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VOL. VI. HENDERSO 1887. NO. 18, KX GOV. A. H. STEPHENS'. COUSIN. I ai f rat cmisin-of tlie late Kx-Oovernor Alexander II.' Stephen-, and liave been postal clerk on difWe.it railroad -hwn 1S6S. For ton years I have been :i sufl.-rer froin'a cancer on 'my face, which grew worse nmtill the discharge of matter became pro fuse iuvl very ofl'ensive. I became thor oughly disgusted with Mood purifiers and pronounced them humbugs, a.s I had tried many without relief. Finally I was induced to uc B. ,L, 15., which was alM.nt the 1st of February, -and continued its n-e until the btter part ot April. The offensive discharge decreased at .aoe and the liardness aronnd the cancer disappeared. It improved my general health and I rapidly gained flesh and strength. The disohug.: gradually decreased and the cancer hecame less and less in si.e until rt a scar to tell l!.- t ile of a onee dangerous cancer. All v. t:- have seen me since I have commenced the u-e of . I'.. 1'.. bear testimony of my great improvement, and the scar on my f tee hhows ihat it cnrel the cancer. I find that I. I. II. eornes s.U trely up to whr.t it is recom inende 1, an I I cannot -ay too much in praise of this wonderful medicine. 1 have tried then: ;1I, hut l. I!. B. stands at the top as a liinod purifier. The aluve is copied from the Athens (Oa.) Jin mir.r-Watchman, being the voluntary language of Mr. James A. (ireer, which Kditor (iantt iudor.-e : 'Mr. Greer is an honest, upright citizen of Athens, who had a had cancer, and his numerous friends thought that he could not live very long, as the cancer was gradually sapping tile foiuulatiou of his con MUtutioii, hut now looks well and hearty, " li AG.vINsr IS." Several phvsicians have pronounced my disease blood poison, caused ly paint or lea 1 in the paint, hut they could not cure inc. La.-t summer I used eighteen bottles ol a largely edverti-ed blood medicine, which did me no more good than m much water. 1 have use 1 onlv two h ttlcs of B. Ii B. nod am oioti 1 to say thil 1 received greiter fieo-fit from liieui than from tti eighteen, and am imw ranidlv recovering There is k no ou-titni ;iinut t lie superiority of 1J. 15 B. over all blood remedies. 215 Ktvindds street. W. II. Woody. Augua, Ga., April 21st, !So. AI! who d -sire full tl' iMW-H ao.i cure information a! ut of lliood lois-n, S.-r. fid i te.i J'l ii o I t t : i fee, :.' Sit- i 'uUmi Swehlnti, Ci- lt'.esiOKtt i-ii', K"lnev in irrli. , ; o '".ir- oy mail nf i ' I I I -t rat 1 il l- r-, lill.-.J .- in" most n I :;ti t! ii i; I i ' 'f i Vor be- !:. . ,t w WO 11(1 f I ; I I 1 i fore k 1 1 - vv 1 1 . Ao.ir.s-, lil.OUl I!LM CO.. Atlaiji;t. (a. lanlins Tim LIAS COME. C X w is tbn time to plant iKisn pot a :ui:s, and OX'1 NS Sow CAIiliAlilv LKTTUi'K, TdMATOES liAlMMt, 1JKKTS, PICAS. .All'. ST' A KI KALF, SALSIFY, CAKROT and PARSNIP ALSO SEED KOK PASTURES, MEADOWS and IX)IS, tn OIU-'HAKD, TIM- ' Ol'HY, HKKDS (IK ASS, and KKI and SAP FLING CLOVER SF.KD. I have a full atock of all seeds and will mei prices with anyone. 1 SHALL COX'XI XLT K To Iaiprova My DRUG STOCK until it ! second t none South of Itich liio'td, -2T lock of rfLTUA'.'S, . 1'Kl A itKTTES and TOBACCO Is Complete. I hve on un1 ami sh ll i-ar ry a larper ct k of L4iuts and faint'-rs' o.ds tlnn -Vtr before. Firi jsialitr ground color a specialty. T firrv at all time nice liaenf ROY TEKS FKKS1I FltKNCU CAXUiES. All Prescriptins ar-' family receipts intrusted to my ca v ill revive mv personal aitenuon a'd cily our. Jre.h drnn used in li lin them. In returning toanks to ni friends and customers I ask for a contin uance of their patronage, and asut them 1 will spare no etf rts 10 deserve it. A jswul h'iis. h lorif; xperiene . iind ampl- capita', I can and wM mak.. jt to your inu-rest to de;-.l with me. Very Respectfully, i Melville-' Dorsey. 1 LITERARY CHAT. A GLIMPSE IN THE HOME AND STUDY OF THOMAS BAI LEY ALDRICH. MRS. POULTS EY UIU ELOW'S PKS.STUOKES. . latest New Works and Comments Thereor. Nutall's Standard Dictionary Joe Howard as Author Gossip Concern ing Stedman, Stoddard and Other Well Known Literary Characters "The Russian Novelists-'' HjiccUil correspondence of the uold Ten-f. Nkw York, April 22, 1887. Few authors have, perhaps, leen so misjudged from their portraits as has .Mr. Thomas lijiley Ahirich. It must be confessed that not a little of this erroneous popular belief is strength ened if one looks at the photograph constantly put before the public. But if the print in question gives one such an impression, it requires only the most casual meeting with the man him self to instantly remove it. It is true that Mr. Aldrich dresses well, but he is not inclined to foppishness by any means. On the contrary, his dress is that of a gentleman, quiet, submissive and scrupulously neat. No man i. more adverse to newspaper talk about himself or his works than Mr. Aldrich, and it is seldom that one reads any thing about his personnel. To meet Mr. Aldrich is to meet one ol the most entertaining and social of men. His disposition is kind and his manners the same to all pleasant and agre able. His only enemies are made, as he himself say:,, through the editorial pen when it is used in the decimation of manuscripts sent to him. Nine o'clock every morning finds Mr. Al drich at his editorial desk in the of fice of the Atlantic Monthly, in Park street, Boston. He is a hard and steady worker, and it will probably surprise many to know that Mr. Al dnch's position .as editor is not the easy berth commonly maintained. He reads every line that appears in the Atlantic, and leaves only very little proof reading to his assistant. His correspondence also receives his per sonal attention; and beside this work every manuscript sent in is read and passed upon by him. At 11 o'clock in the morning he goes to his home and enjoys a late breakfast with his wife, mother and his two boys, who j then have their college recess. These boys, apropos, are exceedingly inter esting in that they are twins, the one bearing the most striking resemblance to the other. After his meal Mr. Al ! tlrich returns to the office, where he j remains until 5:30, when he goes home for the daw ihe author resides on Mt. Vernon street a locality which he once described to me as looking 'so Knghsh" that you can imagine the inmates sitting in the balconies and letting their h's drop with a crack on the pavement below in a home of positive luxuriance and comfort. Everything about the house is tasteful and of the richest description. The walls are adorned with portraits and engravings of eminent writers, and ' each has fixed underneath them some- bit of original manuscript in the sub ject's autograph. Mr. Aldrich shares the pardonable hobby of many in se curing the pen tracks of great authors, and between this and his large library he spends considerable time. His mother resides with him, and to her the son is as devotedly attached as she to him. He is thoroughly dome, tic and finds his greatest pleasure with his family. Mr. Aldrich's study, or "den," as he terms it, is the front room of the second story, and from this chamber in tne nouse emanate mobc i-.uauui) clever stories that have won for their author so large a circle of readers and admirers. Beecher literature promises to be ex ceedingly plentiful even if only one half of the proposed works concerning the dead preacher ever see the light ot dav. From what can be learned there are not less than four different biogra phfes of Mr. Beecher intended, al though only one of these has received the approval of Mrs. Ueccher and her family. This is the forthcoming work of Mr. Joseph Howard, to be isued m a very few days by the subscription house of Hubbard Bros., of Philadel phia. Mr. Howard's father was the virtual starter of Plymouth church and the most intimate friend of Mr. Beecher for nearly half a century. This fact, with Howard's access to hundreds of letters written by Mr. Beecher which have never yet been made public, ought to make his wurk interesting from that point of view and valuable. These letters, it seems, were written about forty years ago, when Mr. Beecher was but 34 years ol age, and "Toe," in bib and tucker, was going to scnooi 111 ins uu,.i- iuu ut Concerning the forthcoming worK u.. iw n TivWe on the Balkan U y 1KJI A. v-a-J- j Peninsula. Mr. Gladstone has written to the author as follows: "I learn with particular satkfaction that you - are about to publish a detailed work on the Ba'.km Peninsula. The well being, tranquillity, and liberty of that region have now come to be of a Tti ore critical importance than ever to the interest of Europe. : It is, therefore, most material that the public mind in the various'countries sliould be impar tially and thoughtfully informed; and I apprehend that the high reputation which you have justly acquired by for mer works on great States of Europe, will, togethei with your known pow ers and wide sympathies, qualify you in a rare degree lor the performance of this important task." The work, as I am informed, is to be brought out shortly through (i. P. Putnam's Sons. Since Frederick Warne & Co., the London and New York publishers' have put their new "Nutall's Standard Dic tionary" before the American public, it has put a stop to the sales of all for mer cheap editions, so the leading book-dealers tell me. This new and revised edition of a most handy and popular dictionary at a low price con tains one hundred thousand words in cluding the latest accessions from sci ence, literature and common parlance with clear, terse and simple definitions. The appendices give the pronuncia tion of Greek and Latin names, geo graphical terms, classical and foreign phrases in common use, and abbrevi ations. The etymology of each word is given, the root from which.it is de rived, and its language being noted. New Yorkers miss a great deal of the romance of their life. For in stance, how many people who saw the two poets, Stedman and Stoddard, talking together in Fourteenth street the other day recalled the memories that cluster around them? Memories of Pfaff's, of Bayard Taylor, of the "Echo Club." They are very differ ent in appearance and character. Sted man is elegant, courteous, treating a lady with a deference that no man to day can emulate. Stoddard is out right like a chestnut burr without the chestnuts, though. I caught a bit of their talk as 1 stopped for a moment. " I," said Stedman, " would give a bad poet Homer to study." "I," roared Stoddard, "would burn him alive!" When the May number of Lippin cotfs Magazine will make its appear ance on the 25th inst., the author (Mrs. Poultney Bigelow) of that short but interesting story in that number, entitled "The Madison's Butler," will be safely landed on the shores of the old world, whither she has sailed a few days hence in company with her hus band, the editor of Outing, to be ab sent for about five months. Judging from Mrs. Bigelow's recent contribu tions to magazine literature, 1 deem the authoress a woman of highly lit erary qualifications. Mrs. Bigelow, I am told, is the Daniel Buxton whose story of "Mars and Mammon" ex cited so much interest when it ap peared in Otttiug. Mr. Charles E. Clay, the managing editor of the Out ing magazine informs me that Mrs. Pigelow has written tor the Mav num.- her of his monthly a serial also, bear ing the title: " Down East." The Recollections of Eminent Men of Mr. E. P. Whipple, published by the Ticknors, is doubly interesting in the new light which has been cast by modern criticism upon the critical work of this author. JUr. Whipple knew books rather than men. lie judged them much as he judged men in a kindly, negative way; he would always rather praise than blame. He chose his department of literary work less, it may almost be said, than the work demanded him. He was a most emracrinsr critic; if he must needs con- demn, he was not slow to give high honor too. He was intimate with all of the famous men of his day; and in' writing the Recollections he did not sitate to tell ot the small foibles of his friends, but with such sympathetic and winning humor that the -eminent men" themselves would enjoy his sen- fences not less, at least, than the read- ers still left in this world. ! or its sound of discord. 1 he future is Mr. Maui ice Thompson, who lives i in it with the weakness or the strength in Crawfordsville, Indiana, and wisely I that falls from its hand into the heart. makes as much capital ot liis provin- ' What a man was and is and will be is cialism as city writers do of their local in it. E. ch man's somewhat and s jmc surroundings, has written a novel with , where is in it, each man's character, the somewhat faulty it is hard to re- each man's destinity. Whatever we sist saving -smarty'' title, "A Banker ; plant in it grows out of it. Whatever of Bankcrsville.". ' But in spite of its we write into it reads out of it. What name, it is a storv with much life and ever faces we paint into it will look humor, love and suffering in it. The : out of it. Whatever voices we speak trials of the young woman who writes from an entertaining diversion, and the somewhat complicated plot is man aged with admirable inaenuitv. " The career of a distinctively literarv journal is a very trying one, ana even i with the best success, there is not I much profit. The Critic, perhaps the I best known and edited of literary pa-, ' pers, has never paid its editors and ; managers for the work and trouble 1 t pent upon it. t-verytning ixas atn ! done in the wav of special features, : - the testimonial to Dr. Holmes proving robaMy the most lucrative. The Nation, able as it undoubtedly is in many respects', does? little more : than pay expenses. "The Boston Literary World, with the advantage of one-hall less expenses .in the fact of its fort nightly publication, is barely self-sustaining, and it is questioned whether it would be continued were it not that its managers divide their time between it and the religious paper which" they conduct in connection with it. 1 The Ep&ch lately started by Mr. Saligman upon the project of supplying New York with a London Saturday Re view, if report be true, has not met with any great amount of success. It is possible that Mr. Seligman, with his wealth, may eventually place the Epoch on a paying basis, but it is .:oubted whether, he will ever receiye enough from it to pay him for the worry and trouble it will cost him to do so. The amount of literature printed at the present day is marvelous. To keep even with this steady stream, requires much time and extensive reading yet a royal road is certainly found in Book Chat, which in its first three numbers of this year has indexed 2,987 magazine' articles under subject, 137 new serials, 748 poems, 715 American and English books with explanatory note, and 414 books in French, Ger man, Spanish and Italian. The price $1.00 is remarkably low. A notable forthcoming book from the press of D. Lothrop Company will be the translation of "The Russian Novelists" from the French ot Vis comte E. M. de Vogue. Written with force, with the marked qualities of the best French writers, a clear insight and a transparent style, and the translation by a Boston lady is exceedingly well done. . The book will be issued early this summer. Mrs. Harriet Taylor-Upton, daugh ter of Hon. Elijah Taylor, has been engaged in Washington for some months upon an important historical series for Wide Awake, entitled: "The Children of the White House." The articles, I am informed will be fully illustrated from original sources. In this work Mrs. Tayloi-Upton has the co-operation of many members of the various Presidential families. A. Rosccaver. THE SONG IN THE STORM. The wind goes sobbing Over the moor ; Far is the fold and shut its door ; White and htill, beyond terror and shock, Lies th'i foolish laiii'o that strayed from the llock, While overhead, from its frozen branch, With a tender pity, tine and staunch, Thus sin.s the robin : The wind howls, heavy With death and sorrow, To-dav it is thee, may be I to-morrow, Yet I'll sing one tunf o'er the silent world, For the litt le lamb that never grew old, Never lived long winter to see. Chanting from empty boughs like me, Boughs once so leaf y. The snowflakes cover i The moorland dun ; : Mv song thrills feebly, but I sing on. Why did !od make me a brave bird soul Under warm feathers, red as a coal, . To keep up my feet cheery and bright : To the verv last twinkle of wintry light, I VVhilst thine is all over? ! Why was I given i Bold, strong w ings ' To bear me away from hurtful things, ' While thy poor feet were so tender and weakly, And thy faint heart gave up all so meekly. Till it yielded at length to a still sate hand ; That hade thee lie down, nor try to stand? i Was it hand of heaven? The wind goes sobbing (Thus sang the bird. Or ele in a dream its voice I heard) Nothing I know and nothing I can ; Wisdom is not for me, but man. Yet some snow-pure, snow-soft, vol snow- cold. May be singing for lambs strayed from fold, lesutes poor robin. Now 1 Charlotte Chronicle. This little word of three letters has an eternity of meaning. Few people, we fear, realize its full significance. It is the mightiest of words. Now! It is ever with us as long as life endures, i and we cannot proceed one minute '. beyond or go one minute backward, ; The past is in it with its face of joy or j face of despair, with its voice of music Hi qtvmL- out of it. If we know of good works to perform, per form them now If we have kind words to sneak, speak them now. If ! we have enemies to forgive, 1 ' forgive : a 1 ... T . 1- 1 - t-? ol rim T-4 r. t iK meur ;iu. jcl una iuU i..JUbh j all the departments of life. Now! In j it is woven the garment in which we j walk to the Judgment, and in which ; we walk, through eternity. Awful ! with defeat or grand with victory the ucmui) uiubauuo ..t, own hand into the heart of the eternal NOW. Gin Mills and Rum Shops. , rBattleboro Headlight.! , If we understand the signs of the times, their days are numbered. Their castles are beseiged by the enlightened and philanthropic of the world and their soldiers are mutinous, demor alized and deserting their service. The cry of sumptuary laws, the rights of freedom and the blessings of whis key will no longer rally their troops to duty. By tens and hundreds they are learning that no good, no moral advancement emanates from their dis- j cipline or campaign tactics. Ihey be hold with sorrow the discharged and the deserter as he wanders away from their ranks all dilapidated, forsaken 1 and penniless as he approaches his hungry children and broken-hearted j wife with one pound of meat and a gallon of whiskey or is kept away in the lockup for crime committed during his Bachanalian revels. We remem- 1 bar abolitionists in the United States cjuld be counted on one's fingers; when Wilberforce and Fox in England had not a dozen followers, and the subject was considerd almost ridiculous. ! Years ago, Charles Sumner in 2 Con gressional speech asserted that "agita tion henceforward shall be the watch word, and we will raise and educate a generation that will break the chains of the slave." That generation came and that prophecy is a reality. Pro hibitionists are agitating with zeal and energy the equal of which has rarely been witnessed. In the bright sun shine of the present age things are seen in a different light. Rum shops by most people are viewed as an evil, a curse to a community, and reasons for their tolertion are fast disappearing as footprints upon the sands. Even now, and certainly in the near future, a chmpion for rum-mills will be a cu riosity. What can he promise his sympathisers? Hear him. Noah got drunk, Paul reccommended wine for the stomach and Christ changed water into wine. The inference is that Lot indulged af:er the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, judging by his lewd conduct. Hence they conclude it is. one of the many blessings vouchsafed to us by the Most High, and they believe it is right, that there should be no restrictions more than at present put upon its manufacture and sale. Here is the man of Straw, and he is going to be knocked down. The Republicans and Democrats will do it. In the North, the West, the East and the South, the brain and the tongue are busy. Way down in the Lone Star State, $1,000 to $15,000 sub scription for campaign purposes has hppn ;pf.ll red in a few minutes. Id iots and children will get drunk. Do we allow them free access to intoxica ting drinks? Why not? "Woe be unto him that giveth his neighbor drink; that puttcth the bottle to his mouth," etc. To be convinced, it is only necessary to cipher out a few mathematical demonstrations. Rum must go because it is a fraud. It is not value for hardly a considerable part of the amount it represents. l'he effects ot rum are so appauing as an evil and of such magnitude as to defy description. Ihe innocent are made to suffer, infants are put in jeopardy. No living mortal can boast of absolute freedom from the dangeis and pollutions of this monster. Reso lutions to abstain and have nothing to do with it, are not a safeguard. It is a feariul miblic evil and as such it ith bv an enlightened 1 oublic. Sellers are not to be expected to volunteer and abandon their lucra tive vocation. Thousands of them under differnt circumstances will flock to the prohibition standard and join heartily in a crusade of respectable strength, to wipe out the whole thing from this continent. They feel if the traffic is to be tolerated by law, it is aslegitmate for them as others, individ ually they can accomplish but little or nothing m keeping men sober. Many ,if ilipm wVui have other goods would much prefer and advise sots to buy j with their money other articles of ne cessity for their families. e have no harsh words or choice invecties to hurl at the man who deals in this liquid damnation, yet we are candid enough to own we have ever turned with horror from a business so freight ed with crime, degradation and misery. In all directions we hear the war bugle's thrilling call to arms, the cannon's boom falls on our quickened ears, the steady tramp of serried columns of -1 infantry in their ruh to the front pro claims thatthe battle is raging m fury. . - r -.-Ptinir intorpctc hnln Legions thousands against their better judg ment. In a few more years victory will perch upon the prohibition ban ners. The writing is on the wall Rum has been weighed in the balances and found wanting. Men dread insanity as they do a demon. And each day brinss blood-curdling stories of mur der, rape and ars3n each bearing on its wings an eloquence more convincing than any ever heard from the lips of man. These questions are daily being kept before each voter throughout our broad dominion. Does it craze our wives? and .: starve our little .ones? Pressed home to an enquiring mind, there can be but one answer. Then can we let Rum alone? A Word With Farmers. Wadesboro Argus. The margins of farmer's profits now are small we know, but it does not fol iow that they should allow themselves to indulge in vain repinings and to become chronic grumblers. There are many thousands in other industrial pursuits all over our broad land who are sailing in the boat, and as the spring time advances, with its many hurrying duties and its new demands for its expenditures in making ready for another seed-time, we counsel them in all friendliness to avail themselves of a wholesome reflection on their bus iness affairs, that peradventure some heretofore unseen ways may be sug gested for the alleviation of the exist ing conditions and sources of their complainings. Avail yourself of all the home resources for enlarging your manure supply barn yard, stable, poultry houses, etc., and supply in such manner as to produce best results, and add most improvement of land. Raise a sufficiency of meat for family con sumption. Let nothing go to waste. Cultivate such crops as are best suited to your land. In determining this question, surrounding circumstances must be carefully looked into and weighed, such as proximity to market; texture of land, and many other con siderations canvassed, and the best judgment ought to be used in decid ing this matter. Spare no pains to provide for the family a liberal supply of the best vegetables, which besides being conducive to health, when nice and fresh, furnish a frugal household almost a living. The One-Crop System Won't do. Oxford Orphan's Friend. 1 The planting of too much tobacco, as well as too much of any other one thing, is bound to work injury to the planter. The farmers of Granville county are not near so well off to-day as they were five years ago. The reason of this is obvious : They tried to get rich all at once, and failed failed by planting more tobacco than they could handle to an advantage, hence it was of an inferior grade, and an over-supply of inferior tobacco be ing made, it must necessarily sell low. The only redemption for the farmers in the "golden belt," said an experi enced and well-to-do dealer the other day, is to make small crops, and see that it is strictly fine. This grade of tobacco, he said, will always sell well, while inferior grades must continue low and lower. But even the making j of finest tobacco cannot succeed within i itself. No country or people or indi ! vidual can prosper who has to buy that which he can easily produce him self Then there should be a lopmnjr off of some of tne ,iuxuriesM when "hard times come." The following by a correspondent of the Charlotte Observer is pertinent: Money is scarce. It is a wonder we have any, when nearly every pound of bacon, flour and lard is purchased outside of the State, and so many of our farmers feed their stock on West ern corn and Northern hay. Times are hard, but we send to Bos ton lor cabbage and potatoes, and to Norfolk for turnips, and it is no un common sight to see a wagon from the country going home loaded with provisions and produce, no single pound of which is raised in North Car olina. No country or people can truly thrive that sends abroad for the articles that they can produce themselves. We pay for these things in cash and ! send nothing away to bring the cash back to us. We ought to feel pro foundly grateful that we have anything left. THE DYING WARRIOR1. Written for the Gold Leaf. A warrior dying lonely lay. Upon his couch at fleeting day. The thatched wigwam's lowly door Swung gently open, to and fro. Propelled by force of Western breeze That sung iiiong the green pine tree And mourned and sung of times that by Had flown on wing away for aye. That sung of times when proudly they hung o'er the lodge where red men lay And drcam't but of the deeds of might And courted the masses of the night And sung of deeds of valor told Among the lodges where young and old Listen'd to the tales of blood, Tales of drouth and tales of flood. The door swung open, open wide And the setting sun shed a tide Of golden warmth of sun's last ray Fell on the couch where tlie dying lay On whose life was passing away On the wings of the closing day And the summer sun Bank to ret As the life-breath left tlie warrior's breast. J. . I'AP.KfcK. IGranse, Ky. T ROYAL 9 ISSt XJ gtaijiEt - Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and wbolesomenes. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold in competition with Mie multitude of low test, short weight lhim or phosphate powders. Sold only in can. HoVAL, Hakinq Powdrb Co. 106 Wall St. N. Y. June 24, I o. PROFESSIONAL CARDS T. M. PITTMAN, ATTOHNKY A.T L.A.VV, HENDERSON, N. C. Prompt attention to all professional business. Practices in the State am Federal cour ts. Refer by pcimb&icn to Commercial National Hank and E. D. Latta fc Bro., Charlotte. N. C ; Altred William JtCo., Raleigh, N . C; D. Y. Cooper and Jaa. ii. Lassiter, lieLderaou, N. C. Office: Ovei Jam. II. Lassiter A Son'a store (nov 5 1 o.) A. J. HARRIS, ATTOR N EV AJT LAWt HENDERSON, N. C. Practices in the courts of Vance. Gran- ville, Warren and Franklin counties. "nd in the Supremo and Federal courts 01 ihd State. -r ' OMice: In Cooper Building, over J. I H. Mlssilliei's. JENRY T. JORDAN, A T T O R N EY AT LA W. NOTARY PUBLIC AND PUBLIC Adniiiiistratorlor Vance Co I ractiees in the courts of Vance v'arren, Frauklin, (Jranville and i erson counties, and in the Supreme ind Federal courts. Off ic e. Iu Burwell's Brick Luilding. The Bank of Hndcrson HENDERSON, VANCE COUNTY, N. General Hanking-. Exctt&nre and Collection IIuliiea. First Mortoaoe Loans Negotiated on rooJ farms for a term of year, la sums of $ A'0 huu upward, at 8 per ceut interest and moderate charge. Apply to W.M. H. H. HUROWYM, At the Rank of lleuderaou. yyM.II.S.BUlltiA'?X( ATTOKNKY AT L.AW HENDERSON, N. C. Persons dt-hirinfr to consult 111 e profea nionally, will rind medai y at my office la Tne Rauk of Henderson Building. c. EDWAKW, Oxford. ;. C. A. K. WOKTHAM, Henderson, Ji. U. EDWARDS &WORTHVM. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HENDERSON, V. C. Offer their services to the people of Vance county. ( ot. Edwards will at tend all the Courta of Vance county, and will come to Henderson at any and all times when his assistance may be needed ty his partner. mar. 19. a. W. II. DAY. A.C. ZOL. LI COFFER DAY & Z0LL1 GOFFER. ATTOUNKY A.T LAW. HENDERSON, N. C. Practice in the courta of Vance, Gran .lie, Warren, Halifax, and Xortbamp Un and in Kupreme and Fdri' courts of the State. Office In the new Harris I .aw Build ing next to the Court House. feb y 6 i Dental Surgeon, HBKDKBSOV, V. O Satisfaction guaranteed to work and pric w. Offic jvvr Farker Ji CIom' atore. Main street feb 4. P S. HARRIS, DENTiST HENDERSON, N.C. Office overE. G. tyvia' Store, Main Street rr r. 25. 1 . I ! "J-Jtt. C. S. BOYD, J$$t& mm f I
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 28, 1887, edition 1
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