Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Oct. 3, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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. J K rsSUNCEtSINT : "' Y J0?V4L W pebll.bed -. i , t at i.uK per year; tiM i i ... 1 .-..reied toeiiy.ubeerioore i Vtr.iKLi' JOURNAL bpnbUh4 Lhun-ff at 11,60 per aaanai. . res of :rriai.'ea or Deaths aot tees t-aliurewiil be inserted tree. Ailed- matter will be charged eta. por Hi I i menu for transient ad vertiaetseuts mast M mwi In idnne. Regular advert iee- i. j will ba aollantad prooaptiy at the aad each mania. -- Communication esatalalng sew af eoftV lout pabiio interest ara solicited. No torn naauicatiua irnut be eipected to be published t eon taint objectionable pareoaalitiaa, ar Withholds the name af the author. Artiolee Uaeyi Uiaa bait' eolaaa nost paid for. Any paraoa feeling aggrievr jet jr aaeay Snojaa eouatruiaatiua can oVJm tbe name of tae aalaor by application at tale office aad riiig wbema wa grievance axuua. . THE JOURNAL. C. C. HARPER, V- rVoprletar. C T.HANCOCK. Leea I Bo porter. JKin4jit4 ntoffiee at New Htnm PEoirirocu the nam BoUtofoa da for tli consolidated Minnesota tropoliat .' " ;' , r AaHaimi'g king is allowed 8,333 wive. Three mutt be the unlucky number in Aahantee. .. ' Th lynching, atiicide and outing coaltie of thi year look as if 1891 were to be a memorable twelvemonth , for sudden and violent deaths. ' Ir all other remedies fail in the case of that New Tork young man who was to mysteriously stricken dumb the .- other day, they might send him to Con " ,;; . : It k said that the Prince of Wales .recently complained that his royal mother did not know enough to come in oat of the reign. Bat she knows enough to keep him oat of it M. Maxim says : "Give me time and I will show yon a flying machine." Ar we to understand that Mr. Maxim mean to utilise the old principle in volved in the discovery that time flies.' Thb average man who becomes in dignant at Sabbath observance will anally be found to be a man who' wishes to do something on the day that it would b better for himself not to do. 1 Ik Jacksonville, Fla., there is a woman who claim to have swallowed twenty-five pills a week for the last sixteen year. This look like an at tempt to boom Jacksonville as a health resort. '';;-.' It i estimated that lightning has an energy vi o,ao, iu ourae-power. ius i the common, avery-aultry-eummer-. day lightning, not the Jersey variety, the energy of which is held to be be yond calculation. . A Kaxsas Cm editor sadly ob serve: "The mistake of which nature . wa guilty when the created the mul berry was in making it too sweet for ' pie." Bow about the creation of the : man who invented pie 1 Ax English scientist ha invented a machine which make the footstep of a fly distinctly audible. Encouraged by thi triumph, he is sow engaged . upon a device for making visible the point of an English joke. Hbxbt Hart, of New York, who is reputed to be worth t50,000,000, is a bachelor of 80. He ought to be , ashamed of himself. It is to be hoped , that at least he has some charming niece, who will make his mosey fly. 1b number of American tourist in Italy has fallen off greatly this year , on aeoount of the diplomatic troubles between the United States and that country. The hotel-keepers are incon solable. The American were their choicest rictims. Whim a man remove to another town, and comes back saying that his health wa not good there, people al way have a suspicion that it wa hi prospect instead of his health. When man is making money, he ha to be come very tick before he decide that he need a change of climate. ' Gkh. Schofield's daughter is said to . have brought about the marriage oi her father with Miss Kilbourne. Match making daughters are decidedly novel person; but when Cnpid and Hymen go into aecret conference it generally result in some queer and wholly un accountable doing among us mortals. A Boarox wife boasts that, after years of marriage, her husband kisses her five time a day; whereupon a Chi cago paper retort that there is a lady oat there who has been married more than ten years, and another wo man's husband kisses her twenty times a day. There is no use trying to beat - Chicago. Taa Western Spring faith-curists - have given it out that people under ' going the 1 "realiration-of-things not- aeen treatment must abstain from eat . ing pork. It is plainly apparent that these Western Springs eradicatora of the ill that affect mankind ar not catering for Chicago trade and popu larity at aU.. ,, ,. . ; . , ' It i to be hoped that the euthusi tic poet, Elaine Ooodale, who ha re- ; ceetly married an Indian, will have better fortune than Mrs. Chaska, who preceded her in the experiment and now seek a divorce. ' The former, how- , ever, married an educated Sionr and the latter a chief who was little above the average of hi race. , ; , It is all very well for the telegraph ' to renort that "strikers Ihrow nntn.nl a in the streets of Bordeaux, but really the editors of leading New York dailies should look put in the ' dictionary . word which they do pot understand before allowing it to go into print. ' Had they, done so the word petard might have been changed to oomb or grenade. ,. - t .. ;, v A rnKwrNa otTMeonCorniu Brooklyn : A TERRIBLE FIGHT. A ; Woman's Desperate; Battle With a She Bear. At CIos Quarters With Bruin . - In a Pig Pen. I Since the departure of the tanning industry has stopped the destructive axe of the bark-peoler In this part of the country, say a Woodstock (N. Y.) letter, mauf thousand of acre ef inouuUiu land throngh the Catk!ll range bare grown up with' a dense second growth ef wood. ; With the young new forests, bar come the bears, . and many . thrilling talc of scrimmage with the varmint ar coa (tantly being told by parties who have been up in the wilderness. The latest Is thrilling iu the extreme, as it il lustrate to a degree the bravery of a mountain-bred woman, fearless aud bold as a mountain lion. Ben Eidredgs, a mountaineer, ha lived fur several years on a little clear ing way back in Mink Hollow, where the tun sink to rest among it nest of hill every night, several mile back In the wilderness from the great Over look Mountain. Several day ago,Beu, while whipping a trout atrcain, sur prised an old she bear, with a couple of cubs, just at tlier were coming out of their holes underneath a huge slab of rock. They bolted into the brush and escaped,but the mouutaluecr knew they would leave a good trail, and he resolved to follow them the next day, providing they did not returu to their loir. The next morning, rifle in hand, accmpanicd by a couple of liugo hounds, lie started into the mountains iu search of the bears, leaving hie wife and three little ones at home He had not been gone from the house more than a hour when Mr. Eldredge heard a great ' commotion among the hogt confined iu a pen back of the house. Putting her head out of the window the taw a big the bear, accompanied by two cubs, half grown, having a desperate battle with an old tow with a litter of little plgt. The other hogt in the pen were watch ing the fight from another part of the sty and were evidently frightened bad ly, while the little pigs were huddled behind their mother, squealing tre mendously. The old tow was mak ing desperate battle for her progeny, at the mark of her tusks showed in great red clot of blood on the bear' flunks. After taking in the situation Mrs. Eldredge seized a rifle from ils place on the wall and hoatoned to the pig sty. Sho fired at the bear, but inflict ed only a slight wound, causing ber to attack the sow with redoubled vigor. Fearing to hit the pigs if the fired again, Mrs. Eldredge seized a hoavy bladod scythe which hung on the fence, leaped over into the sty and sailed iuto the light. With one sweep of the mailt sho half burlrd the scythe blndo in Brain's body. The old bear then left the sow and attacked Mrs. Eld redge, driving her Into a corner of the fence. There the buttle waged des perately for a few moments, the scythe blade being buried several timet inches deep in tho bear's body. Finally the bear began to show signs of weakness from the lots of blood, when with a bound Mrs. Eldredge leaped to one tide and with one swing of her odd weapon nearly sev ered Brnin't head from her .body, causing death. The pigs then rushed upon the motherless cub and would have torn them to shreds, but Mrs. Eldredge, throwing ber scythe over the fence, seized the citbt by the nape of the neck and rushed out of the sty with them. After safely depositing them iu a hogshead, whenco thoy could not escape, the dragged tho car cose of the dead mother bear from the pig-sty and skinned it. Her husband returned home in the evening without any beart, but was surprised to And a fresh bearskin drying on the clap boards of the cabin and a juicy bear steak smoking on tho tablo for supper. The carcass of the old weighed nearly 200 pounds, alt! not very fat. The cubs were so $10 apiece to an animal dealer rhiludolphia,who visited the Eldredge cabin a few days after Mrs. Eldredge' exploit. . Growing Sponge Artifietall. New hus just come from Washing ton that the government fish commis sion it preparing to tend a man to the Florida sponge fltherle to inaugurate a series of experiments in growing ponget by artificial meant, : Sponge grow naturally in groat abundance on the southern coast of the state and around its innumerable keys, and the time wot When a stoked enclosure in the wator for holding sponges while they rotted, after . being token from the sponging grounds, was us invar), able an adjunct to the islander's abode a Is a poultry house to a farmer' dwelling. But, owing to the fact that for yonr past tponges have .''.beau closely and waotefully' gathered, this once important source of revenue to the fisher folk of the key lias almost ceated, although the fi-herles on thq gulf coast are still In full vigor. . . r Spongo are' naturally propagated by meant of ' ,"", but as no means egg can be utilised for artificial culti vation, resource ia had to 'fitaton.'' "Fission" Is the catting ap of sponge Into small piece, moon a the farmer eat ap hit Irish potatoes t Increase hi supply each bit ef a potato form a new plant, and each piece of a tpongo form a new animal. Both are planted, but whllo the farmer cavers the potato eye with earth, the fisher t;e apiece of stone to the fragment of sponge and sinks Jt In a place favorable to it grow tli. tKv'hM "i, ' The experiment i not altogether a. new one, although It hat Barer been poshed, on an extensive scale.' It ha been tried both in th Adriatic tea and in the water f South Florida, and in both case : successfully, with the difference in favor of Florida that it took but about three year for the fragment to grow iuto f full sized sponges, while la tho Adriatic; it took about seven. There are only three or four spot In all the world whore sponges g ww in abundance, and the water of Florida and the Bahama form one of the largest of the fisheries, o' that the importance of the experi ment of artificial propagation is : very great to Florida. Thousands of people around and in Key We-t are dependent upon this Industry for their livelihood. and with tho enlargement of the fish eries, many more would be ablo to do rive an honest living thereby. Four or five varioties of sponge grow around Florida hut only two, the thecp' wool and yellow sponge, are of commercial value. They are fished for from small boats, and are dragged from the bottom of the ocean by means of a large hook fastened upon a long pole. The sponger use water glaiset to find the exact where abouts of the sponges. Atlanta Con stitution. Value of Electricity In Warfare. The value of electricity in warfare was demonstrated by some interesting experiments made in the estuary of' the Mersey to lest the efficacy of sub marine iniiiot aa defences of the ap proaches to tha port of Liverpool. For tome daya the Mersey Yoluuteer i Dlvlnon R E, Major Montgomery commanding, devoted themselves to laying down "mines''- in different spots, and the major, with a large party of officers and others interested. proccedod out in the war office steamer Lady Heathfield to see how those mines could be electrically exploded and note the effects. One mine (an iron box containing 100 pounds of gun cotton) had been laid at a depth of 15 feet of water off rocks known aa the "Rod Noses," and was electrically connected with Perch Rock Battery, at woll m with a buoy 200 yards out in the stream. Tlra steamer struck against this buoy, an electric bell Im mediately rang in the battery, and the mine was fired. Thlt teemed to be practically Instantaneous, and the result wm that a rudely constructed raft placed ovor the mine was hurled up iu fragments to a great height, with a VHt volume of water. It wat easy to see what would have been the fate of a oliip placed In the position of the raft, especially if the iron box had contained a full charge of (00 pounds of gun cotton. Letter mines were laid with relatively equal effects. A hundred mines are laid in the Mersey as port defences. Boston Traus cript. A Family Shmve. A Mul no family consists of tlx bro hers so exactly alike that ho one but their closest friends can tell which is which. One day ' they happened to be in a strange town and all wanted a shave. One of them weut into a bar ber shop, wat shaved and paid the customary ton cents. Five minute later apparently tho same man came back into the shop, very wratby, his beard bristling with a three days' growth. Ho swore that he had not been half shaved, aud demanded that tho woik be done over. The astonished barber apologized and complied, but iudge of hi horror when not ten minute later hi cus tomer came back madder than ever, hi beard ttill showing on hi face, aud demanded another shave. Again the harbor, after tome protest, com plloJ, but when hi man returned the fourth time it wa too mac-. " Sue here!" he cried, -If you're try ing to toll me some patent bair raiser I'll tuke your whole stock, bat if yoa are an escaped museum freak, either yon'vo got to get ont or I'll hare to close thli shop." i ' The fifth and tixth brother hwl to pay fur their shove. Buffalo Ex press. A Nutnanet Worth $500. . After throe months' dickering about a flat-lionse in Nluety-soventh street, tho owner' and the prospective pnr. ohasor could not come to let ,is ; the owner wanted ' $5000 more than the other would give. Then one of the floor became vacant, aud the party who moved in chanced to be a lover of the trombone. ? He - playod about tlx hour a day. - Two of th other tenant) moved out and no one seemed fond enough of music, to move In. Tho owner wa' wild,' and one day (old thfe i prospective purchaser toot he could have the bouse at his figure. Suddenly the trombone playing ceasoil, 4'd there are people who P" t t' t the m-' v i i .- RCIEXTiriC AXD IXrTSTKXlL. ' There i way to bend wood batter r cheaper than by steaming. Recent experiments show , that with proper appliance ordinary gaslight can be used la making photographs. .... . , '. Fahrenheit at first .used alcohol in making hi thermometer. He was led to nee mercury after experimenting with boiling water. -i--:v r . ' By recent appliance to 'kitchen range the. refuse Iron the kitchen is thoroughly dried,' converted into char coal, and used a fuel. At th naval' exhibition ia London there is a colostat electric lamp, ' con structed by tha Admiralty, which give light equal to 0,000,000 candles, ; ... Jupiter ia larger than all the other planet aud satellite of the olarsytem. The tun i a little more than 1000 timet larger than Jupiter. But - A returns i 850,000 time larger than the un. . : - ; , A philological statistician ealoulates that in the year iOOO there will be 1,700,000,0011 people who apeak Sag lith, and that the other European' lan guages will be spoken by only 500, 000, i 000 people. - - '-. :; ';T ". "' A scientific observer publishes a pam phlet to show that the European jaw is narrowing through the letter severity of its labor that accompanies - civilized food. The lower jaw of the later Eng lish ar smaller than those of ancient Britons or even of Australians. ; To the inhabitant of the moon, it there be any such beings, the earth ap pears sixteen timet larger than the sun ami of a blue color. That the aurora boreal it the tail to tha earth like the tail to comets, and at teen from the moon stream out behind our globe in a bright and beautiful trail. The rat of growth of corals i diffi cult to estimate. At the meeting of the Academy of Natural Science of Phila delphia, Professor Heilprin exhibited a. specimen of. Porites astrceaide which had been taken from an anchor cast in the autumn of 1885. Heestimitel that the annual amount of increase was scarcely one-twentieth of au inoh. Th latest plan to improve th craft of tbe furnace of ocean steamers is to in crease tha height of the smoke pipes. The new tteamsr Scot, of tho Cape Mail Line, it provided with tmolce pipes 1st) feet high above tho grates, being the loftiest pipe ever put into a steamer. A. draft of three-quarter-inch water pressure is thut obtained, all the steam needed it easily secured, and the use of fan is dis pensed with. Her speed is nineteen knot. - Bombay hat th greatest piece of solid masonry construction that the world hat teen in modern timet. For year put the water supply of Bombay depended upon works known to be defective, in volving th possibility of a water famine. A consultation of eminent engineers wat held, under tha direction of tha Govern ment, with the result that a large dam was determined on to inclose the water hed of toe valley which drain into the tea touth of Bombay. At Sophia experiment lure been made in the last four week to ascertain the ac curacy ef the rapid-firing cannon recently received from the Gruson Work in Magdeburg. At a distance of 5600 feet a target representing two field cannon and ten men mi almost completely de molished by twenty-five (hots. . A line of thirty wooden soldieti, lying six feet apart, so that only the head were in tight of th marksmen, received twenty- tlx load of coaln ahot and nine or anrap nell. Twenty of th chain (hot and forty one piece of abrapnell atruck fourteen wooden soldiers. ' ' ' Wonderful Growth of Electric Travel.' Only twelve year have elapsed (lace the first crude suggestion of the practi cal working of . an electric ' railway were made, and four year ago a list of a dozen would comprise every such road in the world in even pasiably succesaful opera tion, whatever the method of application. The first large commercial electrlo rail way was, alter many difficulties and dis couragements, opened in tbe early part of 1888 at Richmond, Va. ; and since that demonstration wa made, tha indus try has grown until there are now in operation or under contract, on the general line laid down at Richmond, not leu than 850 road in the TJuited States, Europe, Australia, and Japan, re quiring more than 4000 cart and 7000 motor, with more than 2800 mile of track, a daily mileage of nearly 800,000 mile, and carrying nearly a billion pas sengers annually. Fully 10,000 people are otnployed on these roads, and' there has never been an authenticated report of death on account ol the olectrlcal pres sure used. Over (50,000,000 are in vested in this industry in thi country alone. The Forum. A Moose Horn Grafted late Tree. Something of a curiosity it on exhibi tion in a thow window at D, J. Hen. netsy't. It consists of a very largo moos horn grafted into the bate of a tree. It hat been in that position for year, a tho tree hat grown around it so at to get such a grip on it that cut ting the' wool away it the ooly mean of septratiug the two. It wat found near th Kitty O'Brien mine on the High lands, touth of tbe towa, by Tom Gor don.. It it evident that at torn remote period a huntsman was chasing the man ured of the woods, : who, in running away, was caught in a tree, and in try ing to extricate ' himself the horn wat broken oH.BuU Inter-Mountain. : For the Kins' Flestar, ' j In ancient records we find mention- of four-wheeled carriage drawn by mules, to convey iu vessel set apart the water of a noted river,, for the us of a king then engaged in .battle; for none other would the royal geotloman accept aa a beverage, and even that not only until it bad been boiled in silver vessels. In tuch princely manner rumbled the water-cart withcraoever it might please hi Highness .to Iravel.r Uutr't WttUfr Jk - 3 ? i It i not always advisable to bring up children in the strictly orthodox fashion. Mamie' mother wat very ill, and Mamie waa brought in to see her. ' , : f Oh, my dear, what would you do without i mamtra?",. asked the tick mother. '' ' . k "I don't know, mamma, ' but ' I sup- pose it wonld be all for the best," re spond I t ",.s c' 1 r f r Just aa be reached the toot of the atepe he. put hie hand into on of his troneer pooketa, aad the ejaculated: "What in thunder!" .. Then be felt in another pvekat and mattered: ;-'v - w-.x .. -Weil. Ill be hanged r ' He (topped and thonjrht for a mo ment, and then tried hi reit pocket. Next he triad those ia hi eoat. - "Every one' asleep, too,", be mat tered a he panted in front of the door. "I wonder where I could have left them." - . j - - ' He went through hie pocket again aud then eat down on the atep to thiuk th matter over. . "Shell be bopping mad if I wake her op," he mattered, and no' excuse will go. Bat what else am I going to dor v He sighed, made a third aeareh ef hit pooketa, and then got up with a de termination on hi face and gave several virions yanks at the door bell. - -' "Oh, me! Oh, my! Wont 'the be mad though T he soliloquized. " - Aodi-hewa. .-- - ' ;. "O, if you, is ft the exclaimed, when ahe opened the door. "What did yon wake me up for f t "My dear," he said apologetioally. "I eonldnt rot in." 1 "Did you try" ahe aed. "Why, no, my dear," he explained. "Ton see I lost my keys to-day." v "Iknow it. I fouud thim on the bu reau, and so I left the door unlocked for yon." -. ' -' . ' ' " ' t Then the marched back to bed, and he swore that he would never again take it for granted that anything waa locked. BrnMty ta7rialaa ' , The Finn are an upright, faithful and hospitable people. A writer in the Saturday Beview apeak of their hon esty aa proverbial, and proceed to give torn experience of hia own a illua trative of the scrupulous and even "heroic" manner in which they tell the troth, and the whole truth, under the moat diffionlt cironmatanee. "This aeema to be exactly the kind of apparatnt I am looking for," I aaid to a merobant in Helaingfora, aa I looked at an article worth about $75; "I will bay it at once if, knowing what I want it for, yon can honestly advise me to take it" "No, air," he anawered, "I do not recommend yoa to take it, nor have I anything in atook just now that would nit yon." , And J left the shop and purchased what I wanted elsewhere. - "Here' yonr fare," aaid I to a peasant in the interior, who had driven for three hours thronfrh the woods in hi droaky, as I handed him four (hillings, v "No, air, that' double mr fare," be replied, returning me half the money. And when I told him he might keen it for his honestv. he alifrhtlv nodded his thanks with the dignity of one of nature's noblemen, from which defiant pride and oringing obsequious-, nens were equally absent. Wlatar la tha far Wast, The climate of both Oregon and Washington it mild and equable. In Western Oregon and Washington it ia diffionlt to draw the lines that divide the seasons, write Senator Dolph in the forum. Winter is uaually a wet season, but there are often long periods of perfect weather in February and March. Flower frequently bloom in .the open air in January, and green field of growing grae and grain may be teen all winter. Once or twice dur jing the winter a few inches of mow Jells, bat itdiuppear rapidly. . At in !terval of several year occurs a winter i with ten day or two week of freezing weather and a considerable fall of snow. The rammer are cool, and excessive heat I unknown. In Eastern Oregon and Washington tbe climate i diUer enkj The dry season of summer is more protracted, the rainfall islet, and the beat i greater, though it i never excessive. The winter are colder, bnt of short duration t tbe snowfall is light and seldom lie long in the valley, and live stock range on the 'plain ell winter, thriving on the natural grasses without food, exoept when the anow ia unusually deep or the cold period un usually protracted. i An y to Economy. JTSlt 10 -1 Mr. Ipstieu (from SL Louis)--1 vanta to get me a dhicket to Springfleldt " Ticket Broker (crustily) Which Springfield Massachusetts, Illinois, Miiwonri or Ohio? Mr. Ipstien (warily) Vioh Is dhe cheapest 1 Judge. . , - -j " - laaaTsTasTtat ,r f ' ' ' i ' ' 4 , ' Tko Talaa at Edmeattaa. Old Hownow So -you're throngh collage f '-'ri' i""f-(:'i'"'iS.,yv'w;:Vv.;'''. . Young Smilax Yea, just graduated. Hownow Well, what are yoa going .to do f '--i..;:,-.v, V:v.i v Smilax Well, I hardly know J I've had two offers; one to go in a law office for two year at (3 I week,' and tbe other to play third base on the League .team for 13.000 for th season. - IIR3. J. II. HIKES' Boarding House Mbc' J. VL HIKES has reopened First -ow, ix.ardinit House ia the city, opp a w Baptist Otiurch. i Tiis Koiiscr. iafis Mm Kaciine, fian Oe had at (he tame plaee. B&StUl Hi NES. Agent. H; L. GIBBS, r ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Cravan St., nat to Journal ORIo.n . ; , NEW BERNE, N. C. 1 Practice In the Courts tt Craven, Carteret, Hyde, Pamlico, Jones, Onxlow, aud Lenoir counties, and iu the Supreme and Federal courts. . r ad&wtf j. Ui joitowrrT. -FII'T-OIAI'I- for Infanta lertawswqalsisaettllM ' tisaaaUaseiaih la aarsi alalia awrateaaa." U. A. Assess, K. IU o. Oatar St, Braktya, X. T. , ' V . - aaajaeawef'fslirtaattawwwal aaj . as in a. Tit! sn - ' 7 aapaiMcyaUoa lo axioraa daiiaifciallli waa at as Osaterta Ha CdaleSato naw i ara ur aaOBOTh. YIIUOFUnEYS' Vantnni'.wsFttincs : .cEorfi,Uttl,Bleftgi,Bogi, 4 AMB rOULTBT. era Baak aa TmatairaC af AalataM "ul Chan Baal Kroo. cnaaairrrrtraBriaa,taaaaHaa A. A.lAlaaJ Mala,Ula,aJ Ik Favar, B. B. Mrataa, Laaaeaeaa, Kheaautla C).y-UlaMBlBa', naaai uiacaars P.D-Bota ar tVlraaa, Warm, a. K.K. Caaaka, Beavaa, Paaaasaala, .vralla ar Orlava. Bellracha. G.O. M latmrrlara, HeaMrrhacea. H.HGrlaarv aa Kldaar Dlaei i,I.-.BratiTa Dlaeaaaa, Maaae. .tU-JU.aaa af allsaatfaa. Paraljita. Btautie Bottle MrwMooaaU, 8ta)l Gaiae, with BpertOca. Btaaaat, J V.wlirr Cur. OU d MadioaWfT tT.OO Jar Vetartaarr Care OH, . a 1.0 : toll or Drn refill or Snt Pra aid .BTwUars aou in aar quantity on Bacaipt of Frio.. ... , . - WMPRSBTt BTBDIOfJfB OOV Ooraar WUUaai and laha a Maw Tor. nTTUPHEEYS' EOXXOTATEia flff SPECIFIC Ka.uu UMSral. Taoaalriaiiunafiil tawadriof Rsnress olitr, Vital Weakness) 1 and Piostoattoa, from overwork or otaar aaaies $1 par rial, or trial. aad tama vial aawdar.foraa SOLaaTDaooonm, oraonft postpaid oaraoalp. . a(Biso-IDIiPHRan' stEWCl C0. rj vm wimsea aa aia, aj. a. All of ear Veterinary Preparation can be bad of J. V. Jordan, Druggist, N. W cor. Broad and Middle atresia, tCawbara.N.O .- '-''- X S. WOO Dt, Formerly 18 years witA Geo. Alien i Co. - BBAXBB IB General EardYare antl CnUeri, Harness, Saddles. s ? Bridles and Whips, FARMING IMPLEMENTS.. PoUmI StrNt, lixt t laUtiil Jul; HEW BBRNt. N. C. DCOCTlllADlT.. mui mrwaiim mate tSMtroirttnM. c!KU5fEscoiDEiisrzanc It oao bo (ivrD In oo (Tea, Uo, or la arUol a, o( food, Wlthoat tea fcaowlaoc ol pauant if aeaaaarr U abaoloMlr barmlass and wlU aflaet a pans at and ipeadr core, wkettaer tha patli-nl la a eoaarataonBceroranaioonoiiownva.. a FAILA. Itoparatea ao qetatlT and wltk sock eartainty taat tko patient undartoea ao laooa. CO, aaa aawa aia w !." .-- m aV al pace kaoa liee. To be bad ol , B. H. Duffy. -uiiiet,N-r Berae. W. D. MclVER. Attorney-at-Law NCW BERNE, N. C. ataySSdwn i- K.f'i'- jSJ,.-Tt-w'a Steamship Company, ' ' StMI-WcEKLY LINE." The Old 1imimtn HUameliip Company'$ OU Oful favorite Water Jiontr,ia Albt mrle and Vheeapeutie CuhoL arfolli, Baltimore, Hair Tarb, Plilla- delptola, Bo. ton, Providence, aad . : f U'a.fclaictei. Cltf. And- nfeubfKorOtyK(Ut and West. ! Oa aad after TU E8DAY, APRIL 14,1891 SMcr HE .78EBNE, Capt. Sontligate, Wll sail trom Norfolk, Vector New Berne, N. C,lret, i-v-rj M"i)dr ami .Thursday, staking; cIums cdhM-ction w.ih the A. A N. O. '. 1!., lor ail nmion. oa that toad, and with th - StraHim Kinnton aad Uoward tor Kin v , Trent", and all oiber !auUiit, on the lneuwatMl irertt Klvrrs. ; . ' :s , Krlurnln- nill wll FBOXI SEW BERNE. FOR NORFOLK direct, at 3 p mJ, Toerfay and rniay, tiiaxiB- vonneenoa with tbe IK D. S. B.Co.'ahipiorNew Vork, H. IS. P. Co. a atmniets fnr Bammnrr; C ytlr Line Ships pir Fhiladdrhla, M. . il. T. Co.' ships fur ft S. to and Providence. , --..; a-"- --: fKlesatcr Kln.ion, Cspt Plxon, will sail for Kinatoa on arrival at rt earner Newberne. Order all Kaods car of O. D. 8.8.O0, Jforfolk, V. , -. : I.. Paweugers wilt Had food .table, oomfr-t-alile roouis, and eveiy coo it ay aad attention will be paid tbeat by the aiti-era. .,:, F. B ROBERTS, Agent. Hist. CULPEPPER to TURNER, ' Agen Norfolk, V. W.H. STANFORD, t - Viee-PresMeot. KewTorkCity. Boot aiid Shoo llalier. 'i;'fviptJ'''V.,,,i:t!f; ji'V -:-''S-'r .ri-"--,y"'-y V ;f"?' All Styles of Boots and Sluee mad fcoerxler arte on Short notlo. " REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. : N. ARPEN, ; : CSAYCI ST., ppoilt hunua CZt K. R. JONES, HEAVY AND LIGHT . GROCERIES. , ' Lorlllard tnd Gall 1 Ix Zzzl, -i-y.v EoUatMIoimtfattuttre' Tfl-. TlTTT CirrA A71J Ft!-- miniKEinfESS Ly: UOOCn IlABITw j end ChH 'rrn.' aaaa4a eawa finlla, Coa)alfiiaffla CorI!Mnaae, pMrraaaa. aruouuioa. MJf Kaat ai Wllaaasaieatiillsarls Far ea.aial year I have lajeaanaaaeV yaar 'atarla. ' aa akall alwaya aaaMaaa aaaaaaMaaa Uwnaai yraayaa aasaaat Kawnr.raa.lL A, lla Itrt aa Ttl im, - &UtPi&hJi ;?i4--w , , TT Itauus tisaas, TW Teas. : JOE K. WILLIS, NEW BERNE.. N. C. Italia and American Marble and aU QuaUttee of Material Order solicited and given prompt at tention, with satisfaction guaranteed. "Terra CWta Yaear r nat and newer :' hraiahed at th vary lowest ratafc CMt's H. & Fisiditll. tneamen 0. E. Stoat, Defiairce iYBSjet j- ( - ' '' eaaaajaaraaaaiaas.' ''' v -' On and after February 1st, 1891, , thi line will make regular , ' SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS - BtLTWPKH Baltimore and New Berne Latvia BaltisMtre for New Bern, WED KsBbAY, SATURDAY, at P1L . Leavis New Berne for Ralttaaora. TDEaV ' ? i, lAY,sUTtlRAY: at 6 at . , IireluitB Ml kin, Taka ItUet, ' ' This ietb only DIRECT 11 etrt ef New Berae tor Biltimor witboateban(e,stoppiaff . aly at Norfolk, eonnertfn Ibea tor Bostoa. Ptdvideace.PhiHvaerpbia. Rirbmoad.AadeJl poiate North, East and West llekfne- eloae ooonootlon lor all poiola by A. A N. C. Rail road and River out of New Baraa 7 ' " Afents are at followse . - a VUoBkJi reeTBa, Oeel Manager, MUhtBaltlfer, Ja VT. MoCiaaiCK, Afent Norfolk, Va. , W. P. Qto Co-, EUladelphia, li South Wharves. v New TofkUd Balta.'THbe. Llae,irjef-; Harth river. . E. Elotpaoa, Beetea, 63 Central wharf. B. M. RoekwelL Provldeooe, B, L i- ',..' this lea re Boston, Tuasdayi aad Saturday, New York daily, T " Mto..WtdMadavs8atardays. '"u ' rhiladelphie, Moadaya, Wedaes i t t days, Saturdays. t a-?- Providence, Batarday. Threnrh hills lading given, and rates faar Bleed to all poiatt at la difareat offloes W th cwapanlea. -r - WBT Avoid Breakage ' of Bulk emd Shit is N. C. line. a.U.ORAYsAnt.NewBrae,aT.O NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. r ,'r i '.yf 'f, -.- ' -''aiVBBaakwaraa '"'"f - v ft - V'-' .' ' iDlMiatiialll SiSTEEi iom cuomi MALE AND FEMALE. :.litiA JMiUiet :rtatei jfVwtry, Intermediate, Academic, .Col' i Iqjiaie, Art; Mtuiio, , Industrial - i, - and Burineu. ' TJEN EXPERIENCED AND COM , FETENT TEACHER8. "Voealand Inttrumtntal Iftute Prominent . featuret, under the direotion of a malt pro fessor, with effioient ateistaata. Special Coarse of lattraetioa for' those desiring to become Teaeuers. Expenses very moderate. Board from 98.00 to 110.00 per month laciiitirs good. . Special inducements to iadigcnl stadeota. v. Fall Term Opens Sept. 7, 1891; , ... i v . tj ...... For further informatioa r lor catalogue, apply to G. T. ADAMS, A. B.', s V ',. (Trinity College), PRINCIPAL, Julylldwtf v ' Nbw Behnb. N. C. f GE0.;lffiiDZz:j:ia';:;;' ' r Succator to r.otaU & Hcnderttm.) iiil ii:r2ice iwX ReprescnLin? Imnrance Company of North America, of Philadelphia. Home Insurance Company, of New York. ueeu Insurance Company, of England. - Ilartiord Fire Insurance Company, of Hartford.; . i Norili Carolina Home Insurance Cof ipanr. sf Raleigh. If Greeuwitc'a Insurance Company! New York. ; Fhrenlx Insurance Comnanr. of Hrwllin United Underwriters iu.uruuce Comnaur. f Atlanta. ' Iinstou Marine In.urance Company, of tfostou. julySdwtf f 1 P--.-1na, f . ....... . k ..i t a.waV. . . , 1,0:" ce, Ctuven Street, Stanley But: NEW BERNE, N.!C. r " in ' Cnnrtiof Or- . ' PROPRIETOR OF - EaslBin Korffi Garolma r.larbleVJorlcs !! II . '5-. L "'
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 3, 1891, edition 1
2
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