Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / Sept. 6, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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Pn fhi'rPTTnrn jh mi ir.Ai'r v-ocrie ad -IX TUK FISHERMAN & FARMER AM) i-f.K TIi iol Ifti-M (iron-. AND GET THE FISHERMAN & FARMER FOR ONE YEAR. arm 32 Columns. A. H. Mitchell, Editor and Business Manager. )XE DOIxIxAR per year in advance. Located in the Finest Fish, Truck and Farming Section in North Carolina. Established 1886. EDENTON, N. C FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 1895. VI MI- BOMB, Attorney m Law. i:d i:ToN, n. c. p. , t: c n the Superior Courts of ... ., ,.. :i(!oii!iii counties, aim 111 Vs,'.: :vme Court at Raleigh. , t -lions promptly made. ;. P. BOGERT, 1 ij-mtoii and Moclianicral SNTIST KrftMiton, N (. .-, visited when requested. r 11 II. K. L. Watkins. HARRIS & WATKINS, arroRNEYS m Law, Kfirntmt, ZY. C. r ... lr: tt..a, ( ;:i noiu 01 iiiy icv iiuici. l'r.uliee in .'ill the Courts of the ColU-ctions 'promptly made. SI?I.E INQUIRY MAY DOLLARS. SAVE YOD ''ritt: fur prices before p!at.:' wi ui-.'.ers fr gravestones or t:.'i:ifU-ry work. i ) 'si.'iis -out free. CO Ul' Klt'S -MAUHLK WOUKs. V. & 115 Hank St., Norfolk Vn. For Sale- ill!' it Svnith east corner of Kin:' v.wi o.ikinu streets well adapted to iiiv'Ki l business enterprise having il;tr-.' u.iU r front. Said lot is about ,;d lai wide and 175 feet deep; can be -uM on ;" ' id terms. Apply to Mrs. B. 1 Iui-h or in her absence to her :.'L'!it, M 1 . I,. F. Ziegler, Edenton, N. C. LAND FOR SALE. That valuable tract of laud at :c head of Main street, known ''Holmes," containing about i- acres. Also the "Quarter ract" recently owned by Mr. T. !. Warren, containing about 233 :rcs. which I will sell in sections ::fand 50 acres. Terms easy. RICHARD DILLARD. Aiu'tioneor. Hiving been appointed Countv tioneer and given bond Icrcfor, all persons are forbid- p to exercise the virtues of xolliee under penalty of law. A. J. Bateman, road Street, Edenton, N. C. NOTICE ! bond & Makely, existing .ween D. G. Bond and M. heivhv dissolved, by the f the undersigned. .e:ested will please take -'.v. i. M. MAKEi.Y, A Word to the Wisi sDpj A HE IMMENSE, means dollars to the This far: iers and people gener- alllv. This money will go into all channels of business and Wlbea rich advertisers. harvest for O 7 Q" (O v -- r- v J fi&pmer carefully read by the 'armers and laboring ?etlofthis section and '0u Want a gjopdly tionofthe Fall trade Von , . . --uoum insert your a vertisement at once. HON. CHO. COOKE, j 0CTA1USJME DEAD. Gnan&stHThe Secretary of State P0PULAKAPP01NYMEHT TIIK XEW SECRETARY EXT K RED i UPON IIIS DUTIES TUESDAY j morning. ! Hon. Charles Franklin county M. Cooke, ol I has been an-1 pointed Secretary ol btate to fill j last Friday afternoon, Capt. Oc the vacancy caused by the death tavious Coke, Secretary of State of the late Octavious Coke. Tin-i new Secretary of State was born the 10th day of March. 1844. He served in the Confederate army with distinction through out, being; badly wounded at Petersburg. Since that time he has practiced law in his native county of Franklin. In every relation oflife he has always been recognized as a strong man and a leader. He entered pub lie life in 1874 when he was elected to the State Senate and served one term. Distribution of Profits Among Employes. As a preventive of strikes and dissatisfaction among workman we think the following the cor rect remedy; The Directors of the Crawford Bicycle Manufacturing Company of Hagerstown, Md., have order ed a distribution of $10,000 out of the profits of the company to their employes. The discribu tion will be made prorata ac cording to the standing of the workmen, and will include all those who have been employed in the factory for three months or longer in the past year, unless discharged for cause. In addi tion, the directors decided to ad vance the wages of their day workers 10 per cent. The $10,000 will be paid on the next two pay days. Between 600 and 700 hands are employed. The force will be increased to 1,000 as soon as the extensive addi tions now making to the factory are completed. The 0. D. S. S. Co., Lose a Fine Steamer. The Old Dominion Steam ship Company's fine new steam er, Isle of Wight, was found on fire early Saturday morning at their wharf at Smithfield, Isle of Wight county, Va. She burned to the water's edge and sunk. No lives were lost. She was a side wheeler, 160 feet long, 29 feet beam and 9 feet hold, elec tric lighted and with capacity for 800 passengers. The loss is $75,000; insured. It is not known how the fire originated. Lumber Fire at Portsmouth. Fire destroyed two dry kilns of lumber belonging to the Portsmouth Lumber Manufac turing Company at Portsmouth, Va., on Monday last. About 30,000 feet were totally destroyed and the remainder badly dam aged. Loss $12,500; partly in sured. Doomed to Hell. A man at High Shoals, Ga., who made himseli busy ridicul ing religion while a revival was in progress was struck dumb while the preacher was telling an experience with an inndcl. The scoffer was seen to tremble, turn pale, cry and try to speak, but he was dumb. He wrote on a card: "I am doomed to hell. There is a hell. Pray for me. Wm. Haygood." The effect upon that congre gation was electrical. It seemed as if they were perfectly awe stricken. The services proceed ed, and the religious feeling man ifested was very noticeable. In the presence of such a striking incident the hardest of sinners quivered and became alarmed at his state of mind. A hacking cough keeps the bronchial tubes in a state of constant irritation, which, if not speedily removed, may lead to chronic bronchitis. No prompt er remedy can be found than Ayer s Cherrv Pectoral. Its effect is immedi ate and the result permanent. Don't send your printing away from home when you can get it done as cheap and as good at this print shop. Give us a trial. ofNortl Carolina. TYPIIOID FEVER, FROM WHICH HE HAD I5EEX SUFFERING FOR FIVE WEEKS, ENDS LIS HONORABLE AND BRILLIANT CAREER. At twenty minutes to four. 01 iNortl1 Carolina, died at his nwiiic a.L raieigii, airer over nve weeks illness of typhoid fever, during nearly all of which time he was delirious. Thus ends the life of a noble man, a genial companion, de 1, ... a. n 1 1 r. r- voted to his friends as well as to the State, and always ready to serve them when in his power. I He was born in Williamsburg, Va., in 1 84 1, his father being a wealthy planter there. At the beginning of the war he entered the Confederate service and served gallantly throughout the war, attaining the rank of Cap tain. He was twice wounded: at Sharpsburg and at Five Forks. After the war he studied law and made his home at Edenton, N. C, becoming a citizen in Aug. 2Sth, 1862. Capt. Coke was the Democratic candidate in Chowan county for the Constitutional Convention, but was defeated, the county being strongly Re publican. In 1872 he was the Democratic presidential elector from the First District, and made a brilliant canvass which gave new hope and courage to the Democracy. In 1870, he was one of the Democratic can didates for the State Senate in the first senatorial distrist and was elected by a majority of 319, though the district was usually Republican by a very large ma jority. In the Senate he was an acknowledged leader and led the fight for the system of county government which has proved such a blessing to the people of the Eeastern counties. In the same session he stood in the leadership against the resolus tion of instruction to the North Carolina Congressmen to vote for the bill to approve the in famous election count, by which Hayes was seated. He was an intrepid and fearless leader, im bued with the love of Democracy, and his career in the Senate showed him to be a warm parti san of the highest type. His resolution and aggressiveness and ability won for him a host of friends in all sections of the State, and when he made one Capt. Coke was the type of man whose friends were linked to him with hooks of steel. He had nothing too good for them , and he made them always feel the warmth of his regard. He began the practice of the law in Raleigh, a short while after his term in the Senate, and appear ed in some noted causes, but pol itics absorbed so much of his time that he ultimately aban doned the law, and devoted him self to the cultivationjof his farms. His purse was always freely at the disposal of his party, and it may be safely said that no man in the State, in proportion to his means, has given so liberally to his party in this generation. In 1880 Capt. Coke was elect ed chairman of the Democratic State Executive Committee, and it was in this position that he rendered most efficient service to the party. It was at a time when the lines were closely drawn and the Republicans were exerting their best efforts to win, and the victory for the Democracy that year was very largely due to the chairman's efforts. In 18S4 Capt. Coke's name was presented to the Democratic State Conven tion for the nomination for Gov ernor. There was a close fight for the nomination but Gov. Scales won. In 1 89 1 Capt. Coke was ap pointed Secretary of State by Gov. Fowle to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the la mented Col. William L. Saund ers. The Democratic State Con vention the year following nomis nated him by acclamation for Secretary of State, and he was elected by a large majority. If he had lived he would have been renominated in 1 896. Captain Coke was twice mar ried. His first wife was Miss BettieWood, of Edenton, to whom he was married in 1867. She died in 1876, leaving two children, Caroline Wood and Oc- ST. PAUL'S CHURCH. TJIIC ;v. IiOr.lCRT JiRIvNT DKAM-, I). P. ricc Tor. One of the oldest organizations in North Carolina is St. Paul's Tarish, a picture of whose church is given here with. The Parish was organized in the year 1701, and the present very substantial brick building was begun about the year 1736, and finished sometime before '76. Such work is seldom done in these days; the thickness of the side walls is twenty eight inches, and of the tower walls thirty six inches; the brick is of better quality than that made now in this neighborhood. It is said that the bricks were imported from the Old Country. It is thus one of the "Colo nial Churches." . 4'. one of those built while this country was yet a Colony or dependency of Unglaud. The English government acquired its claim to this part of the new world by the discovery of Roanoke Island, on our coast, and its occupancy in 1584 by Amadas and Barlowe, in the name ot their Queeu. I11 all the proposals for settlement of the country the right of the English Crown to it was acknowl edged and in the various charters grant ed to intending settlers one of the pur poses had in view was stated to be the extension of Christ's Kingdom, the spread of the Gospel. The administration of Holy Baptism to Manteo, a chieftain of the Indians, August 13th, 1587, and to Virginia Dare, the first child of white parents, a week later, is evidence that the early English paid same respect to the ordinances of religion. In the charters given and in the tavius, who lived with their father at the time of his death. In 1879, Capt. Coke married Miss Kate Fisher, daughter ofthe late Charles F. Fisher, of Raleigh. Mrs. Coke survives her husband, the issue of the marriage being two daughters, Kate and Julia and two sons, Jeff Fisher and Richard. Captain Coke was the son of John Coke, who married Eliza Hankins, both from cl.l Virginia families long settled in the vicin ity of Williamsburg. Four brothers and two sisters survive the deceased, namely, ex-United States Senator Richard Coke, of Waco, Texas; Messrs. Alex, and John A. Coke, both prominent lawvers in Richmond, Va., and Dr. 'Lucius C. Coke, of Goose Neck, Martin county, N. C. The two surviving sisters are Mrs. Motley and Mrs. Alice Wilson both widows being in Virginia. At the meeting of. the Council ot State the Capitol was ordered to be draped in mourning as a mark of respect to Octavius Coke. Secretary Telfair was directed to procure floral offerings; Messrs. Worth and Furman were in structed to prepare resolutions expressing the sense of the Gov ernor and Council at Capt Coke's death. Chief Clerk Batchelor reported to the Council that af ter consultation with Capt. Cook's family he was charged by them to say that, while they deeply appreciated the compli ment of the request that the re mains lie in state in the Capitol as a token ofthe esteem in which Capt. Coke was held by his co laborers, they preferred that un til the remains were consigned to their last resting place they should remain in the home he loved so well and where he was beloved. Which is worse, imprisonment for life or a life-long disease, like scrofula, for example? The former, certainl y would be preferable were it not that Ayei's Sarsaparilla can always come to the rescue and give the pocr suiTerer health, strength, and happiness New York City claims to have felt an earthquake shock on Monday morning last, which lasted ten seconds. No damage done. "Fundamental Constitutions" pro vision was made for the establishment ofthe Christian Religion according to the Church of England, while freedom of conscience was allowed to dissenters who professed belief in God. By act of Legislative Assembly of the Province, in 1701, the Parish of St. Paul, in Chowan precinct, was estab lished, and twelve men were named to serve as its Vestry. These met and qualified 011 December 19th, 1701. The minute book of their proceedings is now in possession of their successors in office; it shows that the present build ing is the third in order of erection for the Parish, the first "twenty-five feet long, with posts in the ground," having been put up in 1702, and the second "forty feet long and twenty-four feet wide," in 170S, both of wood. The church is placed east and west at the centre of the church yard, and about it are the graves of men notable in the past Governors of the Province, servants of the public, and of others dear to us now living. It has become necessary to restrict the freedom of burial. But no 011c would have any change made in the picture to be seen to-day the venerable church in God's acre, embowered in trees, festooned with 'ivv Kreen', its spire lifting the I holy cross high above everything else I .... 1 1 in the town it is mueeua vision buiui has charmed many a visitor and solaced those who have been so fortunate as to spend their days in Edenton. "Beaver Hill Cemetery," a local en terprise, purely public spirited and beneficial, with a holding of twenty five acres, stands ready to second the Vestry in its restrictive policy, and the town authorities, in discouraging bur ials anywhere within the town limits. Thotographs of old St. Paul's may be had of one of the. Parochial Societies through the Rector. THE COUNTY AFFAIRS. The County Commissioners met at the Court Hpuse.Monday, September 2nd, 1895, with a full Board in attendance. The min utes of last meeting were read and approved, and the following business transacted: BILLS ALLOWED; Henry Hawkins, $3.00, care ol Emma Russell for the mouth of August. Z. W. Evans, $14.83, for 2 mouths supplies to county home, salt and molasses barrell, and lumber for bridge. Jack Hoskins, $150, to assist in his support. J. H. Robinson, $69.80 for board of prisoners, T. K. fees, scouring jail, &c, J. M. Forehand, Sy0 for services as Assessor in 2nd, township. L. W. Parker, $ro. 15 tor tax receipt books, 1 blank book and care of court house. H. C. Privott, $26.06 for court dockets, and blanks for office. John J. Chappell, $2.00 for the care of Eliza Chappell. E. C. Welch, 32.70 for serving 6 notices on road overseers. D. E. Byrum, $9.25, for board and care of Bettie Bunch. W. P. Jones, $22.00 for lumber and work on Brick mill bridge. T, D. Byrum, $33.40 for 1 day clerk to board, minutes for pub,, issuing and recording orders, 1 day and mileage to county home, notices to school committee, transcribing taxes on receipt books, Sec. ORDERED: That W. P. Jones examine Rocky Hock bridge and have same rebuilt. That T. D. Byrum draw off the names from the tax list in order to revise the jurors box. That Joseph R. Taylor hi re lieved of license tax for selling washing machines, as he is doing such business to enable himself to attend college to study for the ministry. T. D. Byrum, Clerk. IS URLDKKY. HE WILL NOT GET HIS SALARY. CANNOT EK PAID JL'NTIL IIIS AP POINTMENT IS CONFIRMED BY THE SENATE. Minister Ransom's troubles have not ceased. First his sal ary wr.s withheld for months, then his appointment as minis ter was declared illegal and the office vacated. It was thought the re-appointment by the Presi dent on August 24 would end the complications but there is an other hitch in the matter of al lowing exSeuator Ransom's salary as Minister to Mexico, Mr. Willie, the Acting Auditor of the Treasury for the State De partment, having decided that Mr. Ransom's salary cannot be paid until his appointment is confirmed by the Senate. This is unfortunate and altogether embarrassing to the Minister, but he will proceed to his post in a few days, however, and trust to Congress to make the matter right. The Acting Auditor based his decision on the law, which says: "Section 1761 No money shall be paid from the Treasury as salary to any person appoint ed duiing the recess of the Sen ate to fill a vacancy in any exist ing office, if the vacancy existed while the Senate was in session and was by law required to Le filled by and with the advice of the Senate, until such appointee has been confirmed by the Sen ate." The Habit of Saving. The French suffer less from panics and depressions than any other people on the globe, and it is because thrift is the basis of their prosperity. In France nearly every person saves something for a rainy day. The habit is almost universal, and those who earn the least are sure to be found in the great saving class. The French sav ings banks have more than 8,- 000,000 depositors, and their de posits amount to about $800,000,. 000 and this large sum is made up of small amounts. The French schools teach the children to save money, and the most frequent prize given to a bright child is a savings bank book with a small sum to the credit of the owner. This is given where in this country we would give a medal or a book. When a community has a lot of money deposited in savings banks it is easy to borrow money without going to outside capital ists. The local banks are pre pared to loan to home people at a moderate interest. In large cities and factory towns of the Eastern States the savings banks are the great safeguards of the poor wage earners against hard times, and if the saving habit was as general here as in France our people would have passed the recent financial depression without seriously feeling it. Every child should be taught the importance of saving, with out being avaricious or niggard ly. We need more thrift. The average wageearner wasts enough in in his lifetime to make him comfortable in his old age. We should take a lesson from the French in this respect. They know how to enjoy life, and at the same time work hard and save money. Atlanta Constitu tion. LIST OF JURORS. The following is a list of Jurors drawn for Fall term of Court, 1SS5: W. j. Dail, Ohas. Blount, col. Iw'nce Bembury col.T. J. Ilasket, V. R. Chappel. John F. Hobbs, J. W. Overton, J. C. Thompson, Elbert Bunch, P. II. Brian, L. D. Bond, Thos. E. Lamb, James E. Moran, J. M. Peel, R. L. Bunch, B. E. Byrd, J. II. Perry, J. W. Simpson, John Skinner, Ed'd Skinner, col. JohnR. Copeland, Israel A. Lane, E. J. Baker, John G. Wood, James V.Winslow Jacob M. Boycc, Miles Jordan, col. T.'C. White, Jackson S.Rountree, Chas. E. Nixon, Josiah Cofield, J. C. Bond, T. B. Bland, F. V. Byrum, T. E. White, II. L. Richardson. A bale of new cotton, the first in the State, was sold at Morven, N. C, on Friday last. It weigh ed 558 pounds and brought 8 cts. SHORT AND NEWSY Corea is getting onto the ! American way of doing business. ! She lias just had a lot of postage stamps made m tins country, and will institute a postal service. I). A. Bass, a merchant of t ! lauta, was shot in an alky be-. hind the Aragon hotel while on his way to his store; then- is doubt whether it was murdei or suicide. .1 Patent office reports show that over three hundred patents are! annually issued to woman in1 ventors. Some ot them are quite useful, too, and out of the lllie OI IhingS 111 UlUCn WOinCU, Would be supposed to be interest ed. After carefully deliberating a California jury called to act in the case of four men who were hanged by a mob found that they had "died by strangulation." Some juries can find out almost anything. Some of the farmer.-: of Flor ida are catching on to raising their home supplies. In some counties corn is now being sold to the merchants instead of Ik s iug bought from them as former ly- Judge Thayer rendered an opinion at Philadelphia deciding that the city could take the Liberty bell to the Atlanta Ex position. The opinion was de livered in connection with a bill in equity recently filed by cer tain well known citizens. TheWcldou AVrcisav it learns! on pretty good authority that a line of electric boats will be put on the canal between Weldon and Roanoke Rapids and the boats will be run by electricity between the two towns, to be known in the future as the twin cities. Henry Tyson .seven years ago, murdered John King in Denver, Col. He has spent three years in solitary confinement, and has been sentenced to death three times. Last Saturday he was declared free on a legal techni cality and walked out ot prison. A handsome solid silver ser vice of eight pieces, a large pic ture of Minneapolis and an ele-. gant upright piano of Minneap olis manufacture were presented to the cruiser Minneapolis, the "Queen of the Navy," by the citizens of Minneapolis. John Wesley, a negro, who has just completed a five-year term in the penitentiary for an attempted criminal assault upon a girl, made another unsuccess ful attempt Friday night on an aged widow of Manchester, Mo. A posse with a rope has been searching for him and ii caps tured he will be strung up. Wanted to Borrow Him Awhile. A genial I'hiladeiphian, who for obvious reasons does not care to have his name printed on this occasion, secured a parlor car seat on an express train for Read ing a few days ago, and as he was about to pass through the gates was surprised to hear him self accosted in feminine tones with the somewhat startling question: "Please, mister, could I borrow you for awhile?" Looking around he found two buxom women, who hastily and hesitatingly explained that they were riding on a pass made out in the name of a gentleman and wife, and as the gentleman fas not present, they wanted the genial-looking citizen to place his bought ticket at the disposal of one lady and take the other one under his wing, while he personated the absent owner of the pass. "Which is my wife?" he in quired with an inward qualm, lest his own absent better-half should hear the story. "You can take your choice, sir," said the lady in search of an escort, and he promptly did so by tucking the arm of the youngest fair one under his own and leading her into the car. The couple proved to be right jolly traveling companions, and the citizen's only regret in the tranaction was due to a fear that the story might leak out and get home ahead of him. But it didn't. Philadelphia Record. I Had Doctored 45 Yrs. Vhi. laiitl. V1 From the WltitnVKiuio. (Wist., I Irittol Another vur ! lr Fuuii't'k MivUclnr. I was vory luurh liko my m lhUT.Mnvruro tmd rMM-r 1 eruption lu-rpW'f.iro ro- ! y?rt,JIf ,p- n.i Hlaum HIMmnil', ..i.lytl... i.-M T,U.J tuy dsoa.x. I-.rv1;.rliiH f r a imrnivr t t y.r- aud It uus uft T.vutkU lr.'iuur.ivl Jy dm-tont to tx Suit Hhoum. At tho u: . f 11 I aflllctod with it. iui,l lit tlio Ot--"- of W I Wat ho tad I could h.'.riily walk. I found no r-)l f tint!! I romiiitMK't'd tuWlnJ Ir. FtMim-r's lil,.,' and Liver Ikmcdv aud Nitvo Tonlr. and la tlnvo tiiont hs 1 w km cu JoylnK yi tod health iift.-r hulYortnff More titan ft years.' A toiiulu r of euro .uullv us won derful by lr. 1 'emu r Keiucdlo. will upvt lu tllb iiiivr later." Uiood nncl Liver Dr.Fenner'ssNeverFails. Nervo Tonic ii a $arsafarilia-Mindr(ikt'-Pt inic' i Pine Alterative, Nerve Tonic anJ ' Kestorativr Compound. CERTAIN AS THE LAW OF GRAVITATION. Physics from Mood, liver and tissues all worn-out particles ami impurities', without weakening but strengthening instead, and Itostorcs th Ntvm. Cures II. :td;o-h. Py pepsin, OonM Ipa tlou. Hud Itreatii. SWlii I(Ne:iM's, Did Scire ljlzzltiesri. S.-t-.:ftil:t. Genera! DehlMty. eti-. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Sample free. Mother! Ktep your child's stomach and Itow. els healthy wl.h Ur. Keuner's Sonnatorltt. The Iw.-q laxative, uud corrupt I vo knuwu. Dr, Fenner'8 Soothing Syrup. AllayMjjrrltatlim and irlves refroshltitt sleep, lir. Fer.ner'a Worm Syrup, "llroutchi 1" worms from oiirelilld. M rs.Sherlrk. Klldn.O.- Jr.Feniier'hl'AMU.v( Suit Uheum Ointment, llcsWor bWlucrunUous. I'ilca, Burva, Cuto tto Soj' Wallrr a. Lo.u . Good Steady Hi !!! I'.i. Customers Those arc the UMilU ou want from your advertis ing. It is people of this sort v3m road the Fioher raan & Farmer n .id it re;; A' ii lit ularly . ouirhlv md i t.ad it thn You can l.eep in touch with ther.i only by advertising ::i tht col umns. Tel! them what you have t" know a g lod.tl .ell :i'.U tl:. when thev see it. J. H. BEX!., The Tinner. Manufacturer and Repairer f Ware. Roofing and Guttering A SI IK 'I A LTV. I ' I i !! ol'SldVCS. All work attended to promptly Satisl.'iet'on ;';::it:'::t'- d. Only first class shop i;i Jvlenlon POSTED. All persons are hereby notified that the grounds of the Kdentnr, Agl. and Fish Fair have been posted, and that any one ties passing thereon for any ptirpos. whatever will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Jxo. C. 1'ionii, Scc'ty. Clubs for ball practice may g 1 special permit from the Sec'ty. ;ii PLATING! Silver -: : : T: : :": :': Having made special arrange ments ftith a first-class Gold and Silver Plating Hstablishment, I offer myself to the public as agent for same, an quote the foK lowing prices for plating. GOLD Watch Cases $ i. oo each. Vest chain., .50 cents each Queen " .30 " ' Necklace .y " Rings Cnfl Buttons Ear-rings ,.30 ' Watch Cases from fi.ooup. Table Spoons, per doz., f 3.00 Dcs-sert " " 2.50 Tea " " 200 11. ia nviiD, Watchmaker, Jeweler aud Optician. Edentok, N. C-
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 6, 1895, edition 1
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