Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / April 24, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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The Fisherman 6c Farmer is THERE IH NO-es Xcw'spnpcr Race XIN EI.IZAHKTIICITY. It is a procession and the Fisherman Jfc Farmer leads it. THIS IS A rOlXTER lOK ()('. NEVER A TOMBSTONE It is alone, for live men ONE DOLLAR per Year, in Advance. ELIZABETH CITY, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 24 1896. Established 1886. 1 - -- I, 1 1 1 1 Hi 1 1 m - - - . . . . . ; - , - j - - -0$- Tlie ILieebclfLrs. isre-w"s;p3per of tlbe ZEIrst District- -b- I : ' I , j . , - t 1 , ' m M r. HE WARM WEATHER Sutrsrest Cooler Wearing Apparel I. An Exquisite line of Wash Goods, now opened for your inspection. When wesay wash goods we mean goods that will wash, and won't fade nor shrink, that have none of the vices of so called wash gods that won't stand water. We arc laying no traps for yon when We sell yon these Unusual, but V4 III J .... true, these artistic beauties with their sunshiny faces and bright absolutely last colors: wash like a cat's face. These new names may not be familiar to you but they are names ot the prettiest line of wash goods, ev.r sold at I2cts and 15 cents the yard. Come and see therm. Corded Swiss Mull, Jacconat Duchesse, Fulle Chatelaine, Fine Organdies, Crass Lawns, Linen Lawns, neat stripes, Dimities, Ducks, &e. Yard wide Percales, fast colors locts yard. We have just made one of the best deals with a large umbrella manufacturer, and will place on sale to-day, but fair warning is given that prices like these soon go when buyers know what buy- 1 1 tJn.nnit.-.i- foil t 1 1 1 1 I CIS iieie uo. iiwwcvci, wv. on ii ii sell these Ladies Sun Umbrellas at these prices just as long as the quantity last Let it be t ! i o rou ; 1 1 i v u -i de r stood , e ve 1 y Umbrella is wai rrute 1 to be well m.ide, f the In-st material and another unibrelh' will be given for every one that does not give s.ttisfactiou. Ladies lirge Sail Umbrellas Gloria cloth, fast hiaek at K8 cts. Vo i can't rct better $1.00 Ladies large size, best quality silk, natural handled, of all the line wood Acta, Weiehel, Fine trimmed handles of sterling sil ver, the best umbrellas in to wn for this price, $1.25 and 1.50. A fine assortment of handles on all of these umbrellas. Ulack mourning handl.-s, fine quality silk at 31.25, S1.3S and $175. You must see this lot of Um brellas, if you intend to get a new one this season. We know a gooi tiling when we see it, so will y mi. Mitch km. in The New Mnn. PAUL Pv EVE RE'S RIDE. Auniversary of Trie Battle of Lexington Appropriately Observed. Patriot's day, commemorating the battle of Lexington, was ap priately observed as a general holiday in Boston and State of Massachusetts Monday. Public buildings and exchanges were closed and business generally was suspended. Hell ringing and salutes, pa rades, military reunions and meetings of patriotic orders, children's entertainments, re ligious festivals and various sports, including bicycle runs, the opening of the cricket season and base ball, made up the gen eral programme. At Lexington the celebration commenced early. At 5 o'clock a fife and drum coips marched over the route taken by Paul Revere and all the bells in the town rang for an hour. Attorney Law EDENToX, X. C. r. -actio - in the Superior Courts of d; - wan anil nujoiumg counties, aud iu the umeme Cuart at Raleigh. tWColIectious promptly made. Shepard & 1 LI IT 13 iiikI FIRE Insurance Ag-ents, EDENTON, N. C. Only strong and reliable Companys represented and at rates as low as obtainable with safe and sound insurance. " DR. C. P. BOGERT, Surgeon and Mechanical DEITIST Edentoii, N Patients visited when requested. SOUTHERN PROSPECTS A Bright Little Item on the Pro gress of the South. Allien attention is now neing paid to the progress of the South, and its natural inducements to the settler. The Fitzgerald pro ject has received such commen dation, and an equal amount of condemnation In re:erence to the development of the South generally the Augusta Chronicle says: "Everything seems to be moving together for the develop ment of the South. Sectional prejudice, in so far as it controls popular action, has had it quietus. The development of this country moves m great tidal waves. The geld fever popu lated and built up the Pacific Coast, and the era of transconti nental railroad building peopled the great West. In order to give business foi these lines, their managers turn ed a great tide of immigration into the country tributary to them, and from all sides went up, the cry, 'Go West, young man.' That era has passed its climax. The West is peopled, and the day for phenomenal de velopment and rapid multiplica-. tion 01 values is passed, the people art restive, and are look ing out for some new HI Dorada. The barriers which for a gen eration have kept them from the Southern States have been broken down, and all eyes are turned to the South. Just as for the past few decides :.he tide of immigration ha:; been poured in to West, so for the next L-w de cades it must come to the South. The Natio: is awaken 10 rue ricli x)ssionilie.s ot tins section. tli What has accomplished already is sufficient to point u the pos sibilities of the future. The time is ripe for great develop ment. There are million- of acres untenanted and uncultiva ted. There is room for millions of people and there is a living ior al! who will work intelligently and industriously. Let our people embrace every opportu nity that is offered to advertise our section of the country, and employ everv means of bringing here men and money from else where. A great era of prosperity and development is dawning for the South. Shall We measure up the demands of the hour, and improve the opportunities that lie before our own Cincinnati Gazette. peopie?" Shooting Affray at Montgomery, Alabama. A difficulty took place Tues day morning at the union pas senger station Montgomery, Ala., between R. H. Kennedy, sheriff of Dallas county, and the two Wood brothers, Mardis aud Percy of vSelma. Mardis Wood is a special agent in the revenue ser vice, with headquarters at' New Orleans. Kennedy opened fire with a double-barrelled shotgun on Mardis Wood, and Percy Wood took his brother's part. Both Wood brothers were seri ously shot. Percy Wood is thought to be dying. Mardis Wood may recover, though he is is shot in both .arms near the shoulder. The cause of the difficulty is said to be the aliena tion of Kennedy's wife's affec tions bv Mardis Wood. A Household Remedy. Aud it never fails to cure Rhcuma tisir Catarrh, Timples, Blotches and all diseases arising from impure blood, is Botanic Klood Balm. ' B. 15. B.) Thou sands endorse it as the best remedy ever offered to mankind. The thousands of cures performed by this remedy are almost miraculous. Try it. Only $1.00 per bottle. For sa.le by druggists. See advertisement elsewhere. The B&y in Business. ;'Vhiii kind of a boy does a busiuc.-js man want?" replied a shrewd practical man of many i concerns, the other day. ) "Well, I will tell you. In the first place, he wants a boy who doesn't kow too much; business men generally like to run their own business, and prefer some one who will listen to their way .1 1. - 4--t 4-n foo.ll fl-liatll ratuci new K111K.S, coaoiy, uicy went a prompt ooy one Wlio uuua- stands seveJi o clock as exactly seven, not sen minutes past; third,' an industrious boy, vvho is not afraid tp put in a little extra work in'casO ot" need ;fourth , an honest boy honest -u hs servicers well as xn the waiter onrl rents'. 3rd tifth i loses his own now a;tliert' r1 at1irP.a hov "2now iil ieep success a. iaevea by iiood's Sarsapa- good-natured boy v : v tilIa ana lhe many words of hti temner even it .l----"rvFlJ. has receTved. Wealth of Thje States Kansas is worth $460,801,689. Vermont is worth $86,805,775, Arkansas is valued at 89,409, 364. The State 01 Maine is worth 235.978,716. Oregon is estimated to be worth ,$52,522,084. Delaware might be bought for S59.95 1 .643. South Carolina's wealth is es timated at $133,560,135. Louisiana, sugar plantations and all, is worth 5190, 162,439. Colorado was estimated ;at the last census at 74,171,693. Texas has in its enormous ter ritory a wealth of $320,364,5 1 5 California was valued by the assesors of 1890 at 584,758,036. New Jersey's real and personal property is valued at 702,5 18, 361. Alabama, including cotton fields and iron mines, is worth 122,867,228. Iowa, including its farm land and manufactories, is worth $398,671,251. Washington, including real and personal property, is valued at $23,810,693. Utah, including the' improve ments made by the Mormons, is worth $24,775,279. Indiana is a rich State,, its property of all kinds reaching a total of 727,815,141. The wealth of Wisconsin, in cluding the pine forests, amounts to Jr.40u.203, 1 85. Kentucky, including blue grass laud, blooded horses and tobacco, is worth 380,743,58.1. Illinois is one of the wealthiest of tin Western States, its valua tion reaching 786,603,394. West Virginia's wealth, most ly 111 real estate and mines, is valued at 146,981,608. In wealth Pennsylvania ranks next to New York, having an assessed valuation of $1,783, 459,016. Florida has a smaller valuation than most of the Southern States, being estimated at only $30, 9 5", Zoo. Nortii Carolina, although a large part of its territory is 1111 cultivatable land, iias a valuation of o 1 56,100,202. Connecticut is enormously rich in comparison to its size, having an assessed valuation of $327.i7o35. Ohio comes very close to Penn sylvania in the matter of wealth, having an assessed value of 1, 534,480,508. Georgia has developed greatly since the war, the estimate now reaching the respectable total of $251,963,124. Minnesota has developed more rapidly than any other Noith western State. Its assessed val ation is 258,028,687. Missouri ranks high among the Western States, the assessed valuation of real and personal property being 561,939,771. Rhode Island, in proportion to size and population, is among , uie rieiiesu ui uui tummuu wealths, being assessed at $252, 536,673. Massachusetts is one of the richest of the States, having a valuation of real and personal property amounting to $1,583, 756.S02. Virginia is not so wealthy as before the war, at least in the es timate of the first families, but still has a valuation of $3 18, 331, -441. Iu 1850 the total wealth of this country was 7,136,000,000. about $308 per capita; in i860 it had risen to $16,1 50,000,000," r;r about 514 per head; in 1870 ,'it was $30,099,000,000, or abont $780 per head; in iSo it liaa risen to $42,642,00000, .r f,gro per head, and in 1S90 V0 $62, 500,000, or 1,000, per hei. What Nxt? An exchange, says that a ma chine for catching flies off the backs of cattl. an(i s0 affording the animal relief and comfort, has been invengd by a farmer in Madison cunty, Kentucky. The inventive.' genius of the Ameri can people is 'something won derful. -. spring Time j - w,,cn ev-ryoue feels the need oisui; LjjuOd purifying, strength in vigoratvr, and Leillth nroduHnn- medi cine. Ti.- ,;.rj ,li?r;f Qf Hood's Sarsa parill'A the reaso i of its widespread populjjjty, its unequaled success is its be; recommendation The whole system js Suscepion to the most good from a tnedicine like . Hood's Sarsapa rilia tak.t.jj at jjjg time, and we would l" ?ec?at rtress upon the time and .inedy,-for history has it recorded that delays c- dangerous. The remarkable cpafideuce. We ask vou to srive. this tiedicir.e a fair trial. Albemarle, Sound THE VALUE OF THE FISHERIES LABORING INTERESTS OF THIS SECTION. Pay to Wage Earners over Space of As very few people, save those living in the immediate section, realize the extent of the fishing interests as carried on in the Albemarle Sound and its tribu taries, we give an extract from the report of Dr. W. R. Capes hart, of Avoca, to Labor Com missioner Lacy on the subject. We also present an illustration of Capehart's fishing beach, just after landing the seine: Mr. B. R. Lacy, Commissioner of Labor Statistics, Raleigh, N. C. Desiring to give you an idea of the fishing interests of Albe marle Sound and its tributaries, and its value to the laboring in terests to this section, I beg leave j to submit the following : The steam-power and horse- OVl'JLI IV lir'W FlWIXESXtY, AVOCA-Jiist Vi" power seines on the waters above mentioned have iuvef. ' real ty about $95,000; peivmahy, about 55,000; requiring a yearly outlay in keeping "p realty and personalty, the latter being .ery perishable, of 30,000. Realty consists of landings, beach property engines, nouses, etc. Personalty consists of steam flats aud mac'iiucry, seines, rope, cord, stand vats,etc. These . its give employment for fifty day s to the followi no- wao-e-eariK 1S in North Carolina. without exception Five kindred and thirty able bodie i u.eu exoert fishermen. vvu ieelve -vVages ranging irom valued at ,i 5,025, giving em 80 cents J.Q $3.50 per day, aggie-: ployment to a large force of boat gatingyio.ooo, aud to four hun-j builders at 1 to 2 per day, died women t who receive wages j 1 ,000. irom TO to per month, ag- It requires 30,000 pine poles, gregat'.ng 9,000. 15 to 35 eet long, cost us about 1. W.jr,.. r In ri,.,intr these seines in the I r finer inoiiui February, you give emPlO ment to labor at from 75 cents to $2.50 per day, equal to To repair these seines for next year's use, you employ experts at $1.25 to $1.50 per day, equal to about $2,400, now almost entire ly knit by machines in Boston and other Northern cities. Employment is given at 40 cents per cord to chop engine wood, equal to about $600. You observe' that these North Carolina plants, valued at only about $ 1 50,000, "pay to North 1.1, . Carolina wage earners over $4.0, 000 in the short space of fifty dayy. Look at the value of the plants to .per cent, going for wages. I say nothing to employment given to Northern people, and the profit to the manufacturers of rope, twine, seine, cork, rub ber boots, oil cloths, barrels, etc., but only make an effort to show what North Carolinians are re ceiving. The products of these plants and labor, iced fish, from the seines, twelve thousand boxes, valued at 17 5,000. These iced fish all go to North ern markets. This necessitates the purchase of eleven thousand tons of ice. It requires three TO THE $40,000 in the Short Fifty Days. hundred and twenty-four thou sand feet of plank for said boxes. It requires twenty thousand barrels for the fish that are packs ed in salt, and are valued at $8o,ogo. These all go to North Carolina and Virginia markets. The cost of these barrels is about $1 2,000, giving employment to many Northern coopers at good wages. (Shame to us.) The fertilizing material from the seines are thirty thousand tubs, valued at $7,500. Tin tubs are sufficient for one acre of corn, and will increase the yield on three thousand acres, fifteen bushels per acre, 45,000 ousueis, valued at 00 cents per bushel, average price, $37,000, and gives emplojmient, at good ,'waes, to handle said fertilizer and an increased quantity of corn. The pound or Dutch-net inter est for said Albemarle and adja cent waters is by far the greater quantity of material, seines hav ing decreased steadily iu the past twenty years, aud pound nets having increased yearly. There are now about eleven hundred pound nets, which give employ ment to four hundred skilled fishermen, who receive wages ranging from 80 cents to 3 per day, for an average of about 100 days, amounting to $30,000. To 680 shore hands, almost all women, at 10 to 12 per month. $10,000 per month. This requires about 125 boats, 1 . U i ; to 20 cents, or ;,ooo, which gives deployment, at good wages, to many men in January and February. Material used, 260,000 yards of netting, 12 to 24 feet deep when hung ready for fishing, valued at $ 1 10,000. The Dutcbnet catches about 7,500 boxes of iced fish, requir ing about 20,000 feet of plank and 350 tons of ice. These iced fish go to the Northern markets exclusively. The herring catch is about 40,000,000 fish, valued at 140,000. A large proportion of this catch is sold to North Carolina audVirginia consumers, they being shipped in flour bar rels and boxes largely, frequently selling as low at $2.50 per thou sand. See the advantage to the consumers of our section. If these herrings were all cut and barrelled it would require 45,000 barrels. This catch would yield in fertilizing material and increase the corn crop, $27,500. Within the past ten years there has developed an interest that has grown more rapidly than any in our section. At first one or two boats with afew.thousand yards of netting were set in the Albemarle Sound during sum mer months catching sturgeon. The object being to secure the female Sturgeon from WhiHl the . r. roe is obtained, and immediat.ly i converted bv the addition of germ of salt into caviar; whicn, hav iug been packed in ca!: kegs con taining 120 pounds each, is ship ped via New York to Germany and Russia, and for which the fisherman receive from 30 tv $40 per keg on the beach. Said caviar seems to be increasing in value each year; the latter figure being the price obtained this season. This interest has in creased so rapidly that 100 boats giving employment to over 200 expert fishermen was the outfit used for the presets rr t r - 1 season. liie owner iuiuismng boats valued at about 125 each, with netting, from one to two thousand yards to the boat. These boats are equipped with a force of men who receive for their wages a specified value for fish delivered ranging from $1.50 for male fish and 3.00 for female fish. The flesh of these fish goes packed it: ice to New York, while the roe from the female is converted into caviar as before stated. Each fisherman receives from $10 to $60 per week for the fish they have delivered to the owner of the outfit. These 250 men frequently receive as much as $5,000 a single week, while the caviar maker, or owner of the outfit, not unfrequcntly ob tains caviar valued at $40, the eggs from three sturgeon which has cost him about 9.00. :: -i LimdiiiS tlte Seine Continuing my present report to you, I beg leave to say since writing the above I have obtain ed from our transportation com panies figures that will bear me out in my estimate of our grow ing interest. In 1882 to 1892 the number of boxes of iced fish sent north increased from 13,700 to 23,900; and from 1892 the in crease reached 42,400 boxes of iced fish, including the boxes of iced sturgeon. I desire to call your attention to the fact that I have not reported the gill net in terests in the lower waters that employ about a thousand sail boats and hundreds of thousand yards of cob-web-like netting set exclusively for shad from Janu ary to May. The season of 1895 was tho most successful for a great many years for this class of fishermen. Many boats, man ned with three men, cleared above all expenses, from 500, and some as much s 1,000 to the boat, adding largely to ship ment of this year. I remain your obedient servant, YV. R. Capeiiart. SHE GETS A NEW TRIAL. Marie Barberi Has Another Chance for Her Life. The Court of 'Appeals of New York has reversed the judgment of conviction for murder of the lower court and ordered a new trial in the case of Marie Bar beri, of New York city, now in Sing Sing prison awaiting elec trocution for the murder of her betrayer, Domenico Cataldo. Cataldo had refused to marry her after promising to do s,o some two months before the murder, and in the despair to which she was driven she sought him one day in a saloon and cut his throat while he sat at a table playing cards. The court of appeals re verses the judgment of the lower court, both upon the evidence and the charge to the jury. Judge O'Brien writes the opin ion and all the judges present concur in the decision. If afflicted with scalp diseases, hair failing out, and premature baldness, do '-not use grease or alcoholic preparations ;fcut 3-,p!y Hall's Hair Rene".er. IMPRSDNED THE CUBAN BAPTIST MIS SIONARY INCARCERAT ED IN MORRO CASTLE. UNDER FALSE CHARGES. Rev. Dr. Blackwell urges our Representatives at Washing ton to see that Dr. Diaz is ac corded his rights an Aroeri can Citizen. Havana, April iS, via Key West, April 19. The Rev. Dr. Diaz, the Baptist minister now iu Morro Castle, was taken from his home last Thursday night. His wife and children had re tired when the police entered and read the order of arrest to him, and from that moment he .vas not allowed to speak a word to anybody except the men who have him in custody. I lis bro ther, Alfred Victornio Diaz, also .in American citizen, was arrest ed at the same time. The Rev. Dr. Diaz's family knew nothing of what had hap pened. He and his brother were taken from the house so quietly that neither Mrs. Diaz nor the children were disturbed In the morning she was thunderstruck to find that her husband and brother-in-law, whom she had left the night before quietly talk mg together, had not slept in the house. She was preparing to come into the city in search of her relatives when a poliee i:'(cut arrived at the house with the inforuu tion that her hus band had been arrested. The poor woman hurried to th office of the Chief of Police but was informed that she could not see him. She went to those higher in authority, aud to Gen eral YVeyler himself but without success. She succeeded iu arous ing the American Consul-Gen-eral in the men's behalf, but even this v;ce counted for nothing. Rev. Dr. Diaz's sentence may be imprisonment for life at Ceuta, and this terrible punish incut may be inflicted upon a charge that may have no more foundation in justice than a charge against an infant would have, yet even" that poor satis faction may be denied his family aud friends. It may be that the names of the clergymen and his brother were mentioned in docu meuts that were seized, but even such small cause is sufficient to warrant imprisonment of human beings 011 this Island. This arrest has aroused the people of the United States as has no other inerdent of the war iu Cuba. Here are a few of the first notes of warning and appeal from the people in and out of Congress. Washington, April 20. Re presentative Black (Dein.), of Georgia, had an interview today with the State Department offis cials in regard to Rev. Diaz, the Cuban Baptist missionary, who is under arrest tu Havana for complicity in the insurrection. After the interview Mr. Black said that there was uo doubt that Diaz had taken out uaturalizatian' papers during his residence in the United States. The State Department, he said, will see to it that Diaz is given a fair trial and is accorded his rights as an American citizen. Many re quests are members from the South from Baptist Churches which contribute to the support of the missionary work carried on by Diaz, that the Congress men will use their influence to secure the missionary's release. Savannah, Ga., April 21 At a massmeeting of the Baptist Congregations of Savannah to night resolutions of sympathy with Rev. A. J. Diaz, the mis sionary now under arrest in Cuba, were adopted. They call upon the Home Mission Board to provide Rev. Diaz with necs essary comforts and means for his defense, and state the wil lingness of the Savannah Baps tists to bear their portion of the expenses thereby incurred. Dr. Blackwell of this city who represents in North Carolina the Board that supports Dr. Diaz has sent the following strong letter to Washington ; Elizabeth City, N. C. April 22. Hon. Harry Skinner, Washington. D. C. DEAR Sir : As the Vies Piesident of the dome Board of the Southern Bap Carolina, I VOUr influe ymeatto ,hs tist Convention to represent Jsortn write to ask that you use fluence with tbe State Depart- e end that an immediate m- i vesiigation be had of the Case of the Kcv. Dr. bias our missionary, who U now under arrest by the Spanish Gov ernment in Havana, Cuba. More than 150 00 white Baptist's iu North Carolina feci as I iccsl, that a great outrage is being perpetrated against our leloved imssioucry aud American citi:cu Wc know Dr. Dia to be a man of the highest character, cautious and conservative. He is de voted to his work, and since the war on the Island has given much time and money t j alleviate the sufferings iu both armies, as the representative of the Red-Cross. Through this work, I feel that some inisaprehension hns arisen on the part oi the Spanish Gov ernment. Dr. Dia. has charge of a church "f 2600 people, a female school, hospital work, ard other missionary interests. He is a hero with an apostolic zeal iu the eyes 01 a million Hantists of the South. We know he has enemies iu Church aud State in Cuba who would stop at no crime to accomplish the destruction of him ami his work. Hence more is the need of firm ami immediate action on the part of our Department of State. We look to our representatives iu Washington to speak for us, and push this matter until the light of truth reveals the facts. Hespectfully, CALVIN S. IlLACK i:i.l.. V. I. Home Hoard S. B. C. Since the above leftcr of Dr. Blackwell the Journal of New York confirms his surmise that the charges have grown out of the help Dr. Diaz is rendering the wounded in both armies. The journal says : "Diaz is charged with working with the Red-Cross Society, and sending medicine to Cuban as well as Spanish hospitals." Suffocated by Molasses. Charles Nieth, a baker at Chi cago, suffocated himself with molasses a few days ago. He was very fond of the stuff, and in order to get enough he lay flat on his hack on the floor, so that when he- opi ned the clip on the barrel the syrup would flow into his mouth. Then lie opened his mouth and tin.- clip, and was literally drowned by the syrup. He was hmnd dead with his mouth upon and the molasses pouring into it. He was known as a glutton, but was not strong mentally, because of an injury on the head sustained in an acci dent some time since. A Negro ; iend Lynched. Saturday morning Jeff Gard ner, a negro, 21 years old, went to the home of Joseph Burrows, who lives a few miles north of Warren, Ark., finding no one there but thechildren. He took a gun and scared the younger children, having previously fas tened the eldest girl with a rope. He then carried his victim to the saline bottoms, where she wai bound and kept for several hours. It was late in the afternoon be fore they were found. When the negro was ordered to surren der he attempted to run aud was shot iu the leg. On being cap tured he did not deny anything, and only wanted to know what they were going to do with him. He was lynched Saturday night. The girl is in a critical condition. Found Dead onThe Track, J. D. Bryant, of Lumberton, N. C, was found dead Monday near Hope Mills, on the track of the Atlantic Coast Line. He was horribly mangled and was unrecognizable except by the papers found on the body. It is supposed that he was killed by the Florida vestibule train Sun- day night. Bryant was a white man, thirty-five years of age. The Cancord Standard says that W. A. Smith has effected a sale of a gold mine in Cabarrus connty for $52,000 to Northern capitalists. SIMMONSX REGULATOR 3 2. THE DEST SPRING MEDICINE is Simmons liver regulator. Dont forget to take it. Now is the time you need it most to vake up your Liver. A sluggish Liver brings on Malaria, Fever and Ague, Rheumatism, and many other ills which shatter the constitution and wreck health. Don't forget the word REGULATOR. It is SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR you want The word REG ULATOR disUnguishes it from all other remedies. And, besides this, SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR is a Regulator of the Liver, keeps it properly at work, that your system may be kept in good condition. FOR THE BLOOD take SIMMONS Liver regulator. It is the best blood purifier and corrector. Try it and note the difference. Look for the RED L on every package. You wont find it on any other medicine, and there is no other Liver remedy like SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR the Kingof Liver Remedies. Be sure you get it. 9. II. Zeilln Co., Phil4elphi, Pa. - ST .rr f ' '
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 24, 1896, edition 1
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