Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / Nov. 5, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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Everybody who reads the fisherman & Fame prouounccs it to be the best paper in Elisabeth City, and the fjs-ysnsstt sua tflk H3)asM L rm r 'flsl)rmatt & Fattncr a: is in the lead, a: Has the largest circulation of w paper in the District ONE DOLLAR per Year, in Advance. ELIZABETH CITY N C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER. 5 897 Established 1886 Tiie 3LiacLin. of trie District ASK the recorcrad dyspeptics, bilious suf ferers, victims of fever and ague, the mercurial diseased patient, haw they recovered health, cheerful spirits and good appetite; they will tell you by taking Simmons Live KecuijiTOft. The Cheapest, Purest aad Best Family Medieiuo iu the World! f..r rYSl T.PSIA, CONSTIPATIOX, Jaundice. : attacks, SICK HEADACHE, Colie, Depresl ... f Spirits, WjL'R STOMACH. Hart bunt, etc I ' , 1:11' ivn led remedy is warranted aot to contain ; ...rtielc of M e ( t'RY, sr any mineral sabstaaos. 1: PUSELY VEGETABLE, ,, .r,.;,:!i2 'hose Southern Roots and Herbs which a IVi.viflence has placed ia countries hers j.i.rr I 'iv.r.srs most prevail. It Will our avll j.M-;f;-:i eausT'd by Ueraaeement of the J r and Jtowels. syMHOMS of Liver Complaint are a bittef ,.. : u,tc in the mouth ; Pain ia the Hack, Sid or ' ffen mi&inken for Rheumatism ; 8ouT .;;!; l.ts of Appetite; Bowels alternately . by; Headache; Loss of Memory, with a ; ,; ; y ns. ton of havkg failed to do something ; 1 .- i ,ht to have been done; IeblUty; Low Si !."; a tri. k, yellow appearance of the Skin and -, ; ;. ::y ..'oii-h, often mistaken for Consumption. . : ' i s many of - these symptoms attend the i ' "I'eri very few ; bitt the Liveb, the largest 111 t'"- hor v , is j;cnera!ly the seat of the disease, nr .: if 'H.t K--iiI:ih--I in time, great suffering, wretch crtiM i UJiATH will ensue. I he f.ni.iwtr.g highly esteemed persons attest to the v.f .cs .i Simmios I.iv.r Regulator : Gen.W S ,M, I r.-j. S. W. R. j. Co.; Rev. J. R. Felder." 1 . rv.i.a.; C-l. K. K. Sparks, Albany, Ga.; C. Master' .1. 1 -i .'leritf I! UbCo ,(ia.; J. A. Butts, Bainbridge k' v J.)V; h"r,te. Macon, Ga.; Virgil Powers) W. K. R. ; Hon. Alexander H. Stephens' , i....-: v. sic.1 its. virtue personally, and know 1.. : I... I ' -1 epsi... it.li .iisness and Throbbing- Head. . ..... . ;:.c t'est medicine the world ever saw. We ,! '""v i.tker remedies before Simmons Liver i . i .t. i. in. nc oi mem gave us more than tem ..i: .-..irt, ilie Regulator not only relieved, but cured Lj I I., i ULt( KAfH ANU MlibbltNtER, MaCOK.GA. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY J. II. Zi:iLIN & CO., Philadelphia. Pa. Get on to This P. DeLON, f l t i,ii- Xliop.&f- Matthew Street, ELIZABETH CITY. N- C. With proper tools - and much experience I can guarantee work done in the best work manship manner and to be sat isfactory to all. I can also sup ply bicyclists with ail equip ments belonging to wheels. Low My shop is thoroughly equip ped which enables me to do work neatly and promptly. Give mo si rJF ifil. Quito tlie Usual Tiling". Ther'll be cool winds from the north one of these days, with a Klondike feeling about them. Just as well be ready. There are added reasons for early buying tins season, for almost everything is advancing and you had just as well have the benefit of early purchases. Stock is yet complete 'prices are at the lowest notch. Q si iolc-lVEo vin i' Values. .rX To keep the stock moving rapidly to hold your inter est -the lowest prices are being made in every part ot i.;ir stock. Not a detail overlooked. If you get m early you secure the best possible selections. Underwear. Knitted to fit-made for service, with prices u.Her their real worth. Ladies' heavy underwear per garment 25c. Special values in union suits, Irom 50c up to $1.50. Child's heavy ribbed underwear natural colorim'-at 10c. for a No. 16. with a rise according to the sizes. Child's wool-heavy comfortable per gar ment 25c. lilaiikels. Solt, comfortable blankets every pair pf interest. When you note our prices, and see the goods, you'll feel that we arc exactly right 011 blankets. 10 4 cotton fleeced -giay or tan neat borders pair 45c Heavy fleeced blankets, pair 90c. Heavy wool mixed blankets, pair $1.50. Heavy all-wool blanke s, pair 2.50 to 6.00. The reception given our dress goods stock by our pat. rons the pn sent season, has been very gratifying. Many dainty costumes can yet be Secured, in the newest "color ings and weaves. Prices on our dress goods are very reasonable. Yerv choice line of novelties-ln fancy checks diagonals and mixtnres -the correct shadings in value 25c. All wool serges-in popular colorings yard 35c. The choicest ideas in popular trimmings, at the same careful prices. No', many suggestions of men's goods in this column. You wouldn't know frpm this that we sold Men s Cloth ing, unless you happened in our store, and took note ot the many new ideas we are showing. Boy's Clothing made by competent tailors built on the same clean cut lines as our men's goods-the same care in their selec tion perfectly' fitting economically priced. . -Department Store, Nos. 64, 66 & 68 Water Laughter as Medicine. For every good hearty laugh we indulge in there is a aay taken off our age. Why should we take life so seriously? Can not we labor as well, or better. accomplish as much and enjoy life as we co along, if we keen on the watch for every possible opportunity for a good, heart?, blood-stirring, pulse-tn.ghng laugh? Let us try it for a year. Let us put away all those wrinkle-producing, skin-withering, blood-drying, heart-sorrowing feelings of envy, spite, jealousy and secret hatred ; those petty, penny grasping, soul contorting-narrow-minded, ambitious de sires, and make up our mind to live to enjoy living as long as we do live, and to live as long as we can. . Tov is the sunsnine ot the heart, and cheerfulness and lion est mirth brings forth the mos soms and uniolds the leaves, and their fragrance sweetens all our i; nnri the lives or oiners. 11VV.J Ik 11 1 1 - T J I Let us not worry, worry uiumb the system of its vitality and shortens our lives. Fun is bet ter for a sickly child than medi cine, it is said. Are we not children ?rown a little older? a : ,irrii the best of medicines? Let us laugh, then, as we go along, and enjoy every moment of time as it passes, keeping with us eternal youth. Column bian. The three-year old boy of . . t . J. A. Johnson, oi l.yun v-tiun, 111., is subject to attacks oi cruup. Mr Tohnson says he is satisfied that the timely use ot Chamber- Iain's Cough Remedy, during a severe attack, saved his little boy's life. He is in the drug business, a member oi uie mm of Johnson Bros. -ot tnat place and they handle a great many patent medicines lor throat anu lung diseases. He had an tnese to choose from, and skilled physicians ready to respond to his call, but selected this remedy for use in his own family at a time when his child s me was in danger, because he knew it to be superior to and otner, aim famous the country over lor us cures of croup. Mr. Johnson says this is the best selling cougn medicine they handle, and that it gives splendid satisfaction in all cases. Sold by w . w . "gga & Son. St., Elizabeth City,. N. C. STRANGE PHENOMENON. A Gentle Shower of Rain De scends for Four Days in One Spot. WHILE THE SKIES ARE VERY BRIGHT. The Lot About the Size oi an Ordinary House Parlor in a Macon Cemetery Union Soldiers were Once Ju ried on the Spot, but Whose Remains Had Keen Re moved. Macon, Ga., is astir over the strangest, weirdest phenomenon. It has been raining at a certain spot in Rose Hill cemetery iour days without a speck of cloud on the sky above. This announce ment was made over the tele phone this morning by Sexton Hall at his office in the ceme tery, when he had called up the mayor's office and asked that some reputable citizen or city official might be sent out to wit ness the phenomenon. Immediately the iron gray hair which crowns the brow of Mayor "Daisy" Price began to bristle with consternation and alarm. lie turneel the matter over to Colonel Bridges Smith for investigation. In a very shoit while Capt. Monroe Jones, chief of the fire department, was summoned, and in company with a Constitution representa. tive. was on his way to the cem etery to investigate. The most remarkable part of the leport of the sexton is that it is "perfectly true. Away over the hills of Rose Hill cemetery 011 a shaded slope overlooking the winding river, there is a cor ner where once slept the Union soldiers of Wilson's army who fell in battle around Macon. With one or two exceptions the graves of the Union soldiers were relieved of their bones a number of years ago, when the ashes of the dead were removed to the Union cemetery at Nash ville. Since that time this par ticular lot in Rose Hill cemetery has been left aside, unused, un noticed. A few days ago, while the laborers were at work at the direction of the sexton in that locality, one of them passed the spot, and although it was a pers fectly clear day, with the skies as blue as the Gulf of Mexico, he noticed that it was raining on the hillside on a spot about the size of an ordinary house parlor. He was dumfounded for a while, and muttered an ejacu lation, more of prayer than of amazement. Finally he mus tered up nerve to go under the drizzling shower, "to see if his eyes did'ut fail him," as he put it. He found that the falling drops of water were really wet, although they were not falling sufficiently fast to drench the ground. He reported the mats ter to Sexton Hall, who is one of the best known and most highly respected citizens of Ma con. He, of course, gave the ne gro trie merry "ha-ha." Seeing the darky would not be laughed out of his narrative, the sexton decided to go to the spot with him. He found what the man had reported was strictly true. He was likewise amazed and in fear of being laughed at, said nothing about the matter until he had made further investiga tion. After four days, seeing that the drizzling rain was still falling there, he determined to report it to - headquarters, and did so. Numerous callers have visited the spot iu the cemetery.: In fact, sexton Hall has shown so many there he is thoroughly fa tigued with the exercise. The phenomenon cannot be accounted for by those who witnessed it. That it is raining cannot be doubted for the drops can be seen falling from the tops ol tall black gum and hickory trees, be tween which the shower seems to make its way to the ground. During the entire day the rain fell between these two trees near the foot of the lone hill iu the cemetery, all the while the sun fairly beaming down as bright as it could be on the brightest and clearest of the lair autumn days. Citizens who have visited the scene, of course, are jeered at by those who have not seen it, but their amazement is too genuine for them to be cheated by ridicule out of the really they have maue . The incident revives another story about Macon's beautiful cemetery. A tew y ears ago 1111 dertaker Dennis Keating dis covered that at a certain spot in the cemeteayr behind a hili. there could be heard the noise of picks digging away within the bosom of the earth. Mr. Keatinsr. who is one of the best known citizens in Macon, is ready to make affidavit to this at any time it is believed !y many Macou ites that if a few more uncanny discoveries are made in Rose Hill cemetery the people of the Central City will be afraid to die and go there. j.i i ,ii.M. Foil TIIE riSllKKMA' & FA.-.MEB " The man that stands beneath that tree, Of course we all know him. livery urchin here knows well I'oor, simple, erazv Jim. His staring eyes, and vacayt gaze, Will chill the stoutest heart ; His story iu the stranger's breast E'er leaves a tingliag smart. Well long ago, some twenty years, There w-as a grand hey-day ; A big ado, some jubilee Not many miles away. And Jimmie's parent went, you see On the excursion there, Left him at home with his graud-ma His childish griefs to bear. "Now Jimmie, dear, be a good lKy, We wiil come back to-night," The mother said, but still the child Rebelled with all his might. "Come to this tree, she gently said, Wave down the west-bound train. Then we'll get off, and you can come, And greet us home again. The mother kissed the weeping boy, And smoothed his golden hair ; The father promised, lie would bring Him pl-iythiugs from the fair. The trusting child, they left behind, Hcueath that same oak tree Whcie he still waits, for their return Each night so f atieutly. But through that mysterious power. The Providence of God, . . For some wise purpose, though not yet By men quite understood ; Bright hopes were crushed. Despatches c:une, A feaiful wreck that day ! The news fell like a thunder clap On 1 cloudless day in May. A bridge gave way, I think the)- said ; It seems now like a dream ; The engine with its living freight Went headlong in the stream. And hundreds lost their lives that day, It was a fearful sight. The living searching for the dead, Through ghastly wrecks that night. And Jimmie's parents perished, too, Almost iu sight of home. Hut neath that tree, that long, sad night. Jim watched for them to conic. From center to circuimerence The neighborhood was stirred, Aud many an agonizing wail t And stifled sighs were heard. And so the new made orphan boy, By aching heart forgot ; Through weary vigils on himself. Insanity soon brought. Too late kind friends around him thronged ; And took his tiny hand, Vor the poor boy, their speeches now, Could never understa-id. That boy has grown to be a man, Yet he comes every night ; To that same tree and waves his hat When the engine heaves in siht. Then every face he scans with care And looks it o'er aud o'er; I-or he is watching still, you see. For those who'll come no more. And then he sadly walks away. The picture of despair, Yes, every eveuing, rain or shine Poor Jim is always there ; Beneath that tree, waiting you see, For the excursion train. He says he knows the'll come some day To "Little Jim" again. Yes, every one is kind to him ; ' A harmless boy is Jim. E'en the rude urchius always have A pleasant word for him. His tale of woe has often touched The stony hearts of men ; Who irom the dangerous walks of sin Have turned to God again. I sometimes think on that bright shoie, How happy Jim will be, When 'neath the blooming tree of life, His lost, loved ones he'li see. Then all life's strange vicissitudes By all, be understood. And in affliction's ghastly wrecks We'll see the hand of God. M. C. Consumption Will SCOTTS EMULSION cure consumption? Yes and no will it cure every case r No. What cases will it cure then ? Those in their earlier stages especially in young people Wc make no exag gerated claims but we nave positive evidence that the early use of Scott's Emulsion i of God-liver oil with Hypo- phosphites of Lime and Soda H in these cases results in a positive cure to a large num g ber In adranced cases, how- ever where a cure is impossi 4b bit, this well-known remedy should be relied upon to pro S long life surprisingly 50c and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Kcw York. thrilling observation i METEORIC SHOWER. The Corainr: of Star And Rain of Fire. The astronomers lo' lor the ne:t givat meteoric .shower on the morning of November 15, 1899. They calculate that the ! earth, will then pass ag in j through the centre of an 1111- mense swarm ot mcteoroius. as ill r. 1 e called before combust ion. These great "Leouide Star Showers," as they are called, occur at intervals 01 every y ars and one day. The great shower of 1799 occured on Nov ember 12, that of 1S33 on Nov ember 1 3; that of 1S66 011 Nov ember i a . and conseotienti V. a r 1 x - repetition of the next wonderful i phenomena is expected on the morning of November 1 5, 1S99. Iu the meanwhile, however, as the aggregation of meteoroids is of immense length, one end of it will encounter the earth in 1898 aud the other in 1899, mak ing, as Prof. Lewis Swift, the distinguished astromer, of Ro Chester, N. Y., says, considerable showers in those years also. Not only this, but it is stated on the same authority that many fore runners of the great shower may be expected to come within the earth's atmosphere on November 14, j 897, because many of the meteoroids are always consider ably in advance of the main cluster. Professor Swift says "the thickness of the meteoroidal stream is 100,000 miles, and the duration of the shower is equal to the time of the diagonal pass age of the earth through it, usually from midnight to clawn." He adds : "As there is a light shower of Lccnides every Nov ember, we know that there is a vast ring formed by the comet's tail, and that the immense shoal in one portion is the produce of the exploded comet itself, through which we pass once everv thirtythree years and a day." The meteoroids are dark bodies and it is only when they pass into the earth's atmosphere that they are ignited by friction and become visible for a few seconds. The stream makes a revolution around the sun in about 33 years, and by consequence the earth passes through it in a new place each year. The length of the swarm is so enormous that although in perihelion it moves at the tate of nearly 25 miles a second, yet it takes it two years to pass the earth, so that when its hirder part is still with us its advancing side will have reached the orbits of Jupiter and Saturn. Notwithstauding this extent, it is but a fraction ot the entire orbit. Professor Swilt says: "This great cluster will reach the earth's orbit about June 1, 1899, but the earth will not have arrived there then, but will be due nearly six months later, when our planet will plunge in the the swarming mass, and for at .least five hours we shall experience a literal rain of fire."" How to Cure Bilious Colic. I suffered for weeks with colic and pains in my stomach caused by biliousness aiicHiad to take medicine all the while until I used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy which cured me. I have since recommended it to a good many people. Mrs. F. Butler, Fair haven, Conn. Persons who are subject to bilious colic can ward off the attack by taking this remedy as soon as the first symptoms appear. Sold by W. W. Griggs & Son. A SCHOOL DIRECTORY. Supt. Mebane is now engaged in a work that will be ot great benefit to the schools of the State and thereby do much to aid in the educational progress of North Carolina. He is col lecting statistics and other in formation regaiding the schools public and private and col leges of the Statev This he pro poses to condense in sort of a school and college directory, containing the names and loca tion, grade and character of the school, together with names of its faculty or teacher. He de sires to have every school and school teacher in the State iu it. The work is to be done at the State's expense. TEXAS RUM WANTS A WIFE The Ileruiit of Misuou Valley Will Pay Well for a Helpmate. A lHaNCl FOK GIRLS. Uncle Jacob Tomlinson Wants a Good Looking Young Woman to Cheer His Declining Days ami to Inherit ' his Fortune. Jacoj Tomlinson, the hermit of Mission Valley, Texas, is hunting for a wife. He is 78 years of age. and fully realizes that he has only a tew more ears to live. He want a good looking young woman to cheer his deel ning days and to inherit iiis comfortable foitune when death summons him to the other shore. He is willing to pay lib erally for the company of the right helpmate, as is shown by the following advertisement which is now appearing in sev eral country newspapers of that section : Wanted. To form the ac quaintance of a young lady ; ob ject, matrimony. I am 7S years of age and will give the ycung lady who meets my approval $5,000 cash on our wedding day. She must be a brunette, hand some and not over nineteen years of age. All applications must be accompanied by photograph. Address Jacob Tomlinson, San Antonio, Texas. "Uncle Jacob." as he is called, has been on the hunt for a wife only two weeks, but he already is flooded with aoDlications. He eni'oys the diversion and reads closely every letter he re ceives, but as yet has not found the kind of young lady his heart is yearning for. He says that nearly every application received so far has too much of a business tone to it. He wants the young lady whom he is to marry to offer him her love. He is going to keep up the search until he gets the right one. He hopes to get a wife by Christmas time. Tomlinson is a peculiar chars acter. He has one of the most beautiful homes in Mission Valley, a rich section of country northwest of San Antonio, Tex. He made his first appearance in Mission Valley fifty years ago, and settled upon 160 acres of land. He built a comfortable log cabin home and lived all alone. He was a handsome man at that time, and still retaius much of the fine looks of his younger days despite his old age. He had a number of single handed encounters with Indians, who made attacks on his home, and the slaughter which he iu variably made on these occasions gave him a reputation lor brav ery in that neighborhood, and ultimately caused the roving bands of Indians to leave him severely alone. He made few acquaintances, even in those pi oneer days. He has continued to live the life of a recluse ever since. He makes occasional visits to San Antonio for his mail and supplies, but this is the larthest he has been from home since he Sarsaparilla Sense. Any sarsaparilla is sarsapa rilla. True. So any tea is tea. So any flour is flour. But grades differ. You want t)& best. It's so with sarsaparilla. There are grades. You want the best. If you understood sarsaparilla as well as you do tea and flour it would be easy to determine. But you don't. How should S you? When you are going to buy a commodity whose value 1 you don't know, you pick out an old established house to trade with, and trust their ex perience and reputation. Do so when buying sarsaparilla. Ayer's Sarsaparilla has been on the market 50 years. Your grandfather used Ayer's. It is I a reputable medicine. There sue many Sai&apanuAB but only one Ayer's. cures. oegau Ins hermit life. In the early days he followed the voca tion of hunter and trapper, and maue consiccrable money out of the sale of furs and hide. When the wild game became scarce he devoted himself to stock raising and agriculture. He laid up money each year and added to his landed possessions until lie now has a farm of 6,000 acres, one-half of which is under cultivation. Several years ago he replaced ! his log cabin with a new resi dence. It is situated on a hill in the center of his tr.tct of land, and is unique in construction and arrangement. It is built with bamboo rods, intertwined so as to make many kinds of pretty figures. These rods are nailed to the framework ot the house. The roof is thatched with reeds. The house has seven lartre- 100ms. all hand. somely furnished. The floors are all of hard wood, stained, and covered with furs and rugs of great value. One of the rooms is used as a library and is filled with several hundred volumes of choice books and the latest magazines. "Uncle" Jacob is a great reader and spends mucii of his time in his library. He always has per formed all of his household du ties, even cooking his own meals There are few persons who ever crossed the threshold of his home. He keeps a num ber of men employed on the farm, but they occupy houses at the further end of the large tract of land, and are never permitted o visit their employer's home. "Uncle" Jacob has never told the secret of his early life to any one as far as is known. It is believed that he came from one of the New England states, as he takes several newspapers from that section of the country. He states that he has 110 rela tives, and lor that reason he de sires to marry and leave his wealth to some good young woman. WHERE IS HEAVEN? Evangelist Moody Does Not Consider its Location an Im portant Matter. "Perhaps the first question that presents itself regarding Heaven is its location," writes Evangelist Dwight L. Moody in the November Ladies' Home Journal. "For my part, I am not satisfied with the vagueness that describes my future home as everywhere and nowhere. I read that the Master promised His Disciples an abode in His Father's mansions, whither He was going to prepare them a place, and in the Revelation the Apostle John described the wondrous beauties of the City of God. The Evangelist Luke tells us that Christ ascended from the little group of His Disciples as they followed Him out toward Bethany, and that while they stood gazing up into Heaven there appeared unto them two messengers to cheer them with the promise of His coming again.. And so it is with the child of God when the earths ly pilgrimage is over, the soul ascends to those mansions which Christ has gone on before to prepare for those who love Him. The location of Heaven is not an important matter. Christ said very little about its situation, but a great deal about its being with God. To be sure God is eveiywhere, but Heaven is His Home, it is the Father's house.' It is not the home stead that makes home the most attractive place on earth, but it is those who live there. And so it will be with Heaven." 'The worst cold I ever had in my life was cured by Chambers Iain's Cough Remedy," writes W. H. Norton, ox Sutter Creek, Cal. "This cold left me with a cough and I was expectorating all the time. The Remedy cured me, and I want all of my friends when troubled with a cough or cold to use it, for it will do them good." Sold by W. W. Griggs & Son. THANKSGIVING DAY. President McKinley has is sued his first Thanksgiving proc lamation, setting aside Thurs day, November 25th, as a day of Thanksgiving and prayer. Doa't Tobacea Spit aa4 Smoke Tour lire lwty. To quit tobtceo easily and forerer be mag netie. full of life, aerre and if or. take No-To Uac. the wonJer-worker that make creak men strong. All druggist. 50c or II. Cure guaran teed Booklet and sample free. Addresf 5terllng- Itemed Co., Cfalcago or New York At an enoracui rpao, DaTa ik4 ?"ufu lrpt CataJenrua, litbpg-raphHl la colors whch la nat" sow ooiortMi plat re this book look exactly Ilka the carpal Try color and Trr Hover la repro duced. Krery trade U Included In tMs eat loirue to Ji.fc and nnrmUr tbta book ie FREK, AND HI l'AY ALU PO8TA0E. If you wish ua U mall quality samples. Mod us c las tarn i to cover eipense. We have teea deln buslneas In TUltt lnore for 4S years and you run no risk to buying- from the mill. Drop a postal now for our caUIeirue and save the Ug p roOts you are n t I n ir th. mii.ti.n.an Our Furniture Catalefue to alao free. II JULIUS IHPf KS & BON. I llnltlmorc, aid I Please mention this paper. I mVHHHHBBSSSaaSBIBBSSIBBSBBBBH s. ii mum. The OKI Reliable Sail Maker, ELIZABETH CITY, X. C, can be found at his old stand at the Short bridge, over James Spites store, Zimmerman Hall. 4 .Canvas Furnished f at Factory Prices. Awnings, Tents and Flags a Specialty. All orders by mail promptly attend ed to. Old Canvass bought ami sold. P. O. Box i ,v. Elizabeth City, N. C. Monuments agd Tombstones In writing give some limit us to price and state age of de ceased. -LARGEST STOCK- iu the South to select from. (Couper Marble fflorks, (Established 1H4S.) 159 to 163 Katilr H Norfolk, Va. Miles Jennings, 6 o6c 66o cf oo o o c BLACKSMITH Sanders Building, Poindexier St. MillandMarineForgings A Specially. t2f Full line of Wheels and Wagons kept in stock. All work done promptly and in the most workmanlike manuer. GiVe Me a vlul DEPARTURE FOR KDENTON. The now famous Optician, Watchmaker and Jeweler has added to his workshop GOLD and SILVER a Plateing Department. Work guaranteed or money refunded. . . Respectfully, B. E. BYRD & CO. Qome to see us. Our s ock is in, I ook to your interest. all us over the 'phone. Or, write us by the post. Also at Flora & Co. '8 store, you can Leave your orders for us. Remember that we give 2240 pounds to the ton. Also, that we will put it down to you as cheap, as clean, and as quick as anybody. We respectfulty solicit your patronage. Crystal Ice & Coal Co. WVW8
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1897, edition 1
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