Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / Aug. 6, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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.i. ' ... : Everybody who reads the fistjenuati & fanner pronounces it to be the best paper in Elisabeth City, and the fisljentiau & Farmer ' IS IN THE LEAD. X Has tlic largest circulation of J paper in the District. t) ONE DOLLAR per Year, in Advance. ELIZABETH CITY N C, FRIDAY, AUGUST 6. .897 Established 1883 jSTe-wspaper ti;e First District in 4 ttURftEii The Old Reliable Sail Maker, ELIZABETH ciry N. c, , rM,(ithis old stand at the uS."r 3a",:s Spircs slort'' Zimmerman Hall. a Canvas Furnished at Factory Prices. xvnings, Tents and Flags a Specialty. Ml orders by mail promptly attcml- oruciJi j t.r,i,t ond sold. (1 to Old uanviiis w"fc," Elizabeth City, A'- C. iVIonuments aijd Tombstones ,-aMBSI(.N. SENT FKKB. : In writing ivc some limit as to price and state ae of de cvrised. -LARGEST STOCK- c it. 4. enlnrt from. Covtper Maroie yforxs, (1 established 184S.) ,5y to 163 liank St., Norfolk, Va. - mm W9 9 T Brick! Brick! BRICK WORKS. The leading brick manu fiicturers of this section arc now ready to supply orders 011 short notice. This plant ! has been in active operation J for twenty years, and they J o-uarantce satisfaction as to quality and price, hese (Brick have Stood the &est And reflex action will be a guide to your further purchase. You could do worse, and we venture to " say, you can do no better elsewhere. Call Telephone No. 2, or addi ess g. .,?. Thompson, Mg Elizabeth City, N. C. 1 1 'IS AN ATTRACTIVE STOCK. There's an air of freshness about our store we keep the stock moving we keep in touch with what is new est and best, and the reasonable prices we insist upon in every instance, keeps up the constant change in color ings and styles. Dependable goods those that give you the fullest value products of leading manufacturers at prices that are right. There's hardly a want in the dry goods line if it's a value if the style is right but what it can be found at our store. . JWEalT i LINEN & SPECIALS.;-- Our linen stock always an attractive one offers through July extra inducements in prices and styles. Turkey-red damask firm and heavy excellent patterns f.lst colors yard 20c. Bleached all linen damask extra width Irish grass bleached artistic patterns yard 35c Bleached linen napkins damask dozen 35c. Very handsome damask dinner napkins, dozen 75c. Kv ery item in our linen stock a pronounced value. iSUMMER WOOL The "between season's" prices prevailing in remain ing stocks of wool dress goods, enables you to secure a fashionable costume at a very low price. There's a "clearance" feeling in our dress goods stock it affects the prices wonderfully it makes them very reasonable. The handsome novelties of the season in the newest colorings and weaves in plains in checked effects in blacks in value from iSc. up. DRESSMAKER'S NOTIONS. At such reasonable prices for items used in the lining, trimming and finishing of garments, that it makes that part of our stock of unusual merit. Kvery item at the lowest possible price, making a series of savings to you throughout the year. We keep the items most :n use what is newest and most desirable. niaM wirps in V ILUIUUV-V. 1'- parasols fans ladies summer suits -cool wash goods knit underwear. It's a good shopping time in these goods, and you can replenish at slight cost. MIDSUMMER :-: FANCIES. You keep right in line with fashion's demands, and your garments possess that ultra-fashionable appearance, if you use the New Idea patterns. Once used r always used. There isn't a requirement but what is met by the New Idea pattern, plate for the asking. Always ASK the recovered dyspeptics, bilious Mif rercr3. victims of ferer and" ague, the mercurial diseased patient, how they recovered health, cheerful spirits and good appetite; they will tell you by taking Simmons ee Regulator. The Cheapest, I'urcbt ami Bent Family Medicine in the World! for DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, Jaundice. Hi!;ous attacks, SICK 1 i KAIMCHE, Colic, Depres sion of Sj.irits, SOCK SIO.MACH. Heartburn, etc. 1 his unrivaled remedy i warranted not to contain a sinic particle of J! ekc i k v, or any mineral substanoa. but ;s PURELY VEGETABLE, containing ;hose Southern Roots and Herbs which a ail vise I'rovidence has placed in countries wherQ I-ivcr Diseases most prcva.l. It will care aW lisnaHN caused by Deraiigement of th I,l-rr and HotvpIs. 'the SYMPTOMS of Liver Complaint are a bitte or bad taste in the mouth ; Pain in the Hack, Sides 01 I int'., often mistaken f.r Rheumatism; Soar Moinacli; Los of A j..t t; Jiowels alternately t costive and la ; Headad e ; Ixss cf Memory, with 4 pu nfiil sensation of having failed to do something wliwh Slight ti have W-:; cone; Debility; Low Spirits; a thick, yellou : ; pe.irancc of the Skin and Kyes; a dry (Jough, often imstakcn for Consumption. Sometimes m.-.ny ol timse symptoms a:tend tht disease, at others very isv. ; but the Livhr, '.he largest oran in the body, is gtnsiaily the scat of the disease and if not Regulated in tune, t;reat suffering, wretch edness ninl IMCATII v.i I en.uc. The following highly esteemed K.rvns attest to the virtues of Sbiwm I.ivh R nt;i la l ok : Gen. W. S. Holt, Pres. Ga. S. V. 1 (J-. ; Kev. J. R. Felder, Perry, ;.-.; Col. K. K. i ,.;.i'..s, Albany, fit.; C. Master son, Ks.j.,SheritTU:bbC. , .- i J. A iiutis, Uainbridge, '.la.; Rev. J. W. Purke. Macon, (is.; Viryil Powers, Supt. (in. S. V. R. R. ; i: .ii. Alexander H.Stephens. We have V sied its virtues personally, and know that for Dyspepsia, i5 li. i!-i.:,s itM! Throbbing: Head, ache, it is the best tiieCicnc th- w orld ever saw. W have tried forty other reinedn s before Simmons Liver Re;iil.-i!o.-, and none ol ihcm i.;:ive us more than tem porary u;liel ; the Regulator not only relieved, but cured US " !.!. I 1 l.l.l KAI'lt AM .MltSSBSdltK, MaCON.GA. MANUKA! IHKl:il ONLY BY J. II. Zfc.II.IN it CO., Pl.iU elphia, P. Get on to This P. BeLON, liirv Matthe.. St reel, ELIZABETH CITY. N- C. With proper tool; and much experience VI can guarantee work done in the best work manship manner and to he sat isfactory to all. I can also sup ply bicyclists with a' I equip ments belonging to wheels. Prices Low, My shop is thoroughly equip- i ped which enables me to do work neatly and promptly. Brir3 mo :i fXV i zx 1 . DRESS GOODS. all remaiuintr lines 10 cents eacn. rasniou 71 F A MOONSHINER SHOT. OAK RIDGE SENSATION. Pilot Mountain Baptist Association in a panic. A special to the Ncivs & Ob server from Winston, N. C, gives the following accouut of the capture of a desperate moon shiner : There was a lively sensation at Oak Ridge church, Stokes county on last Sunday. The annual session of the I'ilot Mountain Baptist Associa tion had just closed and the dele gates and members of the con gregation were leaving for their respective homes, when Mr. Led Preddy, the new deputy marshal for Stokes, arrested Jim Taylor, a celebrated blockader. The deputy had two officers with him, and when he called upon the blockaker to surrender Tay lor rolled out of his buggy in an instant and drew a pistol, which was well loaded. Before he had time to use it, however, marshal Preddy fired upon Taylor, the ball iroing through the hand in which the blockader held his shooting iron. This caused Taylor to drop his pistol; in an instant the offi cer and his assistants were on top r Taylor and a lively tussle fol lowed for about ten minutes. There were many pistols flying in the air; women and children were screaming, and the situas tion w-s anything but pleasant, even for spectators The offi cers finally tied Taylor and he was placed in a buggy and carried to jail at Danbury. A report was brought lure to dav that sjme of Taylor's friends made an attack on the officers while they were enroute to jail, and that several men on both sides were wounded. Taylor has been in the moon shine business and has defied the officers for several years. He generally carried a Winchester and pistol with him. Preddy sent Taylor word as foon as hew .s appointed deputy marshal that he had five war rants against him and expected to arrest him. Taylor replied that he never would be taken alive. What is the use of putting on so many airs? You have got to die some time just like the rest of us. To Cure Constipation Forovor. TtUe C iscarcts Candy CaJiiirtic. I0cor2ic If C C. C. fail to cure, drutftfists refund money BOY SHIPPED TO CHICAGO. When a train from New York arrived at the Union Depot, at Chicago, over the Pennsylvania line a few days ago, a small boy attired in a sailor suit, with a shipping tag attached to his jacket, was handed over by the conductor to Miss N. Nelson, who meets all trains at the sta tion as a representative of a Chicago charitable organization. The tag on the boy 's jacket read as follows : "This boy is going to his father, (George Condon, 502 West Taylor street, Chicago, 111." Miss Nelson took the boy to the address mentioned on the tag, but was unable to find any 1 1 1 1 person wno Knew any.tning about the child or his parents. Miss "Nelson took the child to the annex of the Harrison street police station, and the police are now trying to find his relatives, if he has any in the city. The child says he once lived in that city, but went to New York some time ago with his parents, who left him with the family of E. Hamorne. : !ui'nt Vonr Howels With Caacareto. i':;'ily Cathartic, cure constipation forever, '.v. Jic. If C. C. V. fail, druggists refund money. Bride Knocked Senseless. The practice of throwing old shoes and the like at newly mar ried couples was slightly over done in Cabarrus county recent lv. The Concord Standard re lates a case in which the blush inqf bride at a negro wedding was knocked senseless by the emblematic old shoe thrown by one of the wedding- partv. The shoe-thrower used a brogan in stead of a slipper, and the No. 1 1 striking her on the side of the head she was laid out unconsious for awhile. -Matches That Won't Light. Next to a match that won't light is a friend that won't stand up for you in an emergency. If there is anything disap pointing, anything that may cause disaster to words and' con science, it is a match that woh't light. You are in sore need of a light, it may be a burglar has invaded your privacy, and is busy with his burglarous inten tions. He may work on with perfect unconcern if the match don't light. You have a friend who says in sunshiny days, "I'll stand by you through thick and thin," but when the test comes and you need some one to lean upon, you find your friend is a "match that won't light," and you are disap pointed, not only in the person in whom you placed confidence, but in the professions of friend ship which were made. Oh, how many matches there are in the world that won't light! And how many friends there are who are ready to praise when praise is not needed, but are scared and fly away when the cat of disaster appears. Oh, for tried fiieuds, who, knowing what friendship is, will stand by you in evil report as well as good ; who do not con demn without a hearing ; who will measure your worth by your actions, and not refuse sympathy when you need it, or when you are destitute. Dur ham Sun. It is always gratifying to res ceive testimonials for Chamber lain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy, and when the endorsement is from a physician it is especially so. "There is no more satistactory or eltective remedy than Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," writes Dr. R. E. Robey, physician and pharma cist, of Olney, Mo.; and as he has used the Remedy 111 his own family and sold it in his drug store for six years he should certainly know. For sale by W. W. Griggs & Son. We shall be more apt to "know each other there," if we do not forget each other here. FariiierM Should Advortise. People in the country fail to place a proper estimate upon the importance and value of newspaper advertising when they desire to buy or sell any thing. As Press and Printer says: "A tanner, lor example, has cattle to sell. A brief an nouncement to that effect will often send him a dozen buyers. Or perhaps he wants to sell some fine hogs. A small want ad costing perhaps twenty-five cents will bring him several purchasers. Farmers are a con servative class, but they should learn that advertising is profita-. ble to them as well as the merch ant, manufacturer or other bus iness man in the city or town. Try it and you will be convinc ed." Do YouJJse It? It's the best thing for the hair under all circumstances. Just as no man by taking thought can add an inch to his stature, so no pfcparation can make hair. The utmost that can be done is to pro mote conditions favorable to growth. This is done by Ayer's Hair Vigor. It re moves dandruff, cleanses the scalp, nourishes the soil in w'hich the hair grows, and, ust as a desert will blossom under rain, so bald heads grow hair, when the rcots are nour ished. But the roots must be there. If you wish your hair to retain its normal color, or if you wish to restore the lost tint of gray or faded hair use Ayer's Hair Vigor. aS Facts About Worth Carolina. . From many sources the follow ing interesting facts about North Carolina have been gathered. It will be well to keep these for reference : Number of counties 96. State area, 52,286 square miles. Extreme length is 503 miles. Extreme breadth is 1 87 i miles. Number ot electoral votes, 1 1. Length of. coast line is 314 miles. Larid suriace, 4S.666 square miles. Water surface, 3,620 square miles. Area Dismal Swamp, 150,000 acres. Number of miles of railroad, 3.597-. Indian population (census of 1890) 1,571. Inland steamboat navigation, 900 miles. Total population (census of 1890) 1,617,047. Average mean annual rain fall, 52 inches. Colored population (census of 1890, 567,170. Total water-power, 3,500,000 horse power. Western boundary longitude 81 degrees, 42 minutes, 20 sec onds. Average winter temperature, 42 degrees Fahrenheat. The highest point is Mitchell's Peak, 6,888 feet. Average area of counties is 507 square miles. Number of vari ties of min erals discovered 180. Average summer temperature, 75 degrees Fahrenheat. Average elevation of State above sea level is 640 feet. Whitsett Student. What cause had dreams is a question that has never been satisfactorily answered; hut, in nine eases out of ten frightful dreams are the result of im periect digestion, which a few doses of Ayer's Sarsapaiilla will effectually remedy. Don't delay try it to day. The Ohio papers are telling about a man in that state whose mind has been a blank for a month. He probably became dazed at not getting that gov ernm ntjobhe expected. UNLIMITED TAXATION. It is generally understood that the school tax will be 10 cents on the $100 and 30 cents on the poll. You will hear peo ple so state. That is not true. The county commissioners have the right to levy any amount, but they cannot levy less than the above. The law says : "The board of county commis sioners shall determine the amount of tax to be voted upon by each district (township), but said tax shall beat least 10 cents upon every 100 worth of. prop erty and 30 cents upon every poll." There is no reason why they should not levy $1 on the $100 and $3 on the poll. They can do it if they want to. And in most cases it will exceed the minimum assessment, for if it does not, there will be no taxes of consequence raised. The rea son will not be because of the lightness and insignificance of the tax. Even that amount will be a burden. The reason is the poverty of the people. Will it pay to levy that much tax for the benefit of the teachers only ? King's Weekly. In 1862, when I served my country as a private in Company A, 167th Pennsylvania Volun teers, I contracted chronic diarrhoea. It ha.s given me a great deal of trouble ever since. I have tried a dozen differnt medicines and several prominent doctors without any permanent relief. Not long ago a friend sent me a sample bottle of Chamber lain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rheoa Remedy, and after that I bought and took a 5c cent bottle; and now I can say that I ain entirely cured. I cannot be thankful enough to you for this great Remedy, and recommend it to all suffering veterans. If in doubt write me. Yours great fully, Henry Steinberger, Allen town, Pa. FAIR NOTES. Our townsman, Mr. Tasccno who has a wide reputation as a nautical artist, is constructing a gig to place 0:1 exhibition at the next Fair. Last year he had one 011 exhibition which was one of ihe attractive features It was 16 feet long and if our memo:y is correct, weighed only 140 lbs. The workmanship was perfect and its finish just grand. He informs us that he will have four models in the exhibition hall during the coming Fair. Those whose tastes run in the aquarian channel will have an opportunity to witness a "thing of beauty, a joy forever." We are glad- to see that our merchants are becoming inter ested 111 tne Fair, lnere is nothing that contributes s o largely to success in the busi ness arena than public spirit in fused in our business vocations. It will tell in the end. The out look is that we are going to have a large Fair, and everv eN fort on the part of the managers will be made to have an excur sion from every locality that patronizes Elizabeth City and every ticiu one adjacent to our booming city to add to the fu ture activity. One of the members of the Board of Managers is off on a trip in consultation with one of the most successful fair manas gers extant. We are sure he will secure enough information that will be the coming glory of the A. P. V., if the Board of Managers will follow, which we have no hesitancy in saying will be carried out to a letter. Ella Wheeler Wilcox to the Sum mer Girl. The summer girl should learn before it is too late that the man who kisses and says ll love you" and no more, is only amusing himself at her expense. I once heard of a young man (his friend was my informant) who kept a memorandum of the girls he had kissed. At last re ports the number had reached 80. The man is still quite young. The summer girl who is temp ted to let an admirer kiss her should ponder this. Of course she might not ex pect to be No. 1, but it would be humiliating to think she was No. 81. To Curn C'oikI Iput lod Forever. T ilto (' isoaiets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If V. C. O. f.iil lo cum, druii'fcts refund money. It is right hard to keep true lovers apart. A Pennsylvania man aged Si, who is a widower, met an old flame aged 73, who was twice a' widow, and they went right off and got married. If you wish to get rich, pay some attention to your own bus iness, as well as that of your neighbor. The man who sits down to wait for a golden opportunity to come along never has a comfort able seat. Depression of Spirits so common in summer-time, accompanied by loss of energy, lack of thought-power, means a deficient supply of nourish ment. The vital force is lost. It isn't a question of muscle and sinew, but of resistance and endurance. At any age, but especially in youth, it involves the risk of lung disease. Loss of flesh and a cough are threat ening signs. of Cod-liver Oil, with the hypo phosphites, meets these cases perfectly. It tones up, fattens and strengthens. In Scott's Emulsion the taste of the oil Is fully disguised, making it almost as palatable as milk. For sal t and $i.oa by all drttsrr!t. , Ulg. CbemUu, Nw York SSiiuni BCOTT JkWWM, MURDERED IT THE ALTAH. A Negro Preacher Shot and Killed in Church. In the First Baptist church, colored, at Montgomery, Ala., July 28, while the State Congress of Ministers was in session, Prof. P. H. Patterson, one ot the lead ers of his race in the South, a graduate of the university of Michigan, a teacher in the State Normal College, and a highly respected negro, was murdered at the altar. The tragedy grew out of a bitter factional fight be tween the local negro Baptists over the expulsion of Rev. J. T. Brown from the pastorate of the big church for alleged immoral conduct with a member of his flock. Patterson led the fight against him, and Rev. A. J. Stokes, pastor of another church, sided with Brown. When the State Congress con vened, an argument between Stokes and Patterson over the Brown case resulted in a fist fight, when some negro from the crowd shot and killed Patterson. i'he colored population is very much wrought up After the shooting a posse composed of negroes, capturod George Prit chett, who had gone into the woods. He confesses to have done the shooting. Preachers Stokes, Brown, Bracy and Bran- an and five other prominent ne groes have been arrested. A conspiracy is alleged to have existed. An investigation by the coro ner was held. The grand jury is being held in session to con sider the case. Lvnchinir was alked of. There is every indis cation that the law will be allowed to take its course. Rev. Babb is Mad. A letter to the News & Obser ver from Washington, says : "There is a story out that edi tor T. W. Babb, of Hertford, is very sore over the tteatment he ms received at the hands of Sen ator Pritchard and Congresman Harry Skinner. Editor Babb, so the story goes, was the one man in North Carolina who brought about the coalition which resulted in Butler's de feat and the success of Pritchard. For the part he played in that deal he was promised a good of fice. He came here last April, with the expectation of getting an appointment. He wanted to be Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue for the Eastern District and he was assured that he should be appointed. Every day he looked for his commis sion, but like the letter it never came. He received, however, so I am informed, daily promises from Pritchard and Skinner that he wouly be taken care of. In the meantime his funds got short and in order to keep himself afloat he became a book agent, but nary' appointment has he received and he returns home to-night completely disgusted. His friends say he has a knife up his sleeve and when he gets back to the Tar Heel State he will make it uncomfortably warm for the two gentlemen, who, having profited by his po litical experience, have fed him on empty promises since last April. It is understood he will oppose Skinner for Congress." The Sunshiny Woman. Do you know her ? The sum shiny woman the one who greets you always with a smile that warms you to the heart and vdiose very nature abounds with the radience of sweet, generous impulses and kindly sentiment. Her name is not legion, neither is the priceless gem found in vast numbers, but, like the dia- mond, she scintillates the more brilliantly amid dark and grue some surroundings. The sun shiny woman as a girl is the particular star in the circle of classmates, who, in after years, perhaps, forget the others, but who always dwell lovingly on the name, even in memory, of the geutle being who turned away the shadow and made the presence of the sun more evi dent. It is likely that the "bloomer" will go out of use if not entirely out of fashion. It has been dis covered that bicycle riding great ly reduces the size and symmet rical shape ot the calf of the leg. Some things will make a fash ion unpopular when nothing else will. Henderson Gold Leaf. She Learned it at School. , An editor who married a girl from a cooking club prints the following in his paper after a few years of married life : '00 stand where I have stood, go feel what r have felt, eat clammy, half-cooked food, and fish and eggs that smelt. Go take what I have took, go bear what I have bore, throw tea cups at a cook, and swear as r ii.iv swore. Go live on juicelcss tca aim soRgy bread, half baked; at midmVht lio a,Mi. and ache as I have ached. Go gnaw with all your might on tough doughnuts or pics, and stop between each breath out hairs and flics. Go do what I have done make vonrself 1 fool, by winniui! as I havr won. a girl from a cooking school." Trltrr, Half Hhtim ami Kcxrnia. Thf iiitnH itrhitnr and Hin:irtim? lnri. dent tn these diiuvws, is instantly allnyed by applying Uhainborlaln 8 hye and Skin Ointment. Many very had rases have ten permanently ctim! ty it. It is equally eraeient for it hlnar piles and a favorite, remedy for wore nipples. chapped hands, chilblains, frost hitea ar.d chronic sore eves. 25 rts. per Imx. Dr. CadrN C4nlition Powder, are just what a horse needs when in lwd condition. Tunic, Mood purifier and vermifuge. They are not food but medicine and the best in use to put a horse in prime condition. Iric 25 cent per p.ickaKO. No. 11. r).l!hrd Soii.l Ui'.w Hi w cr t.'liiOoitltM', 13 ln Ik l.i.ti, OU V 1 1: i- Ii ctt luiiK. 14 IiicIh s !)'. 1 1 la well muni ruclcd aixl han itimmI Ih ka on cucli lr:iw'r. H p e I 11 1 'i Ice, (onl-rs promptly flllcd). Our nuoffi 1 rmt aMental. It in thn rrw:;rl f 4-t -i:h ol IkiiioihIiIm ImisIiichh. Our - fi i nn4 In tlm Kur liituni nrvl '.iiN i ImmIiich U yours f.ir thn ihMui;. Our iniiiii'iifo' IMiiMirn- tt'll ' t.l I' (.'!! Of llll Illtllll', Oil t I itlm. Unity Cirriiii'fH, l; i 1 'iKfTNtor. I!il.lln, Hpiioy, HukI IumH, !.. M fn to nil Who writ for M, a l vr uiy it 1 1 --t air. If J'ou link v i' I '"I l' l' ih' a hire you will il nl I r our tuts lotrtlt. IIS In- ttl'l 11 c HlniniT. If you conHiilt oiir I. 1 iok Mil-! want lfiiili!i n'ii't Ii i nr IoIhim. you will tlciil wiiii 1 lui ii.uiiiituctuiura. 8-utl your iihiuo ou a jxtnl n;.w. Julius hinesft Son BALTIMORE, MD. ESTABLISHED 188(5. The Most Reliable House in Norfolk. FEUERSTEIN&G- a WIIOI.KHALK9 FISH COMMISSION MERCHANTS, FOOT OF ROANOKK DOCK. TSTorfollr, "Vex- Quick Sales, Prompt Returns. References by Permission: City National Uank; K. O. Dunn Mercantile Agency; Southern and Adams Ivxprcss Co. We respectfully solicit a share ot your patronage. Stencils furnished on application. jK. IS IS V (gHRRIBGE FACTORY. A carriage factory and repair shop has been opened at the park, or fair grounds, near Elizabeth City. I have been engaged for more than 20 years, in building Carriages, Buggies & Vehicles, of every description, and am now ready to give special attend tion to the manufacture, repair, ing, and painting of carriages, wagons, carts, and all kinds of heavy and light wagons. All work promptly attended to and at reasonable prices. E. F. Ri ch. td'Old furniture repaired varnished, &c. 1 13 l'A.Tfcrr TJX. X2 FOR KDENTON. The now famous Optician, Watchmaker and Jeweler has added to his workshop a GOLD and SILVER Plateing Department. Work guaranteed or money refunded. . . Respectfully, B. E. BYRD & CO. Water Sreet, Elizabeth ity, N. C.
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 6, 1897, edition 1
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