Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / Feb. 18, 1898, edition 1 / Page 1
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-. I f s fit A 0 ONE DOLLAR per Year, in Advance. ELIZABETH CITY N. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, .808. Established 1886. : w The Best Advertising Medium in the Albemarle District The Finest Fish, Truck and Farming Section in North Carolina. Circulation Doubles Any Other Paper Published in This Section. The Most Wide-A wake and Successful Business Men use the Fisherman & Farmer Columns with the Highest Satisfaction and Profit. .Fanner 0 1 i ASK the tecovered dyspeptics, bilious suf ferers, victims of fever and aerie, the mercurial diseased patient, how they recovered health, cheerful spirits and good appetite; they will tell you Ly taking Simmons Liver Kecultok. The Cheapest, I'nreht and TUnt Family Medicino In the World! For liYSPFPSIA, CONSTIPATION, Jaundice, Hi! ous att;i.:ie. Mt'K II KA1MCHE, Colic, Depres sor. f Spirits, SOL'k S IO.MACH, Heartburn, etc. This ivaled remedy is warranted not to contain a sin:.';: particle of .Mi.Rel RY, or any mineral substanc. but s PURELY VEGETABLE, containing those Southern Roots and Herbs which a all -vis.; l-'rovidenre ha3 placed in countries whera I. i-. rr Diseases most prevail. It will cor H II. sL-nxfH caused ly Derangement ot thv l.i ".t and Itnwels. "t be SYMPTOM:? of Liver Complaint are a bitter r r t tste in the mouth ; Pain in the Back, Sides oi J .nits, oftrn iniMuken for Rheumatism ; Soar .-;;inacl ; Loss of Appetite; Rowels alternately live anil Ir.y ; Heauache : I.css of Memory, with i ... f fill serration of having failed to do something vr.h aught to have been done; lability; Low N: hits; a thu-k, yellow appearance of the Skin and I ; a J-y nh, ,ftcn mistaken for Consumption. tuiiietiriics n :iiiy of these symptoms attend th d s: is.,-, ..; .;!-. '.cry fov. ; but the J.ivpic, he largest or. ; in U-t y, is t;. ncrally the seat of iht disease a:i! (' n..t K?;i;l.ue. in tin:c, yrrat suffering, wretch edness -nrl SHC VI H will etisue. '! he fo '.! : s highly esteemed persons attest to the oi MMVO s t.ivt K Kk-.i i.atch : On W S . I .i. . K . K . Co. : Kev. I. U. FeHw . Col. i. K. ::rks. Aibany. C. Master-s"-f-H 1! bbt.'.. .a.; J A. iiiitts, Bainbridge, I. V Hurl-. NUam, t)j.; Virgil Powers, . V. k. K. . !.. Alexander H.Stephens, i sr.-l it virtu-. t.Lrsof.allv, and know V. ' ' ; . i ar.il Throbbing Head. ! -.- u- in- ::..jij . ,;ie n 1. 1 Id ever saw. We r'- ' i.' " rvin.r.tic. het..re Simmons Liver ' '""c "I '- ;vc tis more than tem- Kcn :u..r i;..t only relic. el, but cured ' ' - ' ' it Nl) '.it SsiiNl l-H, MakJN.OA. m .m r m 1 1 . ij .:. i i:v '. H. 'Zt'.i Li CO. Philj uelphia. Pa. Brick! Brick! BRIGK WORKS. ur 1 i l ne uaaing orick manu facturers of this section are ncv ready to supply orders at short notice. This plant has been in active operation for twenty years, and they guarantee satisfaction as to quality and price, ;( ghese (Brick have And reflex action a guide to youi will be further purchase. You could worse, and we venture do to say, you can do no better elsewhere. Call Telephone No. 2, or add i ess g. ghompson, Mgr, Elizabeth City, N. C. J0OB5 Tested AND TRUE. Must be No matter how little the price we name you in our store, there is never any cheapening of the quality. Unusually reasonable prices never signify a lowness of the grade with us, for that is'nt good merchandizing. It's always the quality first then a price that will make it sell quickly, so that any item selected from our stock may be relied upon. It is always the best that your money can procure. Early 3anuarij pialf. To keep the selling interest and to clear remain ing stocks of seasonable goods, these special clearance values are offered. It's splendid economy to keep in close touch with our store through January, for so many digerent lines are placed upon sale, at clean sweep prices, that it makes interesting shopping. Dress Goois, Capes, Cloaks, Men, Women and Children's Shoes. Blankets, Gloves, Mittens, Sec. January "leaii-(Sweep" (Selling. Seasonable lines right in the height of the sea sou's needs with every trace of profit, and oftentimes a pait of the first cost, eliminated. There's more than your money's worth in every item. It pays to buy of us through January. Clothing, Wool Underwear, Hats, Caps, Sec. IZnn'll .Make A Mistake.. " LZ And you'll probably write it Jan. 1st, 1897. That's the usual -thing. You'll make a mistake, as well, if you fail to make your clothing purchases at our store during the January Clearance Sale. It's a season wheu profits are lost sight of a "house cleaning" time, for all season able goods must be sold, and clothing buyer's receive the benefits. Splendid values all through the store every item bristling with the lowest, clean-cut price every article the stylish, dependable kind. THE FAIR, -Department Store, Nos, 64, 66, and 68 Water A HOME-MADE INCUBATOR. Story of a Little Girl Uaby Who Lived and Thrived Amid Hot -Water Bottles. A lady in Belair, Hartford county, Md., writes to the Balti more Sun about a little girl baby who was brought up in a home-made incubator and is thriving. The little mite weighed only three and a quar ter pounds at birth, which was two months earlier than she should nave made lier appear ance in this world. Under the ditec'tions of a trained nurse from Baltimore, the mite of humanity, so the letter states, "was first wrapped in cotton, then put in a toilet basket and kept warm by mesns of hot water bottles, refilled ev ery two or three hours. These were necessary until she was three months old. "She was fed on milk and water, half and half, taking two or three drops at first through a medicine dropper, and a little later from four to six spoonfuls at a'feeding from a coffee spoon. "Wh.n a month old she be gan the "use of prepared food and took the bottle nicely, 2 ounces at a feed. She was ed everv two hours that she was awake, but this was not often, for she slept principally. Durng the first two months of her life she gained a quarter of a pound. "She will be four months old next Tuesday, and now weighs six and a quarter pounds, and at the present weight will have doubled her weight in the last two months. She is now just as any other baby, and takes a quart of in ilk and the prepared food in twenty-four hours. i.t,. vo .:! nul Sulci . Yuar '. -i'c A.--sr t l.lia-co ctisi:y mil forever i'C ik.u : f life net vo :iml vi-. r. Utl;e No-To ! ii. in r-W'.rKrr lit:. I inui.' s v.viicme:. ii-. AW Oi uists. ."-iic or f 1. v'urc j.-uara.n-..i.l Hji-UIcL and stiniple free. Aildrcsf 'ler intr I;eu;eb" Ca, Clti-asjo or iCew York North Carolina is said to con sume annually 50.000 more bales of cotton tha: she produces. WOOD'S SEEDS are specially grown and selected to meet the needs and requirements of Southern Growers. "Wood's Descriptive Catalogue is most valu able and helpful in giving cultural directions and valuable information about all seeds specially adapted to the South. VEGETABLE and FLOWER SEEDS, Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Potatoes, Seed Oats and all Garden and Farm Seeds. Write for Descriptive Catalogue. Mailed free. T. W. WOOD & SONS, SEEDSMEN, - - RICHMOND, VA. THE LARGEST SEED HOUSE IN THE SOUTH. Street, Elizabeth City, N. C: DISASTROUS OH Frig-htful Accident Resulting in The Death and Of Bffany THE FINE SHIP IS BELIEVED Accident Occured at Ten O'clock Last Night from Causes Not Yet Ascertained Explosion Shook all Havana. Havana, Feb. 15, 1898. At a quarter of 10 o'clock this evening a terrible explosion took place on bear dthe United States battleship Maine in Havana harbor. Many were killed or wounded. All the boats of the Spanish cruiser Alfonzo XIII, are assisting. As yet the cause of the explosion is not apparent. The wound ed sailors of the Maine are unable to explain it. It is believed that the ship is totally destroyed. The explosion shook the whole city. The windows were brok en in all the houses. The correspondent of the Associated Press says he has con- versed with several of the wounded sailors and understands from them that the explosion took place while they were asleep, so that they can give no particulars as to the cause. The commander of the Maine, Captain Sigsbee, is a favorite in the Navy Department. For four years he was chief of the Hvdro graphic Office and by his energy brought the office up to a high standard. He was lucky to get so important ship as the iIaine, considering his actual rank, which is that of a commander, but immediately he justified the department's judgment in the selection, by runt.ing his ship straight into a dock in New York harbor to avoid running down a packed excursion boat. This was a display of quick judgment, nerve and pluck that pleased the department so highly that the captain was sent a com plimentary letter. His officers are also a good lot. including Lieutenant Commander Richard ttt 1 t i . -a Wainwrieht. Lieutenants G. F. Holmon. John Hood, and C. W. Yungen ; Lieutenants, junior grade, G. W. Blow, J. T. Man din. F. W. Jenkins; Cadets J. H. Holden, W. T. Cluverious. Anion Branson and D. F. Boyd, Jr., Surgeon L. G. Henburger, Paymaster C. W. Litllefield. Chief Engineer C. P. Howell, Passed Assistant Engineer F. C. Bovvers, Assistant Engigeers . R. Morris and D. R. Merritt, Cadet Engineers Pope, Washs ington and Arthur Crenshaw, Chaplain J. D. Chedwick and Lieutenant of Marines A. W. M. Catlin. The Maine is a battle ship of the second class, and is regarded as one of the best ships in the navy. She was built at the Brooklyn nayyxyard, and is 3TS feet long, 57 feet broad, 21.6 mean draught and 6682 tonsdis' placement. She has two ten inch vertical turret and two Fishing and Farming. We copy the following from Col. F. A. Olds' correspondence: ' Two interesting chapters in the forthcoming annual repDrt of the Bureau of Labor Statistics are those on the trucking and fishing interests. The figures are of value, as to truck grow ing, it is nearly as early here as to crops at Charleston, and a fort night or more earlier than Nor folk. On May 3 of last year, over one railway, 500,000 quarts of strawberries were shipped. One grower got $20,000 for his berries. One trucking far:i at Newbern got $75,000 for the produce one season. It 'is estis mated that last year's truck and berry crop was worth $8,000,000. Craven is the first county as to trucking. The value of the huckleberry crop in Sampson and Duplin is worth as much as $250,000 in one favorable sea son. As to the fishing industry, it may be remarked that few States have so large a popula tion dependent upon it for a liv ing. There are 12,000 persons employed in the fisheries, and 3,800 vessels and boats are used. There are 124.000 gill nets, The catch of fish last year was 142,326,000, pounds, value $1, 583,600 ; clams, 78,000 bushels, value, $3,000 ; oysters 350,000 bushels, value $r6o,ooo; terra, pins and turtles 38,000, value (tin nnn Tfnr clirimivs orahc anMvi!,r!H,mpm,8nnn was obtained. ' who has been to the national capital, writes: "A visitor in Much of life's 1 misery is due to in-, Washington is made to under cmristion; for who in be happy with . r u j c r a a pain in his stomach? As a corrective Stand the full definition of the and strengthener of the alimentary there h. h. h home, happiness ?;gnS'owills areJnr!tuab1 and heaven." Because he is so their use be.ng always attended with , . , marked benefit. tar from all three ? EXPL0SI0I1 BATTLESHIP MAINE. Sailors. TO BE TOTALLY DESTROYED. military masts, and her motive power is furnished by twin screw vertical triple expansion engines, having a maximum horse power 019293, capable of making a speed of 17.15 knots. She carries four ten inch and six six-inch breech loading guns in her main battery, and seven six poimder and eig'.it one pounder rapid fire guns, and four Gatlings in her secondary battery and four Whitehead tors pedoes. On the morning of January 24th the President oidered the Maine to Havana. The orders were sent to Admiral Sicard, of the North Atlantic squadron, and within forty eight hours af terwards the war vessel was at her destination. According to I Assistant Secretary of State Day 1 1.1. : . . 1 .1 this trip was simply the resumps tion of friendly naval relations with. Spain, and portended noth ing of a bellicose nature. She was royrlly received in the Havana haibor, and there was an exchange of visits between the acting Captain-General of the Spanish forces and Captain Sigsbee, of the Maine. In close proximity to the Ha vana port tiiere is assembled the most formidable fleet of warships that has been gotten together in home waters for many years. It is made up of the North Ats lantic squadron, under command of Admiral Sicard ; flagship New York, first class battle ships Iowa, Indiana, Massachu setts, second class battleships Maine and Texas, Cruisers De- troit and Montgomery, dispatch boat Fern, and the torpedo boat fiytilla, composed of the Cush ing, Ericson, Dupont, Foote and Porter. LOVERS MAY KISS LEGALLY. A Gallant Georgia Judge Tells Them to Go Right Ahead. The kissing epidemic which has been raging in society cir cles at Atlanta, Ga., tias reached the courts, and the vital ques tion of kissing or not kissing passed upon judicially. D. A. Engesser has a pretty 14 year old daughter, Mary, and Mary has a serious beau, Louis Carco la, who, while ardently wooing her, indulged in the luxury of kissing her ruby lips. Papa Engesser belongs to the anti kissers, aud also believes that Mary is too young to permit of such familiarities on the part of her steady company. But Mary had a different view of the matter and permitted her lover to indulge in his propen sity for kissing. Whereupon he was cited into court by the irate parent. Mar3r not only defended her lover against the charge that he had insulted her, but admitted his right to kiss her and claimed her right to be kissed. Cacola declared his intention of marry ing Mary, and Judge Calhoun, after soundly upbraiding the father for his interferance, ad vised Cacola to go ahead uitb his kissing and love making. A north Carolina gentleman THE LITTLE ONES. Don't Reprove at Bed Time. Send Them To Bed With a Swe Kiss On Their Lips. To send the children happy to bed should be one of the. moth er s most ordinary tasks. No little one should dread the bed time hour, nor fear the dark. not be allowed to go to rest un der a sense of disgrace or aliena tion from household love. What ever the child's clay time naught iness may have been, at night he should go to rest with mother's kiss on his lips, and her tender voice in his ears. Hardly anything can be worse for a young child than to be scolded or punished at bedtime i ne motner aoes wen to oe a little blind at some things, re membering that a good deal of childish culpability is superficial only, and washes off almost as easily as dees the dirt whrcli the evening bath removes from the skin. The main thing with children is to have them well started with good principles, which they will carry through life. Obedience, truth, unselfishness, purity, are essentials, and these can be lovingly cultivated, and will nourish in the right home at mosphere. When the nursery brood is undressed and in bed, the lights turned low, the room quiet for the mothei , or nurse, or the kind auntie, who is still found in some fortunate houses, should have a little fund ol stories on which to diaw for the small listeners' pleasure before they embark on the train for dreamland. Jmagination is very active in little children, and occasionally one meets a mother who does not understand the child's world having forgotten her own early days aud their illusions, or who is afraid that fancies aud imager ies wiil lead her child into de ceit. While the most exact aud rigid truthfulness should be practised in our dealings wiJi children, and they -themselves should be taught toshunequivo cation and every form of lying, still we need not fear to let imagination give them pleasure. They early learn to discrimi nate between the false and the true or perhaps it would be better to say they learn to find the truth wrapped in the husk of the story. The same stories with virations, have in all ages and climes, been taught to chil dreu, and they have their origin in the needs and heart of the race. ChiMreu thrive on stories, and are the better able to grasp other literature if early fed on these. Philadelphia Times Fifty Years Ago, This Is the stamp that the letter bora Which carried the story far and wide. Of certain cure for the loathsome sore That bubbled up from the tainted tide Of the blood below. And "twaaAyer's same And his sarsaparilla, that all now, know, That was just beginning Us fight of fame With its cres of 50 years a fa. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the original sarsaparilla. It has behind it a record for cure3 unequalled by any blood puri fying compound. It is the only sarsaparilla honored by a medal at the "World's Fair of 1893. Others imitate the remedy ; they can't imitate the record : gQ Years of Cures. THE CULTURE OF TOBACCO. An Article Prepared By So licitor Leary. OF INTEREST TO OUR FARMERS. Accompanied by an article from The Wilmington Messenger Giving some Facts in Reference to To bacco as a mon ey Crop. Edexton, N. C, February 8, 1898. Editor Fisherman & Farmer. I append an article clipped from the "Wilmington Messen- ger, winch 1 especially can to the attention of the farmers of the Albemarle section, relative to the culture of tobacco. It will be observed that the crops mentioned were remarkable lor their yield for instance, take the crop of John Norwood, of Vance county, which he cultiv vated on a farm for which he paid $450.00, and wre find be sides raising his own supplies, he sold $1460.00 worth ot tobacco. And the question is seriously asked in connection with this crop, "what state can equal or beat it ?" I cannot help thiuking, that, if our enterprising farmers regard then own interest, they will do well to enquire at ouce into the advantages of this crop. I have already called attention to the success of Mr. Geo. W. Wombie, of Mt. Gould, N. C, who cleared 1040.00 on 8 acres of land. Mr. lohn LeaTy, near Mr. Wombie, cleared $1200 on 12 acres of land. This result was obtained within 20 miles of our doors during the year 1897, showing the crop can be success- ully grown, and is, with us, be yond the experimental stage We have one larmer, near Eden ton, Mr. W. L. Bos well, who has the enterprise and faith necessary to make the start here n the cultivation ot this crop. He has an expert tobacco man, wlio understands both, the cuiti vation and process of curing thi. weed. His example should be promptly fallowed. 1 have faith n the success of this ciop, and believe it will be a great help in iftingour farmers out of their financial difficulties and in plac- ng them above buar I. Trust ing that those who may try this crop will nie.t with the success believe they will and have a bountiful harvest, I am respict- ully. v'm. J Leaky, Sr. HIGH PRICES FOR TOBACCO IN NORTH CAROLINA. ( W ilm i 11 gtoi 1 Messe n r . The Messenger for years has been anxious to obtain reliable statistics of fine farming in North Carolina. It wished to publish actual statistics. It has sought for examples of success full farming, and the various products therefrom, and the prices obtained. We have only now and then seen in an ex change some report of a fair sale of tobacco. But what was de sired, was the average per acre, the average per laborer, the average per mule or horse. The fine farming trom 1868 to 1880, had often been reported with the prices secured. When North Carolina has been properly re ported and duly credited she has generally done well. The last tew years prices have been low and unsatisfactory and not many farmers have made much money. The returns have been small as a general thing, when compared with better years. We have known since peace came for an average bale of cotton to be worth $100. We have known farmers to count 100 bales as $10,000. How much would 100 bales bring in these lauded and magnified "prosperous" times Reliable- statistics are to be desired actual results obtained on farms. In the Southern To bacco Journal there is a long ar ticle on the "Rezults from To bacco Growing" in the South. The statistics given are certain ly highly encouragiug, aud if true show that North Carolina in tobacco growing at least keeps not only to the front, but ahead of the procession as she did in- iS68-'8o We do not kuow who furnished the figures, nor how trust-worthy they are, but as names are given, we may suppose that the statistics may be rrlied upon. The writer mentions that good farming in tobacco especially pays and gives aa e.;a .ji.- of t.vo Wake fann ers living side by side and grow ing tobacco. On five acres one maue uoo, me oiner mo. nei says the fine tobacco is grown in a wide area in the State now, and with wonderful results. .The fine old tobacco comities no lon ger lead. We propose to pick so i.e ex amples of great success out of a grcat'many reported. Frame Worthain, of Vance, averaged $57.25 per hundred pounds on 10,000 grown on eleven acres. On four acres he averaged $600. That is fine. When was this done lately or tenor twenty year ago ? Have such prices anywhere obtained within iwo or five years ? J. M Green, ol Vance, obtained $3,500 from twelve acres two years ago. ! Henry Hart, of Vance, paid $1,100 for a farm of thirty six acres. 11 is hrst tobacco crou fetched $1,183 and the tune seven months. That is splendid farming People leave North Carolina where such things hap pen. We hea id a farmer offer to sell J. C. Cooper, of Oxford, his farm foi Si, 300. That year he and a fourteen year old boy supported the family and cleared $1,400 on the tobacco alone $100 more than the farm was offered lor. That was about i87o-72. S. A. Satter white, of Vance, is worth $30,000 and owns one of the best farms. He began some years as a day la borer. D. Y. Cooper, of Vance, sold $7,000 of tobacco fioni his first crop upon a farm that cost him $5,257. He raised other crops. These are certainly re markable examples. What State can equal or beat it ? In the same county John Norwood paid $450 for a small farm. He grew his own supplies and sold in one year $1,460 worth of tobacco. Still in Vance, Ira T. Hart leas ed a farm for $1 50. His crop of tobacco for four years past has averaged $3,500 it most satis factory investment. Such lands ought to rent for $100 an acre, as they sometimes did in old Granville within the last twenty years. There are other very striking examples given from other coun ties or sections. We are not sure, but think thejfollowing ex amples are from Greenville : "J. C. Fleming obtained $1,975 fr a five-acre crop. His brother, R. II. Fleming, secured $1,787.50 for four acres average $446. Ralph Currin got ;z much. E. E. Freeman, for crop of three acres averaged $37 per hundred. John Hall, of Durham county, averaged $56.31 on entire crop, or about $350 an acre. Near Ralrigh, A. M. Council received $66 for product of two and a halt acies. W. B. LTpchurch, of Wake, planted six acres and re ceived $1,510. Good lands may be obtained from $6 to $20. A large tract on the Raleigh and Gaston road some two years ago sold for less than $4 an acre. Some farms, highly improved, will sell for $30 or $40 an acre. The cost of producing tobacco varies. The Granville Tobacco Club, after more than twelve years of trial, estimate cost at $42.50. The Nortl Caiolina Tobacco Associ ation places the cost at $48.75. We are sorry that the statistics from Granville, Person, Orange and Caswell are not given at length. Some of the products are really phenomenal when the low prices of tobacco for several years are considered. 1 Thin Blood t Where the blood lose its intense red grows thin and watery, as in anemia, there is a constant feeling of exhaus j tion, a lack of energy vitality and the spirits depressed 8 Scott's Emulsion 2 cf Cod-liver Oil with Hypo g phosphites of Lime and Soda is peculiarly adapted to correct this condition. The cod-liver oil, emulsified to an exquisite fineness, enters the blood direct 3 and feeds its every corpuscle. restoring the natural color and 2 giving vitality to the whole g system. I he hypophosphites reach the brain and nerve f centres and add their strength' ening and beneficial effect. 3 If the roses have left your cheeks, if you are growing $ thin and exhausted from over- w 2 work, or if age is beginning $ to telX use SCOTT'S EmuF sion. fre Mire you get SCOTT'S Emultioo. W J AH drucwt,; (oc nd f i.oa jjt SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists, New York. Jk 'x V ter-nwd oak rltln teheU like a I Ui o. It Ih fr-luch lo.i I a pi 1 r' in ti.d l-l.nr. A r t i;o I ri'h I .oflulrlMH I mahoyatjr. I Ml! nnlora f'11,.,1 ,, Wo Will mail hi. chaw, our ioi : jour Sprvml Cat- nu. eio. 1 l fxt nit ooat rjrto tMk nvrr puNftii. and w r afl oMe. Our Iltt..tt4ph. Cr-t t a ahru, Vw..tr cwrM-u Id color, la alio )..ura l.r tt askifr. If rari-t anti-P' ar wni-l. mail ua Ko. In '"'' Itwro U no notion whr tu atiou.J par your Wul lrlr to W win. profit wltea yu cm bur fnia tlx mill. Drop Unu now to th cuuDcy-aaveta. JULIUS HINES & SON, Baltimore, Md. Ploaae mention tula paper. LUMBER .1X2) Truck .AND-., Now is the time to place yon older lor the latter for the Spring Shipping. Address (Kramer ros.f & (Co., Elizabeth City N. C. Get on to This P. DeLON, Matthew Street. ELIZABETH CITY. N- C. With proper tools and much experience I can guarantee woik done in the best work manship manner and to be sat isfactory to all. I can also sup ply bicyclists with all equip ments belonging to wheels. My shop is thoroughly equip ped which enables nic to do work neatly and promptly. CjJivc? liKi jl Ti iiil. Come to see us. Our sock is in, And ofthe best Look to your interest. Call us over the 'phone. Or, write us by the post Also at Flora & Co.'s 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 respectfully solicit your patronage. Crystal lee & Coal C Jrjonuments aijd Tombstones In writing give some limit as to price and state age of de ceased. -LARGEST STOCK- in the Bouth to select from. Goupcr (Marble fflorks, (Established 1848.) 159 to 163 Bank St., Norfolk, Va. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Ti fu ll milt Of fan flL 53.95 ft I n;r p c- I" ' U l..l;Od.ii Boxes 7 ...
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 18, 1898, edition 1
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