Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / April 1, 1898, edition 1 / Page 1
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J' " aMa ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ONE DOLLAR per Year, in Advance. ELIZABETH CITY N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL i, 1898. Established 1886 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. Fred Davis, Wholesale and Retail DEALER. All Grades of Coal constantly j on Hand. Nothing but the est handled. All Coal screaned before) leav-. ing the yard. Orders filled promptly and Ship ments made to any point. Yards, Northeast corner MATTHEW AND WATER STREETS, Near City Market. Elizabeth City, N. C. JST'Phone M. MOVED IN TOWN ! I have moved all of my Shop Work . in Town, No. 226 Road Street, uearj Canal Bridge, where I will be found at all times, ready to accommodate my 1 friends. I have been running a i GENERAL REPAIR SHOP! for nearly 25 years and with this long experience, 1 feel that I can warrant general satisfactiou in each depart ment of my business. Dry Lumber all ways oii" hand. Come one, come all, I will give your work my personal at tention. All WORK executed as promptly as possible We will repair your Carts, Buggies, Wagons Plough, Machinery, Clocks, Guns, ('yc les, Pumps and Furniture. Can pull up your lost pump point from 10 to 40 feet lu the ground. Give me a trial and be convinced of these facts. I ex tend to all my patrons thanks for past favors and hope to be favored with their future patronage. W. K. CARTER & SONS. ELIZ. CITY, X. C. Tested and TRUE. 7yf"i37- do you wait 'till you get down before taking medicine. When you feel dull, aching and stretching, just remember that the next thing will be Mdf laria chills and Fevei- To avoid this, use the great rULlt Iia3rLtiT7-e if taken in time will save you a long spell money. It is for the Kidneys, Liver and Stomach, and will cure OOOSLStlpSltiOn.. A Safe Remedy for Young and Old- Regular Size 25 and 50 ents. Tio 10 Gemts. MADE BY YEAKEL DRUG CO., BALTIMORE MARYLAND FRESH Is the way you like your MEATS, fresh is way we have it. All from our own slaughter house every day. Buy your meats of Caleb Walker, Sta.ll IfcTo. CITY MARKET. 'Phone 91 AND GET THE BEST. Finest Poultry at The Lowest Prices. Let us have your orders, they shall have our most carefn and prompt attention. Remember Stall No. ' r; City Marke GOODS DELIVERED FREE. ASK the ' v'nnSp5 dyspeptics, bilious fWHd&$J$k,f", 'ctims of suf tever and ague, the mercurial isrased patient, how y recovered health. iwSrgaappeiac; they will tell LlVI fE Regulator. The C'tieapvitl, I'urekt and Best Family Medicine la the World! For DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION Jaundice. :ii . s .ai SICK HKADACHE. Colic. Deoresl I SOlk S IO.MACH. Heartburn, etc. i I 1.11 i ale.l remedy is w.u-r&nted not to contain (inj panicle t MtktliRV.oraiiv mitirr.Uiiku.nn. a sir but PURELY VEGETABLE, on'amm iwiijj tnose Southern Roots and Herbs which aa i -- 1) :j t t . . . . I.ivcr Diseases most prevail. It will core alT, I;i-ae cm awed by Derangement of th ' ruviucnte nas Dtacea in countri. vIimi 1-1 ii I'll IMIWF18 The SYMPTOMS of Liver Complaint are a bitter or bad tasie in the mouth ; Pain in the Back, Sides 01 J ints, often mistaken for Rheumatism ; Soar omat-li ; I.om of Appetite; Bowels alternately c.-stive and lar; Headache; Loss of Memory, with a pa nful sensation of having failed to do something hit.h auht to have been done; Debility; Low Spirits; a thick, yellow appearance of the Skin and Eyes ; a dry Cough, often mistaken for Consumption. Sometimes many of these, symptoms attend tht d sease, it others very few ; but the Liver, the largest organ in the boily, is generally the seat of the disease and if not Regulated in time, great suffering, wretch edness and D10ATII will ensue. Uhe following highly-esteemed persons attest to the virtues of Simmons Liver Kegdlatok: Gen. W. S. Holt, Pres. Ga. S. W. R. K. Co. ; Rev. J. R. Felder, Perry, Ga.: Col. E. K. Sparks, Albany, Ga.; C. Master, son, Lsq. .Sheriff Bibb Co.,Ga.; J. A. Butts, Bainbridge, Ga. ; Rev. J. W. Burke, Macon, Ga.; Virgil Powers Supt. Ga. S. W. R. R. ; Hon. Alexander H. Stephens. We have v.-sied its virtue personally, and know that for Dyspepsia, iS liousnes and Throbbing Head, ache. : is the best medicine the world ever n W f have tried forty other remedies before Simmons Liver LeKulatur, and none of them gave us more than tem porary reiiel , the Regulator not only relieved, but cured u "to. TtLKt KAIH AND MESSENGER, MACON, GA. M ANUFACTURED ONLY BY J. II. ZK1JLIN & CO.. Phil ..elphia. Pa. Beautiful Hair Or. Hurray's Universal Hair Promoter Cures dandruff, stops the hair from fall ing out, invigorates the growth, is a superb dressing, and while not a dye, by nourishing 'its roots, will positively re store gray hair to its original color, it is the par-excellence of all hair restorers. Price. 91.00 per Large bottle. For sale by druggists if not, send to us and it will be sent, prepaid, upon receipt of price. MANUFACTURED ONLY BV THI Murray Medicine Company, atlanta, ga. 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. V. W. WOOD & SONS, SEEDSMEN, - - RICHMOND, VA. THE LARGEST SEED HOUSE IN THE SOUTH. il of sickness, and much OUR Beef, Veal, Mutton and 9 and fresh Pork Congress Wants War. The Senate Is Swept by a Flood of Feeling. PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE A TAME AFFAIR. Resolutions Offered Declaring- War, Senator Mason makes a Burning Appeal And Says he is for War. Sinee the last issue of the Fisherman & Farmer the re port of theCourt of Inquiry as to the explosion of the Battleship Maine has been submitted. showing that the explosion was external ; and, notwithstanding, the Court fails to fix any respon sibility, the findings show Span ish conspiracy. The report went to Congress Monday accompan ied by a calm, brief review from the President a message of only a tame recital of facts, and so very disappointing that it is not surprising that those mem bers of Congress who believe that the lime has arrived to put an end to Spanish rule in the Western hemisphere are restive at this time. Up to Monday every v, ish ol the f resident had been respected by Congress, but the indications now are that un less he at once foimulates a pol icy, the carrying out of which will make Cuba independent, the two branches of Congress will take the subject in their own hands and bring matteis to a crisis by the adoption of the resolutions, which have been introduced, recoguiziug the in dependence of Cuba; and in tak ing this action thev will have behind them the great body of liberty loving people of Amer ica. SENATOR MASON FOR WAR. Senator Mason, in a speech, declared he is for war, which caused great applause in the galleries, and which the Vice President could not stop. He says the responsibility for the wreck of the Maine lies with Spain, and she must pay the penaltv. He says he is tired of the dilatory tactics which the Government has displayed. He will oppose asking for indem nity, annexation, or the purchase of Cuba, and will demand the withdrawal of the Spanish flag and the absolute freedom of the island. Mr. Mason first spoke of the condition of affairs in Cuba and the pictures painted by those who had visited the island, and in speaking of the destruction of the Maine, Mr. Mason said: "The battle-ship Maine, our gallant ship went down and 268 of our gallant citizen sailors with her. At the time, every citizen of the United States, fa miliar with the Spanish charac ter, felt confident it was Spanish treachery. Suppose ninety of the sailors who were murdered had been United States Senators, suppose the balance had been me mbers of Congress or made up of judges and leading pro fessional and business men, would forty days have elapsed before war begau, or suppose each Senator had a son or a fath er there? Do we tell our children the truth when we say that the life of every American citizen is of equal value before the law They were not Senators. They were sailors. Their widows and orphans cry aloud to us, the silent appeal of 2.68 seamen conies to us again, saying, we are flesh of your flesh, bone of your bone and blood of your blood, we loved and died for the flag that shields you. What is to be our answer, shall we answer with money? "Mr. President, I speak only for myself, and I am for war. "But gentlemen inayr say: Don't say you are for war say that you are for armed intervene tion which means war. I believe in calling things by their right rtty name. If we believe that murder ing our men, sinking; our ship and lowering our .flag is not cause for war say so, and refer it, as they did the Virginius af fair, and allow our brothers to be sold like stock for gold. If it is a cause for war, let's assume the responsibility put upon us by the constitution, and say so, not only to Spain but to the whole world. Let us not say one thing and mean another. For God's sake let us not Span ishize our diplomacies but rath er speak the truth and prove ourselves true disciples of James G. Blaine. IS READY TO VOTE. "We can hide no longer under the Executive wing. He can neither declare war not refuse it. Congress alone can declare war. I for one am ready to vote now. But there are those who say that the court does not fix the responsibility. It was not uecessarv, that peace at any price' man cannot escape so. The law fixes the "responsibility. "The explosive was owned, located and exploded by Spain, and Spain must answer. I shall oppose any plan to assist Spain to place any kind of autonomy on Cuba. Spaiti cannot be trust ed to keep her promise and we cannot undertake to compel her Let us awake! Shake off the Chinese narcotic, that locks us in drowsy indoleuce, murmuring 'peace at any price; awake as our forefathers did at Concord and Bunker Hill; awake to glorious war against a nation that burns homes and murders women and children, awake to glorious war that seeks to gain for us in treas ure or territory, but a war to drive the oppressor from the continent, to set the Cuban flag . 1 m in tne sky lor ever, and a war that will help us for generations to come, by giving notice that the honor of our flag and the lives of our citizens must be respected among the nations of the world." At the conclusion of Mr. Mason's speech, Mr. Morgan (Alabama) preseuted and secured the passage of a resolution call ing uj.cn the President for in formation as to the disposition made of Congress' appropriation of 50,000 for the relief of Amers ican citizens in Cuba and as to the number of American citizens relieved from the fund. DIS NIGGER AIN'T ER GWINE Dey can shoot de ships wid guns, Dey can 'splode 'em wid er mine ; Dey can fight an' fight an' fight. But dis nigger ain't er gwiue. Dey can crowd de sea wid boats, Dey can kill all dey can fin ; Dey can split der very th'oats, But dis nigger ain't er gwine. Dey cun wallop Uncle Sam, Dey can fns.i oni fume an' whime Dey can Call, but I'll be- If dis nigger is er gwine ! F. B. A. A Little Boys Trouble. "My little boy has been troubled every spring for the past four or five years by an eruption covering his bodv and limbs. It was so bad he could not get on his shoes and stockings. Last spring I heard of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and by taking this medicine he was entirely cured " Mrs. NETTIE Ryan, Winchester, Va. HOOD'S PILLS are the only pills to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla. Cure all liver ills. Should our vessels doff their peacelul garb of white for the more sombre and warlike leaden hue, the appearance ox the navy will be so changed that we will hardly recognize our old friends. can be overcome in almost all cases by the use of Scott's Emulsion of Cod-Liver Oil and the Hypophos phites of Lime and Soda. While it is a scientific fact that cod-liver oil is the most digestible oil in ex istence, in SCOTT?S ... EMULSION It is not only palatable, but it is already digested and made ready for immediate absorption by the system It is also" combined with the hypophospnites,wmcn supply a food not only for the tissues of the body, but for the bones and nerves, and will build up the child when its ordinary food does not supply proper nourishment . Be sure you get SCOTT'S Emulsion. See ttat the man and fith re on the wrapper. A!l druggists ; 50c. and fi.oo. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York. wasting in Children JOY MMIEMER. FACE TO FACE. Joys ot Heaven Are Past Man's Understanding. We are told that heaven is a place of happiness, but what do we know about happiness? Hap- pinefs in tins world is onlv half fledged thing, a flowrv path wun a serpent Missing across it, a broken pitcher from which the water has dropped before we could drink it, a thrill of ex hilaration, followed by disastrous reactions. To help us understand the joy of heaven the Bible takes us to a river. We stand on the grassy bank. ' We see the waters flow on the with ceaseless wave cut rue nun 01 me cities is emptied into it, and the banks are torn, and unhealthy exhila tions spring up from it, and we fail to get an idea of the river o life in heaven. We get very imperfect ideas of the reunions of heaven. We think of some festal day on earth wnen iatner ana nioiner were yet living and the children came home. A good time that! But it had this drawback all were not there. That orother went off to sea and never was heard from That sister did we not lay her away in the freshness ot her young life, never more in this world to look upon her Ah, there was a skeleton at the feast, and tears mingled with our laughter on that Christmas day jNotscwitn neaven s reunions. It will be an uninterrupted glad ness Many a Christian parent will look around and find all his children there. "Ah," he says "can it be possible that we are all here life's perils over? The Jordan passed and not one want ing? Why, even the prodigal is here. I almost gave him up How long he despised my coun sels. But grace hath triumphed. All here, all here ! . Tell the mighty joy through the city. Let the bells ring and the angels mention it in their song. Wave it fiom the top of the walls. All here!" No more breaking of heart strings, but face to face. The orphans that weie left poor and in a merciless world, kicked aifd cuffed of many hardships, shall join their parents over whose graves they so long wept, and gaze into their glorified couu tenances forever, lace to face. We may come up from different parts of the world, one from the land and another from the depths of the sea, from lives affluent and prosperous, or from scenes of ragged distress, but we shall all meet in rapture and jnbilee, face to face. Many of our friends have entered upob that joy. A few days ago they sat with us study ing these gospel themes, but they only saw through a glass, darkly. Now revelation hath come. Your time will also come. God will not leave you flounder ing in the darkness. You staud wonder struck and amazed. You feel as if all the loveliness of life were dashed out. You stand gazing into the open shasm of the grave. Wait a littte. In the presence of your departed and ot Him who carries them in his bosom you shall soon stand face to face. Oh, that our last hour may kindle up with this prom ised joy! May we be able to say, like the Christian not long ago departing, "Though a pilgrim, walking through the valley, the mountain tops are gleaming from peak to peak," or, like my dear friend and brother, Alfred Cook man, who took his flight to the throne of God, saying in his last moment that which has already gone into Christian classies, ' I am sweeping through the pearly gates washed in the blood oi the Lamb." Dr. Talmage. Rheumatism Cured. My wife has used Chamber lain's Paia Balm for iheuniatism and other household use for which are have found it valua ble. W. J Cuylf.r. Red Creek, N. Y. Mr. Curley is one of the lead ing merchants of this village and one ot-the .most prominent men in this vicinity. W. G. Phippin, Editor Red Creek Herald. For sale by W. VV. Griggs & Son, Druggist. To Car Coutlpatietfi T'orTr. TnUe Cxs carets Candy Cathartic. 10c or Sic ff O- U. C Tail to cure, druggists refund moocv GEN. FITZHUGH LEE. HIS BRILLIANT CAREER AS WARRIOR, STATESMAN AND DIPLOMATIST. As Consul General to Cuba, He Has by His Sound Judgment, Uudaunted Courage and Staunch Americanism, Shown Himself to be the Right Man in the Right Place. His Course Satislactory Alike to North and South. Gen. Lee the Hero of the Hour. I Washington Dispatch. Major General. Fitzhugh Lee is a man almost without fear, and a splendid representative of the American soldier, the pilot of the administration in a crisis, and the Consul General to Ha vana, not only under President McKinley, but also under Presi dent Cleveland. General Lee's resignation naa been on nie in Washington several months al ready when last November he came home and reported in per son to Prssident McKinley. Yet he went back to Havana with the seal of office still in his pos session, lortihed by tne cordial commendations of the President, who had received stacks of let ters from representative men in all parts of the country, favoring the retention of General Lee. It was in April, 1806. that President Cleveland, impatient at the apathy of Consul General Williams in cases affecting the rights ol American citizens of Cuba, appointed General Lee to the hazardous position. The case of the illfated Dr. Ruiz, of Philadelphia, gave him occas sion to show a firm hand in con ducting the investigation in the lace ot tne almost savage opposi tion of Weyler's organized in quisitors. It was generally un derstood eeu then that Lee had urged the dispatching of a Uni ted States man of-war to Cuban waters: and his manly protest - 'I cannot and will not stand an other Ruiz murder" was ap plauded throughout the countr) year ago. A characteristic expression was that of L. P. Sigsbee, brother of the Main 's commander, who inmenting on the disaster ai Havana, said : "There's a man down there ooking after the interests of this country who cannot be blinded. He has more sand than anybody I know of, and if tnere s anytliuig tieacnerous in this explosion we'll know of it without delay. The man I mean is General Fitz Lec." Lee's grandfather was the fa inous ".Uigur, norse narry Lee, of the Revolution. His uncle was General Robert E. ee. Fitzhugh Lee, our own Fitz, was the eldest sou of Captain Sydney Smith Lee and his wife, Anna Maria Manson, and was born at Clermont, Fairfax coun ty, Va, on November 19m, 1035. He entered the West Point Mil itary Academy at 16, graduated in July, 1856, at the head of his class in horsemanship, and was ppointed a second lieutenant. His second duty was in drilling raw recruits at the Carlisle Bar racks, Pa. Then he was sent to the western frontier ar.d became an Indian fighter in Texas un der Major Earl Van Doru. The outbreak of the civil war found Fitzhugh Lee back at West Point as instructor in cav airy tactics. He promptly re signed, offered his services to his native State, served on the Stiff of General Ewell, then as lieu tenant colonel of the First Vir ginia Cavalry under J. E. B. Stuart, whom he accompanied 011 his famous raid around Mc Clellan's army in front of Rich mond. On the promotion of Stuart, Lee was chosen colonel, and later brigadier general under Stuart. In 1863 the cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia was divided into two divisions, commanded respectively by Generals Wade Hampton and Fitz nigh Lee. Shortly after the death of Stuart, Lee succeed ed Hampton as commander of the cavalry of the Army of Nor thern Virginia, with the rank of Major General. At Winchester, September 16, 1864, he had hree horses killed under him and was severely wouudeu. The last figlthrj done by the Army of Northern Virginia was the cavalry charge headed by Fitz " Lee at Farm ville, a few miles from Appo- matox, on the 6lh of April, 1865, when the Confederates were successful in driving back the Federal cavalry division of General Crook. Then Sneridan and Ord came up and ended the hopeless strMggle : and the next iday Grant and Robert E. Lec settled the terms of the surren der. The personal friendship be tween (Jen. Fitzhugh Lee and President Cleveland, dated from the President's first inauguration March 4, 1885. Lee headed the divisions of tne Southern mili tary organizations in the proces sion, and throughout the whole length of Pensylvauia Avenue he was cheered with greater en thusiasm than any of the other noted men whom the public rec ognized. A similar demonstration oc curred in New York City four years later, when Lee rode up Fith Avenue, leading the veh low plumed Virginia troopers, to the stirring tune of "Dixie," in the Washington Centennial parade. On both these occas sions, by the way, he sat ir. the identical saddle which his uncle. General Robert E. Lee had used on his familiar gray war horse, Traveler. The day after the inaugura tion General Lee called upon President Cleveland by special invitation. The friendship then formed ripened into an intimacy, which from thit day to this has remained unbroken. That same year General Lee was elected Governor of Virginia. Eight years afterward, when Mr. Cleveland was again President, he appointed the General col lector of internal revenue a: Lynchburg, the General's home. Lilscubc. w iAe a. J o iM i i.:iu :erve. No one need suffer with nt-und-m. This disease is quickly and pernjaxK.uly cured by Iirovrns' Iron Hitlers. Every disease of the blood, nerves and stoniBoh, chronic or otherwise, succumbs to Hrowns' Iron Bitters. Known and used for nearly a quarter of a century, it stands to-day fore most among our most valued remedies. Browns' Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers. Shot His Sis'er's Lever. News conies irom Her ford county of a sensational attempt of a forty-five year old man to runaway with a fourteen-year old girl and marry her. George Teel is his name and that of his sweetheart is Pauline Vann. The young people fiad planned to rumway on'a certain night. The girl's brother found it out. so he took a double barrel shot gun, hid behind a tree and when Teel came the boy poured a load of shot into his hide. One of the reasons, it is said, for the Vann family's objection to Teel is said to be that he is an infidel. Miss Vann has been taken from school and is now at home, wh.re she can be watched. All ot this happened during the past week, and the matter has been settled and will not be taken to court. K lui-iie Your Itowuls With Casearcts. Cundy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 0t 25c. If C. C C. fail, druggists refund money. Col. Fred Grant went to Washington last Saturday with a letter addressed to the Presi dent by General Grant in 1885, endorsed by General Sherman, requesting the appointment of his grandson, Ulyses S. Grant, to West Point. Fifty Yean Aro. President Polk In the White House chair. While in Icirell was Doctor Ayer ; Both were busy for human weal One to gorern and one to heal. And, as a president' power of will Sometimes depends on a liver-pill, Mr. Polk took Ayers PIUs I trow For his liver, 50 ycara ago. Ayer's Cathartic Pilf were designed to supply a model purgative to people who had so long injured themselves with griping medicines. Being carefully prepared and their in gredients adjusted to the exact necessities of the bowels and liver, their popularity waa in stantaneous. That this popu larity has been maintained' is well marked in the. medal awarded these pills at the World's Fair 189& SO Years of Cures. o. 083. Mad la 64. 48. 42. 3G Incn Wrt. 2-25 burs this lr.-4-trTnmxl White Eruuneled (Vvlatrawl. I truck In all wiitttis; lnth. "L iiiotw. It hat on-ln.-h )illar.4. iwo-I.m-Ii or nt vat mod caps. Ta.s bed rvUil at Iroia 6 to 4 doilirs. FhiT of the make- and Mre th mid dleman' Urmi profits. Our CataloguM Rr m:l-d for too kins'. Oumplat lme of Kurnltiire. I arrets, Draperle. Crockery, riuturv. Mirroia. MorM. Kvf ltrerrnrs Hatjy ' irrtair. Lamps, Ikrd-t nA, cto.. aro contained In toe books. On.- Lithott-rapticd Carpet Oata nfru?shjwinrallr'"daln hand-paJntisl colors is also t rt-o : if Cr0t riaaaplea ar wanted mail is be. l"i iuai. Drop a postal at nno to t't money-aaver freifflu ibis ntNtb n trl no rmmwr mat m at a y of Carp In, t'Mt-laiaa, Pr- rrmi tlr mh4 Kap f V.OO aat ovrr. aimasiallas; f Julius Hlncs fi Son DAIriltlORG, BID. Ptoaas mention this Paper. A Stitch in Time Saves 9 Nine oo o Don't wait until your Wluel gives out before you have it ie paired. Brind it to P. DeLON, An Experienbed Bicycle Repairer. and have it put in perfect order. Work executed promptly and prices at living rates. My shop is thoroughly equip ped with all modern improve ments, and what can't be re paired in DeLon's Shop can't be fixed this side of the Factory. A full stock of Bicycle Sup plies always on hand at lowest prices. Sliof) No 40, Matthcvs Street, F LIZA BETH CITY. N- C. Brick! Brick! BRICK WORKS. The leading brick manu facturers of this section are 'J', no v ready to supply orders at short notice. I his plant has been in active operation for twenty years, and they guarantee satisfaction as to qualily and price, These rick have Stood the est And reflex action will be a guide to youi further purchase. You could do worse, and we venture to say, you can do no better elsewhere. Call Telephone No. 2, or add less . Thompson, $gr, Elizabeth City, N. C. frjonuments agd Tombstones r-V DESIGNS 8KNT PREK.yt In writing give some limit as to price and state age of de ceased. LARGEST STOCK- in the South to select from. Couper (Marble fflorks, (Established 184K.) 159 to 163 Bank St.. Norfolk, Va. G W.ROGERS. -PROPRIETOR OF THE NEW BLACKSfllTH 5H0P A T AANTEO. N. C. Having recently entered into the blacksmithing business at Manteo, N. C, 1 solicit the pat ronage of the public, promising to give all orders uiy prompt ans personal attention. My shopd i located at the head of rwfs ;-; Railways. Repair work a specialty. Prices low and work guaranteed. . Give Me -A- Trial. For A 22 X acre Hule ! Truck Farm on the suburbs of Elizabeth .City. Apply to feb4 Mrs. F. L Graniv 1 --!- ... - I
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 1, 1898, edition 1
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