Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Sept. 1, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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(7 Leading Paper IN THE YELLOW TOBACCO DISTRICT. o $2.oo a Year; 6 Mos. $1.00. Largest Circulation BEST--. ADVERTISING MEDIUM. 1-Rates on Application. TII,V1 II. MA.XMNG.I KJitorund Loi'r. 1 CDrot.tjstj, Caroliita, HtE-Eisr's Blessings Ltteistx) ZEe:r. 3? HIT Infill PTION SvJ.OO n. Vrar. ! i 1 VOL. VI. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 188T. NO. 36. J y J ! a 1 i i ONE LIVED, Till; OTHER 1)I1;P. A woman formerly our slave i now our cook. Ah ut eijrht'ten months ao ,he be-am Hickly and h:id a cough and was c nlir.ed'to bfit, and it was th 'light that t-he ha I n-nvumption. The lr-;tt-meu-t ly pfcyx-'ans fiii U-d to pivo relief. ti I)-couiber, 1KS1. a node or knot the aiz'i of a gooso formed j nst ahovo t lie pi", of th stoiiiMuii, whie.li when laiuie I jjischatfcred mnUer I-t 8 or 9 months. Oma of thKse a'so formed uii'ler her arm, and threeon her bii-k, which discharged matter for a const Irnl time. Kr mx months of this tirriH iiie was wii fied tn the house, and most of tlis time in bl. The st'iiiiH:h often refused food, by rejecting what sho had eaten. She used a great deal of ined "on:--, but f'aiie I to be curtd. I bought one bottle of your H. 1. 1$. (ma le in Atlanta, Ja,) and gave it to her and cho commenced to improve. I then bought and gav htr three ly-tths more, and she continued to improve and n two months linio her cough had cease'', her eoi;titution streughtetied, appetite, an 1 digestion goof?, all di.-chir gen ceased, nodes or knots disappears I and she went to work apparently healthy and fastened up greatly This woman had a married fehter of jtcar i-amo ge who was all" et.od in pre K"iely the same way and aboii. the f-auio' time. She had node or knot on pit of fetoniacl), ba:k, ete. Mie did not take any 15 H. II- and the node on her stom ach, a'e through lo the ctviti'. She con tinued on th- de;iuo and wa-ted away, md finally died. Ththe were two terrible caes of blood poison, -one used IJ. ii. It. and was fpeodly cured the other did use it and died. It is most assuredly a most won derful blood puiilier. I reior to mer chants tf this town. Yt-uis truly, W. T. Kohinson. Tisliabpe, Ala., May 1, 13V5, A SIIIiKH P RELEASED. been jtl'C'ed with catarrh of the head which ba filed the nse of all nudieines ised. S-: ing tlio ad vertisement of IJ. IJ IJ., I pui.chast d and ued six or seven tott!es, ami although used irregularly bave rtceivtnl great relie', and rtcum zueud it as a go d il od p.ttitior. Sigue il J. K. IIolomhh;, Jr., tibei i.tr of Ha.-al-ou county, CJa, All wlio desis o full information about tho cau:-o and. cure of iiiood lois')n, Sciifidiand Scrofuious Swelling", UN cers, Soie, Itheiuiiuti-nii, Kidney Com plf ini -, Ca itiih, eic , oan sect're by mail I'recj a coov oi oi-i :ti-p?.gH lilttstrated Uook oi Voiu'ei, 11 ; I with tho aiost wonderful and su'rtiing proof cvei be fore kuowu. Aibiress, ULUOU BAI.M CO.. Atlanta, Ua. Flaiiiiog Time HAS COME. Now is the time to plant IRISH POTATOES, and ONIONS, Sow CABBACE, J,KTTUCH, ' TOMATO IN, 11 A DISIT, UEMTS, PEAS, MUSTAUD, KALE, SALSIFY, CAKKOT and TAUSNIP .XiSO SEED FOR PASTURES,. MEADOWS ami LOTS, In ORCHARD, TIM OTHY, HERDS GRASS, and RED and SAP 1'LINiJ CLOVER SEED. I bavo & full stock of all seeds and will meet prices with anyone. I SHALL CONTINUE To Improve My DRUG STOCK intil it i second to nouo South of Kich noud. My btock of CIGARS, CIGARETTES and TOBACCO Is Complete. 5 bjrvcn hand ard shall carry a larger tock of Paiuts and Painters' goods than ver brtore. First quality grouud colors specialty. I carrv at all timesanieelinenf ROY3 TER'S FRESH FRENCH CANDIES. All Prescriptins nfifainily receipts intrusted to my care will rt ceive my personal attention and oulypur, Iresa drugs used iu filling them. In returning thanks to my frients nil customers I ask for acontin xiance of their patronage, and assure theiK t will spare no efforts io deserve it. A good Ivius.it, a long txperieuce, and ample capital, I can aud will make it to yiur interest to deal with me. Very Respectfully, Melville Dorsey. j e. II a it r i s, DENTiST IIENDERssOX N. C 31 co over E. G. Dal Store, ft 25, 1 c. AX AMERICAN MYSTERY. COLONISTS OF ROANOKE IS LAND LOST IN 1587. Their Descendents Believed to be the Croatan Indians of 1887 The Facts in a Very Romantic History Condi tion of the Croatans of the Piesent Day. f F. A. Olds in Auburn, N. Y., Advertiser. Raleigh, N. C, July 29, 1887. In 1587 Sir Waller Raleigh sent John White with three vessels loaded with colonists to found a settlement on the coast of far away and almost un known America. White landed on what is now North Carolina, and es tablished his colony on Roanoke Island. A short while after the de parture of the fleet for England, leav ing the colonists behind, a child was born the first on American soil. To it was given the name Virginia Dare. The new country so auspiciously set tled was named Virginia, after Eng land's " Virgin Queen," Elizabeth, and for the same reason the name Vir ginia was given the first born. The colonists, when the fleet sailed, were busy preparing their rude homes, and had thrown up a rough fort,' after the manner of the time, to guard against a danger which must have seemed im aginary, so kind were the Indians who lived in that region. The friendliness of the latter was so great that they aided the new comers in every way. The fleet carried to England good tidings of the settlers, "in a land well wartered, with a great abundance of fish and game, with grapes and fruits as have not before been seen by Eng lishmen." Three years passed and then the mystery began." It bad Uen the plan that in a little while the ships would return and to the colonists, and their numbers augmented by new arrivals from England. But it was three years before a relief expedition sailed. In 1590 it reached Roanoke. Where were the colonists? Echo only an swered the question. The people landed, searched the island thoroughly but not a trace was there of the lost colony, save the outlinesof the fort and the one word "CROATAN" rudely carved upon the trunk of a tree. There were no Indians, and he colonists had evidently left in a body. There were no graves, no evidences of conflict, nothing to tell any tale of their where abouts. The word "Croatan" was1 more than meaningless. The ships finally sailed away with this awful story of the unknown. For three centuries on both sides of the water, the most melancholy inter est has been attached to what came to be known as "the lost colony of Roan oke," an interest which but deepened as the years passed. Now where and what was Croatan ? It was in Tyrrel county, on the North Carolina mainland, and across the sound from Roanoke. It was there the white people went, no doubt at the special request of Indian friends, who promised them a more generous land. To bridge, in one sentence, the space of three centuries of time, the county of Robeson must be visited, for there rests the other end of the mystery of 1587. The Croatans are in Robeson. As the descendants of those old Croa tans, whose name was the one link in a chain otherwise lost, and as the de scendents also of the lost colonists ot Sir Walter Raleigh's ill fated Expedi tion, they can justly lay claim to more of romance than any other people on this continent. During the recent session of the; North Carolina legislature, a member from Robeson county, Mr. Hamilton McMillan, started thought in a new channel by asking for special aid for the Croatan Indians. He declared that a great injustice had been done them in that they had been classed as negroes. He claimed that they were Indians, of a high class, and of historic name and fame, and that they desired and de served separate schools and special aid. Three hundred years after the colony of White was lost, the descendents of those colonists petition the legislature for aid in educating their teachers a legislature sitting in a city named after Raleigh, the patron of he colony. The legislature has harkened to the matter and has granted separate schools and special aid for normal schools to the Croatans, meanwhile restoring them to their proper position as Indians and as citizens. Thus the two ends of the chain were picked up. It now remains to dis cover the link between. To do this a visit to the Croatans became necessary and in Mr. McMillan's company it was made. The county of Robeson lies on the State's Southern border, adjoining South Crol'na "d a hun dred miles frora Raleigh. ' The land there is fertile, much of it in swamp, filled with luxuriant vegetation, while there are vast stretches of the long leaf pine which formerly yielded the staple of North Carolina commerce tar, pitch and turpentine. The Croa tans now living there number 3,000. They have enrolled nearly 1,200 chil dren of school age. They have twenty-six churches, and are divided into Baptists and Methodists. They have in the past few months built good school houses. The very best road in all the state is found there. A cen tury or more ago they opened the great Lowry road from Robeson to Campbellton (a historic Scotch settle ment) and this was used as a post road until railroads came. It was along this road that fast riding couriers car ried the tidings of the treaty of Ghent to Gen. Jackson at New Orleans in i8is. Very careful inquiries were made to ascertain the past history to this tribe. The Croatans came to Robeson county (then Bladen) between 17 15 and 1732. An investigation of land grants in their possession was made. The oldest grant that could be discovered is dated in 1732, and by it King George II granted a large tract to two chief men of the tribe, named Henry Berry and James Lowry, or Lowrie, who "came from Virginia," as tradition has it, for the Croatans )'et speak of Eastern North Carolina as "Virginia." There is said to be a grant by George III to John White but it cannot be discov ered. The name of John White is very suggestive. Over twenty names of White's lost colonists are to-day among them. fC 5(C l(C 3(C 3$C J(C Many inquiries were made as to tribal traditions. The tradition is common that the tribe formerly in habited the country around Pamlico Sound, including portions of what are now Carteret and Hide counties and all of Tyrrel and Dare. Among the Lowry family there is a tradition that their ffeythers" (fathers) lived on the shores of Lake Matamuskeet in Hide county before they came to Robeson connty. The best informed men say that Croatan was the name of a place, and that the name was later given the tribe by the English. An intelligent Croatan clergyman says that the true tribal name is Hatteras (or Hattorask, as the Croatans call it). Now here is another link. The Hattorask Indians are the ones who were on Roanoke Island when White's colony landed. No Indians lived habitually on the island ; they only went there to fish or hunt, or perhaps for greater coolness in summer. Another tradition, well preserved, gives another link in the chain of evi dence. It is that Lake Matamuskeet, before alluded to, was a "burnt lake," or "lake burnt out of the ground." And so it was, wonderful as it may seem. The soil of Hyde is all peat, and in dry seasons, it occasionally catches on fire. In such a case the very land itself is consumed and pits or depressions are formed, which pres ently fill with water. The best evi dence is that in a vast fire, perhaps centuries ago, Lake Matamuskeet was thus formed. It is thirty miles long, at no place over eight feet deep, and not a fish of any kind has ever been seen in its waters. But yet facts were discovered. The language of the Croatans is peculiar in tone. They use but two sounds of the letter a a broad sound of a as in father and the sound of a as in date. Dare is pronounced Darr. The name ot Virginia Dare is familiar to their chronicles. The Darr family name has disappeared m Robeson county, but is found among a branch of the tribe in Lincoln county, N. C. One of the Darrs served as a soldier in the United States army in the war of iS 1 2. Their language is peculiar in that it is strictly Anglo-Saxon. It contains many words in common use which have been obsolete for a long period in most of England. For instance, "housen" is the plural of house; " crone" is to push down ; for " ask" they say "aks" (Old English); for " father" they say " feyther." Knowl edge is spoken of as " wit." As to family names, over twenty of those held by the long lost colonists are found. James (pronounced in the old English way, Jeames). Lowry is a very common name among them. The name of Locklear is also found, and Cuzzie Locklear is one of the old est living members. The name Dial was formerly Doyle. The name Go ins was once O'Gwinn. Priscilla and Rhoda are the most common names of women, and Henry that of men. One of the oldest men is Aaron Revels, who is more than one hundred years of age. He is an uncle of Senator Revels, of Mississippi. The prevalence of the name Lowry has been referred to. According to tradition a man named James LowTy came from "Chesapeake" and married io the tribe, and becarbe the progenjr tor of a large and influential family. That family, at the time the tribe broke up, moved away from Roanoke section, went up to Western North Carolina, perhaps to Buncombe. Lowry's descendents,; they say, were "leaders among men." Governor James Lowry Swain, who after serving as Chief Magistrate of North Carolina C i was iur over a quarter ot a century President of the State University, was a descendentas was also Lieutenant Governor James Lowry Robinson, of this State. They have always, their traditions say, been warm friends of the white people. It is said that long ago they fought Bonnell (Barnwell) in the vars against the Indian tribes. Many of i them were in the continental army In the war of the revolution, and a com- . . . r 1 . .1 - . psiiy was sent to ngnt trie uritisrt m the war of 18 12. The English name of men in these companies are remark able as those of White's colonists in many cases. Some of the Croatans were slave owners, and some kept houses of entertainment for travelers. Their cleanliness is a characteristic. Physicians who practice among them speak of this and say they never hesi tate about sleeping or eating in the house of a Croatan. They are a hos pitable people also, and very obliging. They are proud of their race and "have far stronger race prejudice than either whites or negroes. They are the best of friends, but the most dangerous of enemies. Indian characteristics are marked. Their fondness for .cloth of a red color is remarkable, and in this most of their - women are dressed. They march in "Indian file" -in their travels. They are reticent unless one gains their confidence. They are of all colors, from pure white to black. Many of them can with difficulty be distinguished from white people. Their women are in many cases beautiful, with superb figures, as vo luptuous in some cases as those of the far-famed Hawaiian maidens. One of their most beautiful women was Rhoda Lowry, who was sometimes spoken of as ": Queen Rhoda." Their movemetns are grace itself, and the dress is worn in a most becoming way, though simple in texture and design. The Croatans were recognized as white people, and attended the same schools with white pupils. But in 1S35, another curious thing in their eventful history occurred. They were deprived of the right to vote, and classed " free persons of color" under an amend ment to the State Constitution, adopted that year which prohibited that class from voting or attending school. The Croatans allege that they were de prived of voting to effect a change in the politics of their county. They were not allowed to attend school from 1835 toi868. Since the latter date some of the poorer class attended the public colored schools. But that is at an end. They are now a race apart, fully recognized and cared for educa tionally. Some seventeen years ago a member of the tribe, Henry Berry Lowry, dis graced it by becoming the chief of a uctiiu ui uuiians, wnicii ior montns 1 terrorized that section and caused a national sensation. Finally they were killed and the blot was wiped out. Such is the history of the Croatans, from 1587101887. They were dwellers in Tyrrell, Dare, etc., who happened j to be on Roanoke Island. They in duced White's colonists to eo to the mainland with them. They intermar ried and out of regard for the white race, the latter s family names were chosen. After years of life in Eastern Carolina tne tnoe, alter the manner of many others, moved to other places and chose Robeson as its main abiding ! place. The rest has been told, part on well grounded tradition, nart on well known facts. The Croatans of to-day deserve a double place in history. It is pleasant to mention that the State of North Carolina, which named its capital Raleigh, after the worthy Sir Walter, has named its Easternmost county Dare, in honor ot that little tribe whose eyes first saw the light there, and whose name goes down into the romance of history. F. A. Olds. A special appeal is made to North Carolinans to contribute towards erec- ting a monument to the memory of General A. P. Hill. His troops were in the main from North Carolina. The chronic grumbler is the fellow with a very small soul, who is forever wanting things different from what they are. He complains at everything nothing suits him. It either rains too little or too much or at the wrong time for htm. When crops are short he complains about the high price of provisions and feed, and when abun dant about the low price. He deserves no sympathy and ought ?o be blackballed, BEFORE DEATH. BY MARGARET J. TRE3T0K. How much would I care for it, conld I Know, That when I am under the crass or snow, j ne raveneu garment r me s unci day Folded and quietly laid away ; The spirit let loose from mortal bars, And somewhere awnv among the stars : How much do you think it would matter men Whatjiraise was lavished upon me, when, Whatever might le its stint or store. It neither could help nor harm me more? If midst of mv toil, they had but thought To stretch a finger, I would have caught Gladly such aid, to hear me through Soni1 bitter duty I had to do j And when it was done, had I but heard One breath of applause, one cheering word O.ie cry of " Courage !" amid the strife, So weighted for me. with death or life How would it have nerved my soul to strain Through the whirl of the coming surge again ! ! What use for the rope, if it be not flnre nil tue swimmer s grasp to the rock has ciung ! What help in a comrade's bugle blast When the peril of Alpin's heights is past? "What need that the spurring psean roll When the runner is safe beyond the goal? vt uat worth is eulogy s hiandest breath When whispered iu ears that are hushed in death ? No ! No ! If you have but a word of cheer, Speak it, while I am alive to hear ! A FINE ORATION. Memorial Address of J. M. Leach, Jr. Charlotte Chronicle. The memorial address of Mr. J. M. Leach, Jr., of Lexington, delivered at Greensboro in May last, has been printed in pamphlet form. A copy is upon our table and we have read it with pleasure, for Mr. Leach is a young man of vigorous intellectual force and splendid literary attainments. His mind is of a strong philosophical bent, and possesses keen analytical powers. We heard him several years ago, de liver a literary address before . Yadkin College and his address now before us is but the fulfilment of the promise he there gave of a clear thinker and forci ble and polished speaker. In this sphere in which he so gracefully moves, he plucks the rarest buds and the sweetest literary blossoms arid garlands them with the beauty and finish of a skilled" workman. The two leading thoughts of the ad dress before us are " that to be as great as those whose virtues we commemorate we must be greater ;" and "that, al though parties, civilizations and nations may pass away, Humanity races for better goals, and grandly marches to loftier achievements." The line of argument is that our fallen dead have left us a shining example in that they fought bravely the battles of life and performed their individual duty as true- men. While the youth of the present day are not engaged in war's cruel carnage there are conflicts to overcome, battles to be fought in the duties of life and vital questions to be met in the affairs by which they are surrounded. In the language of the speaker, we have our battles to fight as did the loved dead. War is to be waged against ignorance, discontent, ine quality and license. The possibility of being greater than those who came not back is suggested by our marvel lous advantages over them, and by the beautiful words of Sir Isaac Newton, who, when praised as being the great est of scientists, said, with the modes ty that characterizes the highest genius: 4 If I have seen farther into science than Kepler or Descartes it is because I stand upon the shoulders of giants.' We stand upon the shoulders of moral giants men who died for conscience." 1 The address shows conclusively that the talented young speaker is an ad vance thinker. He deals in a very ! forcible way -with one of the great problems of the future. That "between the skirmish lines of 'strikes,' and other suicidal policies ot labor, on the one hand, and the absurd demands of capital that the theory of our govern- ment be changed from the protection and culture of the individual to the protection of property alone, on the other, the great battle is to be fought." There are many forcible arguments and apt illustrations of the policy to be pursued in overcoming the con flicts between these two great elements. The address is by a young man and it comes to young men full of food for thought and examples worthy of em- ulation. The peroration is upon Hope, and like the bow of promise, it spans the entire effort with a cheerful gleam. It is in these words: J When the worst has been said of our I society, reasons remain for believing ! that the present, with its blemishes, is j the brightest picture which history has painted upon the canvass of time ; but, ; let us believe that a more perfect paint- insr will be executed by the master artist Humanity. We should have hope in the inborn genius of Ameri cans, Anglo-Saxons, Aryans, " Sons of light." Hope in knowledge gained from the sad experiences of the great majority" who have gone before us, that the rising currents of human charity that will overflow the banks of selfishness until the evangelizing and humanizing societies, stretching out their kind arms, will at last press the four quarters of the globe to then bosom, until human sympathy sweet as mothers' lullaby to drowsy babe will extend the. circle of its influence until it is commensurate with earth's circumference. Hope in recognition of woman as man's equal in the dignity of labor, in the eloquent words of the poet of the heart the " sweet singer of Israel" that " the needy shall not always be forgotten ; the expectation of the poor shall not perish forever;" that the hour flies swiftly toward us when the majority of men will have means and opportunity ofglorifying thier Maker by unfolding and developing their indi vidual natures. Hope that the serene Sabbath of justice, and the sweet calm of" the greatest good to the greatest number',' will succeed the storm of wealth's domination ; that the love of the imperishable soul will be greater than love of perishable money. Hope in the church the crowning glory of the age the great heart of which throbs with diviner energy to-day than ever before. Hope in the press " mightiest of the mighty means, on which the arm of progress leans." Hope in the school that the temples of Minerva will multiply until light streams where darkness reigns. Hope in the new revelations of God, science daily gives. Hope that the dreams and prophecies of earth's pa triot sages are not in vain, and that the strength of freedom will prove irresistible. Hope that the grey streaks of na tional culture, and the growing purple of moral achievement betoken the ten der light and rising glories of a cloud less day. Hope in the gospel of hope and hope in the God of our fathers. Cutting and Housing Tobacco. R. L. Ragland, Hyco, Va. Do not be in a hurry to begin crt- ting your tobacco until it is vipe. and enough fully and uniformly ripe to fill a barn. A thin butcher or shoe knife, well sharpened, and wrapped with a soft cloth around the handle, and ex tending an inch along the blade, will do the work effectually and be easy to the hand. Try it. Put knives into tte hands of experienced cutters only -men who know ripe tobacco, and will select plants uniform in color and texture, and will cut no other. Have your sticks all ready in the field, and placed in piles convenient sticking a stick vertically in the ground over each pile that they may be more easily found when wanted. Pine sticks, rived teree-fourths of an inch by one and one-fourth inch, and four and one-half feet long, drawn smooth, are best. Start together two cutters and one stick holder the cutters carrying two rows eacn ana tne suck noiaer wait ing between them. The cutter takes hold of the plant with his left hand at the top near where the knife enters the stalk; with his right he splits the stalk down the center (observing to guide the knife so as not to sever the leaves) to within three inches of the point he intends to sever the stock lrom the hill ; and as the knife descends his left hand follows the slit or opening, and when the plant is severed from the hill, by a dexterous movement of the left hand the plant is straddled across the stick in the hands of the holder. When the stick has received about ; six medium plants, 11 intenaea ior brights, it is ready to go to the barn, j either carried by hand if near, or hauled on a wagon if distant. If it is necessary to use the wagon, prepare a j bed sixteen feet long to hold three coops or piles, on which place tobacco as cut, and after placing twenty-'ive or thirty sticks of cut tobacco on each coop, drive to the barn to be unloaded. Tobacco suitable for brights is best handled in this way, as it is bruised less than if handled by any other mode, Try it planters and know for yourselves. Very heavy tobacco will break less if, after being cut by the above mode, the sticks are placed gently on the ground and the plants allowed to wilt before removed to the barn. But tobacco of medium size bruises less to handle it without wilt ing, Cutting and housing by this mode you never have any sunburned tobacco. For blights it has been found best to commence curing at once, as soon as the barn can be filled. Scientists say the sun is losing its heat. We think the scientists are los ing their minds. A California court recently granted a divorce to a husband on the ground that he was insane when be married. Since then the judge has been over whelmed with business. It the farmer flourish and all other classes will also. Jet him be crippled and the business pulse of the whole country is affected thereby. Then let them have annual encamnmpnk t different places and new ideas be prop agated and disseminated anrl life be infused into their business and the whole countrv will AVI th t,,rU of such a blessing. Lauiinbutg Ex inunge NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomeness. More economical than the ordinary kiud., and cannot be fold iu competition with the multitude of low teg, nhort weight alum or phosphate powders. Sold only tin cans. Kotat. Baking Pow der Co., 103 Wall St. N. Y , aog. ZTh 1 o PROFESSIONAL CAKDS T. M. PITT3IAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, HENDERSON, N. C. Prompt attention to all profeftMonn! bnnl nesfl. Practices in the Stat and Keueral court. Refers by permission to.Commorclal Na tional Hank and E. D. Latta Uro.. Char lotte. N.O.; Alfred Williams A Co., ftalMth. N. C; D. Y. tJooper and Jas. II. Lasslter. Henderson, N. C. Office: Over Jas II. Lnsstter & Sou's store, nov 51 c A DREWJ. HARRIS, ATTOUNKY AT LAW, HENDERSON, N. C. Practices in thecourtsof Ynnce. Ornnviu Warren and FrunVlln cmintlnu ami in ih Supreme and Federal courts of the Htote. uniee: jn uooper building, over J, L. II. Missilller's. JLJENUY T. JORDAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Notary Public and Public Administrator ior vance L-ouniy, HENDERSON, N. C. Practices in the courts of Vance. Warren. Franklin. Granville and Person cotintlen. and n the Hupreine and Federal courts. Office: in Uurwell brick building. V. C. EDWARDS, A. 11. WORTHAV, Henderson, N. C. Oxford. N: U. JI WARDS & "WORTH A3I. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. HENDERSON, N. C. Offer their services to the people of Vane county. "ol. Kdwards will atUMid all the Courts of Viince county, and will come to nenderwm at any and all times when tils assistauoe may h needed by his partner. inarcn i a. W. H. DAY. A. C. ZOLMCOFFER. JJAY & ZOLLICOFI'KU, ATTOHNKYH AT LAW, HENDERSON, N. C. Practice In the courts of Vanoe. Granville. Warren. Halifax and Northampton, and In the supreme and Federal court of the Htste. umce: in xiarris' taw uuiiumr next tome court house. fc. I. R. C.S,BOYD, Dental JO? l& Surgeoi, Sstiaftction Rutrsnteed ss in work and prit . Offic aver Parker k CIoW store. Main stre,t fob 4 a. The Bank ofHnderson HENDERSON, VANCE COUNTY, N.C. Cieaeral R&nktitv. Exchanf Cllectiea BbiIbch. F1P8T Mobtoaoe Loams Negotiated on good farms for a term of jean1, In sums of $Co sad upward, at 8 per cent interest and moderate cMmrm. Applj to WW. U. 8. UUKUWYN, At the Bank of Ileadeisou. If, . II. S. BURGVV YN, ATTOKNKY AT LAW IIEXDEIiSOX, X. C. Persons dirina: to consult me profes sionally, will find medal j at my offlcela Tne Bulk, of Henderson Bailing, llipyj D
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1887, edition 1
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