Newspapers / The Daily Journal (New … / Oct. 22, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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;USHERSANNOUNCCMCN'l .- T-S DAILY JOCRXAI, I publish., f . , UMpt Monday at5.00 per )W) U4 k r ki swathe, Del Wared to eity lubacriber at SO renta per month. ' THE WEEKLY JOtTRHAL bbUha arery Thursday at l.iu per utu. i Notice ot Marriages or Death, not to x feeed tea lines rill be inserted ire. All ad kutionai matter will be charged S eta. per line. I Paymeuufur trsieutadfertben)eutaniuat M mad. ia adrauoe. Begular advertise aaeat will be oolleoted promptly at the end as eaeii noata. Comtnanieatioai containing new of raftV Went pablie iiitereat are aoliolted. No eon. Miaieatioa mast be expected to be published that contain objectionable pereonalitiee, or withholds the name of the author. Artiels longer than halt column mast be paid for. . Any penwn feeling aggrierau at any anony awaa communication can obtain the name of lb author by application at this office and showing whereia the grieranoe exists. THE JOURNAL. at. E. HARPER, - - .Proprietor, i C T.HANCOCK. - Local Roportor. :'. mmEntm& at the Pottoffiet at Sett litrn , I The world's coinage ia 1S90 showed a falling off of $10,000,000. Bince 1880 the population of Vermont has decreased two per ceut., but, status the New York Herald, membership ia the churches has iu the meantime in creased nearly five per cent. 'ia the last thirty years Canada ha1? added 1,530,052 to her population. Iu the same length of time, significantly compares the San Francisco Er.aniiiei; the United States has added 31,413,227 to hers. Postmaster-General Wannmaker says that 7,900,000,000 pieces of mail matter are distributed by the postal cars every year. Over eight thousand pieces of mail are deposited every minute of the year in the letter-boxes and po3toi&3e3 of the land. , The returns show that there has been no immense apparent decrease in crime in Great Britain in the last quarter of a century. In 1864 there were 2800 con victs in the various penal institutions. In 1890 there were but 720. Since 18S2 eight prisons have been diverted to other uses. The Danish Society for the cultivation of heaths, with the support of the Gov ernment, is rewooding one hundred square miles of heath m Jutlaad. The work was begun iu 1S3B with one square mile. The society now numbers 14,000 members and is enthusiastically supported by communities and private individuals. Last year it purchased plants to the value of $16,000, and about $67,000 are an nually expended for planting and culti vation of heaths. Malarial invalids who consume great quantities of quinine will be pained to know, believes the New Orleans Picayune, that in the manufacture of this drug there is quite as much misery as in the disease which it alleviates. The making pro duces cutaneous eruptions accompanied by a fever, the vapor from boiling solu tions being the chief cause. So:ne can not Work in cinchona. About ninety per cent, are more or less affected. Blondes are more susceptible thaj brunettes. The white populatioa of Hawaii is de creasing rapidly by emigration, and the natives are diminishing in numbers by death. Yet the Islands have now mora population than at any previous census. The increase is mostly in Chinamen. 4The late Kingdom of ICalakaua is ap parently more likely to become a prov ince of the Chinese Empire," solilo quizes the Philadelphia .Record, "than to fill its manifest destiny of becoming that outlying California County, of which the 8an Francisco newspapers have long been dreaming." The agricultural department at Wash ington is doing a good work, asserts the Boston Cultivator, in propagating a kind of bacteria that are exceedingly destruc tive to the cabbage worm. As soon as the bacteria fastens ou a worm, it begins to destroy it by sections, and continues until nothing is left but a little spot. The worm dies almost immediately after its attack. The bacteria is preserved in gelatine and can be sent thus to any dis tance. It propagates so rapidly that when once introduced it soon spreads all over tbo fields, and iu a year or two through an entire neighborhood. I That the army of the unemployed is a growing one in this country, may be seen, tfrom tbe following statement by the Hon. Carroll D. Wright, United State3 Commissioner of Labor: "It is prob ably true that the time has arrived w hen every person in the United States who . desires remunerative employment cannot find it. Five hundred thousand people must compete for 460,000 places. What I am saying has nothing to do with the great army of the unemployed, which (through all, ages has hung upon the out skirts of civilization. I am dealing sim-! ;ply with currents in the way of oceupa ition." In face of the facts from a sta tistician so careful and capable as Mr. ', (Wright, asks tte Atlanta Contttuion,, ,- jwhat lecomes of Mr. Atkinson's chcer ,' Iful assertions to the effect that employ r' ment is to be had by every capable por- oa who wants it? :.yi,m:-:A,,; - And So Theywirt. S 'Doyou know how to cook?" he , asked. si i i ;, "No, she replied, sweetly, "but pa ' ; has money enough to hire a woman to , do the . cooking for .. 8omrviil4 ' THB HARVEST MOON. x - TtAtA the last faint btash of arenisg'a rose, Aad shadows gather in the sleeping raia, Woe.-, silent aoer, (he rippling straamtot ' r flows ' --v.; V ' - Beneath the mist, that, rising dim and : Eorars orer tt llks asilrer reO, Biding the tears upoa toe closed -up flowers. That seem to weep for the day's Tanished boors. Across the heaven a mellow radiance steals, The mist grows brighter, ani the silver stream Reflects the tender light which half reveals Earth's loveliness, and, like an infant's dream, Stakes all things beautiful and holy seem; The harvest moon along the autumn sky Holds her fair sway and bids the darkness fly O'er fallen leaves, o'er hill ani vale and plain, O'er ripened fruit and Holds of golden grain; O'er lover?, liujeriuj in the mystic lig it. Whispering foui words beneath the silent nihi;" O'er the great city in it? so'emn rest, O'er wealth and poverty, the worst, the best. Her luster falls, aud through th9 listening air Breathes but of peaoj and beauty every where, bcrene an t pure sue mounts tbe azure heaven, Telling the wondrous lova her God to man has givjii. All The Year Round. A LUNCH OF FLOWERS. HV EMMA A. OPPER. Ethel HapgooJ was pacing the long conservatory paths, gazing idly through the sleainy windows. An imaginative observer might have classed Ethel as a hot house flower. She was slender, delicately formed; she had thick yellow hair, starry blue eyes and a charming lace, whose chief color was the deep red of her lips. But Ethel bore great resemblance to her father's father a sturdy man, who, wtukiug with his own hands, had laid the foundations of the present large family possessions i man of energy, originality, fine qualities. Sometimes Ethel, with all her delicate beauty, looked oddly like him. She did now. 'What would poor mamma think?" she murmured, guiltily. "She has done everything for me. Why am I dissatis fied? What ails me?" And then she went on recklessly to answer the question. "I'm worn out that is all. I've danced all winter, and gone to concerts and the opera and the theatre, and bowled with two clubs, and What is the use in going over it? I've done everything ! I've been so popular that mamma has beea perfectly happy. I've had so many favors at every German that I got to be a proverb. And Allea Lifford proposed, and mamma was grieved that I didn't take him. And Mr. Dinsmore I shouldn't dare tell mamma howl discouraged him him and his money. She'd be horrified. Oh, I shall never see a man 1 I should know one if I saw one, I'm not afraid of that. He might be a gentleman, too; ho might be of a fashionable set; he might be rich. Those things don't make a man. But if he was manly if ho had spirit und ambition and brightness, and wasn't contented doing absolutely nothing, and didn't think his clothes were all-important, and never drawled and never bored how I could like him! I shall never," said Ethel, withsolemn emphasis, "never see him. Well, and here we are at West Bedford for the summer. To lre3t,' mamma fays. And how I could rest if it wasn't West Bedford! I'd take the dogs and tramp in the woods and hills all day. But it's a 'resort,' and the Stanley's are here, and the Eameses, aad mamma is planning little teas aud dances in this great country place we've hired, and there's a picnic next week, and a dance at the finest hotel to-night, and mamma aud I must go. And I shan't get a min ute's rest before next season sets in. Aud I shall forget all these funny notions, and do as all the olher girls are doing without a qualm dance some more aud flirt some more, and marry the best catch that offers. Sir. Dinsmore, perhaps." Ethel laughed, suatched a white pink, tossed her pretty head, and strolled to ward the door, looking rather less like her grandfather. She was not the girl the world took her to be but nobody would ever know she was not. What could she do? Noth ing! and hopeless heart-rebellion merely made her uncomfortable. Good-bye to it! She almost stepped on the toes of somebody hastily entering the conserva tory, as she would have passed out. A man, and a young man. A perfect stranger. "I beg your pardon!" he Baid, in breezy, bright tones; "but I found the proper entrance locked, and I camt around here. The florist can you tell me where to find him?" "Somewhere in the shrubbery," Ethel almost gasped. "Thank you! I'll hunt him up. I want some flowers, you know," said the young man, briskly. Ah! Ethel was quick of perception. She knew the rear door of the conserva tory. It opened on the road, for the convenience of the gardener and florist, whose cottage was just across from it. "Absurd arrangement," Ethel's moth er had observed, driving past. "You might take it for t public hot-house." And the interloper the tall, broad shouldered, bright-faced, agreeable in terloper had taken it for precisely that. Ethel looked down, looked up, smiled faintly, then looked demurely inscruta ble. Her girl friends had always de clared that she dared, if she chose, do just anything. "I guess I can get them for you," she taid. "Oh!" Ho looked pleasantly sur prised. "You're his daughter?" Ethel nodded vaguely. "Well, I'll bo awfully obliged to you. Roses and pinks, please, and valley lilies anything. As big and nice a bunch as you can fix." Assuredly her mischievous plot had its drawbacks. To be taken for the daughter of a country florist 1 to be or dered about like any serving-maid t She, Ethel Hapgoodl Yet, why was it to far trom being disagreeable? Was it that this man was so oddly to her taste, with his hardy young strength, hi keen gaze, hi careless, rough country suit- like flesh-and -blood embodiment ol her late wistful intaffiaintrtt ... ; . "Very well," hid, genUy.' Oat choicest flower ere beyond the palm there.? J,,5:-:.::v? - .Ji. , , .; Bo led th way. Woea a great cacro leaf threatened to brash her face he pushed it aside, end then they smiled at each other In friendly fashion. "I'm not long in these parts," he Tex tured. "We're here for tbe summer, my mother end I, ' We're rented the Flagg place. ' You know itl" - Oh, ye, Ethel knew the Flagg place I She did not; but she was ia the spirit of it now, and enjoying it. She felt equal to any needed mendacity. "Right up among the hills,' she ob served every place iu West Bedford being right up among the hills. '-Yes. Do you know anything about the shooting?" asked the young man, anxiously. "Is there any?" "Any amount," Ethel rejoined, with enthusiasm. "Whew, but I'm glad!" he said boy ishly. "What's the country without shooting, and fishing, and boating, and all the rest? But then I'm an enthusiast, a crank, to be candid. I'm addicted to CJdoor doings as no follow ever was." "It's a healthy taste," Ethel re marked. t He had not appeared, and it piqued her a little, to be as greatly struck by her charms as men invariably were; but her readiiy sympathetic manner gained for her another quick, genial smile. He had taken o!f his soft cap and was abseutly crumpling it, which showed his dark hair and the crinkle in it. "So it he agreed, "and productive of healthy conditions. I can outwalk anybody but professionals, I reckon." lie lauirhed. "I wish I could," Ethel said, sincerely. "It's all in getting used to it, yuu know," he rejoined. "A little every day. Can you row?" "I never learned. She had wanted to but her mother had opposed it. "Oh, but you oughtl I contracted that fever at college; but it has served me well. I had a great time down on the river here vesterday. I caught four eels, four old shoes and a mud-turtle." They laughed jovially. "But I discovered I vow it a totally new kind of water-weed." 'You and Thoreau should have trav eled together." "Oh, vou've read him? I have. Was he not a genius?'' It did not seem to strike him oddly. the florist's daughter's having read Thoreau ; but he looked at her with ad miring, brightened eyes. There was a blue lacing in his fl innel shirt; his bauds were large, stroug. tanned. Ethel noticed everything with a strange i inward tremor, it was as tuougu ner hero had fallen from the skies. 'Your llowers?" she munnered. 'I'd orgotten them!"' ho vowed, laughing. They're for a young lady, so suit your own taste, and she'll be suited, probablv. "O.i : Ethel and, faintly. "Yes; a young lady I've uever seen, either. But her brother was a classmate of mine at college, lie's away, but I've found since 1 ve been here that his fam ily is sum r.ering here. So I thought I'd send his sister some flowers to-day and call to-morrow. "Oh, yes!" Ethel assented. She was arranging flowers briskly now. Of course! Flowers for his classmate's sister. Who was she? She might be one of a hundred stylish girls. West Bedford was full of them. Ethel Irowued. "She can wear them to the dance to night," she suggested, coolly. "I know there is ia: at the hotel." "I know there is one," he rejoined, with a faint groan. "My mother wishes me take her to look on. I shall draw the line at dancing. I ntver care to, after a long tram plug day, as I've made this. I've c.ivercd ten miles, I fancy. I'm talking of a tramp trip in Scotland next fall." But the florist's daughter was absorbed ia the llowers. "Simie smilax?" Bhe said, With profes sional indifference. Oh, anything!" he responded, try ing to catch her eye again. "Aud a few white camtllias?" she said, not letting him. "lain sure it will be exquisite," he answered. What was the matter with her? A worried 1 ink came into his handsome eyes, hut she was not noticing. "mi raustu t think, he said pre sently, "that I am a worthless, idle fellow. idding about for my aimless amuse ment. I fear you do. I in in business stock -brokerage but my mother has insisted o:i ray taking a year off because I had 1 bolieve, reallv, it wasn't much more th im a severe cold last winter." Ethel smiled a little. That last state ment, tnat he worked, was the last shre.l of proof she hid required to con firm her growing certainty that he was oh. he was a man an ideal man! And she wished he had not completed that proof; for were not these flowers to go to-day to his schoolmate's sister? Was he not going to call on her to-morrow? 'I've done my best," she said, her smile not very steady. "I hope the'll like it." "I'm more than satisfied," he declared. in his straightforward way. "How much do I owe?" "Oh," Ethel gasped, half laughing, half angry, nil confused, "pay the gardner I mcau, pay to-morrow any thing!" She felt she could not be self-controlled much longer, and she all but flew along the narr.nv walk to the door, turning for a parting nod then swiftly disappear ing. He stared after her wide-eyed. For the first time he saw how graceful shb was, how fair-faced, and crowned by what u mass of yellow hair! Then he took himself and his flower slowly away. Ethel ran to the konse, to an upper room and to a window. Yes, she could see him plainly a he went. What a stride he had, and how he carried himself? Strength, simplic ity, energy that was what she read'. "Yes, he was every inch a man. She bad believed, in her foolish pride, that no'such a one existed, or that none such would cross her path. Tet he had. Y'es, that was quite the phrase he had crossed her ' path, and would not be likely to recrosa it, , Or, if ha hould, there would be his schoolmate's mister, on whom be wa to call to-morrow,! and to whoa the flower would go. .. .- y -f;-9' V ' 111 Herkimer House narlor were well filled thai evening, and the gatheriag i was select and brilliant. -:: Ethel and her mother, eame late, ..but that only added lustre to their triumphal entrance.- 1 ;' a j ';. , ' ':t. -. Mr. Hapgood wai entirely used to such happening as those which fol lowed. Mrs. Eame introduced three young men; Mt. Stanley produced four; they were unwillingly forced to produce other..:'" v;."'-:v '. ' " ' Ethel was tbe centre of an eager throng easily the bright star of the as semblage. She looked uncommonly lovely in white and lavender, with a great bunch of flowers roses, pinks, camellias. But her eyes had a searching, fire-occupied look, which her partners, observ ing it, were not greatly flattered by. She bad danced the third quadrille, and was standing listlessly at her moth er's side, fastening a loose ribbon, when Mrs. Stanley came again, beaming. "Mr. Sutherland wants to meet you," she said "Miss Hapgood." Ethel gravely introduced him to her mother. But her mother was talking to Colonel Eames, and Mr. Sutherland offered his arm, and they strolleuV away together. "Is your next dance taken?" he said timidly. "les," she answered. But she never danced it. They went slowly down the long hall and sat dowdj in perfect silence on a retired sofa; then she looked at him, with her blue eyes very bright, "I received the flowers, " she said, "and I'm very grteful. Frank has spoken of you so many times, Mr. Sutherland, that I am glad to knowrou." He returned her look with his wonted steadiness. Was he handsomer in evening dress? She didn't know. "You played me an awfully mean trick," he vowed. "It was my fault, of course. But I tell you I was scared, Miss Hapgood, when I caught sight of you aud the flowers twenty minutes ago. I saw it all then. IIow I'd blurted into a private green house yours likean awk ward great booby, and ordered a bouquet of you. nnd oh, I trembled 1 I assuru you I shook. I've been all this time get ting up courage to come to you. I wa3 afraid you'd cut me dead." "Why?" said Ethel, cheerfully. "We had rather a pleasant time, didn't we! What could I do? You took me so by. storm! I got the flowers. That was my simplest course. And it turned out so neatly. I thought I was arranging them for some ungrateful young woman who would never appreciate it, but there's the greatest poetical justice, Mr. Suther land, in my being your schoolmate's sister. I think I performed au im promptu waltz when thoseflowers came." " You have brought relief to my troubled soul," ho said, seriously and softly. To Mrs. Stanley, who had introduced them, Ethel's mother made a long con fidence, a few months later. She was I in sjrene god spirits. 'It was one of those affairs," she declared, "that seem foreordained and inevitable. I knew from the first, and everybody knew, that Philip Soutberland was in love with Ethel, and Ethel with him. It seemed almost that they had liked each other before they knew each other. I em't explain it. I know their liking was immediate and mutual, and so great! Do you know, I had been worrying about Ethel ever since she came out? I was afraid she never would be suited. Such eligi ble men as would have married her! and she passed them by without a thought in spite of all my remonstrances, and she is always cjnsiderate of me. I never knew what was the matter with them; she never mentioned. You know how silent and thoughtful Ethel is some times, the dear girl. Perhaps I was never wholly iu her confidence; I don't know. At any rate, I feared she never would marry. But Philip Sutherland, she thinks him perfection! And so do I. Kich and well-born, and accustomed to the best possible society, what more could I ask? I'm free to say that 1 am unutterably thankful!" Saturday Night, The Spread of Consumplloa. Interesting investigations of the theory that railroad cars aid in spreading pul monary diseases by meaus of baccili com ing from consumptive passengers, which lodge in the dust of oars, have been made by Dr. W. Prausuitz, a German physician. A few months ago, the doctor, with the aid of a patent instrument, collected a large quantity of dust from the floors, walls and cushions of cars which had been used by consumptives on their jour ney from Berlin to Italy. This dust was injected under the skins of seventeen guinea pigs. The animals were killed ten weeks later. Twelve of them, upon examination, were found entirely healthy, while only five showed slight symptoms of tuberculosis. As confinement undoubtedly affected the lungs of the animals, the doctor comes to the conclusion that railroad railroad cars, if properly cleaned at the end of each journey, will play no part in spreading the disease of consumption. Dr. Prausnitz will now conduct a cimilar series of experiments with the dust collected from tbe floors and wall of street cars, and especially such1 tbe floors of which are covered with hay or straw in winter, a practice which still largely obtains in many cities of the Em pire. ! In Berlin, the doctor think, new eon clusioni will be reached, nptio favorable as those arrived at in tbe cue of team passenger locomotion. Straw, a a com municator of diseases of the mucous membrane, especially when uoh floor covering is impregnated with the expec torations of passengers, iM well known. The doctor's experiments on this point will be watched with interest. at. Lmi Star-Sayingt. Perfume From 'Jranj Biosinmj. It is now proposed to utilize our. orange blossoms for toilet perfumes and the only wonder is that our people have not done it before. Every orange tree has at least ten times as many blossoms yearly as can or ought tt bear fruit. At least tbree-fourthi, if not seven-eighths,' of the blossom can be picked ; oil and worked into perfumery without damage to the orange crop. .There is a place on the Mediterranean called Grease, lying near Genoa, where, the manufactwe of perfumery,' from', orange blossom! i a specialty '.he tree being cultivated for that purpose. Some of the perfumes are exceedingly expensive-Mine kind of ' oil from the orange blossom selling at the rate of 1300 per gallon ifri Trh Mtf old, :. - ' V :' ' Z,V . Taw pre Okjeet at AaVeHa. ' In every heart there is a npreme placew There to place to which all ether are-subordinate. Thia place U occupied by a single object We may cherish deep interest iu many things. Many thing may occupy large place in our affections, bat, of necessity, one, object only oooupie the chief or highest ece. To this object, whatever It may the life is supremely devoted." A we may love many things, so we may be engaged in ah earnest pursuit of many . objects, bnt the great end of life is the securing of the one object upon which . we have set our supreme lova :' In the Gospel God comes to us de manding (or Himself and tbe reward of Bis service this one supreme) place in onr heart. Ue aska us to exalt Him to the throne of onr affections and to hold every form of temporal good strictly subordinate to our regard for Him. He permit us to be deeply interested in a great variety of temporal objects. We may love many things, but all temporal objects which we possess and value must ever lie to us simply the gifts of God, and they must occupy only a sub ordinate place iu our hearts. If our love of temporal things is consistent with supreme love to God, if we are really giving Him the first place in our hearts, these things will be us a mani festation of His loving kindue-ss and ten dor mercies, and tbey will serve to in crease our love for Him. In their en joyment our hearts will rise from the good things enjoyed to tbe gracious Giver. By the action of onr hearts ia this regard we may test the genuineness of onr lovo of God and the character of our love of the temrjoral objects in which wo are especially interested. If we are conscious that our enjoyment of temperal good increases our love of God, we may accept this fact as an evidence that wo are loving Him with a supreme and heaven-born affection, and it may be regarded as presumptive evi dence that our enjoyment of the good things of this wurld ia Mich as God can record with favor. If our interest m our business and the enjovment of oar recreation and amusements serve to in crease our enjoyment of God in His worship, oriu the service to which He calls us, then the presumption must be that we are giving them the place in our hearts that belongs to Him. and that we are deceived iu onr profession of giving Him the first place in our hearts. But as God demands the supreme place iu our hearts, so He requires us to make His service the great end of our lives. And if we are really doing the one, we are necessarily d ing the other. We are supremely devoted to the ob ject which occupies the first place in onr hearts. If wo are giving God and the reward of His service the supreme place in our affections, then our supreme in terest is in spiritual and eternal things. Then we believe that "man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever," and we are devoting ourself to this ob ject. We have here, then, a test of dis cipleship. If our highest interest is in the pleasures and pursuits of this world, they are to us the supreme good. In other words, they are our God, and in these things we nay expect to have our portion. If our hearts are set upon spiritual things, if our chief interest is in the honor of God and in the welfare of lost men, we have a . right to believe that we love God supremely and that through His grace we are heirs of eternal life. Presbyterian Teacher. An Awiul r"aor, "A Christian man" writei: "It seems to me that the devil has sent out many ministers in these days, aud is deter mined to make Christians support them." This may be a hardsaying.and yet our Master tells us that in that day of awful revelation which is to oome, many shall say : "Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name cast out devils? and thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you; depart from me, ye that work iniquity." And, fully disappointed in the day of judgment, it is very pos sible that some of them may be in our midst at (he present time, and may be doing the work of Satan while profes sing to be servants of God. And it is not necessary that these men Bhould all be hypocrites or vicious men, for a blind guide can lead ono into a ditch quite as effectively as a guide who knows the way, and deliber ately nii'direots men. A van who at tempts to preach a gospel which he does ntt know himself, and to speak of a power which he has never experienced, may be doing Satan's work, though be may not be awaro of the fact Sun light Magazine. Aflur tho Yachting Aee'iieat. Bloomenheimor Mein vrentf The Uiver-Well? Bloomoiiheimer Ohf yon sees a loedle follor mit a plue-striped jersey mit a silk co lar on it down dere, pring him oop fired. Dem goods shrinks awful. Judge. MRS. J, M. HIKES' Boarding House REOPENED. - Mbb. J. M. HINES baa recrvneda Fim-Viuas tkiitrding House ia the city, spp. us Baptist Church. The Pioneer Daileiii. Hacfiafi, Can be had at the tame pfaee. J. MHIN ES, Agent. H. L. GIBBS, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, r -. , . ( .- Cravat St., next to Journal Oftloe, NEW BERNE, N. C. - Practice in the Court of Craven, Carteret, Hyde, Pamlieo, Jones, Omlbw, and Lenoir counties, and, in the Buprem and Federal eonrts. . .. v.-, ......... - adwtf . J. B. CUOWN, BARBERSHOP. 1 Neatly fitted op in (he best of stria, Bath room with hot and cold water.,' . ' : ; ; BRICK BLOCK, MIDDLE ST. for Infanf Wasted lmwaBa4aprt.eUUra Mm IntaiiamiHTniiiiTlT-1iir-ri' ,1r"" BB.vatonu" B. A. Aama, X. Ol, - -UlCtoraSC,Broiklyn,M.T. ' TheaaeeT'CaMorla'ainaBrnraalaW ja nMrtta so well tanvi that It wen. a week .( aupereroeatlon toeadorae Is, fewareth pitelnfeB. nmlUeswaoOjaaotfeMp Oa4otia -Tn-s a.I).I), New York Cttv. trts raster Iloomlnrlale Brfonasa Ouwoa. Tas Oamn HUMPHREYS' Da. HuaraaSTB' SracwTca are aden tlflcalljr and MiefuUr prepared prewrluUon. ; met for many nan uipn rate practlcewith.iiax,aad lor over thirtr rear, used br tbe people. Every .Ingle Bp. clno U a ipeclal cure tor the dbwue named. TbM Specific owe without drugging, pnxf tng or roduolnr the tritem. aad are In rc aud ced the e.verelgn rewedieftoftneWwla. URWnuiwun - - raicm I Tying u.HC,w;"v'" Diarrhea of Children or Adult..... I)T.f.tery, Griping BIHot. Colic.. Cholera. Morbaa, VomlUag Ceagha, Cold, BruuchlUij. Nearalata, Toothache, Faceacne.. .. Headache., SlckUeadache, YerUgo urapensia, uinou. nnura .-- gujpnreeaedor Palufal Periods. vaicea. too rroiuao jr.no... ia COUfiH, llimcuitwoatnin. ... t AthenaD, EryGlpelflt. Eruptlooft. - HhAumatloPun...... rWerand Aoae, ChllU.)Ialuta.... Ilea, DllBu or uieeanw. . XI I J 1, i nnri.ui jreoai.iy ..... tlrlnary Weakneae, WetMnft Bed. . Dleea.es of theHeart,Falpltatlon 1.0 Sold by Dragglata, or sent postpaid on receipt of price. Da. HuxrHMYa; kiitoii, PIPW") richly bound In cloth and gold, mailed free. HUMPHREYS' MBDIOINS 00, Oar. William and John Strecta, Hwyortu, 8PE CI FIOS. AU of tbe shore medicine are for lei at the drug stores of F. 8. Duffy indB. Berry, Middle street, New Berne. N. C. L. S. WOOD, Formerly 18 yean with Geo. Allen fc Co. DEALER IN General Hardware anil Cutlery, Harness, Saddles, Bridles and Whips, FARMING IMPLEMENTS. Pollock Street, next to Rational Bank NEW BERNE, N. C. AUNKENtfESS LIQUOR HABIT awntcwojfw maesetroiiaM 0!HMifES GOLDEN SPECIFIC It can tn ffiTtn I n coffee, tea, or 1 n -.nicies of food, without tbe knowledge of patient If necessary It la absolutely harmless and will effect a perma nent and speedy cure, wheiner the patient Is a moderate drl&keror an alcoholic wreck. IT NEV ER FAILH. It operates so quietly and with suco uainta that tha Mtrlont iinritrrna no Incon. venlence, and sooo his complete reformation. f DIXSC Ma pie uvum. irvv. u ue usM V4 B. H.O, N. Duffy, druggist. New Bern jyl5 dwr W. D. MclVER, Attorney-at-Law NFW BERNE, N. C. tcaT22dwtt v OLD DOMINION Steamship Company, SEMI-WEEKLY LINE. The Old Dominion Steamship Company Old and Favuritc Water Jioutr,via Albt WAfU and t'liempeakt Canal, FOU Nurf.ilU. Baltimore, IVevr York. Phil dclpUla, Boston. Prwvideuce, mud Watkhliigton City. And all points North, East and West. On and after TUESDAY. APRIL 14, 1891 untit luriiirr nutlet, me Steamer HEWBERNE, Cast. Sontots, Will .nil from Norfolk, Va for Kew Bern, N. (.' , Iir. ct, rrrry Monday anil Thursday, mukiiiff elaae cuiiirlion wilb the A. A N. C V IU, tor all nation, on lhat ioimI, and with th-titearapr.KiR.Uin and Howard lor Kin ,..n. Tri llion, and all oilier landing on the Ncue and Trent Itlvera. Heiumi..r.ill mil UtOU NEW BERNE. FOtt XORFf" ';4, at I p pi., Tuesday aad r nnay, aiaKiiiv eonneetip with the U. D. 8. 8.Co.Vahiu.larKer York, B. K. P.Co.'s steamets lor Baltimore; Clyde LUte Ships lur Philadelphia. M. II. T. Co.' ship, for lit . to aad f'rovlaVnee. . eteaater Kimon, Cap! Dlaon, Will sail for Kinstoa en arriral of steamer Newberne. Order all feed ear f O. D. 8. 8. &s Norfolk, Va. Pawencw will lad a food table, comfort able rooms, and .eery eourfcsy sad attention will be paid them by the oftirere. K B. ROBERTS. Agent Messrs. CULPEPPER TURNER, Agents, Norfolk, y. W.H.BTAKFORD, Vice-President, Kew York City. Boot and Shoe Maker. AU Styles of b-oota and Sruew mads to order and on Short notlo). ; ' REPJRINGyA SPECIAL. - NsrARPEN, ;,vv "..V.VV ,;.! l ClAVa ST., tpswu Jsnrau afflict, K. R. JONES, ." . heavy and ughXi. GROCERIES. : Lorlllard tod Call 4 Ax SimK,'- , w;v , i,,; Sold ot llamxfacturtn' JViees.. .'. . Dry Goods & Notions, Poll Stoekarrd Large Assortment, ' '; ; . Prices as low aa (he Lowest. Call atial Examine my Slotk. v t!.faeitoa Cearaaaaed. D t n in. and Children. OaaawHa eaves Oelle, CVIalfaSksi, i Boor fiiomaca, Puwraoaa. fcructMion, ,- f Kills Wanna, gives atoop, and tmaelaS wTt&o'tejttrlniei aaeillnaHaoi. ' ' "Far several yonrs I have fMmaaaa year antoraw ' an shall always Centura. . . tta. lavariaMy nnihissi heaatatas t im.Hi" . . . i ' ' Kawnr F. Paanss; at. TA J ' " Th. Wl&threp," littUi Street and ?th Lt 1 .;v. KewTorkOttsv;; Ooeoujrf, TT Kmuu Brass, Kaw Teas. , JOE K. WILLIS, PROPRIETOR OF Eastern M Carolina table Works NEW BERNE, N. C. Italian and American Marble and aU Quatiliet of Material. Orders solicited and given prompt at tention, with satisfaction guaranteed. : "Terra Cetta Yaserfbr Plants and J1sMs' tarnished at th very lowestrats. CWcTi t FfEiEltLifB. Steamers &. H. Stont, Defiance & Vesper On and after February 1st, 1891, this line will make regular SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS BKTWK.N Baltimore and New Berne Learine Baltimore for New Berne, WED ESUAY, SATURDAY, at 6 PM. Learlnir New Berne for BnUkaore, 'TUES DAY, SATURDAY, at fi P II. EerckanlB asd Shippers, Tike lolice. This lM.de poly DIRECT line out of New Berne for Baltimore wiihoat change, .bopping only et Norfolk, connecting then for Boston. Providence, Phimdripliis. Richmond, and all points North, Es.t and Went. Making close connection lor all points by A. AN. C. Bail road and Hirer out of New Berne. . Agents are as follows: ? Rkudkn Fosteb, Qen'l Manager, 90 Light St., Baltimore, Jab. W. MoCahrick, Agent, Norfolk, Va. W. P. Clyde A Co, Philadelphia, U South wharrea. New York and Balto. Trans. Line,lPl.r i North rlrer. K. Simpson, Benton, M Central wharf. S. H. Kockwell, Provideuee, R. I. Ships leave Boston, Tuesday and Saturday. " New York daily. " " Balto, Wednesdays Sc Sstiirdaya, Philadelphia, Monday, Wedae-, dT, Saturdays. " Providence, Saturday, i Throngh bill, lading siven. and rates guar. . anteed to all points at th. different offlee el the companies. ViiT Avoid Breakage of Bulk mtf flWi via N. C. Line. & H. QBAY, Agent, New Baraa, N. O NEW BERNE COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. li Eflicational Instititioa for , EASTEEI I0BTH CABOLIIi MALE AND FEMALE. ESTABLISHED 1889. Kigkt Distinct Departments; , fVwiry, ' Intermediate, Academic Col-: kgiate, Art, Mimic, Industrial and Businm. v'; TEN EXPEHIENCED AND COM- ," PETENT TEACHERS. ... -.I-.T.'SS '' Vocal and ItutrutMntal ilutie Prominent ' Feature, under the direction of a male pre. feasor, with elficleut assistants. , , , Special Course of Instruction for those desiring to become Teaeiiers. . , . J Expenses very moderate. Board from i&ttr ' to $10.00 per month facilities good. bVcialinduoemenutoinitigt;nttndens.,iT Fall Term Opens Sept.. 7, 1891; , Tot farther Information or tor oataWue. apply to .... ; ... . ,V,y, . G.T. ADAMS,A. B , i - (Trinity College), P1VINCIPAB, ' . IgJyUdwt ..BH, .,C A' GE0.HENDEES0K.1i 'fSuettottoJti)bert$4i. ifcnd0m$fik fiffleral :lisiir2E3 Joif Representing Insurance Company of Ndrttt'i America, of Philadelphia.. , : . , ; ' : Horn. Insurance Company, of New York. ! r, Qieen Ipsarknoe Company, of KnglanaVt .? ? Hartiord Tir Insarauo. Company, of Hartford. w-J'.a-XT":h-'I.: Nonh Carolina Home Insurane Company. " of Kaleigh. ,.!. '-r. .... f ' yGoitei InsoraBoe , Company ol Kew ; i: Phmnlx lnso ranee Company, of Brooklyn. -i United Underwriter Insurance Company. if-Atlanta.' ;::e-vi--ii A.t'Ty"'. ' Boston Marine Insurane Company, -of floston. ' . - - Juiyadwtf C.R.THOMAS, Attomsy an! Gounsfilor-at-La iOffloe, Craven Street, Stanley Building,; .. HEW BERNE, N. C. Practices In the Coortaof Craten, Carteret, Jones, Onslow, Lenoir and Pamlico coirntic", the Supreme Court of North Carolina, e i th. U. B. Dlitriot and Circuit Courts, j' . . ....... t 't ..... t .... . I
The Daily Journal (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 22, 1891, edition 1
2
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