1 ANNOUNCEMENT CAILY JOTJRKAL. is pnbHshed t . nt aionday lit S5.U0 per year; tiit . rimn.ai, Dm.Ycred toeitysubecriuers ' it per month. t . , i WtKKLY JOURNAL is published y 1 humday at tlJO per umn. . Miiceiut Marriages or Deaths not toex I u limn will be insrrte'l lr-. All sd ..ikiI mutter wi II bo clierjfed ete. per line. 1 a.vuieiiis for iraiisieutadvertisemenUniuel a mmie in advance. Regular- advertise. ' --me will be cuIIwukI promptly at the cad i -t-h month. . ' Communications containing news of saB cieut puiiiic iuterest are solicited. No oom niuuicatiua must be expected In be published tut emium objectionable pereooaJitiea, or witiilioiie (be name of the author. Artieles lodger than ball' eolttiaa Diutt paid lor. Au pernor) feeling aggrievr i at soy anony mous c-otnroiruv.-alion cau ofn toe name of tne author by application at this office and bowing wherein the grievance exists. . THE i JOURNAL. C t HARPER, ' Proprietor. C.T. HANCOCK, - Local Reporter. aM-JCnterrd at iht rottoffiee at New ibra JTTu, at wwkdw Sautter, --.iv TBI World' Fair vfll be a thing ol toauty, even after dark, according . to tiia plant devised by Electrician viBarrotyW;-"' - ' -' A soon many Amerioan ladies are , ot going to Europe) this searon. The taovelty of smuggling things home U rwornoff, and there is no longer any if on la it and thereforo nothing to gc tor. , . A sew Boston law extends to all cit izens the prond privilege of getting tdrunk twice a. Tear. This provides foi .Fourth of July and Christmas Day, 'bat leaves no margin to oover t he gloi i one days when Sullivan wins a battle 'It seems at this distance a little so Ivors for Englisn justice to doom a man 'to five years' imprisonment for merelj istealing a bundle of canes, bat it must 'be taken into consideration that no real (Englishman is complete without hu walking-stiok. A uii8bowh crocodile from Flor ida escaped from its cage somewhere in Kew York a few days ago and near, flj killed a man before it could be per isaaded to go back. It takej tome iBontherners a long time to learn thai 'the war is over. V. . ; Now that the esteemed Judges ol the Federal Court of Appeals have . ibeen tricked out in Mother Hubbard 'gowns, let all good citizens who can Ikeep from sniokering endeivor to emu late the landable example of th? law Iyer who taid : "No, your honor, I am not trying to show contempt for youi , court; J am trying to conceal it." ( The signatures of the worthies whi affixed their names to the Declaration of Independence have just been sold in England for $4,250. If any one could have delivered their bodies into jthe bands of the English about six months after the instrument was aligned he would have made a larger am than this if he had convinced the authorities that he held the original leet. , Thit have suspended a school prin cipal in Chicago because he would not sign a diploma for a son of a member of the book trust thus certif . ingthat lie had completed a high-school coarse when, as a matter of fact, the bny lad refused to take up one study alto gether. The action of the Superin tendent and School Board is on a par ' with that of the fashionable lady who ends the servant to the door to Bay to p visitor that she is not in. V A Chicago doctor was horsewhipped Toy a woman because he presented a bill for ' attendance upon a patient jwhose oase, it is claimed, he did not .understand and whom he did not re lieve. If this coarse, under similar circumstances, is followed witH doc Itors generally, the profession, it is to ! be feared, will be diminished greatly jin numbers. To ask a doctor to un derstand every case he treat would be i new departure. It would be what (they call "unprofessional. " i He was a wise man who, at a recent mee ing of the Chicago Trade and Xabor Assembly, oppo-ed sending a Irepresentative to the coming intei na tional labor congress at Brussels. ("We got a sufficient dose of such Eu ropean labor leaders as will probably Attend that congress at the Hay mar ket riots of '86. As an American citi cea I object to the introduction of such ideas as are likely to be promulgated t Brussels." The majority was 'gainst him, but he had the right in Jthe matter, as his associates will be (ready to admit some day. A OKK HUNDRED AND TWBTTT-PrVR- TOH gun it planned at the Watervliet Arsenal, which lias just tamed out a 12-inch D2-ton gun. If there is one thing more certain than another in jmodern ordna ice it is that the 100-ton tgtras are all failures, dangerous, short lived and useless. A 60-ton gun. is big enough to smash in any iron-clad now float. To bnild a 125-ton gun fifteen tons heavier than any now founded u ridiculous waste of money, and it is unwise for the Ordnance Office to be-' jgin one with soant appropriations oer-, tain next winter. SracKwearejiu a monument-building rsv and uax Irish-American fellow , citizens have oaught the fever, why, should they not signalize their admi ration for Christopher Columbus by putting up' a shaft in Ean Domingo to the Irishman who accompanied Colum bue there and was ,. left by him in' the colony that remained when he returned to Spain! His name was "Guillermo Ires, natural de Galney, en Irlanda;" that is, William the Irishman, of Gal way. A Celtic cross of native Irish jnarble would be picturesque inci dent on the shores of the Creole re- Ths evidence thus far adduced in dicates that Sir William Gordon-Cum-xninir married the pick of .the Garner iumily and that she isn't likely to be PTiniiod by being taken into the "best" -y ' : ' -k. WOMAN'S WORLD. PLEA8AXT laTERATTJRH FOB FKJUININK UEADUK&. ' A XJJfS REI101KS. Borne girls are extolled for their beantr And tone for their knowledge and w.t, Ani others for doing a duty. ; . Ot hardship aa J oourage and grit, t . And soma tor eompoaing a soouot ; 1 Or actios; and nliiog a hall. -; ' Bat the girt who aa trim her own bonnet - y As4 makes her own areas beats all. . r ' Mima Patti more masic may warble, ' ttoae Bonheur excel her with paint, ' . Hue Hoameroarra better on marbie, 1 bbomay not be half of a saint ' Bnt if aoe can make her own dreams And trim her own bonnet, we bold , V : Bbe is for the hnaoand abe otoaees -: , Worth more toaa the others, ail told; A girl who can make her head pretty , ! And, aiao. her Ogara Jbok sweet, .'. Is, ettaer in eouatry or city, ' ' A prise which no genia ean beat; 1 And wiuu in addition Be' aola , ; To ean tor the babies and cook 1 W set her right ap on the tabie And call on creation to loos. j Hurrah for this girl and no other W e snout her unlimited praise; i To win ner away from her mother Awl wed her we're trying always; Bhe makes a man happy forever dy helping ia Nature ordains While tiioje woo. alas, are too ciever. But add to his tronoies and pains. if. C, Dodge, m OoodaWt Sun. CHACTATjqOA WOMBM. Four "Chautauqua women" are said to be la mous. Mrs. G. R. Aldeo, who writes religious itories over the nom de plume of "Paniy;" Mrs. MoClintook, who teaches a matin class in Beowulf and Chauctr; Miss Laura Fry, who carved the organ screen io the Cincin nati Music Hall, and Mrs. Emma P. Ewiog, who has taught cooking in Kansas for years, Cliuajo Pout. HIKED GABXJEKTS. 'TThen in doubt hire" will be the watchword of future brides of humble means, for the Parisian custom of loan ing for a trilling consideration not only the wedding garment but all possible accoutrements of the occasion is fait taking raot hers. ' Of course the idea will not appeal to women of refinement, but all briUes cannot lay claim to cul ture, and sentiment, like everything rare, is expensive. Heie York Timet. THE WIVES OV GREAT MEN. An item is goins; the rounds' stating that the wife of Joel Chandler Harris is a pretty brunette, with beautiful teeth, purlcling eyes, winning smile and en gaging manners. This is no doubt true, and what is true of Joel's domestic existence is true of that of every man of prominence. None of this class of citi zens has yet been discovered with a plain or disagreeable wife. The homely woman has no show in this world evidently If she has got a husband and he become prominent, at once she is transformed into a perfect beauty. That's the way of the world. lndianajiola San. ROYALTY AT WOBK. The daughters of the Princess of Wales, says Lady Elizabeth Hilary in the Ladiet' Home Journal, are sensibly educated. They know how to sew so well that they can maks their own gowns, and their knowledge of every art taught them is thorough. They cau go into the kitchen and cook cook well; they understand the art of bread-making, and if they were thrown upon their own resources would be able to take care of themselves. Sweet-laced, healthy-looking girls, they are always gowned in the most simple manner, and work at their books and with pencil and needle in a way that would shame the daughter of many a tradesman, who ougut to thoroughly understand everything that is really woman's work. 6HRATII STYLE OF SKIRT. The present sheath style of skirt is most wretchedly unbecoming to women who are either very slender or very stout. It was bad enough in the spring gar ments of wool, but made of muslin, lawn and other sheep limp textiles, the sheath skirt is neither seemly, tidy looking, nor graceful. Another fashion that requires muca discretion to make it commendable is the tight seamless bodice that moulds a fine figure to perfection, but is merci less in snowing up defect in an imperfect one. Fortunately, a large majority of women understand the art of correct dressing; but still the number is very great of those whose devotion to fashion makes them imagine that anything and everything that is la mode will suit them, and they do not see that they make them selves ridiculoui and absurd, not to speak of the impropriety of many modes in their case. Neit York Pott. LAUNDRY WOKE IS UNHEALTHY. Official records of public hospitals show that in almost every .case the laun dry woman's case was phthis, or con sumption of the lungs; the fow excep tions were bronchitis and heart disease. As to the connection between phthisis and laundry work, the resident medical officer expretsed an emphatic opinion that any woman with a prsdispnjition to phthisis who undertook laundry work, either as- a washer or ironer, would in a comparatively short time become serious ly affected, owing to the bad ventilation and the sudden cnanges of the temper ature. The same causes might generate bronchitis in a healthy subject, and, added the courteous physician, '"if any one wanted to make out a case against the laundries they might plausibly argue that the heart disease is also due to laun dry work. For the most frequent cause of heart disease is rheumatic fever, and that might easily he induced by ths con stant moisture in a laundry. Net) York World. BT7S3TAX LADIES M COWAnCm. It is announced from St. Petersburg that Mme. P. O. . Ivasshintzeff .has ob tained ministerial permission, to establish a ladies' commercial school in the the capital. Ladies and young girls seeking admission to the new commercial insti tute most produce "certificates showing that they hare completed the full courses' in the ordinary ladies' gymnasia or in the provincial colleges for the daughters of the nobility. ,. In the new establishment the curriculum will extond over two years and includes, instruction 'by qualified teacher and professors in financial and commercial calculation, the routine du ties of the counting- house, ' commercial correspondence, commercial law, a gen eral knowledge of the national products, commercial geography, political economy, a thorough knowledge of English, French hod German aad S regulation style of plain caligrapby. There art, it is stated alreadra surrjrisinalr lanre number of fair aspirants seeking admission to the new establishment, which will be opened very suoniy. UAioaoa rvti, . . . : A WAKOI71 WOMAN ASTRONOMER- '. ', One of the first American women to obtain celebrity at aa astronomer was Maria futtcnell. woo was norn in run tucket, Mass., August 1, 1818.' ghe was the daughter of William Mitchell, an as tronomer, by whom she was taught, and, after receiving her education, aided him in his work,- At the aire of eighteen she became librarian of the Nantucket Athe naeum, remaining there for twenty years, devoting her leisure to her . favorite science. : She made a' specialty of the study of neoulte, made careful observe. tion and searched for comets. Bbe dis covered several nebula and lound a comet on October 1, 1874, which die covery wat confirmed- by her father. Professor W. C. Bond, of Harvard, and several Italian astronomers. ' The King of Denmark -presented her with a gold medal for this, and the Re public of Hen Marino, in Italy, had a copper medtl struck in ber nonor, . Dur ing the rest of her lift she discovered seven other comets. She made a trip to Europe in 1833, ana visited tne family of Sir John Herschet, and was enter tained by the distinguished English as tronomer, Sir Qeorge B. Airy. She was received by Level-tier in Paris, and by Humboldt in Berlin, where she alto met Encke, whose name is associated with a wonderful comet. Detroit. Free Prut. A SILK FARM. Miss Carrie Douglass, of Volusia County, Florida, is experimenting in the raising of tilk worms. This spring she raised three crops of worms, the third num bering some 40,000 individuals, feeding all on the leaves of the mulberry tree. She hat about two acres planted in young trees, which fully grown will be capable of supporting an immense numbei of the rapacious little . worms, whose whole existence is nothing but one un ceasing meal. The cocoonery which Miss Douglas uses is about thirty feet by twenty, and hat provision for artificial heat, a very necessary thing even in this climate, as the least chill or dampness is fatal to the health of the worms and, consequently to the quality of the silk they produce. Alter they have attained their full growth, which is in about six weeks from the time they are hatched, they stop eating, and commence to spin their shrouds of silk, which are no sooner completed than the cocoon is taken and subjected to some process generally thst of steaming by which' the worm it destroyed iu the cocoon, as it would otherwise eventually cut its way out as s moth, and ruin all the silk so carefully spun. Miss Douglass ships this year at the result of her labors, about one hun dred and fifty pounds of cocoons, which will average about one dollar par pjund. Atlanta Conttilution. PASniON NOTES. Sailor lists of white felt are revived. Beaded sets of girdle and collar enl in a -'rain" fringe. Tiny wraps of lace have a deep V ol lace, back and front. Bustic ecru hats are trimmed with cherries nui red ribbon. Many gray suede Oxford ties are worn with silk stockings to match. A new woolen crape is Btriped like corduroy, and is exceedingly effective. Velvet ribbon for millinery trimming) is on the list of to-be's for next season. There is a lack of the reddish-brown shades in brocades, satin, bengaline, etc. Some noveltle shoir egg-shaped balls in place of the perfectly round polks dot. Clear, dark-green shades will be in demand to combine with woolen drest goods. A novelty in individual salts are canoe shaped ones, with tiny silver paddles foi spoons. For bedrooms and boudoir there arc silver time.! twisted candlesticks with carved staadardi. Scissors with silver handles that fold over and protect the sharp points are made for carrying in one's pocket. Silver boxes beautifully chased and decorated with medallion portraits ol historical persons are greatly admired. The fashion ot wearing handsome coat bodices of material distinct from that ol the accompanying dress skirt is gaining ground. , Jewel boren of rock crystal mounted in silver are counted among other higl t articles that find a place in tnt boudoir. Sheer cotton frocks, like lawns and organdies, ure trimmed with lace, skirl and bodice ruffles; also on the wrists snq over tne shoulders like a pointed bertha. The abnormally high sleeve is passe, and a few very new French tailor gowns show a close coat sleeve lightly trimmetl on the top ot the arm, with the corre sponding trimming at the wrists. . Dainty French dresses have most of the skirts faced with silk and without I binding; and instead of the lace belay cuse, the modiste now puts a pinked frill of the silk insido the facing, whiohgivet a tasteful finish at the foot of the skirt when seen by accident. , ;;: The new silk crepons are illy beau tiful, and great use ii made of them as frills and fiehus. Entire toilets of pink, lilac, cream, and gray chiffon, are im ported. The fabric falls iu most artistic folda.and while resembling crepe proper, are altogether devoid of ; the wiry stiff ness of the b-tdge of sorrow. . : . Few materials are prettier for dressy afternooa wear than the new printed crepons, ' they fall so softly, and ths crinkled grounds give . such, a subdued effect to the flowers with ; whioh the goods are patterned. A silk foundation skirt greatly improves the appearance of the dress., but this it by no meant es sential. " ',, " ; . i Cream, pink and ecru batiste gowns are very popular this : year, the fabric being barred, - striped, flowered, dotted and bordered.:;:. The -bodices are made in many ways, both simple and elaborate,, but all the skirts are hung or draped over soft silk ' petticoats of the same shade as the outside material, the batiste, gown having no foundation. A specialty is made now in ths mak ing up of outside mantilla. Ordinary straight-fitting sacques 'arc no longer allowable. A butterfly dolman with long pointed sleeves, a . long Alpine . shirred tape, a tight-fitting jacket with Norfolk pleats or an Elepin jacket with Gretchen puffs tied with velvet ribbons, aie some of the late rrawer lirport -'iors. CURIOUS FACTS. . . A Baltimore mulatto is tureibff ;lnk. The Alps stand in sis different States. A ' sewing-machine works twelve tunes as last as the hand. A sunflower in a season will produce 12,000 seeds, while a poppy bears 32,- doo. . . , : ' The amount . of gold Ja the world would fit in a room twenty-four feet each way. - ' . " A rose cultivated in a Philadelphia hothouse measures seventeen inches in width. - -, ' 1 ' Covent Garden in London hu been In the possession of the Bedford family for 3W years. . ' It is claimed that a four-year old boy in Forsyth. County, Qa., can read any piece of music st sight. .m js, - Telephones are - put in the homes of Stockholm, Sweden, at.tne rate of .7S k year each. 1 For each call, however, there is a charge of 2 cents extra. : , A novelty at the Botanic Garden In Washington is a plant whose leal bean remarkably well executed caricature ol the Duke of Wellington; all done in the reining. - - ; v;. ;'' A Cheviot ewe in Dumfries, Scotland, save birth to five lambs in May. -Three other ewes in the flook have dropped triplets, which makes fourteen lambs to four ewes. . . ; When the Japanese hitch a horse in the street, they do so by tying his four legs together. Hitching posts are never used in Japan or Corea, except by foreigners. , - Some land in Paris has been sold at the rate of $2,000,000 per acre, some in London for what would net $3,000,000 per acre, and some in New York for a sum equal to $8,000,000. The City Troop, ol Philadelphia, pos sesses what is believed to be the only Continental flag in ' existence. The old t is preserved between two pieces of gloss to keep it from falling to pieces. The importance of microbes to the growth of plants has been practically demonstrated by M. Laurent, of France, who obtained ouly one-fourth as much buckwheat from sterilized mold as be did from soil swarming with bacteria. There is a cone of burnished tin, twenty inches in height and twelve in diameter, on the lop ot Mount Eatahdin, placed there by the Appalachin Cuib, of Bangor, Me. It denotes the distance from which the summit ot the peak may be seen. In the hippopotamus the eyes, ears and, nostrils are set exactly on the same plane. This enables the animal to sink its body entirely below the surface of the water and yet be able to perceive the approach o( foes by hearing, sight and scent. Dr. A. H. Crawford raised a musk- melon in his garden in South Abbeville, Ga., this season that measured three feet in length and was correspondingly large in circumfereuce. The flavor of the melon was excellent, rivaling the can- telope in this respect. A citizen of Chestnut Ridge, Penn., owns a tame crow that is remarkably in telligent. Last summer he split the bird's tongue and taught him to talk. The crow delights in calling the cows, and will laujh immoderately when he succeeds in foiling the dog and cat. The hide of the former Cincinnati ele phant, Old Chief, which was shot last February, baa been stuffed, and with the mounted skeleton of the brute has been housed in a special . building at the Cin cinnati Zoological Gardens. The hid weighed ,1100 pounds, and it has been stuffed with oakum. The oldest church in Europe is said by some who are discussing the question to be St. Martin's, Canterbury, England, which was built as a church before the end of the fourth century. St. Mary. in-the-Castle, Dover, was built about this time, but for nearly two-hundred years it was used as a garrison fuel denot. Boiling to death was once a legal pun ishment, though not frequently used, It was the sentence for poisonim; and coining. Drowning was also common, The latter was used in Anglo-Saxon times for theft, and it was instituted bj Richard the Lion Hearted as the punish ment for any soldier who killed a fellow crusader journeying , to Palestine. " This was discontinued about the beginning ol the seventeenth century. "Staff" for World's Fair Buildings, Thirty thousand tons,': or 2000 car loads, of "staff" will be used in th construction of the main buildings ol ths Columbia Exposition. It has beeq decided that all of the buildings will bi faced with this material. Staff was in vented in France about 1876, and first used in the buildings of 4he Paris Expo sition in 1878. It is composed chieflj pf powdered gypsum, the other conetitu. ents being alumina, glycerine and dex trine. These era mixed with water with out heat, and east in moulds in any de sired shape and allowed to harden. ' --:-. The natural color is a murky whit but. other cotdr are produced by ex ternal washes, rather than by addition ingredients. To prevent brittleness th material Is cast aroand a coarse cloth, bagging or oakum. . The casts are shal low, aad about half an inch thick,1 They fbay be in any form in Imitation pf cul stone, i-ock-faeed j. stone, v mouldings, ot the most delicate designs.- For the lowei portions of tbo walls the : material u mixed with cement, whioh makes it bard. The material is Impervious - to water. ticientifis America. ,"' A ' ; ",: ", I III ' -.!-yWK When Tonr Head Ii Oft , As human curiosity has ) never - bees satisfied as to the precise moment ol death in eases of beheading, the account of the experiment on deoapltated crim inal commuohwted to a French, medical Journal by a leadioj soientist of Lyons is of absorbing interest. This time the results are . more satisfactory than hat hitherto been the case; the doctor mak ing the following statement with regsrd to the .manifestations' of consciousness after the head had been separated from ths body: 1. That the head, on being separated from the body, remains in pos session of all its faculties, if the hem orrhage does not pass certain limits. 2. Ths proportion of oxygen in the blood te sufficient for keeping up the nervout ' functions for a brief space, never ex ceding half-minute. 3. That the re peated opening and closing of the jaws after the separation of the head from the body are nothing but the reuex action common in cr.s of seute s-'f bxia.-5, Vt FtpuKe, IT Showed Her. ' "I'll just show you. Matilda, how 1 sued to be able to swing a pail of water arouna my neaa . ' Without spilling a single drop." ,Jfn tey't Weekly. Eabln in 1776, Washington decided to attack the British in Boston. Though the giound was frozen and the Weather cold, a body of men threw up a line of entrenchment on Dorchester Heights in a single night, as had been done once before in that vicinity. On the next morning Gen. Howe, who had super seded Gage, was taken entirely by sur prise, but a heavy storm prevented him from dislodging the enemy just then, and gave the Americans time to r.trengthen their forces. Afterwards confessing' himself out-generaled, he prepared to leave Boston. When he first saw the breastworks it is said he exclaimed, "The rebels have done more I in one night than my whole army would have done in a month . On March 17, to the great delight of most Boston jieopl s, the British army left the city for Halifax. , '. .-s.,:,;. W. D. MclVER, Attorney-at-Law . NntV BERNE, N. C. may22dwtt C. R.THOMAS, Altoraeyaiii Goaaslr-aM w, Office, Craven Street, Stanley Builiili r, NEW BERNE, N. C. Practices in the Courtsnf Craven, Cartrret, Jones, Oualow, Lenoir and I'nmlliti iwunnei, the Buprrme Court of North Curoliaii, 8 no the U. Ii. Distriet and Circuit Courts, jlyl 1 H. L. GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Crave.., St., neat to Journal Oftloe, NEW BERNE, N. C Practise in the Courts of Craven, Carteret, Hyde, Pamlico, Jones, Onslow, and Lenoir counties, and in the Supreme and Federal eoorts. adiwtf GEO. HENDEKS0N. Smxator t Robertt & Btndtrttm.) J I It America, of Philadelphia, ' Home Insurance Company, of New York. . Queen Insuranee Company, of England. , llarliord Fire Insurauc Company, of Hartford.' .fV ... .... Worth Carolina Home Insurance Company, of Raleigh. . , . Greenwite.li Insurance Company, of New York...-.-- .... . . -:-, Phcenix Insuranee Company, of Brooklyn. United UuUer writers insurance Corunauv. of Atlanta. - , , ' Boatou Marine Insurance Company, of Boston, jn.jUdwtf . Furniture! Furniture! FURNITURE! ONE OF THE LARGEST STOCKS V -' ' " :' '. , .1- .to,..' m'.. : . InJ2 item North Carolina. t COMPLETE in Erery Department. Also, we now have the Ajreaoy for the eel ebrated Whbei.br WlLSOK and STAHOABD Sxwise Machines. : Tbryare the latest im ProvFfl Littht ltunnmg and are uneorpasaed by any machine ever placed In this market JOHN SUTER. NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. An :3lioaal .iElitQtioi for usrai loata cabolha. MALE AND FEMALE. BgM Wslinct fiapartmniifj. Primary, f 'jrdermtdiatt, Academic, CoU fi 'w IrgiaU,' Art, Mwie, Industrial ",v y and himnm. ' ' TEST : EXPERIENCED AND COM ;..'...:,-; . l'EIENi; lEACHEKS. , y.. '- s , ' .i' ' ; Voeal and Initrumental Mtutc Prominent feature, ander the direction of enisle pro feasor, with efficient assistants. Special Course of laitructioa for those SMiring to become Teaouert. . Expenses very; moderate. Board from $8.00 to 10.00 per mouth facilities good. ; Special iudaeemenui to indigent students. Fall Terra Opens Sept. 7, 1891. ; For farther information or for catalogue, apply to . , , GT ' r, I ..(4,1. ,., l-.j-nHf , for Infanta aTiaewn adapted tectJiSaefkat Tlllllralttn-"' fl 'l " team torn" H. A. Aaam. at D, 111 Bo. OzfenlEC, Braeklya, K, Y. Tfto sn ef 'tJjsBstte'et sesrasvaesal eJ tMSBerttaeswetlkam tbaalt sweuawerk a7aoiieTwofaMoatoeBdoraelt. Few are Ox Mel Us f who do ast keep Oaatorle CAsaes J?3 riew lora jnr HUMPHREYS' "T7"kt' Srcto ar KlBjllr and K ' eirifuUr tmand preMTlpUoiui i oi tot Bumf ' lknnTearauaedt7thepeople. srjr alogle Spe-, . , ataVb satMolal owe Cor u diaeaae nemea. : . rbM BpeoUlea cure wltboot dnurelng, f"K laieriUuolns she systun. aad arela ftrt and SeedttaeeeveTeiatai roasedleeof tfceW'eHd. S Dreewterri arlplng.BlHoBe Colic... .5 DtXir!flere,VonU Brawl. mo ttoiaach..... .3 Breeeor -"" 17 "E.O.ISelafclMlolie. . waaatteai, lUteumaUc Palna..,, . ord KiellMalwla.... . Ilea, mud or BleedlM......- -.. .- iaVsulBflueiiOIthHead . tteoelaa- -ease, tiomoiwwi". Ural KwiTTpWaloUWeJLeas . SkMwevvieeMe.... ... . aisSboad tn clnUi and sold, mailed tree. HTrMFHMTB' MBDIOIMH OO, , Oar. WiUiaaa and Joan Streets, HewTork, SPEOIFIQSt All of the above mediolaee are for kale at the tiros; stores of F. 8. Dnfly tad B. Berry, Middle street, New BerM. R..C , L. S. WOOD, Formerly IS yean with Geo. Allen te Co. ' DEALER IN General HariiareEJ Cutlery, Harness, Saddles, v Bridles and Whips, FARMING IMPLEMENTS. Pollock 8treot, aext to latlonal Bask, ' NEW BERNE, N. C. Liquor iiabitv O'HMrfES GOLDEN SVEOnt It cao be elven In eoflee, ua.orla artlolea or lood wltsout aie knowledite ot patleat tf eoeasarj it la abaotutelr narmlvM and will effect a perm Beat and ape.-dy cure, wbeiaer tbe pUfRt U J Inoderaledrliikererenalooboliewreckr IT NEV KB FAILS. Itoperateanoqaletlrajidwltheocl oertalnur ttiM tbe patient undersoee bo Ineoa Teni.nce.and eooe bis complete reformatloe k iffeoud. eS pase book IMe. To be bad ot . B. N. Uuffr, druKgtss,'New Berne .C. . , ru jjUdwy OLD DOMINION Steamship Company, SEMI-W-EKLY LINJ . . Tke Old Dominion Steanultip Company' OH and Favorite Water Moult, via Albe- -wjrie itiei Ckxtaptakt Hanoi. FOR Nerfulb, Bdltlmore, Kew Yertc, Phlla welpUla, Baeton, PravManee, asset Washington Clip. And all points North, EaU and Witt. On and after TUESDAY, APRIL H, 1891 antil turtnrr uottce, the ., Steamer KEOTERNE, Capt. Soutlurate, Will aiil from Norfolk, Va, terNewBerae, K. O.iliriet, every Uondav aad ThsWeday, iiiiikiiig cloet connection with the A. A N. C. ' ', II., fr ail Ptntlonsou that road, and with th-Steauii-rji Kiuaton ami Howard for Kin . ii, Trrnion, and all other landings ea the jt'ruieainl Trent Itivera. t - " ' -.- Ketuniios. will sail FROM NEW BE&NE. FOB NOKFOLK direct, at 2 p as,Taidav i.n.i f ruiayv miCking connection with ttteO. . 8. S.Co.'ashipsforNew York, B. 8. P.Ce.'s ktcnineta lor Baitimnrr; Clyde Line Ships for Philadelphia, M. 4 U. T. C'c's snips fer Bos ton awl Providence. t-toatucr Kinaton, CapL Dixon, will sail for Kinatna on arrival ot steamer Newberae. ( r r ell good, cars vt O. D. S. 8. Co. Xn-l.ri.k. s. t Pjt nttter will Indafood table, ecnafort f if ronuia, and eveiy eontt sj ana at ten ties aill bepuidtbeni by theoltt'-ers. F.. H ROBVRTS, Agent 11 ksbrs. CULPEPPER TORNEBJ Agents, Norfolk. Ye. i W. H. STANFORD. . -T - f -S Viee-Prei-ldent, New Task Qty. 'S 'Boot and Shoe Maker. All 8tylee of Eootsand Sriiee ' made to ordar and on 8hort notlosj, REPAIRING A SPECIALTY CRATEI ITn ippsttti loanal 0Oc K. R. JONES, '-'j- ''; ;w aa-i.S 1 -oUAVAaULaV i-.-' Jgroceries. Ii jiorliiarjl Sold at Manufacturer!' Prion: . Dry Goods & Notion, Full Stookand Large Assortment, ' . Prloesas tow as the Lowest Call and Examine my Stock. SatlafMtletit Ci,a",'-" HEAVY AND LIGHT j. b. mtov: :, - FIU'T ( ' r ea. eswrasm OseeMBT, Tf KsaaAS snwas. Kaw YesaV ;: ... V'''e ..-- - - - - - - ' '.. . .; ': '-.A1 and Children Ceweerte eares Cgltg, OuwWuanVia. SiUa Wenaa, ctres aiB, aaal Breuas yitZeSsaJetleeai esloatlsa rer eeeeeel wears I rsave reeeeawiieist wmr Sa auras.' and ehaU always oontiawaf SaeariaMypiQililssd naeaSilii BmrrisraaKB, . . Week Street aad TtkAvsk, KewTerkCttw, A GREAT BARGAIN! 327 ACRES ' : 5 ' WILL BS SO LB AT A, GREAT SACRIFICE! A VALUABLE PLANT ATIOH situ ': a ted on (the South side of the Neuee ; river, three and-a-half miles from the City of New Berne, N. 0. One hundred and twenty-five acres cleared. . Good land, tuilablt for 7WwUisp( TUoeee i Raiting, r any kind of farmimg. ',' The balahce, two hundred and two acres, heavily timbered with pine, oak, cypress, and other kinds of timber. - z 'y- It is also fine Grarang Ijtnd. . .. . ... Good dwelling, outbuilding, and fine orchard. It has a fine FISHEBY fronting half mile on the beach, where there are high banks of marl that can never be exhausted, from which Teasels can load with ease. It is a very beautiful and healthy lo cation, presenting a near view to the passing vessels and the A. tfc-N. 0. Bail road. For terms apply to v P. TR EN WITH, ppp. Hotel Albert. . win man, i.e. JOE K. WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF Mm M Carolina arbleWorlcs NEW BERNE, N. C. Italian and American JUarbli and aB QaaUtUi of Material, . ' ' . Orders soUcited and given prompt at tention, with satisfaction guaranteed. Terra Cotta Vates for' Plants and riewsn Inmiahed a' the very lowest rates. " ' Boarding House -REOPENED.' Mm. J. M. HINE8 has' reopened First-Ciaoj ikoarding House in the city, Ojip. te Baptist Church. TIis Pionssr Dans Mm lacSae, - Can be had at the same place. ' J.M. HlNES. Atrervt.' Steamer. G. H. Stout, Dcflaice iTesper On and after February 1st, 1891, this line will make regular ! . cc-ajiirrrirr v . tdioq ...'..l. Baltimore and New Oerne Ajsssssw site uaaiiiawasirssj mr rw avrinw. WI ablS ' JNE3DAY, BATUKDAY, ate PM. Laavtaz Kew Berne far Ballitnare, TtfES- , 1 3- BAY, sUTUBDA Y. at M. . . t,: ItrcaUti u4 SUppen, Tak loTIce. ' This Is the only DTRF.CT line ent of New Berne for Bultimore without ebaiige,atriplng only st Kfolk, eomiectlnr Ihea tor buntoa. Provideuve.PiiiWelpliia. Kinhmond. and afl points North. Kern ant West lia(ln close eonneetion tor al I poiett by A. A N.C. Sail road aad Elver out of Niw Kerne. 4. Agents are as follow; -.; "' , : BBVSKlt rosrsa, Oen'l Manarer, ' M Ligbi Ih, Bartfmere, 1 J An, VT. MoT AarvC, A rent, Norfolk, V a. ' W. P. Clyde Ce-, Fniladalohla, 11 fiotita Wharves. Mew York sad Bait. Traaa. LIawtC!lar - Korth river. -I E. Bimpeon, BeStoa, 58 Central whar , B.M. Itoekweli, Pmvldeuee, XL I.- , ; ' Bhlps leave Ttneton, Tii'-i aud t.,!,- Jays. ;'.-,:-.'" New York r. palto., W ' A T '"rdays.. " ' frhilanVi-'. a, ..n.i.ja, Vsedass'" :'-.' ' -.. dare, f -ve. j ; r Provj. ..-..; uruara, ' -f , ThrooRn liills 1 "t. and rstoeraer anteetl to all pom av ...l diuereutOauees el tbe emnaiii.-a. ; ; -Avoid Breukage of Bulk m&Sli'f via N. C. lire. a it (titA Y. Aient, Key Benae, K. O r . -sva'svsv-eivsvsV-cv'SvrA" - -r fsj s" p --- ... ." 3 ;,'.l c. ..r.s . -.v !- - - :t4 ail I. I " aii't vwu h ii ' - t AvMriU P m It lmnr,)VH thf - I H tl-rt V,itlie flf J r-

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