Newspapers / The Independent (Elizabeth City, … / Jan. 11, 1935, edition 1 / Page 9
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$ere, There and Everywhere ! ,u! Interesting Things Found in The News, Con ned I-t?r The Readers of The Independent By ELIZABETH SAUNDERS rs in New York pa?ensers than do a cars, el trains. I combined. An o.OOO local people mi lifts between I Stonewall ?< , i Monroe. N. C.. .. dresses tor 40 I Nino Rinaldoi \ nd Sadie Stearns1 :e for lunch. Sadie ? star from Mar I sample. When I >1 000 noarl. Dis I Orderer King. Pav :<>r Ranch Cafe all possession. I pecies of flower I Tasmainia wn in any other I for the keyhole I n be e'.iininat > install the key in Electric and 1 a.ladeiphia. It's . o >et in the door I advertised its : :or Pasadena's parade on New I p ipping Svelte I a crown r.dantiy dabbing - Venus." : Times reports I Sing, of King Shing. I gave birth ? > and 1 girl, at I aid u be alive I 1 in a damage Paynes of Chicago ..e ;adge to take her . : mouth. I Ohio, a sow own '? Howard, gave birth : ? pigs. The sow's . 12. the second 15. I ' UE LAW was is I r Theodosius II o: j Byzantium on January 1, 425?1510 years ago. He forbade all games andj | theatricals on Sunday. This law j ; is still in effect. In St. Louis, Mo.. George Toomey.1 unemployed, hungry, greedy, gob- j j bled three free holiday dinners, | then stuffed down a fourth, died of j ' over-eating. In Springfield. Mass., when Peter [Pantazelos was arrested he found himself in hot water. He had tap 1 ped a neighbor's hot water pipe and i misappropriated the supply over 'quite a period. It cast him a S25 ; find. In Pittsburgh. Pa., citizens com plained when they fotuid in their brand new $6.0000,000 post office not ! one single slot for mailing a 3c letter. Downtown hucksters in New York City use horses in heavy traffic be cause oats cost less than the gas consumed in the frequent starts and1 stops. In Brockton. Mass., Mrs. Prank Santaro. who three months ago be came a grandmother at 40. recently gave birth to her 23rd child. Only 12 of the 23 are living. She was married at the age of 14. In Octani. Rumania. Nikola Ste pan gave a great feast to celebrate the absence of his wife. When the wife failed to return his guests in vestigated. learned that Nikola Stepan had killed his wife, then cooked and carved and served her for the feast. L. W. de Young, of Dallas, Texas, broke his neck while stretching and had to wear his head in a leather 'jacket until the fracture knitted. In Portland. Ore. Clarence Po tamza yawned?shuddered?his jaws stayed open for three hours. Three doctors worked for 40 minutes be jfore the jaws closed. RAW FIRS WANTED?Raccoon. Mink. Muskrat. O possum, etc. Top market prices. Sop: cash. W. C. GLOVER. Elizabeth City. N. C. cN30-tf. ?~~zmzmi^zz^iiizziiZL. C. i Warner Co. All Kinds of Fresh and Salt Water Fish i \Receivers of N. C. Shad and other Fish Since 1S67 Prompt Returns Honest Weight Honest Prices C. E.Warner Co. Dock Street Fish Market !??:? I LA DELPHI A - - PA. A.NGLEFIN ] NETTING Catches More Fish" the FINEST LINEN and COTTON NETTING MADE Linen and Cotton Gill, Seine, Pound and Trap Netting National Net& Twine Div. i LUDLOW SALES CORP. SO Federal St., Boston, Mass. THOMAS IL WOOD, Agent Edenton, N. C. My Own Digest of 1934 By R. A. LAMB In 1934: I W. O. Saunders had to brand Eliz-i abeth City's Public Utility Commis-, sion a "Futility Commission" in, order to get some action in ridding the town of salt water. President Roosevelt resorted to j many new methods in fighting the, depression, including the spending of several billion dollars, and there-1 by became the year's outstanding world personality. Bank deposits were guaranteed, j A boiler explosion at the Eastern i Cotton Oil Company's Hertford plant killed six men. injured eight others | and did an estimated damage of '? $100,000. Huey Long became a whale in Louisiana, a shrimp in Washington. A famous French biologist pre dicted that the male sex will be ex tinct within 7.000 years, leaving! women to rule the world alone. His! prediction was based on the factj that he studied the woodlouse andj found it living happily in the woods without males. Japan and Russia continued to thumb noses at each other. Walter L. Cohoon had his share of j trouble. William Thomas Gardner died ati the age of ninety. He it was' who. following the capture cf Vicks burg. Miss., in 1863. found a desert- j ed print shop and got out an extra j edition of the Vicksburg Daily Citi zen printed on wallpaper, there be-1 ing no newsprint available. Following an advertisement which appeared in The Independent oh March 2. Americans everywhere be came so interested in Pasquotank's 400 new privies it was necessary to print 150.000 copies of the edition in order to supply the demand. J Andrew Mellon purchased a Rap hael painting from Russia, paying' $1,500,000 for it?while aluminum workers employed by him went on strike, believing they were forced to work too long for too little. Amos *n" Andy took their first vacation in eight years, the former j going to Alaska and the latter to Europe. Bachelors the world around were as unhappy as ever. Drought seared a wide area of the midwest and Northwest, leading thousands of farmers destitute. A rattlesnake died as a result of biting Rev. Albert Teester. a tough Tarheel. Convicts at the Joliet 'Illinois*' penitentiary demanded a swimming poo! and bicycles. Charles Taylor Grandy. Elizabeth City's mystery citizen, passed away. The Blue Eagle went to roost as soon as General Johnson handed j him over to Donald Richbcrg. W. T. Culpepper got the Elizabeth City postmaster plum. The farmers got relief, of a kind.i Roanoke Island celebrated the 350th anniversary of the first Eng-J lish Settlement in America, i Captain Robert Waddy. long a be-j loved conductor 011 the Norfolk Southern Railroad, died as he had lived?peacefully. j Rev. Frank Howard V. Lane left Elizabeth City in such haste he for 'got to renew his subscription to The Independent. Several assorted public enemies, including John Dillinger, joined Jesse James. Thirteen pounds and six ounces of female quintuplets were born in Canada and the attending country doctor only said "Gosh." The dollar shrunk or shrank to 59 cents. Samuel Insull didn't stay in jail very long. The liner Morro Castle burned off Asburv Park. N. J.. with a loss of 177 lives. Princess Jacqueline, only talking dog in the world, died of pneumonia at the age of ten. She was a French bulldog, lived in Maine and could speak such words as "ball, out hello, elevator, goodbv, Bangor, etc." Jim Wilcox died a suicide. Bruno Hauptmann was arrested and charged with the kidnaping and murder of the Lindbergh baby, i An Indian, proud of his pale face talk, inserted this death notice: "The hand that rocked the cradle has kicked the bucket." National Aviation Day was ob served throughout the country in honor of the Wright brothers. | Prosperity stepped from around the corner, almost. A man in Nebraska received a Christmas canary which later prov ed to be a sparrow painted bright I yellow. f And the barbers kept on shaving! No Need of Letting Your Pork Go Bad i Hog-killing time in the South need not be followed by wholesale I reports of meat spoilage this year. Kenneth F. Warner, extension meat | specialist for the U. S. Department ! of Agriculture reports a big increase ; in the last two years in the number j of farmers who are taking advan l tags of cold storage facilities to aid in curing the home supply of meat. Warner estimates that in Georgia ; alone last year more than 15,000.000 pounds of pork was cured with the heip of artificial chilling. Within I the last two years about 30 ice I plants in Mississippi have gone into j the business of curing meat for I farmers, and all expect to continue ! this winter. Last winter was the | third season for Louisiana, but ap ! proximately 4.000.000 pounds was cured under refrigeration. Farm ers in other Southern States, in cluding the Carolinas, Florida and Alabama, are like\vi.se taking ad vantage of improved refrigeration j facilities to cut down their lose [through spoilage 01' meat. There i a need for cold storage for curhve. meat in winter as far north as Vir ginia. Kentucky and Tennessee. There are two principal methods of chilling pork. One is to organ ize the farmers in a community or I county and offer a volume of busi ness large enough to make it worth i while for the local ice manufactur er to provide storage facilities at a reasonable cost. In localities wher. 'this plan is successful the charge (has been from 1 cent to 1.5 cent a pound for the curing period, which i averages about 45 days. Ice plants usually furnish the alt and sugar necessary in curing meat. Where there are no local facilities for cold storage farmers in many sections have built small insulated boxes where meat may be j packed with ice for the curing period. Larger houses, .with stor age space enough for an entire com munity have proved successful in ! receral counties in Georgia. Engi neers of the Department more than a year ago designed and made avail able to farmers plans for a home made meat curing box. To date several thousand couples of these plans have been distributed by 'county agents and the State ngri 1 cultural colleges to farmers, chiefly j in the South. I The cost of curing meat by the I two methods does not differ greatly. 'a large community meat-curing ?plant near Americu.s. Ga? last year cured approximately 45.003 pounds ? in four months at a cost of about la cent a pound. Another coopera ! lively owned and operated plant at j Stilson. Ga., cured 50,00') pounds Hast year for a cent a pound, allow ing 10 per cent for depreciation of ' equipment. | Because of the warm spells in j mid-winter in the South spoilage !of meat is so commonplace that it had come to be accepted as one oi | the risks which a farmer must take, says Warner. "With so many dem onstrations of practical meat cur ; ing under refrigeration the time I has now come when the farmers of the South need no longer assume I this risk. Refrigeration costs som ? j thing, of course, but meat is ac cept 1 as payment by many of the j curing plants when the owner does (not have the ready cash. The re ! cent rise in the price of hogs and pork thus increases the amount of 'cold weather insurance' that can be purchased with a pork loin or ham." wen an i Know is just wiuu 11 read in the papers, and what I hear as I sit around on a moving pictures set and argue about. We are stiil fighting the football game over J There is not a soul in the World j that don't think those Alabamiansj showed not only us. but themselves' some football that they dident know they had in 'em. Stanford was a j much better team than the score) shows, but there is something about that RoscBowl that just makes 'cm' do the wrong thing every time thcyj get in lucre. They used to talk about deciding a game by the team [ that made the most number of first downs. Well Stanford in its three j previous times in the Bowl had al ways made more than their oppon ents, and sure enough they did this time, but somebody told 'em they, maby could pass. Well they could, but they couldent get anybody to to catch em but Alabama, and that) wasent a paying proposition. Tluy) could march down the field through the line and could have till yet. but they wanted to pass, and they did,' right out of the picture. I tell you those old Southern boys ecme here for the eggs, and they gathered cm and went home. That Howell is a freak, and that old Hut son that caught 'em. he gathered em like Babbitt Maranville on an infield fly. it was a great team, and they beat a great team. &t.?:i ford is much better than they show ed there. They are always better than they show in the Bowl. Then too you see they made the first touchdown, and the Coach must have felt pretty confident lot he started pulling some cf hi* m-tin men out. and before he could get em back in. the horses had been stolen. But the arguments will go on into the Winter. Weil football ciroppctt out on Jan uary the First and th> old Senate and House of Rrprcsamutixiv in.! on the third, so we only had one day of no amusement. Mr. Koo-e velt delivered 'em a mossa.,; that all the Country had been wailing lor. but the trouble with mr.-asf;- is con ditions come along about a wet k or two after they are delivered and that almost makes the l.t t m.'.vage null and void. Things arc sure rambling in this Country now. and :. luts -I u day is stand pat tomorrow. Course there was lots of kicking on ihc message, and leu in favor cf it. Ye see its getting hard to please all these fellows now. This enormous relief is running into big figures and they arc all anxious to know how they are to bo met. Never a time in our lifetimes was' money as scared as it is now. Even during the war when folks were ask ed to shovel it out th >y didnl hesti tate. but when they fcl; they were able to keep on making it. bit! now uK-ic u aourji, ana tney want to hang onto it as long as they can. Wa arc getting two fairly well de lined schools of thought on what is one's obligation to another. Mr. Roosevelt has a very liberal idea on the subject. He thinks that there has to be a more generous feeling toward those who are in need, and if it can't be arrived at by persuasion, he will arrange some oilier way of mak ing each meet their share. He has clone a lot in his attitude to off set a communistic feeling, for if he dicl happen to lean to the tnorej conservative element, there would be .?Qiiic justification of hollering for ' a more cquui division, but with him doing all ii? can, and still keep ing v.ithin the bounds of fairnessi to all. why lie offsets the old red. j Its going to be an interesting ses-, s'on of Congress. The question will J be who is going to break over the traces. The Republicans are natur ally going to dig in. and do all they can to save their old principles and theorys. Then there will be the | j I'uti locoed ones among the Demo crat:: who will claim that Roosevelt | has gone too far to the right. There will be a dozen factions, and; there will be things where enough! of em can unite to offset any of; the President's plans. He is not going .o have any cinch, there is| iluve or four hundred Democrats in the?e but there there is two or three, hundred kinds of 'cm. I am hoping to get back and see! iome ot the Games. I love to sit up, theie in that old Senate Gallery and watch 'cm down there on that ten! yard line fighting to hold those Sea's. Well we are living in a, ? ."cat age aint we? Quite a few changes. I think you will see lots! of folks offering to play ball and glad ct" it. that now think its their ball, so why should they have to furnish it. Copyright 1335. By the McNaught Syndicate. Inc.) I Recollections (Continued from Pago One) Doodle." 1 We arc Marching Down to Old Quebec". "John Anderson My Jo John", and '"Oh John Don't' Cross the Main". These songs pos-1 i\. much vitalitj. They linger with us even yet. along with the .?onus that grew out of the three wars that marked the ninety years which have elapsed since our sec ond war with Britain. i Next week Mr. Ansell writes about "The Tragic Death of Captain Henry White.") WANTED?SOY Beans and Corn. Top M! rket Price. Spot Cash. \V. C. CiLOVEP.. Elizabeth City. N. C. eNlG-tf 1 MUST PLANT PASTURES , FOR DAIRY SUCCESS; The weakest point in North Caro- I Una's present dairy feeding program 1 is a lack of adequate pastures, says j John A. Arey, extension dairy speci- j alist at State College. Good pastures are vital to success- j ful dairying, he says, since pastur age promotes health and also fur nishes nutrients at low cost but j good pastures must be cultivated 0:1, good soil. If good soil cannot be found for the pasture, he adds, the dairyman' should build up the soil with legumes and crop rotations until it is in a! fertile condition. Early in February is the time to prepare for planting new perma- j nent pastures. Pulverize the soil to ? a depth of three inches. A disk har- \ row will usually do the work, Arey' points out. The seed should be sown between February 15 and. March 15. No cat-1 ttle should be allowed to graze on; the grass until it has become well! sodded and reached a height of at | least four inches. Petrifaction Petrifaction is caused by (lie In-. filtration of water containing dis solved mineral water, such as silica, calcium, carbide or others. Parti cle by particle the mineral replaces the organic material, sometimes with the original structure retained. The best results occur where silica has been the invading mineral mat ter, and splendid specimens of sil icified wood are often soon. 'i ?'!:t 'ALE* O; wAtvUSkt PPOPIRTIT Bv Tirftie a:' i <i. .<1 cl trtHt <>r?ut,d a ? me by II. i'. Win I a. ind wife, lliqr ri?,. nil.' Wii. i..v. lor c.-ir,,n piir;.osrs llu-riiti llle'lti ll. Wli.rl. I il. ill lit trllil iljle .1 il. t- In r l*i -nit j. reitinteml in me i.Hih- i i tlie I!, i tel nt In..|. u| l'uM|i|.i|ji:k | ' i' -.list*. V i*. in 11.-.il tt.Mik \n. Ii7, l'?|fi> (' 1. 1 >!i/ll .It I.1 i l . k M. .HI SATIMtliAY ' IT.Itlil \ltv. !III|. I'.1.15. . tr.T l.ir sail* at the 1 foim IIoiim- door in iIn- sai?I ('utility, at public aci'ti in. !? ?r cash. tin* property c inveyml to ( hie iti si ill deed of trust t it: That '"I'lljti'i piece ?.r parrel of land sitll- , atiil in ti:i* State ami County aforesaiil mull di scribed as follows: |J Kiiuuii .? .'I (le-i^iiati 1 as Lot No. si I ? ?il fl.t plat ot th Improvement Company I' i.t Kli/aheth fity, which plat is ivooid- ! ? I it t lie i ft" i e e "J tlie Kcgistcr of Deed* j ? I I a <pl itank Collll'v ill Hook l'J. Page l'!i!?. aii'I i*? -otflaled on Main Street ill tin* city i i Kli/ahcth ? ity. and iIuim and is illf? tided tu include all tlie lalid West ot Lot N'?. s|!{ on s.i id plat and lying U'tueeil said I. t N'?. s I :t uii Main Stun t and the ten foot alley running along tlie right-of way ?: ?!ie Norfolk-Southern Mailro.ul Com pany. and 1m.tig (lie -ante lot which tlie v.: I M. !'. Window purchased from Dr. Howard .1. fulfills et a Is as diowil by tlieir dnil. da I (-? I .*la re! i an. I'.rjH. end duly r> e nded iii tlie Uegisler of Deeds office aloft?a id in Ito.k o7. Page 3U4 et se.|.. !i Irie'iee t*? which d< cd, and preceding limits, being made nr a n. r< complete and ac filiate dcscript ion. This January oth, llt.la. .MilIX II. HALT* cliff .111 It. Trustee. I ! NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the District Court. Eastern District of North Carolina No. 257-B In the Mr-tier of Eugene Ernest Carter, Bank rupt. Tire [. titoin of Kugeiie l'rne.d farter, of foiim. I! -iti?1 f Mioty. North farolina. for a toll t!i e ..:r;e i i bankruptcy, having been tile ! in - ti l f ?ui'. it i?. ordered by the Court llilit a In irlir.f be had oil the 4th day of Ft biliary, ] Sllla, before lloiiorahle I. M. Mtekitis, .lulj" "t -aid Court at Kli/ahetli fity, North farolina. a' 10:11(1 o'clock fore ii ..ii. an I that all known crerlitors and other person- intirestid may ap;icar at said time and place and show ju-t catl-e. if anv they have, why the prnv? r of tlie slid petitioner sin it'd not be ggranted. should li it lie granted. S. A. ASHE. Clerk. My .1. P. THOMPSON. Deputy Clerk I". S. District Court, . c.14 L't. Kli/ahetli fliy, N. C. NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant tu order nf re-sale made in that special pnecedinjt entitled C. L. Oriffiu. Ad-|! i ii",i -trati r ?! (leor.'t STokvdy, Deceased vs Mih-s K. St'?kel.? it a Is. the undersign :?d coin-! iiiiv-ieiier if the court will sell at public sale. t? the !.i,hc-t hiddi r f ?r cash at the fi urt lioti-e d.ior in Pasquotank County,; N. rtli f. .ulina. on Saturday. January 1-th.! 1 oar, at I'J o'clock, noun, that certain real, ? -t.it ? ?itn.tle in New la lid Township. PaMpio tank futility, North farolina, bounded ami described as follows: I. rated oil what is known as Mill Pond S'-eti..; hounded oil the North by the lands of Oraut Howard; ?n the Kjst hy a lane;; in tie South by the lands id NVwt Soctice;! ?n t be V. e"t by the land - of Jordan Thorn-1 t ii ; containing Lighted acres more or less, an 1 being the leur.e p rtcc of the said fleorge W. Stokely, decease I. Tin bid iii ,? will its it at Ninety-Three Dol lars (S!i;L.".tiI and titty cents. A dejmsit of Id p.-r cvjtt will be required of the highest bidder. I Th f fWHi'.* Jr tui \V. I. iULSTt C\ *D27-3t. t'cwnii ioc r of tb? Cjti.i NOTICr or SALk By viitne of tl?# t*m>r contained #1 tine pet tain iIihI ??f frn-t# ? t.iiti.l Jj W. <1. '?aiihor. (rustic t#y Tr' N. iVinhMfc*<d*r and wife tleiieia. Margate f%?iut ?ai:d?. I Uteher i?n?l Inishand S., JCommander and wife Nellie and Kvelin R. Commander. h ariiig ?lut*? ?f Altglld 2:.til. 11132. all-1 registered in |t.*ol( Hi, at I'aye 477, x-eiirinj? c?t..iin itidchl doi ?< therein <1. scribed. default haling I- ????? made ill the jiayiuent of said iudehtisjio- . upon re sliest nf the holder of said ilideht. dlKss, t'i? lllid. r .iglii-J as Mlh^tititte trusteo. wilt a! tint :*ourtht?iiM* iloor in this <t uiity. ? 11 th* I in, la> of January 1 ii.'l.'i, at 12 oVl ?ek M of? r for sale to the highest bidd r ? r cash, tne la'iiTs described in said de.s| of ? 11-r to-uit: TRACT 1. Beginning ??n the ?a*t #ide of l(oa?l Street at tin* northwest coin r *>( the P. II. IVeS hit. formerly the llal a y |.t. theiiee northwardly along ea*?t *iih nf sail iload Street 1 tilt feet to It. K. !?trti|?sotl line, theiiee eastirly along sail Siiepwei litir 221 feet to tin* line of .1. 1". Ilmuki' lot, theiiee southwardly along ?ail Brooks' line utid parallel with Itoad Sir. -t IIS tee:. tin nee easterly along -aid lit lino r?H feet to d. W. I'anlueil'ii li: ? . them*' southerly along his line 71 feet, th. yeo easterly along line of lots l?eiougiitg -? said li. \V. Card well and J. I'. Brooks HMJ terf Vf? the lilie of hit IN-Ittli^it'i! to I "oftl'T Stolte Baptist Church. tlienee -ititheily a lot?. jtt:i? of said I'ortier Stone Itiprist f otir<.? I ,t f?3 leet to lot forinerl) owned hy l-a?e I.rigli, theiiee westerly ah n? the line of last tnent it.liel lot and .1. \V. Smith h<t lad tu t to I*. II. lies Jot. formerly t'?e Httlsey lot, theiiee northwardly a! ng na:d lies' lot 213 feet to ea?t *i te of Jtoad Street, place of beginning, and 1 ???::: same property conveyed to r. R. Commander hy deed da t I'd Julie l-t. 1?H4. SKi ON 11 TltAt'T: Beginning in the middle of limn (plan, r Itoad .it the e rtier ot the llamy hi. theiiee N 7t? K. it N't chain* to tin* lands formerly lieh n-.'iii^ to ? Set). W. Winl, theiiee 1 K 1 o ?4 K. 3.1.7.1 eliains to VV. I Walki 1S line, thence along said lands s. m; \\". tn the line i.f the i*. R. I*>riiiu.nider. form erly tin* tieo. Jennings line, and theiiee along said Commander line 3.1 tt I chain* ti the beginning. containing 3."?;;? ai res, more or less, and being the same 'ami apart to fiideon IVndleto*! i;i th.* divisi n I 'ivir i O. \V. Ward and himself for unieli *.??? ii l?irt of Commissioner* duly re? 1 t*d i. the offiee of Register of I?m-*Is ?i l'us'|T|?:ta;.!c County, N. C., in Iln-k 17. at I'.t^i i'.2??. Jtated and posted ln*ceii?l?er 1.1th, l!?3l. A. II. IIOI'TZ, Su!?stitute Trust? ?, I'er 4. II. LKKill, At'y. el 121 It NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qualified as A1I1 itii-trat -r. v.itli t!:c Will atiliexisl, of the late Itoheit lii!di<k, I hereby give notive t?? all pers qe i'ldehtH to his estate to come forward and ntako im ineiliate settlement, a:id ihose holding < 11.1ns against the same 10 present them tor pay ment within twelve month* trom the ?l.*t< i f this notice, or it will hi p!ead*s| in lot of their recovery. Tills I h e. Iit!i, 1!>34. W. I. IIAI.STRAlh clH4flt Adinr. of Ihil>.*rt ltid li< k. lh*e*d. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qtialifVI as Kanit'ir of the !.?!?? Sophia Virginia Seott. 1 her hy give n ?t|e?' to till p ersons ind? ht?l t J her estato to *? ?u ? f-r ward ni make immeliat** ????'!? .Men'. ?in| those holding claims against Hie same to pr seiit tl.eiu for iKiymeiit within tv.eln m .ntlis frolll tile date of this iio!*cf, or it will |h? pleaded ill har if their ur wry. This Ihtvmber 12. Ib3l. SIIRI.1MX l?. S? '<ITT. I?M4 tit. Kvoelllor. EDWIN S. HUFF A > THE SHAD MAN J?^ PHILADELPHIA, PA. - - . lfi Dock Street ^ j Fish Market ||North ^Carolina Shad A Specialty F. P. LARKIN, INC. Wholesale Commission Dealers in FRESH FISH S""' 1 SPECPknad"pi,i.,ra. I Dock Street Fish Market i ?? ? " ?- ?? ??? C. V. Sparks & Company* Wholesale Commission Fish Dealers Consignments Solicited SHAD AND STURGEON OUR SPECIALTIES 5 Dock St. Fish Market PHILADELPHIA, PA. . ], Est. 1859 by CALEB HALEY . , a SAMUEL C. 11ALLY 1 CairfM&iCo. Wholesale Commission Dealers in and Shippers of all Kinds of Fish North Carolina Fish a Specialty j 14 Fulton Fish Market New York Chesebro Brothers & Robbins, Inc. Unexcelled in the handling of North Carolina Fish. We Solicit an Opportunity to Demonstrate ? Nos. 1,2 and 3 FULTON FISH MARKET, NEW YORK J1-13W. WILLIAM H. CORNELL, Pres. JEREMIAH T. MOWER, Treas. WILLIAM H. BANKS, Secy. Wallace, Keeney, Lynch Corp. A Consolidation of Wallace & Keeney and Lynch & Co An Independent Organization and Efficient Organization That Will Continue to Make a Specialty of NORTH CAROLINA FISH WRITE FOR CARDS AND STENCILS 18 Fulton Wholesale Fish Market NEW YORK CITY I ----- w
The Independent (Elizabeth City, N.C.)
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Jan. 11, 1935, edition 1
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