t r i Sunday at JO .
r - d t-n Unc will b Inserts trtm.
"ntlwUlb. toltoatoA poaptly Ins d
irnW.d. eaatalstnt MOT
aant imblis Uteres art solldtsd.
' ueui. .uooVbu aiM.;
. tka aaifcoa- b applioatia as tkls aaV and
jwwtaf vbssaU UM grinuM
v ; THE JOURNAL.
CCHARPKR. IPrewltor.
CT HANCOCK, - Uoal feMfUr.
MM tt Poteffl Sm Am
Us MahLby. of Maine, it is
aid. has orders from Harrison
Md Blaine to keep Reed oat of tbe
1 Minneapolis Convention. How
aloely "we apples" begin to swim,
considering the chilly water!
How rapidly the men of 1884
are passing to the rear. Ben But
ler has deolined a renomination for
the Presidency, Mr. Blaine declares
himself oat of the race, and Mr.
Cleveland seems te have no show.
Belra Lockwood alone remains an
- open and avowed candidate, and
he is not a man, alas! N. Y. Ad
vertiser. It is not yet olear whether ihose
protesting New York Democrats
who ilq not want Cleveland are for
Toweror for Whitney. The pro
tort lacks muoh of Deing exclusive
ly In the ex-President's interest
Is deed, the most portentous aspect
for Mr. Hill is that
Cleveland boom.
Star.
it is not a
- Washington
A Chicago physician says that
UtOM who gaze fixedly at a certain
point, M if in earnest thought, are
not thinking at all that the mind
it napping, "These little mind
nap or flashes of rest may never
be more than twenty seconds long,
and yet they have been discovered
to do the mind a wonderfal amount
of good." This nny explain the re
freshed look on many faces after
ebnrch on Sunday.
Thxbs is a determined effort
being made in England by some
bad people to get np a boycott on
American food products. Some
tima airo a chemist declared that
then was arsenic in the American
apple, and now another declares
that there is from a half a grain to
lira trains of the chloride of tin in
the average pound of canned good?
bat he can't persuade the Britishers
not to eat 'em. Wilmington
8tar.
WHAT would the Southern
Representatives in Congress gain
by obstinately pushing a Free sil
ver coinage bill through tbe House,
to be defeated in tne senate or
vetoed by President Harrison!
They would gain the loss of a
Democratic majority in tbe next
House, the election of a Repabliaao
President, and the certain passage
of new Force bill for dragooning
the Southern people. Even if by
the' free coinage of silver all that is
anticipated from it by its most
fanatical advocates could be ac
oomplished, would the measure be
worth so great a political sacri
licet
Col. James M. Smith, of Ogle
thorpe county, Georgia, gives this
laoonio advice to his fellow farmers:
'Eaise everything at home for man
and beast." Col. Smith began
after the civil war on a red hill
farm near Athens, Ga., without a
dollar oapital. He is now out of
debt and runs a farm of 1,500 acres,
splendidly equipped, with a broad -ffuage
railroad running all over it
and the rest on the same scale. His
taoke houses are full of good meat,
Ids larder almost wholly supplied
from bis farm. Last year be raised,
0,000 bushels of rust proof oats and
fold his crop at the farm for seed
at 11 a bushel less enough for bis
own and tenant's use. He grew
4,000 bushels of wheat, and sold
the surplus at f 1.25 a bushel. He
keeps herd of registered Hoi
Stslns, is fattening sixty steers se
lected for the purpose, milks
Mfeity-flve oows. Every straw
and onnoe of bran are utilized for
feed.' He plants 750 acres in cot
toa rotates his crops, upon careful
observation of the soil of his fields
depends what he will plant them
with. Bis cotton and cotton seed
he sells for cash. On this plan Col.
Emits has made himself one of tbe
wealthiest and most considerable
eitlsens of his county and district.
Of coarse, every farmer is not a
CoL Smith, bat his rule, "Eaise
everything for man and beast at
home," applied in the smallest way,
will be found profitable. The
Tradesman., , f
f . HIIX REPUDIATED. : r, !
No man ever rose to high end
honorable position without having
done some meritorious action, and
no one ever fell from the dazzling
pinicle of fame without having
forfeited his right to shine among
the stars.
From the time Satan was hurled
from the battlements of heaven,
hissing like a fiery thunderbolt to
the nethermost hell, there has been
instances where vaulting ambition
has overleaped itself.
David B. Hill once stood well
before the country. His eleotion o
the governoishipofNew York was
an achievement oi which he might
well be proud.
, His administration appears dif
ferently as viewed from different
stand points. From the Republi
can obsevatoroy it is as black as
starless midnight, but from the
sunlit mountains of Democracy it
appsars bright as cloudless day and
prophetic of a more glorious mor
row. Bat, alatt, human greatness is
often as the mist of tbe moruiug
that soon paeseth away. The buds
of promise were clustering thick
around the brow ol David B. Hill,
when there came a killing frost that
made them wither before tbe time
of blossoming.
Fortunately or unfortunately for
the National Democracy tbe ap
proaching mid-winter convention
has sear, as advance couriers,
snow drift upon snow drift, until
the Presidential boom of David
B. Hill is bnrried forty fathoms
deep bejond the hand of resurrec
tion. Strange revelation! The
magic picture is a magic transfor
mation. Instead of Senator Hill
basking in the fall orbed splendor
of a meridian sun, icicles are pen
dants to his robes and tbe north
winds howl his melancholy re
qaium.
Well and trnly does the Phila
delphia Eeoord say:
xne anti-uiu mass-meeting in
New lork was a rouser. The
great hall in which it was held
could not accomodate tha throng
of protesting Democrats who sought
to give weight to their disapprob
ation of Hillism by their personal
participation- Tbe speeches were
firm enunciations of Democratic
principles, made by sterling and
stancn supporters ot tnose princi
ples. There was very little pyrot
echnic display upon tbe part ot tbe
speakers, and there was none at all
in the resolutions. They denounce
tbe untimely mid-Wioter Conven
tion as uncalled for and ill-advised
and goto the extent of pledging
tbe dissenting Democracy to a sys
tematic opposition to tbe Hill
progsamme.
j. ins jNew i ort sentiment is
echoed by the whole country.
Whyf Because the people of the
United States are manly. They
discountenanoe fraud everywhere
detect sharp practice let it come
as it may. They may applaud the
tricks ofthe professional trickster
but when a man on whose shoul
ders rests the pillars of State be
comes the manipulator of a politi
cal thimble game or the dexterous
maneuver of trump cards, they
turn away with infinite disgust and
join Dioganes in his search for a
man.
If Mr. Hill intended to freeze
Cleveland in bis mid-winter con
ventions, no one should regret that
he has been caught in a blizzard and
stands shivering in the winters
blast.
SIMPLE IN COI8TRUCTIO.V.
PERMANENT I DTJKATIO.
EASILY APPLIED. ITS SKILL
FUL TJSE QUICKLY LEARNED.
The Eloctropoige is an Instrument for
THE KIKE Ot DISEASE
WITHOUT MEDICINE.
BAKED on new theories of tbe cause and
cure of disease, tl deals with the electrical
and magnetic conditions of the body and the
gases .urronnding it in tue atmosphere.
controlling tbesa conditions at will. It la
not eleelrlcltr. DISEASE lislmD'v Im
paired vitality. The Electropol.e constant
y adds to the vitality and only assists
Nature. In Nature's war. to throw off the
trouble.'
A 40-page book, describing treatment and
containing tsstlmontals from all seotlons,
and for tbe cure or all diseases, mailed fhxb
oa application. Address
ATLANTIC ELECTRO POISE CO.,
Washington, D. C. Ch.rle.loa,
, S.C
Atlanta, us,
W, M. WATBON.'Afent.
Sew Berne, N. o.
There is one good thine that may
be said about faults; it is aWays
the man yon dislike most who has
most of them.
Oh, What a Cough.
Will yon heed the warning. The
signal perhaps of the rare approach of
thai more terrible dieease Consumption.
Ask yourselves If you oan afford for the
sake of saying 60s., to rud the risk and
do nothing; for it We know from
experience that Shiloh'a Cure will cure
your cough. It never fails. This
explains why more than a Million Bot
tles were sold tbe past year. It relieve
cronpiand whooping cough at onoe.
Mothers, do not be without it. For
lame baok, aide or chest us Sbiloh's
Poroua Plaster. Sold by New Berne
Drug Oo.
WAITER II. D0J1Y,
' BREEDER OF ' V vi
Buff Cochins,
White Cochins,
Partridge Cochins,
Bl'k & Wh. Langshans,
S. S. Hamburgs.
Golden Wyandottes,
Dark Brahmas,
Toulous Geese, 4
Fekin Ducks,
Bronze Turkeys,
White Crested, White
Polish.
Eggs for Sale in Season.
Also Breeder of
Celebrated Black Bsrhhin Swine.
ADDRESS I
Green Place Poultry Yards,
NEWBERNE N. C.
HORSES AND MULES.
I hare just received a FINE LOT of
Western North Carolina
HORSES AND MULES.
ALSO, A FINE LOT OF
BUGGIEb, K0AD CA&T8
AND
HARNESS.
All cf whioh I will Bell VERY CHEAP
for oath or approved paper.
Give me a trial.
fcfRE AT MAGAZINE
The Century's Programme In 1892 A
Sew "Life of Columbus" Articles for
Farmers, etc.
that great American periodical,
The Century, is going to outdo its
own unrivaled record in its
porgramme for 1892, and as many
of its new features begin with tbe
November nunber, new readers
should commence with that issue.
la mis numDer are tne opening
chapters ot
"The Naulahka,''
a novel be lludyard Kipling, the
famous author ot '-nam Tales from
the Hills,'' written in collaboration
with an American writer, Wolcott
Balestier. It is the story of a young
man and a young woman from a
"booming" Colorado town, who go
to India, he in search of a wonderful
jeweled necklace, called "the
NaulahEa'Mtrom which the story
takes its name), and she as a
physician to women. The novel
describes their remarkable adven
tares at the court of an Indina
maharajah. Besides this, The
Century will print three other novels
during the year, and a great number
of short stones by the best Ameri
can story-writers.
Tbe well-known humorist Edgar
W.Nye ("Bill Nye") is to writes
series of amusing skercbes whioh
he calls his "autobiographies," the
first one of whioh, "The Autobiog
raphy of a Justice of the Peace," is
in November. This number also
contains a valuaple and suggestive
article on "The Food-Supply of the
Future," whioh every farmer should
read, to be lollowed by a number
of others of Great practical value
to Farmers, treating especially oi
the relations of the Government to
the farmer, what it is doing and
what it should do. This series will
include contributions from officers
of the Department of Agriculture,
and other well-known men will dis
cuss "The Farmer's Discontent,"
cooperation," etc., etc.
A celebrated Spanish writer is to
furnish a "Life of Columbus,"
wdich win De Druiiantiy illustrated,
and the publishers of The Century
have arranged with the managers
of the World's Fair to print articles
on the buildings, etc.
One oi the novels to appear in
1892 is
A story of New York Life
by the author of "The Angloman
iacs," and the magazine will contain
a great deal about the metropolis
daring the year, among other
things a series of illustrated articles
on "The Jews in New York." In
November is an illustrated descrip
tion of "The Players, Club," found
ed by Edwin Booth, and one of the
features ot the splendidly illustrated
Christmas (December) number is
an article on "The Bowery.".
To get The Century send the
yearly subscription price ($4.00).to
The Century Oo., Union Square,
New York N. Y.
$3000
I tsach njr fairly ln(eIHrBI person oritbtt
MI. Who AM Mad Sim) writs lni
A TF.ARI I nnrtevtBli ft Umt
atUr lusimction, will work hxraMrtously,
TriBihjrown !ol I tlt wh wtct tr He. 1 wM
the sititttkMs or etnploynisnsMt which yosjfABMm that uwmbI
No moisv for ma anlew naeaaaftal as above. Eaeil mmi quickly
learned. I drain brn on worker from each district or eottalr. I
kave already taught and proTided with employment a Urra
number, who are making orar 8000 a rear each. It's MEW
i?a "WW KrtlwUra FKfeB. AddrarVit 7n"
TYLER BANK COUNTERS.
. nXUSTRATTD IR COLORS; a perfect Work or Arte
ISO Pages; low ready. Books free, pottage 5e.
ilMliOn.
frblMU, Chair
ildstbrlSe,alT;torlWat TrrWrrM
XYUS& DESK CO, HO., U.S.A.
I iT -;
Just
Arrived
Ycung Kentucky and
-Vest Virginia
3.
Has Just Arrived
with Two Car Loads of Young
KENTUCKY and WEST VA
HORSES AND MULES
From 3 to 7 Years Old.
EXTRA FINE DRIVERS,
Draft and Saddle Horses,
Which Will Be Sold Cheap.
Also Nice Variety of
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Harness, Whips,
Lap-Robes, Dusters etc., etc
OUR MOTTO IS
Quick Sales Small Frofits.
Call and see us before you
buy; it will be to your advantage
to do so.
Smallwood & Slover,
DEALERS IN
General Hardware,
A1ID
Harness,
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnish,
Glass and Putty,
Lime. Plaster, Hair
and Cement.
Agents for DEV0E &
CO'S celebrated Heady
Mixed Paints, which
are strictly pure
goods.
MIDDLE 8TREET.
The Pittsburgh Lamn
w : ?:r
to jiic tii mose in
venti ons that
seems to be fin
ished. It seems
to reach the
end as to
goodness of
iignt in
every way,
and ease of
anage-
ment. .
The only care it requires is
filling and wiping.
Dirt falls out when the
chimney is taken off, not into
a limpet as m omer central
draught lamps.
Putting in a new wick is a
7ery easy matter indeed.
All this seems strange to
one who knows how trouble
some other good lamps are.
f It is in all the good lamp
stores. Send for a primer.
Plittbargb, Pa, PITTSBURGH BRASS Ca ,
Sclent! Ao America!
Agency for
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...!' DE8ION PATBHtV
'?tV COPYRIGHTS, eto.
'miSFS!?1 and tree Handbook write to
nSS?xan bboadwat, niw yobk.
""Io - securing pttoota In Ajnerti.
$2n.tFilf? out by os Is brought before
tbe pubis benotloe siren tree of otuuie to the
Mtutitk $m titm
wurio. 1
sm Brosdvw, Hew fork.'
Colds and Coughs
croup,
ore throat,
bronchitis, asthmaf '
and hoarseness
cured by
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the safest
and most effective
emergency medicine.
It should be In every
family. ' v-" ' ; '
Dr. J. Ci Ayer Cc Co
; ; Lowells Mass. . 1
Horses lilies
T
-k&A4
i r
TZ0TE8SIONAL.
DR. G. K. BAGBY,
Surgepn Dentist,
-"" ' nwmii it,a r"":::
W. D. MtplVER,
Attorriey-at-Law
NEW BERNE, N. C.
ajSSdwtt
DFLJ.D. CLARK.
NEW BERNE, N. CJ
saroffioatmChsmBlTtal, betwaen
Pollock and
P. H. PELLETIER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
OraTen St.,' two doors South of
Journal offioe.
Will prao tlee In the Oona ties of Craren,
arteret. Jo nee. Onslow and Pamlico.
- United HUtea Court at Mew Berne, ml
BODieme Court of the State
GEO. HENDERSON.
: (SuceatortoEoberUA Emderton.)
General Insnrance imi
Eepresentlnir Insurance Companj of North
America, of Philadelphia.
Home Insurance Company, of New York.
. Queen Insurance Company, of England.
Hartford, Fir Insurance Company, oi
Hartford.
North Carolina Home Imuran oe Companr,
of Raleigh.
YQnwitck Insnranea Company, of New
Eh""' Jnsnrance Company, of Brooklyn.
United Underwriters Insurance Company,
Boston llarine Insnrance Company, of
Boston.
juijxawB
J, ABRTAil, Prn. THOS. DANIELS Jiee Pres.
6. H. ROBERTS, Cashier.
The National Bank,
OF NEW BERNE, N. C,
Incorporated 1865.
Capital, - - $100,000
Surplus Proflts, - 86.700
DIRECTORS.
J as. A. Bet an, Thob. Daniels.
Obab. 8. Bbtan, J. H. Hackbuen,
Alrz, Miller, L. Habvkt,
Q. H. Robebts.
Down to a fine -point
that's where the making of
corsets has been brought to.
Kabo for the "bones" it
can't break or kink.
Loops of corset lace in
stead of metal eyelets they
can't rust or cut the laces.
The Ball Corset for ease
and comfort; the Kabo Cor
set for unyielding strength.
Each is the best of it's kind
If you don't think so, after
wearing for two or three?
weeks, return it to us and get
your money back.
O. MARES it SON,
We will placs on Sale'
To-day only some hand
some STEHLIM SILVER
atout 33 1-3 PER CENT
CHEAPER THAN CAN BE
BOUGHT ELSEWHERE.
A rare opportunity to rget
a wedding or Christmas gift
very cheap.
BELL THE JEWELER.
THE
BEST THING
IN THE
UNITED STATES
FOB
IS THE
PHILADELPHIA
RECORD!
$4 per .year, Dally.
$3 per year, omitting Budays
THE FARMER
BUSINESS 'HAN,
RECORD
.. . .. ,5." ,''t- -: r,
i . ' HAS 'rfi'0,'.v.
NO EQUAL, ,
, Address THB EKCOBD."
, v, , PmiaDELPiiu.' ;
NLV
Until Jan.
-FOR
WEEKLY
NINB COLUMN FOLIO LARGE AMOUNT OF READING.
The Daily Journal.
.00 Per Year.
Circulates in every direction from New Berne, where there is a
daily mail, and is a splendid medium for advertisers.
Liberal Advertising Rates.
We have just received a large Hot of Few
and Handsome Books, which we club with
both the Daily and Weekly Editions. Call and
see them, and get one by paying one year in
advance for the Daily. By paying $1,25 for
the Weekly one year in advance will also
entitle you to a book.
Job Department.
Hn connection with tho Journal there is a FIRtT-CLASS
10 B DEPARTMENT. All
of order and at satisfactory prices.
Xetter Heads, Note Heads, . Bill Heads.
' . . . ... i ' ' ' '
Statements, '' Business Cards, Envelopes,
Posters, .
srrrD res jfses e?s:xjie3 copy of Tmsjcrr-ft"
$1.00
1st, 1893,
THE-
JOURNAL.
: 50c. Per Month.
kindsjof work executed in the he
:. And all kinds of work.
S '