. . J UlHtR3 ANNOUNCIBVO ,!,,,,.. l)B.lTtri oair''ribn WarlKLYTJWrAL T Thursday at $L60 wwm., . ? r- .t!ce oi tarriag of Death not to -Vwl k a Hut will bo inierUd two. All M A onal matter will b churned . par lin lrmati for triaiieiitodtrortuemeiitiinaM I in kdruos. Begnlar dTarti- J.J1 l collected promptly at U ena i eo& month. . - Communication! contalnmf Ml I f toot pablio interest are .011(3 ted. No oom moioatlon nut bo ozpoetod to bo pnblliood Hut eootalBO objeetioaablo ponoiiaUtio. or withhold, the nan the aothor. , Vmicw thoa blf eolnma nnot bo pud nr. Any pereon feeling oggrifwdrt an mob Mai communication eu obtain too bubo of the author by application at tbJi offloeaad thawing wherein too gtUnuMvM THE JOUKNAX. (E. HARPER, llrw..Hwto. CT. HANCOCK, - Looal RaporUf. Thk Demooratio factions of Louisiana settle their differences . Ex-Senator Blair announces himself a a Presidential candi date. t THR court at Dead wood hae granted a divorce to Mrs. J as. G. Blaine, Jr. THE British garrison at Lodon In Upper Barman, are completely beaeiged by 500 Kachuns. THK Democrats and Alliance men of Minnesota are going to unite in the next election. Of this year's cotton crop tbere are in sight 7,711,067 bales agaiust 7,263,033 the same date last year. Thk lower House ot the Utah Legislature opposes the proposed anti polygamy, amendment to the KFMeral .Btitution. litSoav Buchanan of Ten- leclares himself in favor of Boies of Iowa, for the 'atic candidate for Presi- l-TttAT bill introduced in Gon- gresi providing that hereafter no "penBlpnslshall be paid to non resi deijjt 4 ,ho United States, may, if DMied. save some money now bald i to the 15,000 non resident peiiiidn drawers. The fine weeping willow in Hol-k-ood cemetery at Kicbmond, has grown, it is said, from a twig cut from a willow rhat grew at Nopo leonV erave on St Helena, and brought to Bichmond by a French man. Wil. Star. THE New York World says: The logic of protection is very queer, It admits in one breath that bind ing-twine Has been cheapened "more than 50 per cent" by the ad mission of the raw material free and a reduotion of the duty, and claims in the next that clothing is made cheaper by taxing wool and cloth. LEADERSHIP. We now come to consider s higher order of leadership, exhib iting superior political thought, a more perfect knowledge of the aeience ot Government and a broader field for Its operation as M illustrated in Presidential can didates Cleveland and Hill. Both, of these distinguished men are born leaders of different classes. Cleveland is a stateman who emphasises Democratic prin ciples: Hill is the political expo nent of policy- Cleveland is a political architect and be would bnild an edifice, founded on the rock of the Constitution, that shall be large enongh to shelter every American and grand enough to be the pride and glory of the world Hill beholds the building com plated, and in its admirable pro . portions sees an application of the science of Government. With him, the question is, who shall oc copy that edifice, and by what means shall he gain possession! The friends of Hill tell us that Cleveland is a back nnmber: that fundamental prit ciples need no presentation, for tbey are omni (SVUk uu die bo uuu dO tun -.J A n A-nil n r. . I. n eternal hills! that a revenue tariff Is the darling measure of the Dem oeraiie party, and it needs no her i aid to proclaim it no prophet to foretell the blessings that will fol " low In its wake. They say that the (ULlj .question is, How can we win, and they answer. "By nominating : David B. Hill!" We confess that we are not able to see that such logic is the logic "If. Ami . tT!M ' oriaois.- Aioenawr am ib nomi nated, we shall see it, and see it clearly, but until then, we shall re gard the greatest living exponent of Tariff Beforrfl as the logical can didate ot the American Demoo- We do not believe that the time fc.as eomein tbls country when 'ftemott dent ; statesmanship is to five place to adroit partisan maneuvering. ' -True,the temple of our liberty w erected by oar fathers, but the grand edifice is- not Inished. There is not a day in which Bome modification of the plan is not sujge.ted. 6Thla . woik is to be taken down, and this addi tion' ia to be made. If we are only to have men who are only able able to occupy and cannos protect, the roof may be taken off, the founda tions sapped and great w 11 be the fall thereof. No campaign can be conducted without; a platform of principles, and the more perfectly those prin ciples are embodied in the candi date the greater are the probabili ties of success. Candidates do not put themselves in office. It is the people who elect. If the leadiDg question before the country was, How shall we perpetuate political legerdemainf, Hill would be witbout a rival, but with tariff reform as the paramount issue, Cleveland is (he logical can didate. They tell us that Cleveland is practically out of the race, in-as- mnch as the New New York Stale Convention has appointed a dele gation to Chicago instructed to vote for Senator 11 ill. We ndmitthat thin complicates the situation, but it does l.ot fore shadow t!;e Domination of Senator Hill. Id rather points to some Western Democrat who is not handicapped by State factions and personal embroilments. Street Railroads. It is but a little time, says the Kailway Age, sinoe all street rail ways were horse railways, and it is surprising to learn that already more miles of lines are operated by electricity and steam power than by animais, and still more surpris ing that electricity is even now used for more than half as much mileage as that operated by animal hower, as the following statistics of the United States show: Miles operated by cable 600 Miles by animal power 5,443 Miles by electricity 3,099 Miles by steam motors 1,918 The number of horses employed on street railway lines in this country is stated to have decreased 28,081, being now only 88,114, while electricity is still pushing forward at a rapid rate to displace the four-footed motors. LEMON ELIXIR. A PLEASANT LEMON DRINK. For biliouaeoa and oooatipation, take Lemon Elixir. For indigestion aDd foul J omach, take Lemon Luxir. For tick and nervous boadaoUes, take Lemon Elixir' For eleepleseneaa and nervouiness. take Lemon Elixir. For loss of appetite ad debility, take Lmon Elixir. For fever, chills tind malaria, take Lmon Elixir. Lemon Elixir will not fail you In any of the above diseases, all of which arise from a torpid or diseased liver, stomach, kidneys, bowels or blood. Prepared only by Dr, H. Mozley, 50o. and $1.00 p.ir bottle. Sold by druggie! i. A PROMINENT MINISTER WHITES. After ten years of great suffering from indigestion, with great nervous prostration, biliousness, disordered kid neys and constipation, I have been cured by Dr. Mozley 'a Lemon Elixir, and am now a well man. Rev. O. O. Davis, Eld. M. E. Church South, No. 28 Tatnall St., Atlanta, Oa. The refrigerator' ships, which were constructed for the dressed beef trade between Buenos Ayres and Europe, are being utilized for the transportation of frozen fish Tne "Pojerey," of the fresh water streams of the Argentine Republic, is a fish of a delicious flavor, and when once frozen solid can be preserved for any length of time. SIMPLE IS COXSTHUCTIOJ. PERIHANENT IW DURA.TIO.V. EASILY APPLIED. ITS SKILL FUL I SE QUICKLY LEARNED. The Eifctropn:se is an Instrninent for THE t;UKE OF DISEASE WI1H0UT MEDICINE BAKED on new theories of the cause and cure of dlBoase, It deals with the electrical and magnetic conditions of t he body and the gases surronndlng It la the atmosphere controlling these conditions at will. It la not electricity. DISEASE 1b ajmply lm- fialred vitality. The Klectropolae constant y adds to the vitality and only assists Mature, In Nature's way, to throw off the trouble. A 40-page book, describing treatment and oontalnlng testimonials from all seottons, and for tbe cure of all diseases, mailed fbbb oa application. Address ATLANTIC ELECTROP0ISE CO., Washington, D. O. Charleston. S. O Atlanta, 6a. W M. WATSON, Agent, Few Borne N. O. Jhe wily politician now publicly declares that he will never accept a Domination, and privately Instructs his "heelers" to work np public sentiment in favor of com pelling his acceptance. BVOKLEll'8 ARBJICA HALVE The Best Salve in the world for Cats, Braises, Bores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Bores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and post tively cares Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to live perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 28 cents per box. Xorsale in Newborn by F. 8. Duffy, wholesale and Mtail druggist. WALTER II. DRAY, . , . t' BREEDER Of . : ' Buff Cochins', White Cochins,' Partridge Cochins, Bl'k & Wh. langshans, S. S. Hamhurgs. Golden Wyandottes, Dark Srahmas, Toulonso Geese, Fekin Bucks, Bronze Turkeys, , White Crested White .Polish. Eggs for Sale in Season, ilso Breeder of Celebrated Black Berkshire Swine. ADDRESS I Green Place Poultry Yards, NEWBERNE N. C. Sma.lwood & Slover, DEALERS IN Stoves. General Hardware,. AND Harness. Sash, Doors, Blinds, Faints, Oils, Varnish, Glass and Putty, Lime, Plaster, Hair ' and Cement. Agents for :DEV0E & CO S celebrated Ready Mixed Paints, which are strictly pure goods. MIDDLE STREET. UREAT MAGAZINE The Century's Programme In 1892 A New "Life of Columbus" Articles for Farmers, etc. THAT great American periodical, The Century, is going to ontdo ita own unrivaled record in its porgramnoe for 1892, and as many of its new features begin with tbe November nnnber, new readers sbonld commence with that issue la this number are tbe opening chapters of "The Naulahka,'' a novel be Eudyard Kipling, the famous author of '-Plain Tales from the Hills," written in collaboration with an American writer, Wolcott Balestier. It is the story of a yonng man and a yonng woman from a "booming" Colorado town, who go to India, he in search of a wonderful jeweled necklace, called "the Naulahka" (from 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 Iodina maharajah. Besides this, The Century will print three other novels during the year, and a great nnmber of short stories by the best Ameri can story-writers. The well-known humorist Edgar W.Nye ("Bill Nye") is to write a series of amusing skerohes which he calls his "autobiographies," the first one of which, "Tbe Autobiog raphy of a Justice of the Peace," is in November. This nnmber also contains a valnaple and suggestive article on "The Food-Supply of the Fature," which every farmer should read, to be followed by a nnmber of others of Great practical value to Farmers, treating especially of 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 tbe 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," which willsbe brilliantly 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 of the novels to appear in 1892 is A story of Now York Lite by the author of "The Angloman iaos," 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 "Tbe Players, Club," found, ed by Edwin Booth, and one of the features ol the splendidly illustrated Christmas (December) nnmber is an article on "The Bowery,". To get Tbe Century send the yearly subscription price (t4.00) to The Century Co., Union Square, New York N,Y. . - : -' - j - A TRABI I MtlAftrfaW. tn Ih4 tuvli ny iBlrtjr iit)lljr.ui p.non orJifcef ..I, who tm rad Mid wrtu, uid ftr iiiitmcuon.wlll wrk hidnttrlondr. iw .a Mm Km. TLi...j ri-li Tear In thdreirn lomHtie..wlicrvmth llve.l will also fanitib tha allufttion of tmploymenMt which jouran earn Ibaumoual. Ko mOHar iW maunitftamacflMfulaaalKiva. Kaailvaad qulckl lvarned. J drain but om worker from aaeh dlslrict oraonntr. 1 bavo alraadj taught and.provlded witb amploymMit a l.rira numhrr, who aro making ovarSUMlO a Tfaraaish. It'aNE ftV and HOI.! U. Full njvrtloulan f atti:, ifljrc.. at onea, K. V. Ai.LJAI. Itux AitauMfa, AtnlusT Just Arrived : Yesng Kentucky and : fest Virginia HorsesiMules M.HAHN ? 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 Qhap. Also Nice Variety of Carriages, Buggies, Carts ' Harness, Whips, Lap-Robes, Dusters etc., etc OUR MOTTO IS Quick Sales Small Profits. Call and RftO lis hnfnrn vnn buy; it will be to your advantage WUU BO. H. HAHN GO. When Will February Have rive Mon days. To the first person sending in a correct answer to the above, telling how many times February will have five Mondays from January J, 1892. to January 1, 1942, a period ot fifty years, half a oentury, we will give a gentleman's or lady's double-oaso gold watch, positively worth $40; to tne seoond oorrect answer gentleman's or ladies gold watch chain, worth $25; To the third correct answer, a gentleman's or ladies silver natoh, worth $20; to the five next correct answers, five exceed ingly handsome silver watches; To the ten next correct answers, "The Life, Speeches and Writings of Henry W. Grady," the handsomest book of His lite ever printed, bound in cloth and gold and handsomely illustrated, printed in large, dear tvDethe regular price of which is $3.50 per volume. AO the next twenty coireot answers we will send a copy of Farm Culture," a book of 200 pages, Ihe most valuable work on agriculture una horticulture ever puhliBhed The regular price of this book is $2 per volume: To the next twenty-live correct answers, six months' subscrip tion to The Southern Farm. Should this prise fall to one who would not wish the magazine, we will send it to any name they may send us. Prizes foe All. We do not intend any one who answers this advertisement shall be slighted, and there fore make the following proposition: To every one wno answers this, stating . in what paper they saw the 'ad' (this positive ly must be done) and does not get one of the above enumerated prizes, we. will send postpaid The Southern Farm for March and April. W e want every reader in the South to see these two magnificent issues of this superb magazine. These two issues alone will be worth 91. All we ask from you in this offer is that eaeh answer be acoompanied with 25 cents to help pay postage and white paper on which these two issues are printed. Send silver, either two dimes and a nickle, or a twenty-five-cent piece, Wrap money up in a pieoe of paper and enolose in ordinary letter. (No answer counted unless 25 cents is. enclosed.) Eemembee. That every person who answers this is sure at least of getting for two months the'feest magazine on earth, even if you don't gef the $10 watch, $25 gold chain, $25 silver watch or one of the silver watches worth $5 or a copy of the Grady boik, you are certain of getting the Farm worth four times the amount of money you are required to sent. In order to equalize distanoes no letters' will be opened before Wednesday morning, February 17th at 9 o'clock. You ;are likely to get one of these prizes, if you answer anytime , during February. All answers must ; be Bent 'through tha mail or else they will not be Counted. Address THE SOUTHERN FARM, Constitution building, Atlanta, Ga. HORSES MID PULES. it ' c , : I hav Jast received a FINE LOT of Western North Carolina 0 USES AND MULES. ALSO, A FINE LOT OF , BUGGIEb, ROAD CARTS AND HAHNESS.. All of whioh I will seU VEEY CHEAP for cash or approved paper.' ' . -Give me trial. , !Ejsi eHS Stiroet J. K LATH All, GEMAL CCniSSICS KEBCHWT Bayeir of Cotton, Country Produca, and -: all speculative commodities. . Kauonable oh advaner made. Can fur. nl.h atoraxe for imu bal.a ooiton. Oflloa foot Jruven Btreet, In Clyde bu 114 Ing. febjdwtt r&OFSSSIONAL.; ' DR. O. K. BAGBY, Surgeon Dentist, Offla, itiddl SnO, opp. BapM ChmrcK, i w. d, jvioiyERr Attorney-at-Law NEW befTnc. n. a mayffldwtf DR. J. D. CLARK, NEW BERNE, N. CJ KOfflce oa Oram Street, between Pollock and Broad. P. H. PELLETIER, ATTORNEY AT X A W . Craven St.,' two doors South of Journal offloe. ' . Will prae tics In tha Conn tie. of Craven. arteret. Jones. Onslow and Pamlico. t. United Mtatea Conrt at Mew Berne, and Susrema Court of the State GEO. HENDERSON. Sticceuor to Robertf A ffmderton.) -General Ipn Agent, Bepreaenting Insnranea Company of North America, of Philadelphia. noma xninranoa ittmpanj, or Maw York. Queen Imnranee Company, of England. a. uw .h.bi aawa svauvauij. M Hartford. ofEJelgh?11 1Iom ninrano Company, Greenwitfill Tnanranrub rmMiM A K. York. " Phoenix Iniurance Company, of Brooklyn. tin tori lTnU.w.it. T n of Atlanta, Boston Marina Inraranoe Company, of Boiton. iulridwtf J. A BRYAN, Pres. TDOS. BASIEW,Vlte Pres. 6. H. ROBERTS, Cashier. The National Bank, OF NEW BE.RNE, N. C, lKOOBPOEATD 1865. Capital, - - $100,000 Surplus Proflts, - 86,700 DIEECTOES. J A3. A. Bit yah, Tbos. Daniels. Oh as. S. Betas, J. H. Hackburn, A LUX. MlLLKB, L. HAEVKY, U. H. BOBEBTS. 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 pt 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. MARKS & SON. We will phc on Sale To-day only some hand some TERLIItd BZLVER abut 331-3 PER . CENT CHEAPER THAN CAN BE BOUGHT . ELSEWHERE. A rare opportunity to 'get a wedding or Christmas gift very cneap. BELL THE JEWELER. THE .:. BEST THING IK THK .. - UNITED STATES FOB ' One Coxrt . . , 18 THE ' r ' PHILADELPHIA . RECORD:! $1 per year, Dally. $3 per year, omitting Sundays ; wb ... .THE FAEMEE ; -V . ' , ADD TBI " f V . BUSINESS 'HAN, NO EQUAL. -Addeess "THE EECOED," ' " PnlLADELrilU. g:jelv ; JFioxn Until Jan. -FOB WEEKLY NINE 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 Elates. We have just received a large lot of ITew and Handsome Bpoks, 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 entitle vou to a book. Job Department. In connection with the Joujwal there is a FIRST-CLASS JOB DEPARTMENT. AH of order and at satisfactory prices. - ? Letter Heads,-. Note Beads. , ' - Bill Heads. . , Statements,; ' . Business Cards, ' Envelopes, posters,' " i ,.or,Gu 0 -r Now - 1st, 1893, THE- JOURNAL.''. : 50c. Per Mcnth. in advance will also kinds.of work executed in the be - ' ind all kinds of work. it - - - ' fl ' r