FOR PUBMGITY Advertise in the fisherman & Fatmer It Has The largest Girc1001' Fop Tljc NEWS ! ! Subscribe to the Fisijetmau S. Farmer u O Contains latest and best news fcaturct up to date of issue. ONE DOLLAR per Year, in Advance. ELIZABETH CITY, N C, FRIDAY, APRIL 9 1897 ESTABLISHED 1886 3L ewspaper ran Leading1 ox tixe First IDistrict Economical Opi'OR- c TUX IT IKS. f ttv . SPRING VOVELTIES ! MJfL COO Silk and Wool Dress G Novelty Silks : ! In beautiful Patterns for Cos- j 111 str These at remarkably low j I nrices ! "erfectfits (GbOTHING, Guaranteed.! aqd SHOEb 1300 Mell,iTsBo.ys In Stock. Spring and Summer JXiHi 3 . . . . r,. 1 I all the latest y es anu, Shades. Oar 910.UO line ofjP?i- mt,Q . ,.,, plaids are beauties; each suit thoroughly made, sponged and pressed by experienced tailors. Clav Worsteds $4.50 per suit up. I-TIX IiIXE of l!ys 2 Piece Suits in plain and nobby effects, .- cents to 8-1 .50 per suit dry (WTiAlAsale Bewartsiient IKS?' UOOUS f Our Wholesale Department is on the second floor. In this we have had the benefit of a forced market and the powerful aid of CASH purchases. A mammoth Double btore Extending the river, E. W. RLBAUGH & SONS, Wholesale Commission Merchants - BALTIMORE Prompt Returns, Quick Sales- REFERENCE C.tizens National Bank. W. J llooner fc Co. Stencils Furnished Free. Established 1861. SAML. M. LAWOER & SON. Wuolesale Commission Dealers in Fresh FisH Soft Crabs Terrapin, Etc. i25 Light St. Baltimore, Md. uick Sales! Prompt Returns REFERENCES Tra.lerbXat'1. Bank. Duns Merrant! e J Venc A. S. FOREMAN, Successor to J. R. Wynn & Co. Wholesale Fish Commission Merchants, TVo. Roanoke Dock. Norfolk, Virginia. Reference Bank of Commerce; R. G. Dunn Mer cantile Agency; Adams and Southern express Company, or any large busi ness firm in Norfolk. Seasonable Suggestions. SID DM ) Fashionable ) j Designs. - oods in Latest Effects. Wool Fataics : The variety of our Spring mid Summer Offering was never before equaled m this - 4- - - i city. HATS, ) Foreign and Domestic Fabrics. gpypmg ifilSHlS Of the very latest Styles and best blocks should eo with our - Will line yJi oiivuu u k- in price, variety, quality and workmanship. We have a line of IXftmtaellllsis in Silks, Gloria's, and Satteen, from 4-cts to $2.00 each, which is beyond competition. NOTIONS MEN'J - cpoRF S. B. MILLER & CO., WHOLESALE COMMISSION NO. 7 FULTON MARK KT, New York. Samuel B. Miller, ) Clarence G, Miller Soecial Attention (iven to THE SALE OF NORTH CARO LINA SHAD. Stencils and Stationery Furnished on Application. WE EMPLOY NO AGENT. S.L.STORER&CO Wholesale Dealers aud Shippers of ail kinds of IO FULTON FISH MARKET iVEW YORK. We work harder for the inter est of the Southern fishernier than any house in the business. If your St-i-il i- not in ;ood o iki let us know, JVe Employ no Aleuts and Pay no Ooniinissions. lOaVENPORT, MORRIS & CO., Wholesale Giocers and Com mission Merchants And Dealers in (Richmond, Virginia. Consignments of North Caro lina Herring solicited, and pro ceeds remitted in cash . On account of our intimate j acquaintance,and frequent trans action with the Grocery trade of the West and South we are able to handle N. C. Fish to the best possible advantage, and we are known everywhere as the largest 1 distributors in this marked. THE MISSISSIPP II The Height of the Waters Ex ceed that ct '82 and '84. LEVEES MELT AWAY And the Rushinsr Water Covers A Vast Area of Farming land. The mighty Mississippi and its tributaries, are now on their annual Spring rampage, and the swelling waters have swept away everything but the land, leaving hundreds of people, once happy, without shelter, or the necessities of life. The more fortunate sections are rendering such aid as is in their power, to care for the homeless ones. The present flood is probably the greatest in history, even over-topping the floods of 1882 and 1884. The immense levees are melting away, and the rush ing waters have covered an im mense area of farming lands, de stroying buildings, fences, sweep ing the stock away, and carry ing dismay to many hearts. The homeless ones are encamped in tents on the hills, awaiting boats to carry them to the cities where the relief committees may care for them. The rivers are jiow about stationary, but as moderate rains have fallen during the past forty eight hours in the watersheds of the Cumberland, Tennessee and Ohio rivers, the waters may rise even higher. The destitution is fearfub want sets at many a table, and the need of help is great. Big Norfolk Fire. The Greenleaf Johnson Lum ber Company, near Berkley, on the Elizabeth river, lost four teen dry kilns, two fan houses and 350,000 feet of first class lumber by fire Friday night. To tal loss estimated at $3,000. The mill's fire pumps broke down, and the engines sent from Nor folk and Berkley met with mis haps. But for the pluck of the mill hands the entire plant would have been destroyed. As sistance was rendered by the Navy Yard Fire Department and several railroad fire tugs. "Is'e Bleeged to Look After My Flock. (Monroe Enquirer.) The story is told of a colored preacher who was very much op posed to dancing and was very loud in his exhortations against it. Secretly he loved the music of the violin and the dance had an irresistable charm for him. On a certain night a ball was to be given and the preacher went so far as to threaten to expel any of his flock who dared aN tend the ball. But 011 the night of the ball the violent parson was seen sitting in one corner of the hall, patting his foot and swaying his body to the music of the dance. One of his friends ventured to express surprise at seeing the parson at the ball, but the preacher defended him self by saying: "Lawsy Massa! I hates dis mightily, but I's de s'lepherd, and I's bleeged ter look arter my flock. I's got my eye onto a very one ob dese here oncliristian, pop-eyed, dancin' niggers, and you see ef I don't make 'em smell fire and brim stone for all dis next meetin' time. The next leap year will be 1904. The girl who failed to leap in 1896 will have some time to wait. Some men tell their wives everything that happens, and others tell them many things that never happen. Brooks "Did you have good luck fishing yesterday?" Rivers "Yes, I got home without be ingseen by anybody." Chicago. RAMPAGE HICKS FOR APRIL. Quite warm weather for the season will prevail generally during the opening days of April. A regular storm period centers on the 2d, covering 1st to 5th Look from about the 1st to 4th, for a very low barometer to move from vestern to eastern sections, attended by great sul triness and warmth, ending in many marked and dangerous storms. The disturbances are almost sure to bring heavy rains, hail and thunder. Behind the storms of the first April period look for a killing frosts, even in central parts- The cold will appear in the northwest promptly in the rear of the storms ad vanceing southward and east ward as the storm area moves out of the way, reaching the Atlantic coast regions about 5th to 6th. On and next to 8th and 9th, antistomi conditions will break down and another warm wave will cross the continent, break ing into storms of thunder, rain and hail about the 8th to 10th inclusive. From about 10th to 1 2th look for very cold nights with frosts in many sections. In dications are that the 12th to the 17th will constitute the most precarious storm period of the month; a wave of great warmth will develop at this time, the barometer will fluctuate and fall to danger readings in various localities, phenomirral heat and cold will stand over against each other in close proximity, and violent storms of lain and hail with tornadoes probable, will visit many sections of the con- tinent. Will name the 14th to 1 8th as dates of greatest pro bable danger. Prepare for very cold for the season, with frosts after the storms. Reactionary disturban ces will center on the 20th and 21st, when warmer weattier will return, followed by another dash of northwesterly air. The last storm period for April will be central on the 25th. Look for much warmer, with very active storms about 25th to 28th. The 28th to 30th will bring progress ively fair weather, with cool and frost northward. By comparing the positions of the moon on the 7th and 20th you will see the difference be tween north and south declina tions. Cow Thieves Sentenced. The Goodman brothers, Carter and Wells, get three years each. They were tried Tuesday in GatesvilleN. C, Superior Court, "Judge Bryan presiding. Solicitor Leary prosecuted them. The al leged thieves had no counsel, and the jury made short work. m The State Treasurer has noti fied the heads of the various State institutions charitable and educational that the special appropriations made by the last Legislature cannot be paid un til he finds there is a surplus over the regular expenses of the State. The family circle is never so happy after the chain is broken and a link taken. Some family chains are strong, others weak. Have you a good family nistoryr KJt is there a tendency to coughs, threat or bronchial tret? bles, weak lungs? Has a b.-clher, sister, parent or near relative had consumption? Then your family chain is weak. Strengthen it. Take SCOTT'S Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypophosphites. It makes rich blood, gives strength and vigor to weak lungs and run-down constitutions. With its aid the system throws off acute coughs and colds. It pre vents the chain from breaking. Shall we send you a book about this, free? For sale by all druggists at 50c. and $1.00 ' SCOTT & BOWXF, New York. Bro ken E WHOLE M Mi A Remarkable cure effec ted by the Prayers of a Virginia Lady. CURED AFTER BEING GIV EN UP TO DIE. Her Family, Friends, and Physicians Believed Her Dissolution a Question of a Few Days Prayed that She Might Recover, Aston ished Her Husband by Ris- and Walking. The Norfolk Virginian prints the following news item from Suffolk, Va. : "The most remarkable exam ple of laith cure ever heard of in tills section took place Monday in South ampton county Va. Mrs. Joe Tom Barhafn, wife of a leading merchant in Capron, was a help less invalid for more than six months. She could not feed herself nor sit up in bed. The most expert physicians in that community had given her case up. It was no use to give any more medicine, they said. Hers was a hopeless case, and her death was only a matter of a short time. cured'by prayer. The doctors were wrong. Faith stepped in and did the work after human agencies had failed. At 3 o'clock Monday) morning Mrs. Barnaul woke her husband and toid him she want ed to get up and walk around the house. Mr. Barham thought his wife was delirious. Not" withstanding his protests, Mrs. Barham jumped out of bed and walked about the room as nimbly as a 16-year-old girl. Mr. Bar ham looked on in astonishment; he could hardly believe his eyes. There was his wife, whom he thought would soou be a corpse gliding about the room declaring that she was painless. GREAT REJOICING. Monday the news of the mir aculous cure spread like wild fire. There was great rejoicing around Capron and vicinity, for Mrs. Barbara was well liked, and her friends had never expected to see her walk again. She got up at 9 o'clock, dressed herself and went down in the parlor, which was a scene ot thanks giving. There was a continual reception. The hostess says she never felt better, and it is hoped the cure will be permanent. Tiie doctors don't know what to say. The ministers are puzzled. So is everybody else. The whole of Capron is talking about the seeming miracle. FOR A MOTHER'S SAKE. The cure is looked upon as a direct answer to prayer. Mrs. Barham 's father, Mr. Daniel died last week, and she prayed to be well that she might com fort her old mother. Her prayer was answered. This story looks too miracu lous to be true, but it is authen tic. It was told by Mr. George W. Truitt, the wealthiest and one of the most reliable citizens of Suffolk. He was in Capron Monday. BRYAN CALLS ON M'KINLEY. They Discuss Many Thing, But Eschew Politics. William J. Bryan called on President McKinley Tuesday morning. It is the first time the two gentlemen have met since they were in Congress together. Mr. Bryan was accompanied by Hon. Benton McMillin, of Ten nessee, and Attorney-General C. J. Smith of Nebraska. They were cordially received by the President. The visit lasted about ten minutes. "We dis cussed everything except poli tics," said Mr. Bryan, laughingly to a Southern Associated Press reporter as he was leaving the building. MAD FARMERS FORMING A TRUST. Banded to Controlthe sale of Produce at Common Centres In Every County. P. F. Brown, of Johnstown Pa., left a package of papers and let ters in his room at the Jefferson House, Toledo, Ohio, and went to Columbus recentlv, and it was the means of exposing the largest scheme the farmers of this country have ever under taken. It is known as the AgricuK turists' National Protective As sociation, and is incorporated under the laws of New Jersey. The members are all oath bound, and the farmers are taking to it right and left. This year is be ing given up to organization, and agents are now at work in nearly every county in the lead ing States. In 1898 it is proposed to com pel people to import their larm pro ducts, and county and corpora tion warehouses will be erected and placed in charge of county boards, who will have absolute control. From these wares houses goods will be shipped as may be deemed necessary. The farmers will raise all wheat in one locality, oats in an other, and so on. The National Board of Finance is now at work on a complicated scale for the division of profits, and everything will go through the hands of the sovereign body, much on the order of communi stic organizations. The ultimate design is the ab solute control and marketing of all farm products, farm ani mals and machinery. A Finger for Her Nose. It is due to the skillful sur gery of Dr. Joseph P. Tunis, of Philadelphia, that Mrs. John Edwards, of Chester, Pa., has a nose like anybody else. The third finger is missing from Mrs. Edwards' right hand, but it is now a part of her face, for it was grafted there to form a new nose for her. Mrs. Edwards was admitced to the Methodist Episcopal Hospital late in the fall to be treated for a cancerous growth. This ailment was care fully treated and checked, but it had left an unsightly blemish where the patients nose had been. Mrs. Edwards grieved a great deal over the facial disfig urement, and, when Dr. Tunis suggested a remedy, she immed iately agreed to undergo the op eration, by means of which one of her fingers was to be made to take the place of her nose. The patient was etherized, and the operation begun. Dr. Tunis cut off the end joint of the third finger of her right hand, and disarticulated the remaining two bones. The hand was held in position over Mrs. Edwards' face, and the boneless flesh was laid over the damaged nose and stitched to the face. Bandages of crinoline.spread with plaster of paris, were wrapped about the patient's body, holding the arm firmly in place. The hand and remaining fingers were padded to prevent maceration of the face, and for three weeks Mrs. Edwards remained in that po sition. Her hand almost en tirely covered her face, and it was necessary to feed her by means of a tube inserted into the left corner of her mouth. Oc casionally the bandages were removed, but the hand was never allowed to change its position. The finger was firmly grafted to the face. It was then treated with a preparation of cocaine and was severed from the hand. Both wounds were dressed and the patient was none the' worse for the operation. She was much better off, as a matter of fact, for the new nose was quite as good as the average person's. The nasal passages, which had not been affected by the cancer ous ailment, had been packed with iodoform gauze and the nostrils were thereby preserved. Mrs. Edwards has left the hos pital with a new nose, hardly less perfect in form than her or iginal one. To Care Constipation Forever Take CascareU Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25a If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggUw refund money. PREDICTS MILLENNIUM. Here is a Clergyman Who Says McKinley Will be the Last President and Tells Why. McKinley is to be the last President of the United States and Wall street is to be trans ported to Jerusalem in the near future, according to the positive prediction of the Rev. Beverly O. Kinuear, a revivalist, who is) now preaching in the luble House. He says the millennium is due to arrive here September 1901. "Do not say that I preach the end of the world," says he; that only makes people laugh. I preach the end of the age. Af ter that we shall all be taken off his continent and transported to another, if we are believers. If unbelievers, we shall be killed. The time for this is now close at land. I quote a few, very few, if any authorities. "Sir Richard Proctor says: 'In about 1897-98 the heat of the sun will be so enormously in creased by the impact of a comet as to destroy life upon this earth,' Sir. T. W. Dawson wrote: 'I an- icipate the destruction of the present state of things on the earth by conflagration from the teachings of science.' "Dr. Frank M. Close, of Oak and, Cal., ex-president of the Tacoma Academy of Science, writes: 'The late seismic dis turbance' which extended over the Middle and Southeastern States, was one of the prelims inary throes of a great cat aclysm.' "These undoubted authorities show that the time is near at land. We know that the end of the age is within this genera tion, due whether the present generation began in 1870 or in 187 1 we do not know. That is where chronology is liable to err. I3ut tne time is near ana we must be watching for it. "What will become of the present United States when the end of the world comes It will be carried over to England. Mc Kinley is to be the last Presii dent of the United States. Be fore the end of his term there will be a terrible European war. Nations are building warships and getting ready for it. More have been built in the past year than in the world's entire pre vious history. "It is not certain how the end of the world will come;" contin ued Dr. Kinnear. "That is not revealed as yet. If He deceuds to earth He will gather the faithful together and establish a kingdom in Jerusalem, and there rule His people 'with a rod of iron,' as the Scriptures say. If He decides to take us all up to heaven, He will do so and leave the others here. Either way it will be the millennium. "The climate of the earth will not be severe, either from excess sive cold or heat. Violent storms either on land or sea, will be unknown, and the whole aspect of creation will be more beauti ful. The animal world wiJl no longer have ferocious beasts, or any creature to harm man or woman. "What will become of Wall street? That I can positively answer. Wall street, three years from now, will be in Jerusalem. But its work will be over. Its usefulness will have been ac complished. "And our politicians? The bad ones will be cast into outer darkness and the good ones transported to Jerusalem, where they can fix for a thousand years in the delights of the perfect reign of Christ, the millennium. Their mission then will be to follow Christ forever and for ever. "Now, when it comes to locat ing the day for this to begin, I must beg off a little. I used to believe in chronology, and all signs say that the world will come to an end March 29 1899. But it may be September 190 1. That is my present belief. There is only a little difference. One is surely right. And the time is very near. The Same. Old Sarsaparilla. That's Aytr's. The eome old sarsaparilla as it raa made and sold by Dr. J. C. Aytr SO year a ago In tho laboratory it is different. There modern appli ances lend speed to skill and experience. But tho sarsapa rilla is the same old sarsaparilla that made the record SO year of cure 9, Why don't we better it? Well, vre're much in the condition of the Bishop and the raspberry! "Doubtless," ho said, " God might hare made a better berry. But doubtless, airs. II$ never did. " Why don't yre better the 6arsapartlla ? We can't. We are using the same old plant that cured the Indians and the Spaniards. It hp.3 not been bettered. And since ire make sarsaparilla com pound out of sarsaparilla plaut, we see no way of improvement. Of course, If we were making some secret chemical compound we might.... But we're not. We're making the same old sar saparilla to cure the same old diseases. You can tell it's the aamo old naraaparitht be cause it works the aamr aid ewrea. It's the sovereign blood purifier, and it 'a A vera. LUMBER .1.YJ) Truck .AND. Now is the time to place your order ior the latter for the Spring Shipping. Address (Kramer ros., & Co., Elizabeth City N. C. YOU TAKE NO RISKS when buying shoes of us. SPRIIJC STYLESh NOW IN. Ladies Oxford Ties, laced and button in the New Colors now used Nobby styles for Men and Hoys in Red, Chocolate and Tan DOYLE cfcSnALL. 302 Main St. NORFOLK, VA. Mention Fishc rmau & Farmer. Lim . , .. . i . ESTABLISHED 1880. The Most Reliable House in Norfolk. FEUERSTEIN & G . WHoI.KNALKS FISH COMMISSION MERCHANTS, FOOT OF ROANOKE DOCK. TSTorfol:, "Vci- Quick Sales, Prompt Returns. References by Permission: City National Bank; R. O. Dunn Mercantile Agency; Southern and Adams Kxpress Co. We respectfully solicit a share ot your patronage. Stencils furnished on application. ESTABLISHED 1887- Odell Bros., Commission Merchants. (Consignments (Solicited. Reference:- Bradstreet's or Dunn's Agency, City National Bank, Citizens Bank, Norfolk, Va., or any shipper in the South. Norfolk, Va. Boxes