Newspapers / The Wilson advance. / Nov. 12, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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'it V. Wilson CLAUDIUS F. WILSON, EDITOR & PROP R. 4 'LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY GOD S, AND TRUTH S. $1.50 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE. WILSON, WILSON COUNTY, N. C, NOVEMBER 12th, 1891. NUMBER 4 VOLUME XXI. The cl vai ico COAL! COAL! COAL! C. N. NURNEY, DEALER IN ALL KINDS OF COAL NIT, EGG, STOVE " RED ASH. AND Broken and Egg for Stoves and Grates Orders left at A. W. Rowland's Drug Store will be promptly filled. . 0. -N. NURNEY, I am also agent for the Red C Oil Co. 10-S-im Ellis Wi -:o:- We have bought out the horse business of John Selby may be found at his old stand, adjoining Bob Wyatt's tin shop, where we will be pleas ed to see his friends as well as ours and serve them. Mules k Horses ' m 1 1 " T for sale or trade. We are better nreoared than ever to - 1 1 serve you. Call and see us. ELLIS & WIGGINS, Wilson, N. C THE WASHINGTON LIFE " Insurance Co. OF NEW YORK. ASSETTS, - - - $10,500,000. The Policies written by the Washington are Described in these general terms: f N'on-Forfeitable. , i Unrestricted as to residence and - I travel after two yeans. 1 Incontestable after two years. Secured by an Invested Reserve. Solidly backed by bonds and mort gages, first liens .on real estate. Safer than railroad securities. Not affected by the Stock market. Better paying investments than U. S. Bonds. Less expensive than assessment certificates. More 'liberal than the law requires. Dennite Contracts. T. L. ALFRIEND, Manager, Richmond, Va. SA.M'L L. ADAMS, Special Dist. Agent, . . Room 6, Wright Building, 4-30-iy. Durham, N.'C. . C. LANIER. -PROPRIETOR- Wilson Marble Works DEALER IN Hii Hoauuntt, Headstones, Tablets. Cemetery Work, &., - Examine our work' before purchasing elsewhere. Satisfaction Guaranteed, Corner Barnes and farboro Streets Wilson, N. C. n. DEALER IN Richmond, Va. -3-331. FALL 4 Millinery ! Alter snendmcr cmo ,..1- ; Northern cities familiarizing myself - . 1 ?- w iti iu "lu mc: .i Hr cri- ac it, mi i. nery, I now have a SELECT STOCK , which I am offering AT VERY LOW PRICES NICE, KTOns ins style and quality, and hav eil the services of Miss Strasbur in experienced mill- iner and one who cannot 1, e surpassed in taste and style, 1 can fill all or tarWill he ders nromntlv. ,e pleased to have you call. ERSKINE, Under Brigg's express offic WILSON, N. C. Hotel, next door to the io-8tf A.DOBIE& CO COTTON FACTORS AND- general Commission Merchants, 2 and 4 Roanoke Dock, NORFOLK, VA. CarIi;?oUDgess is our North and South Representative. tfSottafr ateioB given to sales vanee: 111 Lonsisrnments. Prnmnt B 'oerai asn AQ- and Highest Prices guaranteed, pis. HAWES COA Get Ready For Winter. UNDERWEAR? Why do you wait until a ter rible cold forces you to buy what you can so easily ' select now while the assortment is complete ? Gent's camels hair shirts at 75a worth $1.2$: All say ours are the cheapest as well as the prettiest ; we mean our Crush Hats and Derbys. A pure fur Crush Hat at 50 cts. We have six different styles and qualities SHOES ! Our stock of shees is as large if not larger than any in bur town and we know our prices are lower. We have a genuine French calf for "gentlemen which we are selling for $2.96 that cannot be matched for less than $3.25. We cannot find time to men tion all the desirable miners in stock. We have three stokes all connecting- crowded with BARGAINS We insist that you call and look through. Cash catches the .bargains. THE CASH RACKET STORE Nash and Goldsboro Sts TOHN D. COLTER, J MARBLE & GRANITE Monuments, Gravestones, &c, in, 113 and 115 Bank St., NORFOLK, VA. Designs free. Write for prices. 5-14-iy.- DR. W. S.. ANDERSON, Physician and Surgeon, WILSON, n. c. Office in Drug Store onTarboroSt. DR. ALBERT ANDERSON, Physician and Surgeon, WILSON, N. c. Office next door to the First Nationa Bank. DR. E. K. WRIGHT, Surgeon Dentist, WILSON, n. c. Having permanently located in Wil son, I offer my professional services to the public. EOfhce in Central Hotel Building. DR. R. W. JOYNER, DENTAL SURGEON, WILSON, N. C. I have fied with become permanently identi the people of Wilson ; have practiced here tor the past ten years and wish to return thanks to the gener ous people of the community for the liberal patronage they have given me. tT"I spare no money to procure in struments that will conduce to the com fort of my patients. For a continuation of the liberal patronage heretofore bestowed on me I shall feel deeply grateful. Watson & Buxton, Attorneys at Law, 1 WIN8TONN. C, Sep't 16, 189L f Jas. H. Webb, Sec'y, Washington, D. C. : Dear Sir I bave been using one of yonr Kectropoiaes for four years, upon a little in valid son, who has been afflicted with a pul monary trouble and a drop6ical tendency. I have found great relief for him in the use of the Electropoise, when the doctors had failed to give him any permanent relief, and I am satisfied that but for its use we should have lost him. I have never seen it fail to reduca bis fever, or to bring sound sweet sleep. I would.not be without It for many times; its cost. Yours truly, J. C. BUAIOH. 1 Mr. Buxton Is also President of First Na tional Bank, Winston, U. C, and is one of the foremost men of the bouth. For all information address ' ATLANTIC ELECTROPOISE CO.,' WO. 140S NEW YORK AV., WASHINGTON, D. C, , on 822 King St.. Charleston S- C. BILL ARP'S LETTER. CKOKGIA VETKKAXS IN VIRGINIAN GRAVES KEJT IX MIND, But the Mounds Should be Marked An Appeal to the Veterans to Contribute to a Good Fund. There are i,oq7 confederate sol- diers ' buried in the cemetery at the University of Virginia, near Char lottesville. Two hundred and twenty five of them are Georgians. The good people who live there have not neg lected their graves and have expend ed $1,5000 on the enclosure and the shrubbery. But the Old Dominion is almost a universal graveyard, and it is not right for the other States to throw all the burden upon them. The appeal now comes to us for help. There is hardly a Georgian regiment that is not represented in that ceme tery, and every soldier s name and company has been carelully preserv ed and every grave identified. Two years ago a similar appeal was made from Fredericksburg, and our peo ple responded as patriots and Chris tians, and every grave is marked with a marble headstone. That good work is done well done perma nently done, and those who gave the dollar for one soldier will have a good credential when they meet these sol diers "across the river." Many years ago James Berry was convicted of robbery in our court. The evidence was strong but alto gether circumstantial, and was sent to the penitentiary. He had served three years of his time when another man, who was in jail in a distant county charged with robbery, sent for Judge Underwood and said, "I am guilty and cannot escape. I am also guilty of the crime for which Berry - is now in prison. He knew nothing about it and is innocent. It has made me miserable all these years that he is suffering for t my crime. I don't want to meet him and face him in the penitentiary. I have now written my confession and made plain my guilt and his innocence, so please see the governor and have him pardoned and sent away before I get there. His poor, suffering face will haunt me like a ghost." Berry was released and Roberts convicted, but they never met. When I ruminate upon the hard, long service of these soldiers and their sufferings and death afar from home and kindred, their hurried burial in shallow graves with no one to weep a tear or send a last message to those Who loved them, and when I ponder upon their neglected graves and the indifference ol our people it makes me shudder at the thought of meeting them on the other side. I believe in that. We will all meet. I believe thai we will have to face every one we have wronged or neg lected. There is no excuse for this neglect of our soldier dead. One dollar for each grave will mark it and keep it green and there are thousands of our people who can spare that much and be no poorer. Until this is done it will not do for us to boast of our patriotism or our gratitude. The exposition is a big thing, and so is Kihg Solomon and the cyclora- ma, ana ruianta is a wonaenui city, and we have seen thousands and thousands of dollars pouring into her hoppers every day and from every train, and as I looked upon the hur rying crowds I wished that every man and every woman would leave a dime somewhere to spend on our dead soldiers' graves. I wonder if there are not 225 good, big-hearted people in Georgia who will send me a dollar, or send it to Mrs. W. B. Harris, at Charlottesville. I wonder if these are not a few who will send $5. I wonder if there are not eighty two in Alabama who can spare a dol lar for her soldiers, and eighty-lour in Louisiana, and sixty-nine in Missis sippi, and 200 in North Carolina,' and thirteen in Florida, and 191 in South Carolina, and 192 in Virginia. I looked over the list of our Georgia boys who are sleeping there, and wondered if their kindred knew where they were buried. I saw some familiar names from the old Eighth, to which I was attached, and I won dered if the friends of Funderburk and Huckaby and Dunn knew of their burial place, and that woman's loving hands did every year place flowers on their graves. I knew those boys and it pleased me that their bones are thus honored. They went at the first call and did what they could. General Lee did no more. Friends, countrymen, good people send in your mites as the Lord hath blessed you ,and let us preserve the homes of dead. I believe in church- and cultivating our emotions, our spiritual nature, love, pity, gratified ; those virtues that refine us here and will be a passport over there. I be lieve in happy homes and cheerful firesides and obedient children, and in the faces that bring sunshine when they come. This is my creed. Of course there are ups and downs and losses and crosses, and big troubles and little troubles in every household, but they don't last long and we an ticipate a sight of trouble that never comes. I am in a little domestic trouble right now, but it won't last long, I reckon. I've been letting the Jersey calf run in the grove in front of the house and my wife told me that calf would come up the steps and eat up the flowers, but I said no; that cows had less sense than any other animal, and calves didn't have any, and nobody ever heard of a calf climb ing up five steps to get into a flower garden. She had bordered the front yard' with chrysanthemums that were just beginning to bloom, and sure enough when I looked out the front door this morning there wasn't a flower left'on one side of the yard. They were all eaten down, and the plagued calf had begun on the roses. The sight made me sick away down. The front yard looked like a man with one side of his whiskers, shaved off. My first impulse was to rush frantically forth and kill the calf. My next was to drive her gently over to the other side and let her eat that down, so as to restore the equilibrium. Then I wondered ll they were not thick enough for me to take some of them up and replant the side that was desolate, but the ground was too hard and dry, and so I drove the aggravating beast to the lot and shut her up. My comfort is that I bought that calf to please Mrs. Arp, and Captain Peacock never told me that she was fond of chrysanshemums. I called my wife to the door a Igi pointed to the pitiful spectacle. She never said a word. She never said, "I told you so," but she looked sad, very sad, like somebody was dead. For a little while she posed as ' a martyr, and then resumed her house hold duties. The trouble is that every time we go to the front piazza we see it and it mars the pleasant prospect. It keeps us from feeling calm and serene. But by and by the flowers will fade and the leaves will fall, and then we will torget it. Old Father Time is a good doctor. Well, I haven't been to see King Solomon, and I am not going until the controversy is settled. The Bap tists say it is a good thing and the Methodist say it is a very bad thing, and so I will wait until the Presbyte rians have their say. Our preacher hasn't said a word. Heard a man say that tne .baptists were increasing more rapidly than he ever knew them, for there were 12,000 new ones in the show every night. Maybe they were the same old ones who keep on going. But it is well for us that the preachers stand like sentinels on the watch towers and warn the people. They may sometimes cry danger when there is no danger, but they are, nevertheless, the best senti nels we have zot. There may be extremists and fanatics among them, but I had rather risk them for advice and god example than any other profession. They are the leaven that leavens society. They are the salt that preserves morality. They are our comfort in trouble and sickness and at the open grave. Good people honor them everywhere. There is not a college in our State, male or female, but has a preacher at his head, and their high moral tone and Christian influence over tl te youtn 01 tne lanu inspires them to goes down from noble conduct and generation to gener- ation. Blessings on the preachers Bill -- Ru?it'II Sage to Boys. Arp Ihe boy who is wanted in the business world of to-day must be educated, says Russell Sage in an admirable article on "The Boy That is wanted," in the November Ladies Home Journal. If his parents can not afford to give him a high-school or college education, he must learn to study without the aid of a teacher, in the early morning before business begins, and in the evenings after business hours. It can no longer be trutniuny saia that an education is out of any one's reach. Our splen 1 aiQ school system, where one can study by day or in the evening has put tne priceless treasure 01 an education in reach of all. The main thing, in the beginning, that I would impress upon boys is one of the great commandments, "Honor thy father and thy mother, that thy days may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee." The boy who respects his father and mother, who treats his sisters and brothers with loving kindness, has laid a good foundation for a successful career. You will do as your parents tell you, and that certainiy will be to study. Don't be in a hurry to get away from your school books. The cares and responsibilities of business life will come soon enough. Go to school as long as you can, and, remember, every hour spent in study in your youth w ill be worth money to you in after life. Read good books the Bible above all. Make yourself ac quainted with history. Study the progress of nations and the careers of men who have made nations great. If you have no library of your own, join one of the numerous associations to be found in all cities, where s?ood, healthful books may be obtained. Study religion, science, statecraft, and history. Learn to read intelligently, so that you may turn to practical use in after life the readings of your youth. Be sure to begin right. Do not waste time in reading trashy books. L.a Grippe Again. During the epidemic of La Grippe last season, Dr. King's New Discov ery for. Consumption, Coughs and Colds, proved to be the best remedy. Reports from the many who used it confirm this statement. They were not only quickly relieved, but the dis ease left no bad after results. We ask you to give this remedy a trial and we guarantee that you will be satisfied with results, or the purchase price will be refunded. It has no equal in La Grippe, or any Throat, Chest or Lung Trouble. Trial bot tles free at A. W. Rowland's Drug Store. Large bottles, 50c. and Si 00. Mr. C. C. Campbell, of Camp bell's Cotton ComDiess Co., city of Cincinnati, Ohio, writes : "Every body finds relief shortly after using Bradycrotine for headache." CONCESSIONS NEEDED. SUCH IS THE OPINION OF MR. LKAZLli. Ol" XKKDKLL, And Such all Conservative Men in North Carolina see Concede Mr. I.eazer is Right About That, And a Sound Man Generally. In your issue of this week, editor ial page, appears a short article, quo ting the Norwood Vidette's state ment of my position upon certain public questions. You also ex pressed confidence in my party feal ty, and other good things, which is duly appreciated. Misunderstand ings are so common, it may be prop er to make my own statement for myself. As district lecturer for the Alli ance for the seventh congressional district, I have made about forty public addresses in the last ten weeks. I have endeavored to make a fair pre sentation ot the principles involved in the platform of the organization which I have represented. I have spoken everywhere to mixed audi ences of Alliancemen and non-Alli-ancemen. I have met Alliancemen cold, lukewarm and red hot. I have met non-Alliancemen, often sympa thizers, often indifferent, sometimes antagonistic ; and everywhere I have had comtortable evidence that my understanding and presentation of all the positions involved in our plat form were satisfactory, and in most cases strongly approved. As to the points involved in your article : The Third or New Party. I have frequently said, as I believe, that there is not likely to be, any suf ficient cause for the organization of a new party. There might be some independent political action, if ex treme counsels and proscriptive in tolerance prevail in the different fac tions. I hope the moderate, conser vative spirit and methods may rather prevail, to the end that factions may disappear, and harmonious co-operation to all good ends may preserve to us the fruits of a quarter century of struggle and labor, and procure for us valuable reform in our Feder al system. But there is danger, great danger, unless there be toler ation of difierence of opinion, and all agree to abide the will of the majori ty. v The sub-treasury plan. This is my understanding and sub stantially my presentation of the money-plan of the Alliance, on many different occasions, at Norwood and elsewhere : The cardinal doctrine, the essential principle, the main end of the plan is as follows : We want more money. We want it issued by the government, the sole constitutional authority to make a. legal tender money. We don't want it issued by the banks, but we want to deprive them of the power to is sue money and to measurably con trol the volume in circulation. We want a good, sound currency, full legal tender for the payment of all debts public and private. We want this currency issued by the govern ment direct to the people, in such manner as shall be safe to the gov ernment and for the best interests' of the whole people. We want enough of this currency for the easy trans action of the legitimate business of the country. How this is to be done : One way of effecting these principles was devised, and presented to the Fifty first Congress, commonly called the sub-Treasury bill. The friends of the bill were heard by the ways and means committee of the House of Representative : it was then laid away in "the archives of gravity," where it sleeps. After its presenta tion to Congress, that bill was en dorsed by the convention at Ocala, Fla. Their resolution urged the passage of the sub-Treasury bill "or of some other, measure that will car ry out these principles and relieve the necessities of the . toiling masses." The Alliance does not now present the sub-Treasury bill, as its ultima tum. Some bill, doubtless will be presented to the Fifty-second Con gress, designed to accomplish needed relief. Whether the -same bill, or one similar to it or something quite different, shall be presented, remains to be seen. The sub-Treasury bill presented through' Senator Vance and Representative Pickler, is dead, and not in issue. The Ocala platform, so much dis cussed, and so little understood by friend and loe, honestly analyzed, presents these two great policies : More money issued by the govern ment for the people : Less money taken by the govern ment from the people, and that fair ly and equally taxed upon all kinds of wealth and upon all classes of people. These two pillars support, and are they not strong enough to bear, a platform upon which all good citi zens may staid together ? One more word : As one who knows he loves his country, to his fellow citizens with whom at elbow touch we have passed through the trials of civil war and the greater perils of reconstruction, who have devoted the best generation of the race in this century to the preser vation of good government and the building of our goodly social fabric, let me make appeal for prudence, for moderation, for toleration, in this crisis. "In essentials, unity ; non essentials, liberty ; in all things, charity." "And now abideth, faith, hope, charity, these three ; but the gteatest of these is charity." A. Leazer in Statesville Landmark. Mooresville, N. C, Oct. 3, 1891. A Reign of Terror. A situation of affairs at once se rious and deplorable exists in Pitt county, and the Governor is forced to take extreme steps to put an end to the lawlessness. Eleven, years ago Gen. Bryan Grimes was assassinated, and since thqt time incendiarism has been a common crime in Pitt. A man named Parker, who had boasted that he killed Gen. Grimes, was hanged to a bridge by the indignant people of Washington. Mr. J. J. Laughinghouse, a magistrate, was active m his efforts to ierret out the murderer of Gen. Grimes. For this cause he has been one of the victims of the incendiaries. He has lost, a dwelling, gin house, three barns, a peanut barn and a tobacco barn. Mrs. Grimes has lost- a barn with $3,000 worth of peanuts stored in it ; Mr. Jack Grimes a large tobacco barn. Thefts are of a nightly occur rence, and now murder is attempted. A man named Proctor was shot at. There were grounds for belief that a negro named Telfair did the shoot ing. Mr. Laughinghouse, a magis trate, tried him and appeared against him. Since that time he has lost a barn, his stables have been entered, teams taken out and used to haul away his cotton and other property in the night time. The result of this lawlessness is that the insurance com panies have canceled their policies on property in that section, and that people from other parts of the state who designed going there to engage in truck farming or tobacco growing will not go. One man had rented a store forfeited the rent money, one store having been burned. Gov. -Holt in view . of these aggravated offences and this terrible state ol affairs, to-day offered a reward of $600, $200 each for the unknown persons who burned the property of J. J. Laughinghouse, Jack Grimes and Mrs. J. H. Saunders. The lat ter is the sister-in-law of the late Col. W. L. Sanders, and she has, though an entirely inoffensive person, suf fered heavily at the hands of the in cendiaries. It is all a very dark page in the record of that section of the State. Raleigh Cor. Wilmington Messenger. Catarrh, Not Local, But Constitutional. Dr. Dio Lewis, the eminent Bos ton physician, in a magazine article says : "A radical error underlies nearly all medical treatment of catarrh. It is not a disease of the man's nose ; it is a disease of the man, showing itself in the nose a Local exhibition of a Constitutional trouble." Therefore, he argues, the use of snuff and other local applica tions is wrongs and while they seem to give temporary relief, they really do more harm than good.' Other lead ing authorities agree with Dr. Lewis. Hence, the only proper method of cure for catarrh is by taking , a con stitutional remedy like Hood's Sar saparilla, which, reaching every part of the body through the blood, does eliminate all impurities and makes the whole man healthier. It removes the cause of the trouble and restores the diseased mem bran to jroper condition. That this is the practical result is proven by thousands of people who have been cured of catarrh by taking Hood's Sarsapa rffla. He who envies own inferiority. another admits his Happy Hoosiers. Wm. Timmons, Postmaster of Idaville, Ind., writes :. "Electric Bitters has done more for me than all other medicines .combined, for that bad feeling arising from Kidney and Liver trouble." John Leslie, kfarmer and stockman, of same place, says : "Find Electric Bitters to be the best Kidney and Liver medicine, made me feel like a new man." J. W. Gardner, hardware- merchant, same town, says : Electric Bitters is just the thing for a man who is all run down and don't care whether he lives or dies ; he found new strength, good appetite and felt just like-, he had a new lease on life. Only 50c. a bottle at A. W. Rowland's Drug Store. , Envy never does a good turn but what it meant an ill one. Rucklen's Arnica Sa've. The best salve in the world for cuts, sores, ulcers, salt reheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chil blains corns, and-all skin Eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refun ded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by A. W. Rowland. K,9mon Klixir. PLEASANT, ELEGANT, RELIABLE. For biliousness and constipation; take Lemon Elixir For fevers, chills and malaria, take Lemon Elixir For sleeplessness, nervousness and palpitation of the heart, take Lemon Elixir For indigestion and foul stomach, take Lemon Elixir For all sick and nervous headaches, take Lemon Elixir Ladies, for natural and thorough or ganic regulation, take Lemon Elixir Dr Mozley's Lemon Elixir will not fail you in any of the above named dis eases, all of which arise from a torpid or diseased liver, stomach, kidneys -or bo-.vels Prepared only by Dr H MoZLEY, At lanta, Ga. 5oct and 1.00 per bottle, at druggists Lemou Hot Dropt.. 4 Cures all Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, . Hemmor rhage and all throat and lung diseas es Elegant, reliable 25 cents at druggists Prepared only by Dr H Mozley, Atlanta, Ga PACE & WOODARD, Wilson Tobacco Warehouse, i Desire to say to the readers of the Ad vance that our buyers are here in force and want your TOBACCO :o: .0: THEY HAVE NO OLD STOCK ON HAND AND, CONSEQUENTLY NO AVERAGES TO REDUCE, WHICH IS A VERY DE CIDED ADVANTAGE IN FAVOR OF THE WILSON MARKET. SO BRING ALONG YOUR Tobacco. DURING THE SUMMER WE ADDED AN ADDITION TO OUR WAREHOUSE WHICH NOW GIVES US THE LARGEST AS WELL AS THE BEST LIGHTED SALES FLOOR IN EASTERN CAROLINA, 95 FEET WIDE, 160 FEET LONG, 52 SOLID SKY LIGHTS. YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND US AT OUR POST READY TO SERVE. YOU. WE PLEDGE YOU IN ADVANCE YOUR TOBACCO SHALL RECEIVE PROMPT PERSONAL ATTENTION AND Highest Market Prices. WE DON'T ALLOW YOUR TOBACCO TO BE GALLOPED OVER, BUT WE TAKE A STEADY PACE, AND GET THERE IN PRICES EVERY TIME. WE CAN PRESENT NO STRONGER CLAIMS FOR YOUR PATRONAGE THAN THE VERY TOP OF THE MARKET FOR YOUR TOBACCO, AND THAT YOU SHALL HAVE. COME TO THE OLD RELIABLE, AND YOU SHALL RE TURN HOME HAPPY. YOUR FRIENDS TRULY PACE :o- Our Workiqg; Force: Joe E. Reid, Auctioneer, and a good one, he is. U. H. Cozart, late of Oxford, is now with us. David Woodard, Book-keeper. With a competent force and best facilities, and long- experi ence in the trade, we just defy competition. Cooke,Clark & CO, (SUCCESSORS TO LUTHER SHELDON, j Sash, Doors and Blinds, Builders' Hardware Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty, and IJuiklii ii: IVlaterial. No. 16 West Side Market Square and Roanoke Ave., NORFOLK, VA. A. BRANCH, President. . C. HALES, Cashier A. P. BRANCH, Assistant Cashier. Branch & Co., BANKERS, Wilsor),,- - - N- P- TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS IN ITS FULLEST SCOPE. SOLICITS THE BUSINESS OF THE PUBLIC GENERALLY. D ETHERIDGE, Currituck, N C D. EtLeredo;e & Co. Successors to Lthendge, hulgham & Co.. Cotton Factors AND Commission Merchants, 1 9 and 2 1 Commerce Street, Norfolk, Va, Specialties : Refer by permission to T A WHKams. President Bank of Commerce, Norfolk, Va., Caldwell Hardy, Cashier Norfolk National Bank, J R Copeland, President Farmers Bank, Strffolk, Va., M II White and Dr. David Cox, Hertford, Va. Consignments solicited. 9-17-3111 & WOODARD, PROPRIETORS. -:o:- BF WRIGHT, Camden, NC Cotton, Lumber, Corn, and Peanuts. I I I
Nov. 12, 1891, edition 1
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