptly left the group, unobserved by Jewett, who was also about to depart in another direction. While strolling homeward, Flavel said to bin. sell : "Mow lucky for me that my aunt was daft after that mysterious visit of hers to friends iu New York! And how very, very queer it seems that no one bat me knows of her meriiage and subsequent motherhood ! When her husband, Theo dore Terrill, aud I were both in the hos pital after we were injured in that rail road accident, he told me the whole fctory, knowing that he was about to die. He told me, deluded man, that my aunt bad gone crazy at the birth of her little daughter, and had drowned herself, but her body was never found, and he was ! then on his way to see her father and tell the sad news. He never suspected : that she was at home. Lucky is it for I ire, boy as I war, I had sense enough to ; bold my tongue about Terriii's surprising leve'ation, for that child, is it is alive, is my nude's lawful heir.'' i fcuch was the fact, hut no one had ever fusprrled 'hat old Mr. Ashcroft's only ; (laughter had been a wife and mother. 1 Therefore, not even tiie most astute lawyer had the least hesitancy in declar ' ing his handsome, extravagant, selfish ' nc'l,1'cw to bth'9 h -'' Of course, it was not long before the tidings of Flavel Ashcroft peuetrated to the large w holesale drug store where he had been a former clerk for the past six year?, and his former comrades rejoiced at his good fortune, for in his careless, happy-go-lucky way lie always mae'e friends wherever he was. "I wonder Mr. Ashcroft has not been in to see us," said one of the clerks to J'essie Moore, Huxley & Co s stenogra pher and typewriter. "Has he told you when we are to expect him?" "I haven't seen him since the last day he was in the store, four weeks ago," Bessie replied, with an embarrassed air. Mr. Ashcroft's attentions to her had born so unremitting for some time past tnat everyone predicted a speedy wed ding, and liessie knew it; she knew, too, that her ow n family her adopted mother and sisters (for she was an orphan) had looked for the same result. Therefore it was doubly mortifying to feel and real ize that others fch that Flavel had mereiy been amusing himself at her ex pense. "Oh, well, I dare say he's been pretty busy," said the first speaker, kindly try ing to hide his surprise at Bessie's words. "Different people, to whom he was al ways more or less in debt, have told me that he has been around among them set tling up all his little liabilities. Then, too, where there's so much money in volved there must necessarily bo a good many interviews with lawyers." "Yes," chimed in Harvey Wilson, head bookkeeper, who had overheard these last words, "riches entail many cares, yet Ashcroft, no doubt, has some free evenings. For my part, I am con vinced none of us will ever see him again." "Oh, I say, Wilson, aren't yon a bit cynical! Ashcroft isn't such a cad as that." ' "Koi I hope not, for. I usti to like him. But remember, prosperity tries a man; adversity is not our only crucible." Bessie's: cheek flushed painfully. She knew that Wilson was an honest, far seeing man, and that he had been more intimate with Flavel Ashcroft than any of the other clerks; consequently, he ought to be able to judge him correctly. Yet she also knew that Wilson's affec tions were all bestowed on herself, and that his love for her might make him jealously spiteful towards a handsomer, richer rival. She had always liked and esteemed Harvey Wilson, but who could blame a girl of nineteen if she bad been captivated by Fiavel, who, during his ' thirty-fouf years of life, had traveled much and learned many things, among them the art of making love to every pretty face? Harvey sighel as he noted the flush on her face, and walked quietly away. Day passed, weeks vanished, yet nc visit or message eame to her from Flavel Ashcroft. Bessie was young and in genious, but she wns a sensible; girl. Gradually his true character preseuted itself to her mind as she read of his gay life among fashionable people, and she saw that be was indeed a recreaut knight. And as this knowledge was forced upon her, she slowly came to appreciate Har vey Wilson's unwavering, though hope less devotion. "Oh, Mr. Wilson," she exclaimed to him one evening when he was calling on her, "I have heard so much news to day. One thing you, too, have perhaps heard, that .Mr. Ashcroft is engaged to the lovely but hitherto uuapprcachablo j Miss Carroll." Harvey looked quickly at her. Her tone was not that of a heart broken woman. , "Poor Fiavel!" he answered. "She has the reputation of being cold hearted ' and mcrceuury. Can you pardon me if I say that I thought him devoted to you in the olden days?" "So did I," she replied, lightly, "but we were mistaken. I really believed, too, that I was devoted to him, but I am happy to see that I was mistaken about that, also." "Oh, Bessie, your words open para- ! disc before me! I know I can't hold a candle to him; if he failed, how can f, a rough, plain fellow, ever hope to win?" "To win what?" she whispered. It look many words, many kisses, many , tender glances before he had answered that question to his satisfaction ; but at last he was satisfied and in elysiuni. "Name the weddiug day? ' said Bessie, an hour or so later. "Tnat I cannot do without c insulting dear mamma. You know, of course, that I am not Mrs. Moore's own child; that she took me. a nameless waif, from an orphan asylum?" "Yes, yes; but that is nothing. You" are your own dear self ; I ask no more. But Mrs. Monro has been a mother to you, so let us go down to the sitting room aud ask her blessing." Mis. Moore not only gave her blessing, but sai l that there was no man in the world to -vhom she would more willingly see Bessie married. "But whe.i you get the license, per haps you ou,'IH to give her own name, for my husband and I never legally adopted her." "Oil, nnurna! And I never knew it! My father's name was Theodore Terrill, was it not! You don't know my moth er's?" "No, dear, but Harvey can find out. The matron of the asylum whence wc took you told us that your father placed vou there temporarily while he went iu search of your poor mother, who had wandered from home during a temporary delirium. He gave her a copy of his marriage certificate, in case he might die 1 suddenly, but she never saw him again." "Theodore Terrill!'' exclaimed Har- i vey Wilson in surprise. "My father had a chum of that name and c.ille i my second brother for him. I will write to ! the asylum, and if the father of my Bjs- 1 sie is the same man, bow singular it will be!" "1 have lived long enough to learn ! that life is full of coincidences; it is the ; unexpected which generally happens," Mrs. Moore sagely observed. "Perhaps my unknown father may have le.'t m-; some money," criel Bjssie. "Wouldn't that be nice?" "It's nil very nice as it is, darling." "I am glal to hear you say so, Har- vey," said Mrs. Moore, "yet a little money is always useful." Judge, if you can, of Harvey's surprise ; when it was proven thafc Bessie was tho law fill ow ner of the wealth which had so turue 1 the '.wad of Flavel Ashcroft! No l words can dese-ibe the hitter's disgust with himself when he found that the pretty girl whom he had courted and theu fo;sa!;en was the one to whom he was force I to resign the riches which 1 he ha I al vays known were not his own. . Bessie wir.ild gladly have given him a I share of the money, in spite of his con i duct to her, but he gave her no chauce. lie vanished utterly and completely ; even Miss Carroll never heard of hire aaiu. Lalut Home Companion. Ludicrous lie licainent of a Juelje. One of the peculiar brand of Judges peculiar to this peculiar community invested in a ready-made outing coat on his way down to court the other ; morning. As toe any was excessively i warm, his Honor concluded to slip on the gnrmcut juat as it was taken from the window, and unmindful that a pla- card was still attached to its tail, pro- ceeded calmly on his way. Qlad you don t make any bone about sayings", remarked a tricna, siapping him on the shoulder at the next corner. "There's ucithin? like coming out flat- footed and above board." What do you meant"' a9ked the Court, but his friend worked o!I an in describable wink and passed on. 'That', light!" warmly ejaculated a Police Cwirt lawyer as the jurist reached the City Hall. '-Xuthing like getting dawn to bedrock rates these hard timoi. See you 1 iter." "I always thought that man was crazy," iiiu.scd his Honor, as he entered the court room, where he observed that his advent created a very marked sensation indeed. One of the regular practitioners grasped his hand excitedly and whis pered, "That's the way to do business Judge! Now, how about this Glucky vs. McCorken case? Would 675 strike you as about right?" ' 'Is everybody insane or or is this some dreadful dream?" gasped the be wildered dispenser of justice. "Have I " Just then the placard became de tached and fell to the floor. Even the ragged vagrant in tbe dock smiled hope, fully as the Judge pieked it up and read vf-ti ",'," S&.-f: . ' '.f . "Xo Reamab!eOAerlWasedi:i-AM framim Brmtmtr. .. . '- :. : CCBI0CS FACTS. : Africa has nearly seven hundred lan guages. . A Hew Tork firm boys duplicate wed ding presents. The tongue of the giraffe is nearly foot and a half long. New York City tempts dyspepsia by eating 75,000 pies daily. Chicago claims to be the home of not leas thau 250 Arabian families. The poisb. w.n originally a Tery poisonous fruit, but by cultivation the poison has disappeiro l. The Oldtown Indians in Maine have a Curious law which forbids palefaces tobi on their island after a certain hour in the evening. Carrier pigeons recently made tb.9 distance betweeu Nuremburg and Vi enna, 310 miles, iu less than four and a half hours. It is stated that in Tangier, Algeria, locusts fall in the streets like rain, and the sound of thuir foiling resembles a heavy shower. Tiie hailstones w'lic'i reitly fell at Arkansas City, Ark., were abut t'aa lhap'j of a cooinia soli uisciiic ana nearly as big. A citizen of Greencis'le, Md., hai trained his rat-terrier to hatch out sprinr chickens, and the little fellow does it thoroughly, lie is now sitting on goj38- Bg!?S. AVhen a Kansas farmir has been sold out by a sheriff to satisfy a mortgage, he is then known as a "wlierjas," bsoiuse the writ of attachment begins with a "whereas." With the idea of preserving the G lelic language the Duke of Athol's daughter is preparing for the instruction of the Gaels of Perthshire in reading, writing tiud speakiug their native tongue. The Trans-Atlantic Steimihip, Fusrst Bismarck, carries the pennat for spee I, with a record of 19. 73 knots pur hour, ter second being the City of Paris, with i record of 11) 49 knots per hour. Professor B istiaa relate I in a recsit lecture iu B.-rlin that ho had lately ma lu the trip from Bombay, India, to Midrai and Benares in forty eight hours by rail, while in 1S72 the same trip, with ox teams, tookto months. Joseph Patton, who lives near Clifton Hill, iu Randolph County, Mo., still has the pony he rode in the Confederate army. It is now thirty-six ye irs old and as fat as a mole, not having been used any, or very litle, for some yecrs. George Smith, "king" of the English ! gypsies, annouuees that in th'! fall he is : going to begin the publication of a news- j paper in the Komany language, to be . called the Wun krinj Folk. Ho hopes j to get twenty thousan 1 subs:riber-: j Many years ago, when rats became ; numerous and auuoying in a house, thi j owner would write a letter t) then re- ; questing tlie-u to leave. Thu le'.te.- woul I 1 be written ou the best of piper, i:i go.) 1 j plain writing, with explicit directions ai to when they were to vacate and what j course they should pursue. Tiie note J would then be covered with butter and placed in a holo where they cull easily i get it. It is said this ancient casto.u is still practiced by many people. The Key of Death. About the year 160') a stranger name! Tebaldo establishe 1 himself as a mer chant in Venic;. S.)o.i booming in fatuated with the daughter of one of the most aucieut and wealthy families hu asked her hand and was rejected, thu young lady being already alii meed. Half crazed aud thoroughly enraged, ho 1 ulauned revenue. Being ai excelleut . mechanic he soon evolved a most formi- I , dable looking k-y. Tae handle of this i unique weapon could be easi'y turned. I Being turne 1 it disclosed a spring with a missile in the shape of a needle of ex- I ; quisite fineness. With this weapon Te I baldi waited at the church door until the maiden he loved passed in on tho morn ing of her marriage. When the bride ! groom appeared the desperate lover, uu I perceived, sunt the slender poisoned ! needle into his rival's breast, and within an hour he was dead of a "strange, baf- : : fling disease." Again Tebaldo demanded ! the hand of the maiden, but was re- j ' fused. Within a few days both her parents ' had died in a very mysterious manner. Suspicion being excited, examination I was made, and the small steel instru- '. ments found iu the flesh in bcth cases. One day the maiden allowed Tebaldo an ' audience, but told him that she would ; never bo his bride. Within an hour she was a corpse. Tebaldo was suspected, the key discovered and the culprit I hanged. The celebrated "key of death" is still shown to the curious visitor ot the Venice Museum. SI. Louis Republic. Nest of thn Oriole. The nest of tiie Biltimore oriols is an elaborate piece of workmanship aud is likely to be hunj fro.n a drooping branea of an elm, sycamore or pear tree. It is placed far out on the bouU where leaves ars many, and is usually in a lofty situa tion, though nesU have beeu found dis tant only a few feet from the ground. The Baltimore oriole is a loom, his bill being the shuttle.' With rare skill and nicety he weaves a cylindrical pouch of Brass, horsehair, yam, twine, strips of j bark, rags or paper, in fact any soft i material that is obtainable and suitable j f0i warp and woof. If proper lengths ! of bright-colored yarn are laid upon the I lawn when Icterus galbula is building he will be sure to help himself and work them into a web. The smart appearance his nest will then present is. very strik ing:, and, doubtless, swells his breast with pride, while less fortunate congen ers consume wuu envy wueu vumpitciug their sober homes with his. The Baltimore oriole lays from four to six eggs, about one inch by a little more than half an inch in size. These are pinkish-white, spotted an 1 scrawled over, but most profusely upoa the larger end, with brownish lines and blotch ss. New York Pott. -: ' ' Sprinkling a Railroad. Probably the biggest thing in the way of sprinklers that hat thus far been evolved is the railway sprinkler now ia use on the Interarbaa Railway, which runs between the cities of St. Paul and Minneapolis. The apparatus consists ot a huge tank of boiler iron mounted upon a flat car. A pieee of four-inch steam pipe, perforated with numerous small holes, is placed across the rear end ot the car. It to intended. that the car shall be whisked over the line about onoeerery two hours, trailing a small shower as it goes. It is calouUUd that this will keep the dust down. Phil delpAid Btcord. . ''r'1 ISHKS CMlOSBW-.f -:' ': The prasenos) of the Spaniau school ship Nautilus in the North River re calls aenrioos custom in vogue on war vessels of that nationality. It origi nated ia superstition and has long been the subject of many jeers from English speaking mariners. Years ago, so the legend runs, a Spanish man-of-war was lost under peculiar circumstances. The ship was careening before a Levant breeze, when suddenly the heavens grew dark with an approaching squall. It became neoessary to shorten- sail quickly and the seamen were hurried to their stattonV The vessel heeled under her bellying canvas and the sailors tugged at the olew-lines, but not a sheet wonld sta.-t. As a last resort the halyards were out, and under ordinary cironmstances the yards would have fallen upon the caps and spilled the wind out of the sails. But they remained mast-headed, and in a few moments the vessel cap sized. It was afterwards discovered that the iheaves, through which the ropes for shortening sails were rove, had been so lightly plugged up' with sticks and jther small obstructions that it was im possible for the ropes to slido through. It was urged that no human agency iould have done it, and the deed was laid at the door of the evil one. Shortly after tho fateful occurrence a general order was promulgated direct ng that the crew of every Spanish war ressel be sont aloft to chase His Majesty nit of the sheave every evening at sun lown. From that day to the present it has been the custom for the crew to go sloft for this purpose when tho colors sre lowered at sunset They scramble up the rigging as the flag oomos down, run out upon the yard-arms and closely jxamine every hole and crevice. Their patient search for the elusive jld gentleman has hitherto been as fruitless and tireless as that instituted by single ladies under beds for lost burglars. V hat wonld happen if they should ever find what they search for can only be imagined. New York Times. No Spxre Hnurn. Mr Hayseed (arriving at city hotel) I s'poso I kin beat the goDg when it rings for dinner, can't 1? Clerk We have no gong. We have breakfast from C to 11, dinner from 12 to 0, supper from 6 to 11. Mr. Hayseed Jehoshaphat! How am I to git lime to sea the city? New York Meekly. W. D. MclVER. Attorney-at-Law NrW BERNE, N. C. inay22dvtt c 7r7t h o m asT Attorney aui GoaossM-La?, Office, Craven Street, Stanley Building, NEW BERNE, N. C. Practices in the Cuurtsof Craven, Carteret, Jones, Onslow, Lenoir and Pamlico ootintieB. the Supreme Court of North Csroliuu, and the U. S. U.siriet and Circuit Courts, jlyll H. L. GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Craven St., next to Journal Offico, NEW BERNE, N. C Practice in the Courts of Craven, Carterev, Hyde. Pamlico, Jotien, Onslow, anil Lenoir counties, ami in the Supreme and Federal eourts. ad&wtf -J. EJ. IJKOWN, FIRM CLASS BARBER SHOP. j Neatly fitted up in the bet of si) Is. Bats ' rooms i h h a aud cold writer. ! BRICK BLOCK, MIDDLE ST. Furniture! Furniture! FURNITURE! ONE OF THi LARGEST STOCKS In E stern North Carolina. COMPLETf in Eyery Department. Also, we now linvejhe Agency fr the eel ehratcd Wheki.kkawh.sox and Standard Skwino Machines. They are the latest im proved l.iiiht Ku lining nnd are unsurpassed by aiiy niHchine ever placed in this market JOHN SUTER. GEO. HENDERSON. (Swa-aor to Roberts & Hendertan.) General Unruc Agent, Represcminr; Insurance Compsnyof North America, uf i'hiladVlphia. Home Insurance Company, of New York. Queen Insurance Company, of England. Hartford Fire Insurance Company, of Hartford. Nor.li Carolina Home Insurance Company, of Ilaleigh. " Greennitc;: Insurance Company, of New York. Phcr-nix Insurance Company, of Brooklyn. United Underwriters Insurance Company, l Atlautu, Baton Marine Insurance Company, of tfoaton. ' ju.)2dwtf NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. Id HuGatioul Mitatioi for EASTERI I0BTB CAROLIIA. MALE AND FEMALE. ESTABLISRKD 1889. Eight Distinct Departments. 'Pn.nary, Intermedia'e, Academic, Col legiate, Art, Music, Industrial and Business. TEN JEXPEBIENCED AND COM PETENT IEACHEE3. . Vocal and Inttrumental iftir'e Prominent Felwet, under the direction of msls pro fessor, with effioieut assistant. Special Conn of Infraction for those deiiring to become Tesener. ' Expense very moderate. Board from $8.00 to $10.00 per month-rfocilitiesigood. " ' : . ttffc-ial inducement to indigent students. Fall Term Opens Sept. 7, 1891. For further Information sr for oataiosne. apply to " , :'v,vy ;,,,4i-V "7 i G. T. ADAMS, A. D., t& (Trinity College), PRINCIPAL julylUwtf . ygvf n. C, for Infante Osrtalswda4astdWetuttnBsa I rssowms teMSMtwrtcrfssTfvWf! Hnkx." B.A.Aassna.lLlV Ul So. Oxferd ft, Broaklrm, X. T. TW'Cmtsria'ltvral aJ It swriss o wttt know, tax it wj CiKai wbtosst 0tri Hww, I. TJ., Nur Tart OUT. i OawiAsm ;ETERIATOfSPECinCS Far Eorses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Sogt, AND POUI.TBY. B. B.-Xtrala. LueuN, RhatUsa, C. C. OUtem.er, Masai Dlsckarsea. D. D.-Bts mr tub VVr.. K.K. Caash, Ileaves, Paeaatnla. F.r. COI10-ST mtiswp, ljrala. Elngto Bottl (over 60 dows), - -Stable Cass, with Bpedflc, Msniull, Vetertiiry Core Oil and Hedicsur, 7.00 Jar Veccrtaarv Care Oil, - - 1.0 Sold br Drnnists; or Sent Frsptld inrwhsr and In any quantity on Beoeipt of Frico. HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE CO., Corner William nd John Sl., Mw Tork. ST72IF&X.ETS' H0XE0FATHIC fft SPECIFIC No. fitt ! usm ao vmn. Tba tmW maocMntul mnedrfo Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness. ' and Prostration, from ow work or otnr canae. 91 per vial, or 6 vials snd lariie vial powdar, for S6. Solo bt DRunamrs, or sent postpaid on rocefpt of prices HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE CTl, Cor. William and John Sla., jr. T. All of our Veterinary Preparation! can be had of J. V. Jordan, Drutiginl, N. W cor. Broad and Middle streets, Newtern.N.O L. S. WOOD, Formerly 18 yean with Geo. Alien & Co. -DEALER IN- General Hardware, AND C-U-T-L-E-R-Y. Harness, Saddles, Bridles and Whips. FAHMH3 IMPLEMENTS, Pollock Street, next to lational Bank. NEW BERNE, N. C. jnne20 dwtf mUNKEKtfESS W. Dquor Habit. mmne warns m&tesanTOMeaii 0!HXlrfES GOLDEN SPECIFIC It can be vrn I n coffee, tea, or In artlclotvof food, without tba knowlediro of patient If necessary itj n umHUVCi; urimtta uu win jueci pvi utav : nent and mmwhIv fur. wlieLhAr th navtlftit In m 1 moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. IT K EV ER FAILS, Itoperates no quietly and wttb such certainty that tbe put lent undergoes no lncoiv venlence, and soon hit complete reformation ft ffftote4. et page boos free. To be bad of R. N. Duffj, druggitt, Now Bern N.C. jjWdwj OLD EOHiNTON Steamship Company, SEMI-WEEKLY LINE. The Old l):nitinion SttamsMp Company's Old and Faiiril ' Water fiout;v-'a Albt- vi rte anl t'hajpakc Canal. 1 OK S jrf.tllt, R4 tl.mari, Sew York, PJtlla Doilnu, lVvftteili;e, UtJ " 'H.hlig(oti t Hy. And all poi Jh N-r!h. J.ast ami Went. Oa anJ fifter TUESDAY, APItlL 14, 1891 UIU. 1 1 : I t-r !(! .., tilt S.e32:efEW2SRHS.Cspt. SoiMj, Wil mi! from Norfolk, Va., to- N'-w Ilrrne, N. (' , dir el, i-i-.-ry Mondi.y nr.rl T i.urwlay, in:' 1 ins close cu'ineutioii w lb Hie A. & S. C ''.!., tor n:l MHiionx on th-it inad, and with Ih fc-'iiMiir-rs Kint-n mnl Howmit lor Kin- . ii, Irtnioo, Hi-.il all oli.er landings ou tbe N u-e au l Tient ilivers. Koiiruinwill KUOM X'KW P.ERWK. FOI! NORFOLK direct, at 2 p m., Tuesday and rrniuy, irwK iii; coiinei'tion with th (i. D. S. S.Co.'snhipyJoi N.-w York, R. fc. P.Co.V tfranieia for llaiiiniore; Civde Line Shipa tor Philadelphia, M. 4: M. T. i.o.' ship fur II. t toii and Providei.ce. steamer Kinslon, CsFt. Dixon, wil! sail for Kiiifton on arrival ol i-tearner Newherne. C r !er all goods care of O. D. S. S. Co. Norfolk, Va. Panenger will find a good table, comf' -t-hie rooiua, and eveiy couit ay and attention ill be paid them liy the ofhvera. E. B ROBERTS. Agent Mkssbs. CULPEPPER TURNER Agents, Norfolk, Vs. W. H. STANFORD, Vice-PreaiVnt. New York ty. : 1 1 Boot and Shoe Maker. All Style of Hoot and 8ro madf to order and on Short notloe, REPAIRING A? St-CCIALTY. N. ARPEN, CBAYEI ST., pposlt Imnti Office, -' ' ' " i i i i .g K. R. JONES, HEAVY AND LIGHT . . GROCERIES. lorlHar ail Oaa ix 88, - ; Sold ai Manufacture? Prioe. Dry Goods & Notions. f till Bteekand Large Aaaertmenf, -'r,' v frleea lew a the Leweat. Call twist Caamlae my Sleek. -:. rt-ii?i'a CarataV and Children OslfarjuiisWiiattss. Bum Dlimnia. DUnko. CructaUoa, ' XiU wcBt gns ints'asjuflsas rr sevwal vwrsl have i ar rlw aast ahaU always OMittaua Iimhssmw ivarJaM sswlussn bsnnfcal . -. town F.Pusaa. ItS' ' " She Wasts," UHk ttnat aad Ttk Ave, RawTarkOttr. Omtrun, TT K-dbbs Btsbsst, Ksrw Tm. A. GREAT BARGAIN. 327 ACRES WILL BS SOU) AT A GREAT SACRIFICE! A VALUABLE TLANTATIQS sito ited on ithe tSouth side oi the Neuse river, three and-a-hnll miles from the City of New Berne. N. C. One hundred and twenty-live acres' cleared. Coorf Land, tuitable for Trucking, Tubaeet I Saitinf, or any kind, of farming. The balance, two hundred and two acres, heavily timbered with pine, oak, cypress, and. other kinds of timber. It is also tine 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 Tery beautiful and healthy lo cation, presenting a near view to the passing Tessols and the A. k N. C. Railroad. For terms apply to P. TRENWITH, Opp. Hotst Albjrt, HEW BERNE, 1. G. JOE K. WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF Marble Works NEW BERNE, N. C. Italian and Amaiean Marble and ail Qualities of Material. Orders solicited and given prompt at tention, with satisfaction guaranteed. 'Terra Cotta Vase rttr riant and flovsrs tnrniihed at th very loweat rat. MRS. J. M. HINES' Boarding House REOPENED. Mrs. J. M IIFNES has reopened First-Ciusj iiua diny; House in the city, o,ip s te Baptist Cliurcb. Tte'Pioo Dans W&i MacMne, Can be Itad at the same plane. J. M. Hi NES, Agent. ewe's H.C.Freiilil Li. - Sltawrs 8. E. Stoat, Mint S Tew will tMelA SEMI-WEEKLY TRJPS Baltimore and New Berne Lasting iSaltirMr for New Bern. WED" r nixtuM. a, dai unva i, itvr si." favlnfl. Knar Hrfi fnp RallUnAvA - TTTira. nl V A TITDftl V .t j n t1 .. " -. 14. iHAA VMani, M ,1 Mk ,. 't ': ' y J;-'' EarciiBti and 8hlpperi, Taka lotlca. Thi i tSo oo)j DIRECT tin int Nei - l Berne for B iltimore wliboat ebne,topplnf cray pt AoriuiH, enpntruor men lorixwtOH, ProtiArnec, Philadefphls. Blrhmond, and all ;; pcuin Aorui, uat ana ni siaaiM eioao Boiinvcuon roraii poiniay a. ai xit V sum r.:,' j : .... r vr n Afant sre a. falloirsr ' ' s? Riusut f omu, Qts'l trnnr. - - JAS. W. HoTASatrrr. Annt Narfolar V. W. P. Clyd A Co., Kuiladelphla. It South New York and Ballo. Trans. UiiPlWI E. Sljnpaon, Boston, 63 Central wkart - . . 8. ItTRnoktrell, Protidenoe, R. I. t: - W (Ship lesv DnttoD, Tnday aad Saturday. " New York daily. - . ' i " ' Balto., Wtdnewlay A Sattirdajf, " ', , " ,-r Fbiladalphia, Mondays, Wsdaes- " :" t Providence, Saturdaya. '; , j Brongn nm isiiing ien, and rats nar - .t.l -II .nl.,i. . . . .1 ; . id J ' tb eiHiioanle. ' - P&A void Breakage of Bulk aniEhij via If. C. Line.' .,::':- ..'.-r .; - : d. U.UU.AI, Afent, aewutra. Jf.u iVEOILL 'PflinT OUTWEARS ALL OTHERS . ThenJgj n lint It the beg and mmt Mtmoitito T If al Rlnw hi iv a an uIliua.Ii .ui..il A ctu r and ha. to paJnt.mr llraeilnabrlofBwl.xL Jid . buy tu. Anrlll'uii paffit bm mm, do you not aar 75SJ ATtrUl Palnl i oaa a oemutirai iiiatrei it lmpioTa tha an. W oaranoa ot Increaae tbe Value oftolnp H i wn S yean. Sajnpla card of 0 taahlonable ttotaandDOalUTt plWot ti diir.M Hyof AWMli Palt tO ClT adV 7 A . ,"' Xt, n. crurt,' , .- ' ''. ' ' iw-arti..t '. a Pi aaa snwa stt6SJnV''' ' "
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 15, 1891, edition 1
2
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