Newspapers / The Weekly Economist (Elizabeth … / Jan. 13, 1899, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Weekly Economist (Elizabeth City, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
W- .rf-C Jh H W-tf s) O-b U- O-ss t i I . m rm- m-TTf ftlATi . c m Aww-a. wa..- iu--icc will I -the lust 'nail m aim cu... wu. fC2LX3asi ETX3T rcixuT. . ,lVv-i ,Mj Ku-Ion cof-' Haad "Carraway," pledged him- MU s. s. Brooklyn" vent above m3 rc WO I I Mil 0 r. )J C( 5 i I I - t... Atn Kirr JYNUYRY 13 1S'i! JAMAi.1 u, 10.1-. FRIDAY THE "LEGiSLftTOSlE. The Governor's Message. IncidentsandExcidcnts. An Exceptionally "Abk: Body. Our Parliament of patri ots are setting down to work in earnest, with nospread calr speeches or ambition of swell ing pomposity. Earnest work, retrenchment and reform are the impulses that swell all hearts. The Governor's Message wai on time on Thursday by llv hands of Baltics the Cade. Ii is pronounced a "tamo Stati paper," which is an equivocal compliment, suggested by the leonic message of tlu protubu ant Governor two years a:; when his :utteranci about t lie "retributions of history,' and a vampire feeling of venom, revengo and cussing animated his victoriousjbosoin. There i some effusion in the realms of poetry about the devil, who whenheis a saint ami a sinner. When down he wa a aiit" and when in power a 4I vil of a saint was he-" Our in- in ty is at fault in recalling the line; , But we are sure the poet !rd a supernatural foretaste of Itu ; sell and Kussellism whm he gave life to the idea. The message deals with pub lic questions in a lamb like way. He dodges sain . mi leads some, lies some, but ho cusses neither Ravages r. r Democrats. Impliedly he hits the savages who leeto I him between the. 'e, v.hea he apologises for having put only S of them in oCice, and utters a "false when he says so, ior no was the foster father of all the ! ..... . 1 negro appointments m the ma chinery of the State Govern mcnt that brought us to the J . ..... verge of barbarism, jfaud him j r.w. ; down the rolls of time, with all I ,,.,! ,,, iU.cli'Hf'' lmnnr t hie!: ! upon him." And well may . such honors blush." Leave him aloue to the "conscious ness of infamy and to the distinction of being the mean est Executive that jsortli Caro lina has ever produced. Tho three leading important questions before the Legisla ture are the .suffrage, the Jim Crow cars, and the educational taxation question. It is jr.dd to bo a unit on Jim- Crow and tho suffrage. So are we too, pardner. Tho Senate is said to b '- "quiet, orderly, dignified, ; a i conservative body.' W iieu they want to step down from their dignity and exercise their abdominal intercostais, get Tom Skinner to tell about the Boy that broKe up a buzzard., nest and never had any luck afterwards or about Lavcn stein and Livenstein, the two Jew merchants, and their mail, or about the "stiff" win de clined to pay his pail of a Northampton drink, or abaut Bill Toolcy and the 'Tuicamry Injun." The Senate is 'humping" ahead. The standing commit tees were appointed by the pre siding officer on Friday. S n " ator Cowper, of the First Dis ' trict, is Chairman of the Shell Fish Committee, Skinner, ll colleague, is on the Fish and Fisheries committee. In tin House Bush Leigh is on the Judiciary committee. Senator Brown, of Columbia, has introduced a bill to ap point a special joint commilUc :n...ot;.ftti tli. affairs of t!u vonitentiary under the fusior;K regime. It is the stenca of re publican politics, and it would bo a fit comment upon the "ret ributions of. history" if the penitentiary "attachces, includ ing our distinguished Govern or, should bo in instead of over aho penitentiary. The conven tional striped, uniform would put tho "mister into them." Tho bill to amend the char ter of Elizabeth.City" has been introduced by Mr. Skiuner in the Senate and by Heprcsenta- I , -fi.. i i C'rov. " x I roir.invU in -n . t it'll .. iij' -i both h u" o::. has ;,c: : r ' i llv .T r -t ' n 1 v Jti.l. ' ' i , , r..fl,.." t j 1 1 '. a s '... TT .-Lit b: on I o bv mtro i:r ,.t 1,4 Ji" - II. pr.-. r:: alive Winston, ot j U aoui no, uPF- -- ,5 cUon into the fleet of Ad IJ .rti,.. It provides for an edu-jbatc. Representative J. H. miral T , .i;.'...;,n f,r in its Smith, an Afro, of the Guinea The old ehip bore great epreadpf -.ore, ... :ru:e:;y quahhea- of : , ' ..nd in the absence c: 1 lit- 1 r;v;ef wir, vr:d rnor to. r t.rior. to . ! V 4f , ..,1: of. t th ittiiro-v.;l,r.i -n.irl.v , i-d 5-oHirr of the U::itod Grati s, or a f,..n r grandson ot uca Md.-ilcr. T.:o dt;taiW of the a:m;:uino ::t. vi;:i the routine of the oU article', with the at iriuly.nl oatl; and punishment for f4 ii- ar.;.;avivied for in NiiH'ituil. -a as j it... l.fl I" " '! ! r-w i .nnv:.dJd Yiml! h : ub :dttod to the too: le in- tn.n clfrtion of l'MHiand the Legislature- elect-.-! in.If shrill. hiive authority mr.i.idify or rc-ival the ame by -the concurrent vote f two thirds of tho members of each House of the General Assem bly. "Wo understand all the pro visions in rhe bill and qi'prove thein, . exempt tlu:t relating to soldiers ia the Army of tho Unite I States, 'i l.ere is prob ably tome, ii avj:i f r giving f, r fran'h:sc t Fe ieral sol diers -and ! to C ;:;;" urate soblifisir; v,el:, for the ia ,'ged i-.jhorts 1 . I . ic worthier' of , iie f.aiu ..- i'roin thy Xoith rffcro!ina land point, than the e --m o - liiai; c !;:.; of Grant. - iiote liic :-,iii.h, t'.ij Airo iiinri . r '.' 1 1I t at! VtJ ' of ;:ntativj III the IIoU:e .d .h Ctr- o'.:na. ; iee-i i:Y polic! from h "causr L':e D.-m-ratic ,....!.,:- sin llo- ;ut r of i he Fu ll; apoi Odin ; :ii:HU;. 4 . CV. ;.;S : U U- IilvMil- M.iiiig for :t iuced i:i Dare tr.r own o r . 1 c in! v 1 1 O ;l l!:.in ;4sv .:o a 1 .... oil the ;e nhrTi::i ii ollen .v;l r. ; ; their necks lO f . ti.a: r. i co de. jea. haul (.t big blue lih v.-orh a thous.iud dol- hit.- Fa L-giLiture, e.h 1 v:t. aeli a wick- e 1 law, giving tlie !,a.l bodies f paupers, crinnnals. insane and other as lum inmates to metiical colleges, to' b carved iip. Tlr. -fojif has introduced a bill t- de:n jli h this monu ment of Uepubiiean deviltry, by repealing ll;e devilisil act. , Its d.. -agreeable eiiougli t. be poor, :i: to be slicet! up by young doctors because you are poor hur's. Thanks,. Mr. Iloore. . "Peg Leg Williams," (why so called we know not) came in for a bhare of the honors of Legislative :utic- n Siiturday. V.'av von l.r i;i ''.n 1 bill was I -cd tokc- p-'I'e- ' iioaita'-dngt-ur niggers out of 4 he Stato' It was prop.,. ,l i,, ropeal the bill- 'i. -.- . . ,--'.. ...".-..-------- v S s ?: i "JJrl o c-o -ou . Br lr---j V-t ho-.i.:d Of? V li I'Q-v about r. a old 'i brxi.'r ? Cr.o that has dcro viizcri lor OTiT o. c;.uj-u r ,4 H ot' a c r.i-.:v? Cue tiiat kO'S -l H n'wav. i-cpt II 3 premises? i a. t.!.at nuvcr failed ; njver "V :j nV'-.l r.iti tn-r.nr war? . ""x'r-. 1 1-t-.-M tru-t t'"ch R'bnnlr. '1 couidut ycu? fiO r. -rxri-. -T e- 1: of coD-Lrro oil vrrn. :; jsT IS h .3 never deceived you, q ) Loo'" OJi tht scmooao ci -. r n n ; Lnvcnt .yciir iie.vlta in rev tcnic corno new rasdicino ,t - 1 1 ; r J .w W you icnow nou-nsj ji. .3 SCOTT tOWM, Cv.-tJ, New Ywri. il lticu cuch a baa',1. It hrnovcr C H nnnintnt! TCU. novor will. . Trn niHi;im. followed UlrL I ii tin i - i was a host of opponents of -Dirt' proclaimed him- . . j. ' .1 n n ri I self lor ncjrro urum ucia cuv - . . . r I Hfn" declared nimseit ior i . ..-r-. ,n r i Edirccomoe. -i-'irfc aa iui "Peg per SC, DUt as lO "xieu, v - -. . a iiTT L I . ... . ' r .U.ki.n. o fh flnntini? fortreBS that T. A 11,,1 Tfnc ana iUO pe, . with Hcn ' and '-Virt ana eiaooratCU Uia iwsiuuu 1 "nr. argument partaking or ine r ehives of gravity. Ine bill to rfT eal waspassed by a . thun- rtpcai was pa J . dering big mojoniyuuu to the Senate, j Senator Bryan, of Craven is 7 ,it ir, Wnrinrr old 1 HJ 1 Ii " v.- 0 New Berne, once ''Athens ot rpntrfi I r Aeln onH of refinement,: distinction and I culture, to the ranks of Anglo Saxon supremacy and civiliza tion.. iie mtrouueeu inree bills' on Saturday relating to the local government of New Berne and Craven county. 't Senator Daniels, of Wilson has introduced a bill to divert the insurance fees that now come into the perquisites of Cy. Thompson, the Secretary of State, from him into the Treasury: This biii will clip the wings of the biggest buz zard in tho! department of State. It is j unnecessary to say that he is a big buzzard of the Fusion party. The bill which has been notified to the Senate by Hon. Frank I Os borne, of Charlotte, is one that will.be approved by every' pa triotic or just man in North Carolina. It is a bill to inves tigate Iiussel's removal of the two Wilsons from the Railroad Commission: one its Chairman and known to. be one of the best and. ablest men in our State and probably the best business railroad man in it, and the other, sometimes called "Gideon," and known as one of the poorest "sticks," that ever disgraced North Carolina. If we were on1 that committee, we would say ' as to "Gideon" "served him 'right," and as to the Chaitmauj we would say to you Governor: "You miser able, plethoric old leper, you deserve all the vials of your lurid wrath to be emptied on your vile, uncovered head." Beasley, of Currituck, is on iho committee on Fish Inter ests of which Leigh, of Bas vuotank, is Chairman. Beas ley has an ejye to Currituck. He introduced a bill on Tues day in regard to the Jtoad Laws of Currituck county. A resolution recommending that the people have the right to elect United States Senators was 'passed by tho Senate of North Carolina on Wednesday, ft would be) some protection against the debauchery of mono in our State Senatorial elections. But whether a change .fromjthe present mode of election taken altogether, would be a change for the bet ter admits of doubt. In the early years we had a dignified hod' composed of the best men in the States, "but in these lat ter davs this Is not thus. Parsnip Complexion . It ilot-s not require an expen to qc tH't the sn!Ter;r from kidney trouble. Th hollow cheeks the sunken eyes, the ilarii, pufTy circles under the eyes, ihf alsow parsnip-colored complexion Inlliotoa ?f I a nlnMcian would -ask if you had h ick or over the hips, stomach trouble ,!, !re to urinate often, or a scaldin Ins in poking it; ii after passing there is nn nnsatitJtied feeling as if it inast k,H at ouce rt?latdor ir lhe arine has I B. a brkk dat deposit or strong odor. I -Win n thes symptoms are present, notbue should be lost in removing 0 the cause. 1 Delay may lead to gravel, catarrh of the bladder, inflammation, causing! stoppage. Hnd sometimes requiring 7 to be mistaken ior nan crowns, ior the drawing of the urine with instru- now they are minted not only of a dif ment5,orinavruninto Bright Dis- Jf" size and design, but even of the nut u.mi;ertMi3 stage 01 or Kinney 1 trouble. ! I Dr. KilmprV Pwamn-IJont the rrrefctl discovery of the eiuirent kidney and J . . .... .... l bladder specialist, is a positive remedy I for such disease?. Its reputation is 1 .. . . - . . . I v rld-w;de and it is so easy to get at I any drcc store tla.t no one need suffer any length of time for want of it. However, if yon prefer to first teat i wnndertnl merits, mention (insert I The full name of yonr paper) and write to nr. Kilmej u; Co. Bingbamton, N. ., for a sample bottle and book tell- all about it, both sent absolutely free by mail. V. ben waiting kindly mention that vou eaw this liberal offer 111 lie tCUliuujiaia a . .I T. ? A. ot Vncle Sm' ClU Time JwK Tliat Thrllletl llieUerl ot WJiele Ship's Crew. I , il inlflmi There was once anomer atw;-, . - a! .mnMi tue forerunner ci m p"-;-rrr-. ftri.epr. nuh iuo uiu - th Mril war. rained; the name '. ' . - cf tne "Butcher Shop," naa: no reeem .n and had but auxiliary steam Her loftr masts and creaking Jfirdg. would geem- ringularlj out of pjace xoaay, out uivj iuicu , nose in their own time. Her open aecjc, p. muzzl0 loadingf 1. looked like a scene from a mediaeval drama, and when she wnt tft tha flaDDiDe of the sails ::XC"r, nf tha rdaee were not an unwelcome lullaby to those who srept beneath her cool white decks. This old Brooklyn sailed one day I Vani Vnrlr hnnnil nTVin B rnVlIlC mse and came in time to the Azores islsnds. whence she eaiJed for Lilsoon and Gibraltar and, passing through the ind the Suez canal. rteamed slowly down the Ecorcnmg aea sea. A stop at Aden for a day or two made her readyfor a journey to the Persian gulf, but when. the gulf of Ormaz was reached the skipper thought to take a look at Muscat, and so the course was shaped for the capital of the son of Abraham, whose forefathers for hundreds, nay, thousands, of years, had been sheiks of the desert, i In all her journey the good ship had entered not a port where the , proud cross of i St. George' could not be seen from the staff of a British man-of-war, but here at Muscat it was thought that at least our flag would be the only token of western civilization in evidence. But it was not so,, for, as the Brooklyn rounded a high , promontory that shut in the little harbor, there, lying at an chor, was seen' the English gunboat Sphinx with her milk white flag float ing above her. Muscat had much that was . strange and weird to. interest the Americans, but neither the palace of 'the sultan, with its double wall, between the two parts of- which are kept the tigers whose duty it is to guard the palace at night, nor the Imperial harem's grim exterior, nor the gorgeous apparel of the sultan himself had half the attraction for the westerners that the grim, sheer face of torn ptmmoKttmy Hart tm tt harbor had; for there upon the bleak wall of this towering height were painted the names of many ships, and high - above therm all, in a place that seemed inaccessible, were the words, "H. M. S. Sphinx." ; ' V . The men of the 'Brooklyn stared at that name day after day, until it seemed burned into their brains, and the spirit of emulation grew within them. . The night before the Brooklyn was to sail . for Persian waters there were evidences of a secret movement among the crew,' and after the night had fallen still and black a boat pulled off Jrom the vessel's side, and with muffled oars made rapidly for the shore. It carried many things of various sorts, and among them a lantern, whose tiny glimmer those on the ships watched with bated breath as it reached the shore and slow ly began the ascent of the promontory. Now it would disappear and then glit ter again like a star of hope and com fort, and so it went slowly on, ever up and up the face of the outlined precipice. The hours dragged slowly by, and it was -far Into the night when a tired boat's crew clambered slowly over the Brooklyn's side and dropped exhausted into their hammocks for a short sleep before the call of "all hands" In the morning. The Brooklyn Eailed away just as the eun began to show above the eastern horizon, and as she swung upon her course and stood 1 for the waters of the open gulf a cheer burst from the throats of the whole ship's company. For there, in great letters of white that caught the warmth of the rising sun, far above the name of her majesty's ship Sphinx, far above the highest name of all, could be seen the legend U. S. S. Brooklyn." And there today, looking down upon the tiger guarded palace and the harem of the sultan, ever before the Arabs and the Belooohistanese of the tiny sultan ate, still gleams the - magio name that Schley and Cook once again made fa mous and that shall endure in history when Muscat itself shall be forgotten. Washington Post. How a Frog Illberaatei. , According to Simon Henry Sage, the frog does not hibernate in leaves or the trunks of trees, but in a dry hole in the ground not likely to freeze. ; He scratches the hole with his . hind feet and enters backward. Once inside, there is appar ently no trace of the fact outside. Frogs found under frozen leaves are still able to move about Mr. Sage has found hibernating frogs with their extremities and skin frozen', but their vital organs were still intact, and they recovered their activity on being liberated. .Lion- don Mr- A- Ballard, B. A., LL. B., sends " tbefHoTl1fg rom, Oxford: - Your f . - t . fc of of the negro student who at one of our great missionary colleges was conduct- ing family prayers, and in an outburst of enthusiasm prayed, 'Give us all pure hearts, give us all clean hearts, give ns all rweet hearts, to which all the con- 11 11. j 1 . tit r 3 gregauon repuea, -amea. juuuuua nronlcie- ; ; . ; - English farthings are no longer like w- , "I never complained," once . said Sa'dl. the noeL "of mv condition . hut en a single occasion, when my feet wvawa Imiva oi4 T ItAl ti tnnnAV A Vvw vj w-.t. " - -wH became instantly 'contented with my , . . bom ho ha 1 nia philosophy. Sa'di replied. "From the blind, because they never advance a cto nntu k. f; .r,n tt ..They agked me,. Sa'di writes in tfa GnIistan .of ,hom didst thou . , 7. j 4 "A learn manners?-I replied: 'From the tmmannerly. Whatever I saw them do which I disapproved of, that I abstain- A mnm 1nin. I II ' w ui-u uuiu. . . . t, m. U9 C3 i -- . . - - A -. ' - - - Actually had to lock doors during the Holidays and only let customers in as others would finish their shopping and move out. ' This wo d.sliked to do, but the rush was so great we were forced to do it. , Kit CO ft Why this Mad Rush... ti? CP ': c? ... ' , ti The answer is simple cnougn we knew full well the reason. CO CO admittance at the Racket i CP' ? CO i . . People have found out ana are siiu uuuiug wuu .u v " d We began on the -principle of Underselling and knew we were in position to under sell aU without fear or favor, and have stuck to it from the start. Whenever we fin4 g tWnt rtmfthodv else is selline the same article at our price, down goes our price on that U .article until we get it out of and the beauty about these I . . f V? c 1?? S:. special day or special weeic, . . It' . -r J J 11. . ..J exceptea). -fteau wem auu The Daily Bill of Fare. Something ONE DOLLAR 480 Lead Pencils. 1600 Slate Pencils. 100 Yards Lace. 50 Nice Handkerchiefs. 110 Papers Pins. 125 Papers Needles. ; -W0 Packs Envelopes. 100 Quires Writing Paper. 50 Bottles Best Ink. 400 Dozen Shirt Battens. 25 Pair Suspenders. 25 Pair Ladies Hose. ' 25 Pair Men'o Sox. ' , 20 Hair Brushes. 100 Cakes Toilet Soap. 40 Yards Yellow Cottons. 30 Yards Check Homdspan. 33 Yards White Insertion. 33 Yards Bleached Cotton. 25 Yards White Lawn. 25 Yards Checked Muslin. 20 Yards Bed Ticking. 12 Yards Worstead Dress Goods. 20 Yards Good Outing. . 7 Yards Turky Red Damask, for if you go elsewhere you 0t '!-., V? CO 1 CorlAiM Caie of Sbmnuabnllim. The modern novelist is very prone to found his plots on the doings of sleep walkers and hypnotists, but, as usual, 'truth is stranger than fiction," and his efforts are outdone by actual occur rences. Here, for example, is a true story from France of a gentleman miss ing from his bedroom a packet contain ing more than 2,000 worth of bonds. The thief could not be traced, but short ly afterward the mistress of the house, who had taken the robbery to heart even more than her husband, was taken to a doctor, fur she was suffering from nerv ous prostration. The doctor, a firm believer in hyp notism, was told of the robbery and, putting two and two together, hypnotiz ed his patient and extorted a confession from her that she had taken the bonds and buried them in the garden. There, upon search being made, they were found, but the lady is as yet quite igno rant of the fact that she herself was the person who hid them. Chambers' 'JoumaL ; n n n a A hacking cough is a grave-yard cough; the sooner yon get rid of il tha better. Don't wait until it develops into consumption, but use the cele brated Dr. JohnW. Bull's Cough Syrup at once. It is a wonderful remedy for all throa and lung affections, ana will cure a deep-seated cough or cold in a tew days. Uooa lor oia ana young. Will cure a Hacking Cough. Doses are small and pleasant to take. Doctors recommend it. Price 25 cent. At all druggists. KoticeV Administration. Having qualified as administrator of th'e late Miss Mary B. LaBoyteaux, I hereby give . notice to all persons in debted to her estate to cpme forward and make immediate, settlement, and those holding claims against the same to present them for paymentwithin 12 months from the date of this notice, or it will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. . ; Ailm'r of Mary B. I aBjyteai x. : nr. 25. 18S-S. . LEG SLATIVE riOTICC !, . A pV ., A n ? fo the -c p1 t - N-.i H I r. t the egilrtf-i'.-ti a i luirlh iu Raleigh n edi. "0-t -. . . rt Monday ;n .'an nrv. f- refVt 1 Act f I-e- v l.Hi'iff privailaw ot If 73 o in74. te 131, Cbapt. ICS. Privntr laws !8J7. i i E.F. LAMB. Dec' 6. h, 1805. ; 7 IS uu W U J BECAUSE OF THE . . At The Racket Store? .1 ..it. tahM iAnt ; anu as iup wuuo Their dollars were at stake Store some could be saved. .. J! 4knf their reach-as our list of Sledge Hammers below will show prices is that they are not made . . 1 . i out ior every aay ot every wee, wj v c I' . . V, AAhv . iiw" "oiou; Quantities In Proportion. 0 Yards Good Carpet. 6 Yards Velveteen. 4 Linen Bosom Shirts. 72 Spools Hand Cotton. 8 Good Umbrellas. 2 Handsome Bed Spreads. 2 Good Blankets, r 10 Boys Hats. . 10 Hatchets. 25 Yards Curtain Scrim. 10 Picture Frames. . 25 Celnloid Collars. 20 Large Tin Pans. 25 Breast Pins. 4 Pair Men's Pants. 1 rine Pair Men's Pants. 1 Good Wool Coat. 4 VestH. 2 Pair Ladies Button Shoes. 2 Boys Suits. 100 Boxes Blacking. 40 Good Tooth Brushes. 1 20 Pocket Knives. 35 Yards Calico. 100 Yards Silk Ribbon. might be pursuaded into paying higher prices than you would have-to pay at this Popular Low Roliinson, Stevens & pa Wholesale and Staple &hmy I Nos. 69-71 Poiudexter St., . ' T " .' ELIZABETH CDTY, W. C v'PHOWE 125. Drug Store For Sale. The Drug Store, good will and ap purtenances of H. DeB. Hooper, of Edenton, is offered for sale, upon easy terms. The business has been success fully conducted for 20 years and is a good opportunity for investment by an enterpriMr.g person. Apply to MBS. HDeB. HOOPER, . Edenton, N. C Stockholder's Heeling. Offick First natiokai.' Fatck Elizabfth City, N C , Die. 8, 18U8 I The regular! annual ir.fetirc the Sioekholdf rs of th a BhiiW. (m t.h.'leo-' Hon of Diicet'rn. will be held hi, its rt..irir.(T.i..iia tti Tiipflav JaiAUurv 10. 18W, at o'clock. P. M. . Wanted. .Hr-tr-r rt rftr.TtFPlit the Sips - v. rvifY 9 f - s 7 T " ' ' Prudvutial IhstiralMe Coin pnpy and the Union CaMialty & Buri'ty Ciinmnr in Ue cpuntus of (iHt- f h.waii. Prr qulnni!!, raquntank, Cam a and dt-m iuturarjce. A:, M. 11 XV, KIKS Om. gt. --'y-..- Ralelli. N.C. J notice. The Board of Town Commissioners have placed lb my bands fund- to re pay all citizens of the town the money paid by 1 hem to Hill Humphrey for numbers placed upon their buildings. All such persons will call at this office and receive thtir money. ' E. IT, LA 115. Dec. 20, 1808. LOTS FOB I have a number of desirable build ing lots in Prircbard Town. Terms, 10 cash and $5 per month, without interest. Title retained until lots 1 paid for. Apply to ' I tind bancr for admittance - ana tney Knew .1 f r'.O ' . . . a- H all WA CIAim tO QO. only for a special saio or t& t m voii RnnrtjiVfi onlv 4f WILL BUY. Smaller 4ft Yrd Hamburg Trim ml MR 25 Yards Ladies Dress.Good. 25 Yards Black Calico. 16 Yards 10c. Dress Goods. 25 Yards Cotton Diaper. J 14 Yards Black Satteen. 10 Yards Flannel. 10 Yards Wool Linsey. 10 Yards Matting. 5 Yards Silk. 60 Hand Saw Files. 10 Hand Saws. (10 Key Hole Saws. : 2 Heavy Bed Comforts. 100 Money Purses. 2 Men's Fur Hats. 16 Quart Dish Pans. i - 11 Good Hammers. 1 $2 Fur Hat. 1 $2 Stiff Hat. " 6 Ladies ('orsets, , 20 Yards BesUPercale. 25 Men's Ciixe n Collars. . 8 Yards K'-4 Sheeting. 1 Dozen Horse Whiips, Price Store. Retail Dealers In. roceries, "Silver Plate that Wiars No. ai6 BAKINQ DL5M. A handsome article ' and just as practical and useful as It is hand some. Whether it Is useid to serve plain baked beans or the most'dainty dessert, it recommends itself to every housekeeper as most desirable. Everyr thing else in "Silver Plate that Wears" you can possibly want, including Robots Bros." knives, - forks, spoons, etc r3! FAVORITE A U0ST POPULAR CI OMffTQCS S hiW W W U B 1 PANS1ES, NASTUirnLV.LS SWEET PEAS, one Tkt ot ach variety for only C n.r m i wow aaimi .1 ina Minib. 1 . t ... . . . . I t . T "1847 WY. 5S r j. .. A "A A A A A A ... o A A c A A A A A A
The Weekly Economist (Elizabeth City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 13, 1899, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75