Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Feb. 24, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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Leading Paper : ; Largest Circulation j BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM. IN THE YELLOW TOBACGD DISTRICT. o $2.co a Year; 6 Mos. $1.00. tRates on Application XII V I) I t. M V NNINU,) l-O.Jitor 4nd tvoi'r. 0-AjRoiurr, IETti ajvte3sts Blessings Ajjttetp ZETttr 1 8UTnsciiirTioKr I .00 a Yer. VOL. VI. HENDERSON, N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1887. NO. 9. ward's woes. Maxsk's, Oa., January. 1886. ' For tw tive or I'nirtfd i yera I linvt brtwu a isr.-at uffrer from a. terrrib'e f-.rm f 11 o:i prison which ran into Ihe Hdcomi'iry, and tinallv it was pronounced h iriary form. My bead, taee and slioui.lr bacaine alui t a iiihss of e-r-rupti "i, and finally Ibe di-aH ;om tiifiiOr?d Hating away my tktili bones. 1 beivune o hrriblf re.u!lve that for tbrttn years i absolutely refused to let peojile see me. I used large quantities tP inoit noted bio ;d remedies an I 8p- Clied to nearly il physicians near trie, ut my condition continued to trow worse, and all said I niustfme'y die. My lioites befiitin the seat of exeruei tjn n:hes and pains ; my u'gbis were parsed in misery ; I reiueod in ll.'sh and sire.igtii ; my kidney were terribly de ran'-d, a.d lifv became a burd. n to me I I'hancfrrf to e an ad verii-ieiic ol fi. li. II. and sent one dollar to W. (,'. Birch-.u-re &".. merchants f our pi. ice fend they procur d one bottle f .r tm. It va- used to dscidd benefit, ami when eigiit or ten bottles h;il been used I was pronounced sound and well. Hundreds ofcars can -ow bo seen on rns lo ikiu-x lik i a man who ha I bn biiriiod and then restored. My case was well known in this. county, aud for the benefit of others who may be .similarly HilVete i, I think it my duty to trive the fa- is t tuo public, and to fXteud my heartfelt thanks for so valuably a remedy I have been weil over twelve mmtbs. and no return of the disease has occurred KUBEHT VvrAKI. Maxey's, CjA., January, 18S5 We, the undersigned, know Mr. Robert Warl, and Lake plHasurn in saj'iujr that the fact-. ab ve staled by him are true, and thai his wa one of the w.r-t canns of Ul iod I'oisou we ever knew tu our county and that he has been cured by the use of B. li. 11, II .tani iiio. d Balm A. T. Union i wKf-ii. Merchant. VV. ('. liiiu H umick &Oii Merchants. J. i. BhWII WELL, 31 I). JolIN T. Hakt, AW li. CAMVanLt.. All who desire full information about tlin cause and cure of Blood l'U'n, Mcrofula kud iScr.d'ul tin .Swelling, UN cers. Son's, Kheuuiatisui, Kidney t'om plnints, Catarrh, etc , wan sccarw by mail 1 rev, a r.ipv o' our oi-pae lieustrat-rt Book ot Wonder, filled wilh the most wonderful and startling proof ever be fore kuowu. Address, BLOOD BALM CO.. Atlanta, tia. 79 CSlsTTS. I S3 O O "TTTnOKVKlt HKAKH OF A MAN TT buying GOLD WATCHES lor 7J) Cents'? and jvt a fiim out Wes had the audacity to head one of their ad vertising sheets in this manner, and did it sini ' ly toct-h the eye of the public. Now while wo do not believe in deeep tion of any sort, still we luve such an anxiety for th public to see our WGIiH fi "vVe have been making alt this talk simply to get you to looking this way, and shall be willing to take your pun ishment, provided, we fail to sh-jw yon BARGAINS almost iqual lo Gold Watches at 79 cent. Don't take our word for it, but come and look for your selves upon the most ASTONISIIISG CHANCES ever shown to the good peo p!e of this tovvn, in FINR n n watcm I offer thrt fo'l -wlng most woiulerful and extraordinary bargains : Ladies' Fne nld E:gin Watch, beau tifully engraved huntintr case, lor S33; the u-ual rptiii price is ?5. a la b-'s Gold K gio Watch, handsome ly engraved hunlintr cusp, fsr ?.'G; the l sual retail price is $Q. Indies' Klegant Oold hunting cse Wa'tham Watch, lor $-'4; the uul re tail price is KJ Cfnts' God AValtham Watch, fancv ngravr hunting case, full Kuby Jew eled. adjujte i to he-At, eold and position, for ?41 ; usual prie i f -0. Genu,' handso nelv engrare Gold hunting case Eig n Watch for 38; usu al ret-il pr;ce i- 'i. Gents Gold Filed Watch for $16 , usu al price fJ5. Gents' Go'd Filled Watch, handome-lye'grave-i hun-iii: cse. for?i8; regu lar retail price 810 All the ab.vi Watches are Strm winders, wit i Patent S .fety Pinions and Compers iting BaI uce. I f v -u wan t a real I v FIXE HA ND ZOllE WATCH At bvf price, now is the to i-eoure i'. Now is your time lo get a BARGAIN, for such another opp-rtuniiy may not occur again in your lifetime. JEL IE. HIG-HT, BIG GOLD' RING, HENDERSON, N. C. VALUABLE REM, ESTATE FOR SALE. I will sell one hundred valuable build ing lot in tlie town of iJeuern. N. O. Persons wishing to purchase wU do veil to calland see me. I will makt tbeiarms easv. JAS. II. LASSITER. tludersoa . CJ. BIS WITHE FI fife -k 'S: mm S0 ME WEATHER That the Present Winter Brings. The Good "Deacon Salisbury" Denoun ; ces the Article Furnished by the Weather Bureau. v Fall River Advance. Variety is the spice of life, as it is the strong weakness of the present win ter a winter that will long c remem bered for its reliable unreliability, its steady lack of settled weather and its general cussed ness in setting all pre dictions at defiance. It has been a "winter of discontent" to the suffering public, but a "glorious summer" to the golosh maker, the rubber boot manu facturer, the umbrella architect, the arctic overshoe miscreant, the rubber cloak fiend and the man who makes "cough no more" remedies which are warranted to case the bronchial tubes even if the undertaker has to vouch for the positive cures which they perform. Over in the cold country where fogs, rains, drizzle, sleet and snow are component parts of a bright and crisp winter's day, and where the proverb tells the wise man who goeth out upon a fine morning to "be sure and' take his umbrelia along, and, on wet morn ings to please himself about doing so," they would find it difficult to put their finger upon the record of a winter's weather more broken-up and dissipa ted than the one which Falll River people are enjoying (?) in this year of grace. They may be able to point to winters when the rainfall or the snow fall has been greater, when the melodi ous fog horn has had to toot its soul corroding strains with more exasper ating regularity, or when a greater av erage of umbrellas have been worn to the bone, but we defy them to produce one winter in which there has been more snow, rain, thaw, slippery slop piness, bad temper and brimstoned ad jectives per day and per square yard than there has been between -Globe Village and Steep Brook. And as it is the money that talks we have a plugged quarter that says so. . And if there is a certainty winter, so far as it has gone that the thunder- ing down the ages, has not been one in which any long continued stretch ! of extreme cold has borne with cruel ! hardness upon the poor (who buy their coal 'by the half ton and Jiave the; whole of a two hundred pound team-: ster weighed with their load ;) just think of the sorrow it has brought to the heart of the innocent plumber and the grief which it has twined around , the heartstrings of the suffering ice- man. The plumber has hardly ever ! been able to get his tools together to ; tackle a job, but the weather has got in ' ahead of him and spoiled his little! bill. Pipes that were irozen fast j thawed faster ere he could put his j hand upon them ; others that had burst , with the sudden thaw, froze hard and i fast again as soon as the rattle ot his soldering iron was heard upon the jjj causes, ami ins jjiusptv-io ivi uv-uiq able to charge for solder at silver rates j and to book the time of his apprentice t at a price that Jay Gould would be j glad to earn, are being ruthlessly shat tered by the sledge hammer of an ir responsible and erratic thermometric influence. So too with the noble ice man whose weights get lighter as the days get warmer and whose . twenty pound lump in early sj ring is ten ! times as large as when it has ' been ; shrunk by the heat of summer even if ; he is making the air sulpherous with j his observations upon the patch work j quality of the weather, which rarely ; permits him to harvest a crop unless : he has his ice plovupon a raft and his j horses are capable swimmers. j And just consider the hackman I "who neither toils nor spins" and who, j before he turns out mornings, has to make elaborate calculations whether to take out his funeral-smelling carriage upon wheels or runners. What must he think of the weather we have been dozed with? Is it any wonder that he begins to feel ugly, smell mouldy and have a susnicious redness about t the region of the nose? And then 1 again there are the street car drivers j and conductors. Try to imagine what they have had to go through : Wind, rain, snow, sunshine, blizzard and black frost have bothered them. Storm time, doubled-up teams, frozen or sop py reins, ill-tempered . passengers, splashing or sliding horses, lost tracks, buried switches, long hours and frozen fingers and noses have fallen to their lot, and heroes, as they are, they have never lost their tempers even when for ' the seventy seventh time in a day, some helpless and aimless lunatic has stop ped their car under an idea that it was going somewhere quite opposite to that i:i which it was headed. We would not be a car driver for all the wealth of a Brayton. We should have mur der upon our soul too soon. We should slay some remorseless and conscience less passenger with a swingletree. That General Hazen is much to blame for the weather we are having is certain. He is supposed to run the weather bureau in Washington, and though he never fails to be around, by proxy, on pay day, he is' not doing much else for the country just now. In fact he is gallavanting in Europe, do ing the grand tour, hob-nobbing with the nobility and gentry of those effete countries and not caring a continental whether school keeps or not. He cer tainly did leave one of his apprentices, a young man whose experience of a weather manufactory had been gained in a search for the North pole, to run the machinery in his absence, but the result has been a dismal failure. The substitute evidently does not know all the stops, valves and cogs of the ma chine and he has got it so tangled up that unless Hazen domes home quickly or an experienced aneroid barometer pirate like Vennor takes his place, we shall be having frozen sunstrokes hand ed out to the public and the daily pre dictions will become as demoralized and unreliable as a fifteen for a quarter cigar or a boodle alderman when he is trying to pose as a much maligned but innocent martyr. MY VALENTINE. BY LOUISE CHAKDLER MOTJITON. What would 1 have thee, other than thou art, To win my whole soul's love and bless ray days? What other eyes could I so fitly praise? Blue as blue flowers now dim "with tears tluit start For gentle pity from thy gentle heart, Then glad with smiles, as when a master plays On answering chords, or o'er the wind harp strays -Some wind that laughs to come, and grieves - to part. How shall I fitly praise thy true soul's truth, Thy scoru-of what is base, thy love of good, Thy wit and wisdom that with grace 'combine, The glow and courage of thy fearless youth. Thy strength and nobleness of woman hood The blessed whole of my dear Valentine? Y&uth' Companion. Bill Nye's Cow for Sale. Bill Nye publishes the following ad vertisement which we copy gratuitous ly out of regard for his patriotic ser- vices: Owing to ill health I will sell at my residence in town 29, range iS, ' West, according to Government sur-. vey, one crushed -raspberry colored j cow, aged 6 years. She is a good ! milkster and is not afraid of cars or anything else. . She is a cow of un daunted courage and gives milk fre-; quehtly. To a man who does not j fear death in any form she would be I a great boon. She is very much at tached to her home at present, by i means of a trace chain, but she will be ; sold to" any one who will agree to treat ' her right. She is one-fourth short-i horn and three-fourths hyena. Pur- chaser need not be identified. I will also throw in a double-barrel shot gun j which goes with her. In May she generally goes away somewhere for a j week or two and returns whith a tall, ; red calf, with long, wabbly legs. Her ; name is Rose, and I would prefer to j sen ner to a non-resiaent. The Printing Press. The printing press has made presi dents, killed poets, furnished bustles for beauties, and polished genuis with criticism. It has made worlds get up at roll-call every morning, giving the pulpit lungs of iron and a voice of steam. It has set a price on a bushel of wheat and made the country post office the glimmering goal of the rural scribe. It has curtailed the power of kings, embellished the pantry shelves, and bursted rings; it has converted bankers into paupers, made sawyers of college presidents? it has educated the homeless and robbed the philosopher of his reason. It smiles and kicks, cries and dies, but it can't be run to suit everybody and the editor is a fool who tries it. There is quite as much of truth as force in the following paragraph from the Bellefontaine, Ohio, Examiner. It says : Gen. Longstreet, in a recent contribution to the Century, attempts to exalt his own military capacity and consequence at the expense of Gen. Lee. Gen. Longstreet, by his re creancy to honor and to principle, is a self-convicted renegade and crax-en and as such can never impress either himself or his opinions favorably upon public sentiment, North or South. The American people will never, by any estimate of Longstreet, made from any standpoint, raise him to the boot-tops of Gen. Lee. K:nd words, like the flowers which thread the air with adors, and make earth sweeter and more beautiful, distil a fragrance of sweetest cheer, and scatter over every trial an aroma like the angels breathe in Heaven, MIKKORINGS; "Gems of Purest Raj Serene Proverb-ial Reflections from the Pol isucu ijuiiabc ui cue wuson Mirror." ; Henry BluTit.J TV SI a : i j c- r Ar i iiTir.'i Pleasure is a nower near whicn we frequently find the thorn of evil. A wife is the angel of home, and her ministry is an odor of Heaven. Yesterday is a scholar, in experience; and to-day should profit by its teacli ings. A man may escape the lashes of the law, but he cannot escape the lashings of conscience. ' We understand it has been deaf inirely decided that a deaf man has no hear-after. Pride frequently builds the nest in which poverty hatches out its brood of wretchedness. Envy aims her darts at the great. We bet we have been aimed at a thousand tiems. Animals have been known to wear bustles. We have "seen them oa the hip-popotamous. The strongest pillar in religion is charity and that temple would totter into ruins without it. A man in a passion is on a wild horse without a bridle, and he rushes Lfuriously to his own ruin. Though fame is nothing but smoke, yet its fumes bring sweetest fragrance to the' nostrils of ambition. i The reason an old maid never plays ! a violin is because she has never caught the exact hang of the beau. A snow drop is Nature's delicate announcement that she is coming out in a full dress of spotless white. Love imparts a roseate tinge to every scene in life, and tints earth with gleams of blessed Paradise. A kind act for one in distress is the sweetest and most luscious fruit that ripens on the tree of human endeavor. A smile is the soul of good humor, which runs out on the cheeks to tell of the radiance that is glistening within. ' A bit sh on a "maidens cheek is the ruby signal Nature makes when the least invasion is made upon the hal lowed domain of modesty. Love is the golden brush with which is painted on the glorious canvas of marriage the most precious and most exquisits coloring of existence. Bury the faults of your neighbors beneath the mound of your own short comings, and then you will be more lenient and charitable in , your judg ment. A girl in Wilson says that she is afraid of all snakes except the beau constrictor, whose coils, she says, 'embrace you just too nice and lovely for anythm At the beginning of the New Year, Heaven sprinkled its snows, and wove a spotless spread of white to show us tl e beauty of purity, and the matchless glory oi a stainless life. When a beauteous maiden pants for a change of costume and tries to re dress her monotonous surroundings, it is then the divinity of her charms re veals itself in all of its thrilling witch ery. It is a great misfortune to have a fretful disposition. It takes the fra grance out of life, and plants weeds where flowers of rarest perfume could l e made to bloom in all their luxuriant wealth. Happiness is frequently almost within our grasp, and we pass it by; while misfortune is sometimes faraway and we rush forward to meet it. Don't try to jump over the ditch until you get to it. Hate plants the sharpest thorns that can be found in the path of human existence for when we learn to despise a fellow being then it is we find what a road of wretchedness we have started out to travel. Sorrow's crown of sorrow is the remembrance of happier days -those blissful scenes of love dreams all ful filled, when life throbbed out its glorious pulsirgi, thrilled and quick ened with all the ecstades that Heaven lent to earth to emparadise its borders. . The brilliant and matchless gleam ings of the glittering icicles, which have been glistening in such sparkling lustre from the tree tops the past few days, are but reflections, yea but shadows flung out from the magnificent corruscation of those dazzling gems which God has placed in the crown of His redeemed. Yes, Johnny, marriages do increase the papa-Iation of a country. AH the good deeds of a rnans life bear the golden imprint of a woman's blessed influence. Prayer is the avenue which leads to God, and the oftener we enter it the nearer we get to Heaven. A grain of sand may be the germ of a new world, but a button m the right place does more good in the wild rush ing present. V - Virtue is a flower which flows m the garden of purity, and sheds the most delightful fragrance that ever sweet ened home life. Without woman, men's trials would be doubled, for he would have to sew on his own buttons, and would have no one to complain at. . A serpent's fang is a little thing, but death is frequently its victory. The smallest thorn of slander can ruin for ever a woman's character. No community can boast of more than one genius, at a time, says an ex change. Since we've come to think about it we do feel mighty, lonesome, and often find ourself sighing for com panionship.. ' WOMAN'S, BETTER SELF. Woman, in her deepest shame and degredation, holds some keepsake of her higher and purer existence some precious jewel from the magnificent coronal of her God -set womanhood, and like a diamond in the mud, it will ever and anon flash out from its dark sourroundings, gleamings of an unquenchable brilliancy, and reveal the lustre of that radiant throne from which it fell. The Coming of a Summer Day. Rev. William S. Lacy in North Carolina leacuer.j, Contemplate with me that daily miracle of nature, as it appears on these sweet June mornings "dark summer dawns, as Tennyson finely phrases it, or as I witnessed it a few days past. You 'step forth from the confined air of your chamber; the first sensation is that of delicious coolness and exhila ration; the sky is without a sieck or stain; the stars twinkle industriously in the ebon vault, their myriad- eyes gleaming like fire.. As your question ing soul looks up in mute admiration, they are silent; the winds are whist; the voo:is are still; the flowers are heavy with dew and the air with fra grance., k In the east hangs low the decadent moon, a glittering silver sickle on a black ground. As her es cort a royal guard of stars appears; the golden lamp of Venus burns with intense and steady blaze, revealing her conscious beauty; her companion, the mighty and more distant Jupiter, with smaller, but not less brilliant beam, while Saturn, almost eclipsed by their lustre, is barely seen, a point of light faraway: " ' "But lot their splendors pale. Along the horizon is a faint glimmer of gray. You glance upward and find that the ebon hue of the vault is gone; the stars wax dim and slowly fade from view. The ancient raoon hangs on its nether horn A frighted ghost." The skies grow lighter and blue. Again you turn your eye to the com ing morn. "Streaks of light God's glorious shadow," to use Plato's fine thought shoot upward to the zenith at first colorless, then growing cool gray, soft pearl, with the faintest hint of gold and pink the purest and most delicate of tints, shaded with the ut-1 most nicety. It is the daily battle of j light and darkness. Now a mist rises, j and stripes of fleece are seen. They j seem the advancing squadrons of the armies of the king, planting their; white banners on the deserted held, as the hosts of darkness sullenly retire. Those white banners suddenly become rose and flame colored; the whole east flushes and glows at the coming of her lord, and while rays of golden glory from the advancing splendor leap across the heavens, objects of the dear, familiar earth come into view the dark forest, the old homestead, the open plain. At length he comes ! The eye of the morn peeps over the eastern hills! "Night's candles are burnt out, and Jocund lair - Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops." And now what a chance greets the soul I There is a happy rustle of the leaves: the toyous breeze springs op to tell the glad world of the great trans formation; the flowers bow their sweet faces as he passes; the marshalled clouds move steadily, softly onward, as if in triumph; there Is a noise of merry music, happy birds carol in un restrained glee; sounds of hope and delight fill the enchanted ear and thrill the soaL All is life, animation, beautv ! : " - ' '. ,; ' ; Reed and advertise in the Gold Leaf. ..... . " - TOBACCO PLANTS. How to Grow and have plenty of them. The Practical Method of a Ketucky Farmer. a looacco grower, in a corres pondence to the Georgetown (Ky.) limes, 01 January 26th, gives his practical method of producing good and healthy plants, as follows: THE CAUSE OF AN UNEVEN AND RAGGED CROP. There is probably no one subject connected with the cultivation of tobacco upon which there is a greater diversity of opinion among producers than there is upon the subject of pre paring plant beds. Every farmer's success with ' tobacco depends in a very large measure upon his success in raising an abundant supply of early, healthy and vigorous plants. . With the late device of canvassing the beds failures have become less frequent, but in the same proportion planters have become more careless also, and while they nearly all generally have enough plants, they are of such poor quality that frequently a third and. sometimes even a lourth setting is required in order to obtain a regular stand, and as a consequence an uneven and rag- ged crop follows. It is impossible to obtain good re sults from a field where there is from two to four weeks difference in the age of plants growing promiscuously amongst each other, and it becomes a matter of the utmost, importance to have the quality as well as the quanti ty of plants. TOO MUCH PLANT BED SOWN. Now there are prevailing in the White Burley districts, very liberal ideas in regard to the area of ground sown in plant beds, in many cases reaching as high as 400 square feet for every acre ot land to be planted, which, upon the basis of 6,223 plants to the acre, the rows being 334 feet apart and the plants two feet apart in the rows, would be an allowance of nine square inches of room for every plant in the plant bed. This is costly in the amount of bed room to be pre pared; costly in the amount of canvas required, and costly in the amount of labor required to keep down the weeds and to keep it properly watered during dry seasons. Now, one square, ten feet each way, con tains 1 4,400 square inches, and my object now is to state how that amount of ground may be made to start nine tobacco plants to the square inch, making a grand total of 129,600. - HOW TO PREPARE PLANT BEDS. . Dig a pit 18 inches deep, 6 feet wide, and i6S feet long early in February, and fill in the bottom of it layer of straw about four inches deep, and on top of this put a layer of fresh stable manure about 10 inches deep, and lastly a layer of fresh woods earth 4 inches deep. Cover it closely to keep dry and allow it to stand , two weeks, by wliich time the warmth from the manure will have sprouted all the weed seeds in the earth on top, when it may be thoroughly raked on top to kill all of the growing weeds. Fork thoroughly and make the surface perfectly smoothwith the pressure of plank, bow evenly upon the surface one tablespoon heaping full of choice seed upon it, and do not rake them' in, but moisten the top . of bed well with moderately hot water from a sprinkling pot, and immediately can vass the bed very closely Over planks ten inches wide, set up edgewise around the bed, and throw up dirt all round the outside as high as top of planks, to keep out all the surface water from the outside. Repeat the sprinkling with milk warm water every few days if necessary, to keep the surface perfectly and evenly moist. As soon as the plants begin to come up they will need stimulating, which will be best done in following manner: Fill a common water barrell two-thirds full of fresh stable manure, and then fill to the top with water and let stand for several 'days. Sprinkle the plants every few days with the water from this barrel, and in a very short time they will turn to a beautiful green color and grow very rapidly. ANOTHER PLANT BED TO BE PREPARED FOR RESETTING. : You will be prepared to say thai the plants are too thick, and that 1 don't know what I am writing about, and the last part of your conclusion shall not be controverted, but unless you have followed the directions this tar it is unnecessary for ; yon to h: instructed any further. If the instruc tions have been followed, however, the conclusion, though a wrong one, will be almost inevitable. That , it was wrong will soca appear from what follows. The spring time has now come. The ground is well settled and warm. The grass seeds have sprouted, and can be easily killed out. The heavy rains that bake the cround r. .. . . . 0 auer running it togetner have passed. Now prepare another bed, just as b ordinarily prepared for sowing the seed, and reset these plants in it in rows at least three inches apart. Take up the small plants by running a sharp spade under thepa, .about ; one inch under the surface of the ground, taking up all the dirt with the roots. Hold the spade full of plants near the surface of the new bed, and, with a long knife, cut square' down through the plants and dirt to the spade, halt inch from the front 'edge of plant sod, and slide the strip of plants and earth off where you want to grow in the new bed, without disturbing the roots. Move the spade to the and of the plant row thus started to another sec tion of the plants, and so continue the process until all the plants have been thus removed. Fill the dirt in between the rows up level with the plants and water thoroughly and can vas as before. When the. leaves of the plants are as large as a dime, take dry stable manure, pulverize it thoroughly. and sprinkle it over the plants until they are almost hid by it, water well with a sprinkling pot, and you need not fear having early and vigorous plants. By this means you obviate the neces sity of having to weed your plants. and at the same time have good loose soil for them, so that they will grow more rapidly and can be pulled up without the loss of the small fibrous roots. - A careful hand can set these plants out in the field without the loss of a single one from the mere' trans planting. . --- - PROFESSIONAL CARDS 'P 3f. PITTMAN, ATTORNEY AST ILW, HENDEKSOX.N.C. Prompt attention lo all professional buioeit. Practices ia the JStat and Fedend court. Reform by permission lo Commercial National liana aud E. D. LatU A Bro.. Charlotte, N. C; Alfred Williams & Co.! Raleigh, A'.C; I). - Y. Coopar aud: Jib. li. Laasiter, HeuderBoo, N. C. Office: o?i Jas. U. Latter A fcon's te nov 5 1 o.J A. J. HAKltld, ATTORNEY AT LAW. UENDERISON, N. C Practice in the courU of Vance, Gran ville, Warren and fr'raiUtlin counties, aid in the feu pre me and Federal curiol thj State. Office: lo Cooper Building, over J. Lu II. Jdivsiliiei's. JJENKY T. JOKDAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, SOTARY PUBLIC AND PUBLIC Admiuistratorlor Vance Co ( radices in the courts of Vance barren, FrauHiD, liranville and I ergon count ie, aud In the Supreme jnd Federal courts. Oppic In BurwelPa Brick building. TheBankofHnderson HENDEBSOK, VANCE VOVSTY, W. C. General Banking-. Ezebtari and Collection ISuslnesa. First Mom gags Loins Ncrtlaf.rt on good fArms lor a term of Tears. In umsor$4COaud upward, at 8 per cent interest and moderate charge. A poly to WM. H. 8. BU RU VY , At the Bank or lleudersoo. yn. h. s. bukgVtn, atto rney at law, HENDERSON, N. C. Persons deairinz to consult me nrnf. fclonally, will and medst y at my office in ine JnK 01 Henderson Building. L. C. EDWARDS, Oxford. 2i. C. A. B. W01THA1C, Henderson, X. O. EDWARDS & WORT HAM, ATTO UNISYS AT I AW, HENDERSON, . . . . . . . N. C Offer their services to the people of Vance county. CoL Edwards will at tend all the ConrU f Vai.ee county, and will come to Henderson at any and all times when his assistance may be nrtded fcy his partner. mar, 19, a. W.H.UAY. A.C ZOLLUOi'FEU DAY & ZOLLIC OFFER. ATTOUNKY AT LAW, II ENDEIWON, N. C. - Practice lo tb courts of Vance, Orsri lie, Warren, Halifax, and Xortbamp UAt and So Supreme and Federal courts of the State. Ornca In the new ITarrls Taw Bolld tog next to the Conrt lious. - fob 98 i - ; -; ' liniTPVtobe made. Cut tliU out and f 1 1 1 IM H Y rwturn to u. and we wLI seat ifiULllJ 1 on 'r aw"" f areaf. value iml ImporWace lo you, that will atart 70a In !uinc which will Urine you 10 .re money right away Uum nyuiln eibe lu this world. Any od chu .Jo the work and litre at horn?. Ki!br Ul agw. Homeibluff new, that Jost coin monvj foraUworlr.tr. We will fctrt yoa; spllat not needed. Tnla I one of the a oi ne, lm portaji t ehances of l e tine TLoe oho are arablUoajtwrul eiJUrr-rUlng will not lelay. Grand oorfll free. Aklr Tva m Ot Augusta, adalne. is
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 24, 1887, edition 1
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