Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / Aug. 30, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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:. ' .- SEND ONE DOLMaATE AND GET THE FISHERMAN & FARMER FOR ONE YEAR. 4 pages 32 Columns. pleases ETerytooAjr. arm -IN TUB FISHERMAN & FARMER AND KK " Tli IollntM Grov. er: A. H. Mitchell, Editor and Business Manager. Located in the Finest Fish, Truck and Farming Section in North Carolina. ONE DOLLAR per yeariq advance. W M- BOND, EDENTON, N. C. FRIDAY AUGUST 30, 1895. Established 1886. 2STo. 526. I Gin'rally Lay Low. 71rT7 it?WF.V ZIT L , cycles or sich; rni aWaava-i.a V. A A it . A j Don't bother 'bout no bloomers or hi-, COS TOF OUR NAVY rentv EDRNToN, C. Pir.'tier n the S33iT& STI2SST. Superior Courts of j I don't amount to nothin' an' I'm tw nines irom rich: The fashions.likethe seasons, kin come ! an then kin tm i ri . - 0 a ne tv j It Takes $360,000 to Maintain The New York. Cliowan and adjoining counties, and in ,,,. Sufii-fiiif Court at Raleigh. ( '(.lu ction promptly made. DR. C. P. BOGERT, Surtfoii niitl Mechanical SiiaTSLT count? ' an !i QUITE COSTLY ISN'T IT ? j WAR-VESSELS COME '. HIGH BUT WE MUST HAVE j THEM. j DENTIST Kdenton, N C. Patients visited when requested. 1 "otner aoout no bloomers, or bi- i K7JJ?,.. i OUR SPEEDY w. .i vkijrKjn con cm tit Tn o , . i - ........, u.ai ci xJl or my best. I hear 'em say the women folks aii Changed from loticr -icrn- But the good Lord took an' made em i ' ' an' I gen'raTly lay low! ' j It costs the United States Gov- i yJfW no bloomers, or bi-i ernment about $360,000 a year j That somewhere thar's a livin' in this j to maintain the cruiser New! uiu woria rer me: t 'bout the K R. Harris. K. B. L. VVatkins. HARRIS & WATKINS. anoRNBYs m Law, i near tne folks a-growlin' women ehanyinir Bn- But a woman's at my table, an' I gin-J rallv 1.iv lnioi ' Atlanta Constitution Eilenton, ZV. C. Ottirc in front of Bay View Hotel. Practice in all tlie Courts of the Stale. Collections promptly made. AFTER FOUR YEARSOF PROSECUTION REV. WALTR R. DALE IS AC QUITTED OF THE CHARGE CF BIGAMY. A SIMPLE INQUIEY MAY DOLLARS. 8AVE YOU j 7 Write for prices bfJ'oro p!:ioJ in.' orders for sravcslones or fi-niotery work. Dt'signs 3011 1 free. COUl'KirS - MAUULE WOUKS, ! IS & 115 Bank St.. Vorfolk Vi. The Rev. Walter R. Dail. , in. 1 dieted at Dallas, Georgia, for I bigamy has been acquitted. For seven years it has been a ques tion whether Dale was really named Dale or Nuttall. A wo- i man who claimed to be his wife said that he was Nuttall, and that she married him in Con cord, N. C, twenty years ago. Her brother identified Dale as Nuttall, and so did a dozen other ; persons. Nuttall abandoned his I wife at Concord, and was traced . ; to Charlotte, where he worked i i York. For the eleven months j i Sne was in cnmmiwnn nAi, on June 30, 1894, the exact cost jot maintaining her was $3270) DALE OR NUTTALL, WHICH?!957 74- The fiscal year has just been completed, but not until the Paymaster General of the Navy submits his accounts to the Secretary in the Fall will the ex act cost ol maintaining each of the ships of the navy for this year be known. In the year end ed on June 30, 1894, the Balti more followed the New York closely in the matter of expense. The cost of running that ship was $321,000. The Chicao-n . 0 came next, the cost oi maintain ance being $311 ,000. The San j Francisco cost $283,000; the Phil adelphia, $279,000; the Charles ton, $250,000, and the Newark, $264,000. TM . - . . . x iic most expensive item in THE VALKYRIE. How To Do It. j The EngUsh Craft Greatly Ad mired by Yachtsmen. If you haea bright invention. Which you think is worthy mention. And you wish to call attention To your prize ; i AH its merits highly rating. iuiii i , , , And its powers plainlv stating. I WILL SHE WIN THE CUP? ! lnst vUng- l Advertise. ; Ifvou want a buver, show it. HARDLY, BUT DEFENDER WILL Else the world will never know it. MEET A WORTH V KOE. ' usl kt the liaPers ,,!ow il To the .skies; SCROFULA. Awn;. Nearly HemA wlili thf. LornhMM ) 'Tis perfection, let them tell it. readers who There is nothing can excel! it. f Mnti . I . v . , 1..... . a a.. ..It 1: 9Jf tnfl rfca 1 r time t n - lA-t aa- ,v - "V W V A V. O Lvi 111 . i For those of our BY VM. E. BOND, ESy. A HISTORICAL SKp;TCH OF j Rcv- orge Bradford. On his rcsigna- THE BAPTIST CHURCH tio? jn. ;8f5?,Rcv- ThTs Waff kindl" ; aud faithfully supplied the pulpit uu IN EDENTON. til the church was able, about the close j of the year, to becure the services of ue . lvC-vi l norne, who resigned in 1S57. After nearly a year spent with- ! out a minister our Heavenly Father sent us a pastor Rev. T. J. Knapp, of Portsmouth, Va. who commenced his labors in February, 1858, and was soon after regularly ordained to the minis try and installed as pastor by a presby tery composed of Rev's. Watkinson, of Portsmouth, Thos. II. Pritchard. of Hertford, and Weatherly. of Elizabeth i City. The war coming on the church was IVmTLAND. N. Y.. Ie i. itn Dr. If. M. Fksxei. Frodr,n)4. N. Y. ertr Sir: I hail Nx n olck iuxi7 yiV When you flmt u mf, In WWt I wm nr th On Or For Sale- j as a printer. Dale appeared, at j The pay for the officers and men 1 iwhwpon,tia ana later at Dal jlas, where . he became a Baptist j preacher. He came from Dallas i to Atlanta and had a church in a . fine lot South cast corner of King j suburb. He was recognized in rui'l ():ikum streets well adapted to i f 1 , . p.n km.kI business enterprise havinr i vtIaHta. He was convicted Once :i I n -e water front. Said lot is about I of bieaillV beinp" Mi! fi'et wide and 17H foet ilopn: run lm : J soM on good terms. Apply to Mrs. b. i ed for marrvinEr a Miss Smith, of - - - m o - ' ro ner I Dallas. Dale got a new trial and M. 1'ansh or in her absence atil, Mr. L. F. Xiegler, Edeuton, N. C LAND FOR SALE. i now. after four years of prose j cution, he has been acquitted, no U'111PCCfc frv 4-1. J appearing. Nrs. Dale is now suing for a divorce. The evi That valuable tract of land at the head of Main street, known deuce has been conflicting, some 1 1 S acres. about i Also the "Ouartcr containing: i reputable people testifying that the he was Dnlp Wfl4 111 T.fnr1rr oiijI of , . 1 . . , - . ... : " tiiivi tit n w,rr, rv ,uf , ' i same time others swore acres, which I will selfiu sections ' in North Carolina, of:; and 50 acres. Terms easv. : richard dillard' A NARROW ESCAPE. Aiietioncor. j A NORTH CAROLINA LADY CAME ! NEAR BEING DROWNED. Having been appointed Countv : ,T , , L ,r. , , . Auctioneer and given bond n Y !? B ot therefor, all persons arc forbid- j Durham' C. while bathing in den to exercise the virtues of tlie surf in front of the hotel at thatollice under penalty of law. j Ocean View, Va., went out into A. J. Batemax, j deep water and came near being- oireet, naenton, i . l;. 1 drowned. NOTICE When the young lady j found that she was beyond her : depth she became frightened and on the New York for eleven months was $190,000 in round numbers. The cost of maintain ing the engineer department was the next heaviest item, the fig ures lor that being $28,000. The prosecut- sum of $10,970.10 was required for ordnance, and $5,492 was used in equipment. For con struction and repair $5,r43 was used, and the item of supplies' and accounts required $16,455. Then there was a lot of incident al expenses, such as are charged to the navigation or the surgery accounts, bringing up the total cost of maintenance for eleven months to $327,974.74. The Navy Department has made many changes recently in the system of keeping accounts. A most thorough plan of tabular tion of all things that can be of use in the statistics of the Depart ment is kept, and at first sight the Department would seem to be overwhelmed with figures ar ranged in scores of tables. The coal consumption, for example, ot every ship is tabulated for every condition of sailing, and from a study of these tables many The Baptist Church in Edeuton was constituted the 28th of March, 1S17, by a Presbytery consisting of Elders, Martin Ross, William Creath, and Job Pettijohn. At first it consisted almost exclusively of members of hcthel and Ycopim Churches who were compelled by distance and other inconveniences to ask a dismission for the purpose of forming a separate and independen organization. By the same Presbytert and at the same time Rev. .V . Farus-y worth, ofPortland. Maine, was ordain ed to the work of the ministry and soon after by a call of the infant church assumed the duties of the pastor. During a period of seven or eight years after his relinquishment of the pastorate the church was a part of the time under the care of Rcv. artin Moss and Rcv. Mr. Billings. About 1825 the pastoral mantle fell upon Rev. Thomas Meredith who held it uninterruptedly and very ac ceptably for about ten years. He was succeeded in 1835 by Rev. Josiah J. Finch, who after two years of faithful labor resigned and was succeeded by Rev. Stephen E. Gardiner. He was followed in 1S3S by Rev. A. P. Repitou. For a long time after his resignation, the church was without auv rerrninr pastor. During this period of privation and spiritual famine, the church re ceived considerable attention from, ar:d was placed under many obliga tions to Rev's. Q. II. Trotman A. A. Connella, Barnabus Nixon, Thomas Waff and other nerghboriug and trav elling ministers. In 1848 Rev. Aaron Jones was chosen pastor and was succeeded in 1853 v vcrtise. International Yacht race,we give ! u our cash dml vou hiive iam.tJ a brief description of the boat as i ?ince -vmi in business started. , ; ou will never get down hearted, appeared to a representative of; if you are wise; the New York Times, while in j Is disaster darkly looming ? thf drv rWl-- i Thcrc'-S Kood m weekly glooming - k-xv- j it vou want vour liiness IwxMiung-- "The Valkvrie is a Watson advertise. boat all over. ' She looked to be j- mer s ink. bStJ WD!STS IN P0LITICS- trance, and form of water line oi i aiKyrieii., riiriering only in oiuo presiding ki.dkks ask wdNwvo having more beam. Her mid- unitkd action against ship section is shoaler. Her! run saloons. under-water body is not very &:' ifc " An lmnortaut circular simied i T(hh and T.lvi- sSa?Lrsr,SecseedsHci5 bi?ge i b' "r -Dr.ftDaer,ss,'lla!BrRiff$. while being fairly full, impress--Methodist Church in Ohio has1 Ncrvo Tculo es one more, due to her hollow j been sent to the members of that li Atl?tTf2j garboards. Her bilge is bv no! denomination throughout the! Restorative Compound. means what one would call a,n,i.pV, st-t, it iic r.,r CERTAIN AS THE LAW OF fiRlVITiTlfli - , ItL. r i . - rnysics irom diocki, liver and tissues all worn-out particles and impurities, without weakening but strengthening My throat was rttvply ulciraud. thJgba ami Ixxly fcidtunly orfonsUo, and I nn uiirnini unu uhul iikmi nal railed. J Vour HICXKl and LlVir ILntr improvemeut iH-Ban at once." Fivdonta. N. Y., Junn l 1, "It ha now U vn almui JU yt'ora loco I ' rurea anu tn'n liat ln-on no ri'turn of tha i ours truly. Mr. Ana Ajxam. i united political action on the slack bilge. The varht's ovprhano-;.ir( vprv for sometime without a pastor. After long, particularly the overhangs Ja11 Ul a11 i""4"! 111 l -('" the war, Rev. c. T.Bailey, late the aft, and she must be 1 28 feet on j to elect to the next Legislature honored and influential .editor of the the deck. The midship section j as man v members as possible Biblical Recorder, had charge of the has a round, full, easv side to it. .;'n fi;,f tu churcii. lie was followed in the pasto- jf- nieamires nhmit f ft rti th . , rate by Re, Mr. Phillipps who four From thisoiu" l 7 T years later was succeeded by Rcv. , , f mn K. vices will be called lor by the Trcicvant Harrison, who remained two " w" V P ' ,.Mrc easy curve, vet powerful shape! in 187.1. Rev. . n. ("niifn r, onvrf. to the bilge. It is a section ! Met nouist church 1 n Uh 10 edjew, was called to take charge of SI1wmg great Stability Ot torin, the church, remaining four vears and will offer great resistance to heeling. The yacht draws between 10 feet 9 inches and 20 feet, the greatest draught being at the stern post. She has, it would appear, about 75 tons of lead on her keel. It is not bulb shaDed A vurew llcatlarhP. Iysppla, Vmatlra. i u, nan Mrt-atb. Skin DIwrsm, Did Hufea DlMlm-i., iforofula. O.-n.-ral iVhlllty. vtr Satisfaction Ouarantecd. Sample free. Mother ! Keep your child' utomach and bow. el taealtby with Dr. Kjiun. r n Sennatorla. Tlie best laiatlvw and correctlvo kuown. Succeeded by Rev. W. Bivins, of New Hampshire, whose pastorate extended through nearly two years. in 1079, ivcv. k. auucvciitcr as sumed charge of the church and for six years the church prospered under his active labor. lie was followed by Rev. F. M. Sattcrwhite. of South Car Dr. Former's Soothtnpr SvniD. Connection HI every ' vii'yl'tt'on anilKlviv4rrfrHblnKiloep. ir. ronncru worm byrup. Hrouitht m yornm from our child. Mrn.hlnTlrU.Kllla.t.- Jr.Ft iiinrVFAMii.v(SiiltKlii-uiii OlntrnntT liett for bklncruLttoua, I'ilca, tjrv, C'uU.utc. NIAGARA HARNESSED. SoMfy Walter I. Ti'jirv. GROVER TO TOUCH THE BUTTON. AND SET IN MOTION THE MA CHINERY OF THE ATLANTA EXPOSITION. : was in imminent danger. Mr. ! valuable data are obtained, and The iinu of p.oud & Makely, existing j j?. Iuck, of Norfolk, went to true economy in that element of 'luoiotore between D. G. Bond and M. ! . . I . , , . , Makciy. is herein- dissolved, by the her assistance, and saved her. 1 expense is secured. Every kind iillurau-a! of Hie mwlorirrtiod I'-'-'Uvs interested will 'wlcasc natioe. M. Makely, take New Gun Boats Named. June 27111. 1095. j of supply is measured out to the ships most careiully, and, altho' ; there seems to be A WORD TO THE a confusine Acting Secretary McAdoo an- j amount of red tape, it is a kind n j nounced the names of the gun- Gf red tape, so far as the accounts ! boats. heretoiore known as Nos. jare concerned, that pays. 6, S and 9, now building at New port News. They are the Nash ville, for Nashville, Tenn.; Wil mington, for Wilmington, Del., ! and Helena, for Helena, Mons tana. Four Murderers Lynched. Thv A mob of 250 men broke in to the comity jail at Yreka, Cal., on Monday morning last and hanged four murderers in the courthouse Dark. T. he victims ARE IMMENSE, j wpre liamed reSrectivelv John-!edoPen purchase ihis means dollars to the j son, Seinber, Null and Moreno. farmers and people gener-1 allly, ! Like The Cedar of Lebanon. This money will go into all ! . channels of business and Says an exchange in speaking will be a rich harvest for of the beauties and possibilities advertisers. ! of the Southland : "The South I is like the cedar of Lebanon ?S O i she is proud and lofty, yet yields ; olQX?Zuu4l ami to the tempest and sways back ls carefully read by the farmers and laboring "lenofthis section and lfyou want a goodly Portion of the Fall trade ou should insert your a(Wisement at once. again to her height with the dews resting upon its branches; ' she is the beauty and glory of the i nation." ! No appetite. Then donot try to force j food down; but use the most scientific means for restoringitone to the stomach ' How? Why, by taking Ayer's Satsa- parilla, and in a surprisingly snort time your appetite will come again, and come to stay. When a ship is in home wa ters supplies are obtained from the store-houses in the Navy yards. These supplies have been purchased mostly by contract. In the fiscal year of 1894 the con tract supplies for the navy cost 5.821,570,030. When contracts are not made, or when it is nec essary to purchase articles at once and without making requi sitions on the storehouses, sup plies are secured by what is call- The Pay master of a ship or the Pay mas ter in charge of the supplies at a Navy -yard simply goes shopping for whatever is wanted, after he has written authority to make purchase, and what he spends goes into open purchase account. The number of articles required for maintaining a navy is enor mous. For example, there arc kept in the storehouses of the New York Navy-yard no fewer than 75,600 kinds of articles used for running the navy, and the value of these articles is about $3,500,000. Public Ledger. Advertise! Advertise! Advertise It has been arranged that President Cleveland will touch the button at Gray Gables on September 18th, and set in mo tion the machinery of and un furl the flags on the Cotton States and International ExposiN tion buildings. The principal address of the opening day will be delivered by an orator of na tional reputation whose name is not yet made public. The board of directors has directed the com mittee on ceremonies to issue an invitation to Booker T. Washing ton, President of the Tuskagee (Ala.) Normal and Industrial In stitute, to take part in the ex ercises of the opening day and to deliver an address on that oc casion, thus recognizing the negro race in the official program. Two Convicts Killed. olina, who continued as pastor for four like the Defender's, but straight years- up and down. At the too this in 1007, i. 1. vann, necame pastor, lpn1 li3! t1cirWn1d r,l- remaining tor two years. I " wug Rev. C. J. Jones succeeded him and 8 to 10 feet higher at the forward in turn was followed by Rcv. Jno. E. I ond than aft TIip tnnmMCitr Wli -1 if Ttrli r Ci i 1 1 min ictAf nf nUn.l , ' :: - " about 33 feet, while the length and among its people. ,-, .. - . The membership of the church is oouom IS about 20 teet. nearly three hundred and being strat- ilclL 1:5 auroP 01 aooxu I& ln- ceicallv located with resoect to the irom ine lorwarcl end to the - I . Chowan Association is a Baptist point ISternpost on the bottom of the of much importance. Ilead. x ne raKe 01 uie sternpost is about 20 degrees, while the rake of the sternpost on the Defender is about 40 degrees. THE SOUTHERN DENTISTS. SHORT AND NEWSY. The town of Clinton has vo ted a school tax of fifty cents on the $100 valuation and 1.50 on each poll, which is the heaviest school tax ever voted in the State. Tn,:..i. r -Limitv yji a man ruling in twenty-four hours 453 miles on a bicycle. That is Louis Grimm's record at Cleveland, Ohio. rr 4 - 1 wenty norses could not make the distance infortv eight hours. Here is Georgia cotton that is While the convicts on the State farm, in Northampton county, were being taken to the dykes on the Roanoke river, last Saturday, three attempted to es cape; two, colored, were killed. The third escaped. Killed Her Children Through a Mistake. Las Saturday morning at New Berne a colored woman, Hat tie Outlaw, killed her two little children, aged 3 and 8 years, re spectively, a girl and boy, by ad ministering a dose of strychnine by mistake for'quinine. The Texas' Trial Trip. NEXT ANNUAL MEETING TO BE HELD IN ATLANTA DUR ING THE EXPOSITION. Dr. E. H. Peadles, of Dan ville. Va., corresponding Secre tary of the Southern Dental As sociation, has issued a notice of the next annual meeting ot this association to be held in Atlanta Ga., during the great Cotton States and International Exposi tion. This is the largest dental cotton: Near the flourishino- association in the world and rcp- city of Cordele a picnic party resentatives will be present from composed of several thousand a riumber of foreign countries as people, old and young, recently wcu as rom each State in the assembled in a cotton field and Union. This meeting will be After almost five years' work and the expenditure of over $3, 000,000 Niagara has finally been harnessed and a power generates by a monster 5 ,000 horse-power dynamo of the Catarac Construe tion Company, is now sending out electricity for coiniuercia use. The first power was de livered to the works of the Pitts burg Reduction Company this week, when dynamo No. 2 in the Construction Company's power house was set iu motion numerous swines for the rhil. &in its session on the dren were put no on the lnrPr November next. limbs of the cotton stalks. At lanta Constitution. 5th of NORFOLK TO HAMBURG. Married in a Buggy. At Clarksville, Tenn.. J. T Hite, a carpenter, eloped with Miss Annie Halliburton, the 16 year-old daughter of Dave Halli burton, a carpenter, and they Were married by Squire Cald well while seated in a buggy iu front of the magistrate's resi dence. After learning that his daughter had married Hite, Halliburton proceeded to the hotel where the couple had reg istered and persuaded them to go ionic with him. They had gone but a short distance when Halli burton drew a revolver and shot Hite, the bullet taking effect in Hite's head. Hite then assault ed Halliburton with the pistol. Hite will probably recover. Halliburton is not very seriously injured. PAPER SOCKS. ToTsuch an extent has the horse been superseded by elec tric and cable railroads, the bi cycle and other new methods of transportation, that the question A REGULAR MONTHLY STPAM SHIP SERVICE TO BE ESTABLISHED. The HamburgsAmerican Line which now has resrular freight of what rn Hn ritb i. i. i ,, ,"' -"-iMiius aml passenger steamship lines of hone, rn the ranches in le from MmireliU lioston.Philadel- ivuaiduu iortnwest has become The steam trial of the recent ly completed, Battleship Texas will take place without delay, probably between the istand 5th of September. The course will a serious problem. Large bands of horses in Oregon and Wash ington now have almost no value. The railroads refuse to ship them East unless the freight is paid in advance, fearing that the ani mals will not bring enough to pay the freight bills, and it is costing the owners more to keep and tend the horses than they are worth. Horses that a few years ago were worth $50 a piece have lately sold for$2 to $3 each. Portsmouth Star, phia, Baltimore and New Orleans, has decidedto establish monthly steamship service from Norfolk to Hamburg, to be in creased as the needs of the trade may demand. The first steamer to leave Nor folk on this line will be the Po laria, which will sail October 8th, and steamers will leave regularly j rate there is no reason why The day of the paper collar passed away some years ago,and, though paper is used to-day in many more forms than ever dreamed of a few decades back, this cheap article ot haberdash ery has almost disappeared from the market. But there is prom ise that it will have a worthy successor in the paper sock, says Shoe and Leather Facts, which is the latest novelty to be ground out of the pulp mill. The me chanism has been perfected to produce a paper yarn of such consistency thai it is capable of being woven into fabric soft enough for wear. A special merit is the cheapness of this newly-devised material, socks be ing produced at a retail price of about 3 cents a pair. At this the Good Steady Customers i 1 Those are the results you want from your advertis ing. It is people of this j sort who read the Fisher- i man & Farmer read it rcg - (h ularly and it-ad it thor- n oughly. You can keep in . u touch with them only by l advertising iu these col- minis. I ell them what you have to sell tlu-v i 1 know a good thing when 'j 11 tL..,- . 4 1 J. H. BELL, The Tinner. Manufacturer and Repairer of Tip and Slt Iron Ware. Roofing and Guttering A SI'ICCIAITY. ltopttf i-r of " Ml v '(.. ,11 work attended to promptly. Satisfaction jMiaraJiJeed. Only first class shop hi Kdentou POSTED. All persons are hereby notified that the grounds of the Ivknton Agl. and Fish Fair have been posted, and that any one tres passing thereon for any purpose- whatever will be prosecuted to he full extent of the law. Jno. C. Hon i), Sec'ty. Clubs for ball practice may get pecial permit from the Scc'ty. Adose of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral tak en in time has prevented many a fit ofj sickness and saved numerous lives. ! wrn nnp vnn mr -Kf !, This proves the necessity of keeping . -r a , , , . this incomparable medieino t blS Falr we are goinS to hold 111 be from Hampton Roads through be readily reached at all hours of October. iVlso prepare some, ; paper socks have a ready market ' the Virginia Capes. y mght- ! thine to exhibit. May it be followed by 'a 1 o-cent 1 thereafter every month. The j world may not be supplied with United States Shipping Com-, j foot coverings. At three cents pany will act as agent for theia Pair the bachelor's life will be line in Norfolk. j come gladsome and happy. It ; is said that substances can be Th Big Fair in October. I uscd in thc preparation of this ! materials to make the socks so ni f,ii- n tt:, nv.11 ! impervious to water that they fore falling apart. This, too, is a great boon. Alay the 3-cent Gold and Silver . H-H-f t PLATING! Having made special arrange ments with a first-clxss Gold and Silver Plating Establishment, I offer myself to thc public as agent for same, an quote thc fol lowing prices for plating. GOLD, Watch Cases fx. 00 each. Vest chains .50 cents each Queen " .30 " Necklace .30 " Rings .30 ' CufFButtons .30 " Ear-rings i.30 SILVER. Watch Cases from f r.oo up. Table Spoons, per doj., 13.00 Dessert 2.5o Tea " 2.oo n; JEL BYRD. Watchmaker, Jeweler and! Optician, shoe !
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 30, 1895, edition 1
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