Leading Paper j
IN THE
YELLOW TOBACCO
DISTRICT.
$ 2.00 a Year; 6 Mos. $1.00.
Largest Circulation
BEST
ADVERTISING
"MEDIUM.
fSTRates on Application.!
I " OROTrisrA., CROinsr., Hjeia.-vnjs BLEssnsras ttextjd ZHjbiu" I oTV0
VOlTvI HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1887. NO. 39
: t 1 - t t . . . '
A TONiiUE IN KNOTS.
I contracted malaria In the swamps
of Louisiana while working f r the tele
graph company, and ua-d every kind of
inedicene 1 could harof without relief.
I at last auccf ede 1 in breaking the fever,
Jut it cost me over ? '.00.00, and then itiy
ftystem wmm pmatrated and faturaled
with malarial poia o and I became al
most btlplea. I fina I3' came her, my
mouth ho filled with Bores that I coul I
arcely eat, and my tongue raw and
tilled with little knola. Varlou rrint
die were retried to without effect. f.
bought two botilr-a of B. U B. and it ba
cured and atrenjrlbened me. All sort
Afniv month are healed and my tongue
entirely clar of knot and aorentss and !
a. toi aau ai v ww
A F. Britton.
Jackaon. Tcnn.. Anrll 20 IK81.
STIFF JOINTS
A Most Remarkable Case of
Scrofula and Rheumatism.
I iiiivo a liitie boy twelve yeirs old
whose knees have been diawn almost
double and his joint are peifwctly stiff,
and has been in this condition three
years unable to walk. During that
time the medical board of London county
ezxmiued biin and pronounced the dis
ease ferofula and prescribed, but no
tenent ever derived. I then ued a
much adverti-ed preparation without
benefit. Three weeks ago be became
perfectly helpless and buffered dread
fully.
A friend who has used 11. B, B. ad
vised itn use. Lie has used one bottle
aud all pain ha ceased and he can now I
walk. This has been pronOunced a most !
wonderful actiou. as his Complaint had
ba filed everything. 1 bba t continue to
use it on biw
Mm. Exmi Griffiths.
Uni'a, Tenn., March 2 la6.
WEDJI CITY, AKK., J5LOOD.
Having tested B B. B. and found it
to be all that is claiined lor if, I com
mend it to any aiidevry oue buffering
from blood poison. It ban done me
jnore good for It money and in a vborl
r "pace of time than auy blood purifier
J eyer used. I owe the comfort f o.y
Jjl'e to its use. for I have been troubles
with a severe form of blood poison for 5
or 6 years aud tound uo relief equal to
thai giveu by the use of B. B. B
W. C. McGacuky.
"Webb City,, Ark., May 3. 188i.
All who desire full information about
ton cause and cure of Blood 1'oison,
Mcrofui and Wcrofulous Hwolling, UU
cer. rSoref, Rheumatism, Kidney (Join
plaints. Catarrh, etc , oau secure by mail
free, acopvoi our 34-page Illustrated
Hook ot Wonder, Oiled with tbe most
ivonderful and startling proof tver be
fore known. Addren,
i'LOOD BAIjV CO..
Atlanta. Ga.
Plantin? Time
HAS COME. .
Now is the time to plant
IRISH POTATOES,
aud
OXKXS.
Sow
CABBAGE,
L.KTTUCE,
TOMATOES,
KADISIT,
BEETS,
PEAS.
MUSTARD,
KALE,
SALSIFT,
CAR HOT
and
PARSNIP
JLUSO SEED
FOR
PASTURES, MEADOWS
and LO rs. In ORCHARD, TIM
OTHY, HERDS GRASS,
and RED and SAP
PLIXG CLOVER
SEED.
I have a full stock of a'l seeds and will
meet prices with anyone.
I SHALL CONTINUE
To Improve My
DRUG STOCK
until it i second to none South of Rich
mond, My stock of
CIGARS,
CIGARETTES
and
TOBACCO
Is Complete.
I hve on hand ard Khali carry a larger
Vih-W of Paints and Painters' goods than
$tt f.re. First quality groundcolors
specialty.
I carrv at all time a nice line of ROYS
TER'S FRESH FRENCH CANDIES.
All Prescriptins
and family receipts intrnsted to ray care
will receive my personal attention and
only pure, fresh drugs used in fl.ling
them. In returning thank' to my
friends and customers I ask for a contin
uance of their patronage, and assure
them I will spare uo efforts to deserve
it. A good h use. a long experience
and ample capital, I can and will make
il to your interest to deal with tne.
Very Respectfully,
Melville Porsey.
Jj S. HARRIS,
DENTIST
HENDERSON
N.C
Davis Store,
VL r. 2$, 1 c
fW; Office QT.erE.
UU Street
HOME HAPPINESS.
THE RIGHT KIND OF WIFE TO
HAVE.
A Few Timely Hints to those who are
Matrimonially IuUined.
Peck's Sun.
Say, young man, I suppose you are
looking about for a wife; one that will
help you to get on in the world one
that will be happy and contented with
you one that will -meet you at the
door of your nice little cottage with a
kiss and a how-are-you-to-night-love
look on her sweet face, as you come
home from your work at night ; one
who will watch your interests and see
that all is done that can be done for
your comfort and happiness ; one who
will have a nice, clean, substantial
supper spread for you on a table cov
ered with spotless linen, with a clean
white napkin neatly put thro' the
silver ring on which is engraved Frank
or Charley ; one who is as neat and
tidy as the repast she sets before you.
Where can you get such a wife? Ah,
ray boy, while you are hanging about
the front gate that, opens to a stone
front house on the avenue with a la-de-da
sort ol a girl who simpers and
laughs and talks about Carrie B. or
Flora C one who knows all about
the latent swell wedding or party up
town, and whose head is full ol the
latest fashions, and who talks glibly
about the new hat or dress that she is
about to come into possession of, and
tries to entertain you with stories about
her poor little Fido, or the beautilul
and lovely pug that Papa just bought
for her.
No, sir ; don't take that girl. She
won't do for you, lor she won't know
any more about teal life than a horse
does about chewing gum. You couldn't
support her three months on a reason
able salary or any sort ot a fair trade
that you may have worked up at your
young store. That white h-nd and
those taper fingers will not do for a
Monday morning's washing, or to
chop your hash for breakfast.
No, sir, don't spend your time on
any such a girl ; don't hang about her
and tell your companions that she has
a rich old dad. Ten chances to one,
before you will be ready to hitch up
and trot in double harness with her
the old gent will get on to the wrong
side of pork, and be busted flatter than
a griddle cake. Drop her, and if you
really feci as though you must get
married, go out early in the morning
on one of your main streets and
select one ol those nice, bright, rosy
cheeked, trim shop girls that one sees
tripping light-footed down to her
work in the morning, and is in a hurry
for fear she will be late at her place of
business, where she handles the cash,
or measures tape ; that's the sort of
girl for you. She wants a home and
stands ready and willing to make you
happy in one. She can handle your
washing and chop your "hash" with
out any remarks. When she talks to
you she will talk sense she will cheer
you up when you come home at night
feeling blue over'a poor day's business
or a note from the boss, stating that
in consequence of dull times your sal
ary has been reduced a trifle. Young
man, you want a help-mate one that
will willingly put her shoulder with
yours to the wheel of lile and make
you cheerful and happy. Isn't that so?
For the general good of that order
the Gold Leaf hopes the rumor of the
proposed resignation ot General Mas
ter Workman Powderly of the Knights
of Labor is not true. The prominence
the order has acquired is due very
largely to the intelligent administra
tion of Mr. Powderly as its chief officer.
He is conservative in his views, and
yet thoroughly alive to everything
which will promote the intere.ts or
welfare of the workmgraen. If his
his counsels had been entirely followed
the order would not to-day have so
many internal dissensions. While Mr.
Powderly is not a learned man he has
a vast amount of sterling common
sense, and he has devoted to the order
over which he presides an amount of
study, energy and hard work that will
not be exceeded by any successor who
may be chosen. If the Knights are wise
they will decline to accept his resigna
tion, and re-elect him general master
workman.
The Wilmington Messenger is in
tensely in earnest in its love and pride
and devotion to everything that is
North Carojinian, and possessses no
characteristic that we admire more. It
says;
North Carolina has been blessed by-
nature. Its mountains teem with
minerals and its hill-sides are full of
ores. Long live our Tar-Heel State.
Nature built it because it was intended
to come to stay, and when nature
builds a permanent foundation it
rrjeans business,
ON THE SHORE.
rArgosy.
Bevond those sunset bars of gold,
Which light the waves of the purple sea,
Near the crystal river, the pearly gate,
1 know you are watching and waiting
for me.
Not weary, not fearful, for time with you
! sever measured by lingering years,
And the golden points on the dial s face
Are numbered by smiles, and not by tears.
To-night, as I walk on the lonely shore.
And list to the mournful surges' beat,
1 think of the music that falls on your ear.
Of the beautiful blossoms that lie at
your feet.
And 'tis joy to know that no grief of mine
Can darken a brow so bright and fair ;
Yet I sometimes fancy my spirit can fel
A gleam from the glorious radiance there.
A boat will lie shortly on yonder wave,
The boatman be drawing toward the
shore ;
His call of warning I soon shall hear,
And the soft, low splash of his ready
oar.
He will bear me safely, his arm is strong.
Till the walls of the golden gate I see;
And when I reach it, your task is done
There is no more watching and waiting
for ine.
"Our Women Must be Protected."
Commenting on the recent lynching
of the negro brute Eugene Hairston, i
at Greensboro, for one of the most
heinous of all crimes, the Winston
Sentinel says .
Can any man doubt that this was
the right thing to do? Was not the!
sentence, "He shall die," uttered by I
a representative body of our fellow
citizens ? Only such a crime would
have aroused such men to take the
law in their hands and we believe the
lynchers will stand justified before God
and man.
As to the effect ot the lynching on
the minds of other depraved men,
no one can doubt for a moment that
it was more forcible, more salutary
than the slow process of law, even if
the penalty eventually had been death.
There would have been a possibility of
acquittal and opportunity for further
crimes. As it is, there is none.
Even in the event of conviction, the
brute would simply have worked on a
railroad a few years and then again
been turned loose on society. Now
he is dead.
What an awful example to evil
doers! Imagine the effect on others
of like nature, contemplating a similar
crime. Bafore their mental vision will
float the picture of a hundred dark
forms, a halter round the neck, a pre
carious seat on a horse's back, a quick
cut on the horse's flank, a sudden jump,
and then a soul loaded with one of
the blackest crimes in the whole cat
egory of sin, sent out into the Un
known, and only a body, riddled with
bullets, left swinging in the midnight
air. Such a picture before the mind
of a brutal man is a more horrible
warning than all the juries ever im
paneled or courts of law ever held.
We approve, and in no qualified
terms, the action of the lynchers, and
so do the majority of men, both laity
and clergy. In speaking to a rever
end man of God, we asked him if he
approved it. He said: "I most cer
tainly do. It was the only thing .to
be done and should have been done
the very day he was caught. With
such crimes increasing, only such vio
lent punishments are adequate to pre
vent them."
It is an unwritten law in the South,
but thank Heaven, none the less a
law, that a man who attempts rape
shall be hung. The white men of the
South are determined their mothers,
wives and sisters shall be protected.
The Granville Copper Mines and the
Oxford & ClarksTille Road.
News-Observer.
Mr. T. C. Harris has just returned
from Oxford and other points in Gran
ville county where he went to gather
information concerning the copper
mines of Granville. He was unable to
visit the mines, but learned that nego
tiations were going on between some
of the owners and a syndicate of North
ern capitalists for a sale of a part of
them. !
The Oxford & Clarksville railroad
is being pushed rapidly forward and
by the first of November will be in full
operation between those two points.
The road is being well and substan
tially built by the best contractors and
of the best material. Just now there
is considerable talk as to what point
it will be extended. In this particular
Raleigh and Durham divide the atten-;
tion with a large balance in favor of.
RaVih. TTm nwnin anrl A irprtnrc -if t
the road really desire to build it to this
point, but a subscription from Durham
may turn the balance in her favor. If
the directors propose to work for the
substantial and permanent benefit ot
the road, as a matter of course it will
be built to Raleigh, notwithstanding
subscriptions from other places ; and
this is reported to be the opinjon of tbe
directors.
TO HANG.
THE FATE OF ANARCHISTS
V SEALED.
A Wholesale Hanging: to take Place in
Chicago So says the Supreme Court
of Illinois.
Press Dispatch. J
Ottawa, III., Sept. 14'.
-The Su-
preme court this
mornmg deliverea
an opinion in the anarchist case, af
firming the judgment of the court be
low. The execution is to take place
November 1 1 .
Chicago, September 14. A News
special from Ottawa says: At 9.30
Justice Magruder began the announce
ment of the decision in the anarchist
case. Just before the opening of
court every one seemed to have a feel
ing that something was going to hap
pen. Before the hour for convening
of the court lawyers and reporters
seemed to have that feeling and con
versed with each other in subdued
tones. Even Barker, the janitor who
has waited upon every justice of the
Supreme Court that sat upon the
bench .. m Ottawa, tipped around in
opening and dusting the court room as
if he was afraid of breaking the death
ly stillness that pervaded the entire
building. Deputy Smith faltered and
his voice trembled as he pronounced
" Hear ye, hear ye." As the justices
filed into the court room headed by
Chief Justice Sheldon, they appeared
more dignified than ever. The Chief
Justice waved his associates to their
seats even more stately than is his
wont. His nod to the sheriff was
more stiff and his Open court" less
audible than on previous days of the
term. Justice Magruder appeared
flushed and nervous as he entered the
court room, the cause of which was
evidenced a few moments later when
Chief Justice Sheldon turned to him
and in a voice which would have been
inaudible save for the deathly stillness
which prevailed in the room said,
" Justice Magruder, have you any an
nouncement to make?" The flushed
appearance of the "justice changed to
that of pallor and his voice was husky
as he responded, " In August Spies
and others against the people of the
State of Illinois, No. 59 advisement
docket."
The chief justice nervously turned
the leaves of the court docket to the
case indicated, when the justice read
the decision ot the court in the an
archist cases." As he commenced
reading he regained his composure.
His voice was clear and distinct until
the order fixing the death penalty and
date of execution was reached, when
his reading became labored, his voice
husky, and his manner showed that it
was with the greatest emotion that he
performed the duty he had been
delegated by his associates to perform.
Having voiced the decision of the
court in this most celebrated case it
has been called upon to decide, the
justice who made the announcement
at once left the bench and retired to
his room.
The opinion of the Supreme Court
in the anarchist cases was written by
Judge Magruder, who announced that
the judgment of the cort below is
affirmed as to all and as to each and
every one of the defendants. An opin
ion has been prepared setting forth
the reasons of affirmation of the judg
ment. Judge Sheldon announced that
he concurred in the opinion. Judge
Mulkey said : " It is not my intention
to offer a separate opinion as I should
have done. I desire to avail myself
of this occasion to say that, while I
concur in the conclusions reached and
also in the general views as entered
in the opinion filed, I do not wish
to be understood as holding that the
record is free from error for I do not
think it is. I am nevertheless of the
opinion that none of the errors, cpm
plained of are of such a serious char
acter as to require a reversal of the
judgment. In view of the number of
defendants on trial and the great
length of time consumed in the trial,
the vast amount of testimony offered
and passed upon by the court and the
almost numberless rulings the court
was required to make, the wonder to me
is that the errors were not of a more
serious character than they are.. In
short, after having fully examined the
record and giving the the questions
arising on it my very best thought
with an earnest and conscientious de
sire to faithfully discharge my whole
duty, I am fully satisfied that the
opinion reached vindicates the. law,
does complete justice between the peo
ple of the State and the defendants
and is fully warranted by the law and
the evidence.''
Justice Sheldon " In this case the
court orders that the sentence of the
Superior Court of Cock county on the
defendants in tbe indictment August
Spies, Samuel Fielding, R. Parsons,
Adolph Fischer, Engel, Louis Singg and
Michael Schwab be carried into effect
by the sheriff of Cook county on t ith
day of November next, on Friday,
between the hours of 10 o'clock in the
forenoon and 4 o'clock in the after
noon on that day. The judgment of
the court was unanimous. The
opinion makes 66,000 wards. The
anarchists had no counsel here to rep
resent them before the court as the
decision was announced and no steps
were taken in their behalf. They
have fifteen days ia; which to 'file a
motion for a rehearing and thirty days
trom the close of the term to file a
petition in support thereof. This will
not act as a stay of the sentence and
they will have to show very strong
grounds before the court would con
sent to the issue of a stay of execution
until a rehearing could be had at next
term.
The Land of the Golden Leaf.
T. M. Pittman in News-Observer.
Henderson, N. C, Sept. 14.
In a quiet way the enterprising bus
iness men of Henderson have kept a
close watch upon the railroad move
ments now being agitated and without
making any fuss about it, have two
new terminals.
First, of the Oxford & Clarksville
road. This company has already se
cured the Oxford & Henderson rail
road, which will become a branch of
the R. 8c D. system with Henderson
as one of its terminals. This line is
already in successful operation between
Henderson and Oxford, and irfa short
while we hope to see cars running
through to Richmond via Clarksville.
Second, the Northern & Durham
railroad will have its Northern termi
nus at this place. It is stated that the
work of grading will begin next week
at both ends of the line, and that
twenty-four miles of road will be in
operation before the end of the year.
The completion of this line will bring
us into closer relations with the other
tobacco markets of the State and ma
terially strengthen our position.
- BUILDINGS. "
If we had'nbt become so accustomed
to big enterprises we would think we
were enjoying a veritable boom, but
it's a constant thing here. I men
tioned some time ago the new and im
portant improvements of D. Y. Cooper,
Harris, Gooch & Co., Allen & Ginter,
Strause & Raab, Clary Bros., Horner
& Kelly and perhaps others. As these
near completion others follow. A new
warehouse is just begun. It is to be
one of the largest here and will be oc
cupied by Messrs. Jenkins & Elam.
D. Y. Cooper has a new prize factory
under way, and R. E. Young has be
gun work upon two handsome brick
stores. Others will be begun soon.
Upon inquiry at the R. & G. R. R.
freight office to-day I learned that
three hundred and thirty-five cars of
lumber had been received by rail at
this depot during the present season,
and I learn from other sources that
three brick yards have been in con
stant operation during the whole sea
son, with a redely market at home for
their product.
Money is plentiful and hard to put
out. Crops are good. Merchants are
happy. Tobacco isturing finely and
bringing good prices, and the farmers
have surrendered their old-time privi
lege of grumbling.
Fredericksburg, Va., has a big pickle
factory that is supplied with cucum
bers from. the lands adjoining the city.
This season the supply has reached
30.000,000 cucumbers, those engaged
in their production furnishing from
200,000 to 1,000,000 each. An acre
will produce 100,000, and they sell in
Fredericksburg at 80 cents per 1,000.
Tne object is to get them an inch or
an inch and a hajf long and this re
quires active picking before they in
crease this size. A boy will pick 3,000
in a day. Picking them thus early
increases the productiveness of tbe
vine, and, while tbe season lasts, others
are appearing in place of those taken
from the vines.
The Hillsboro Recorder suggests
that Col. Wm. L. Saunders, at present
Secretary of State, would make a most
valued member of the United States
Senate to succeed Gen. Ransom. That
he would. He has the ability and
knowledge of affairs which fit him to
adorn such a position. By the way,
the people . are casting about a good
deal in search of a man to succeed
Ransom. It is not a difficult matter
to find a man possessed of the requisite
qualifications; but the fittest man is
the trouble. Graham Gleaner.
When a young man sits in the par
lor talking nonsense to his best girl
that's capital, But when he has to
stay in of evenings after they're mar
ried that's labor.
Read and advertise in tbe Gold
Leaf,
DIVERSIFIED INDUSTRIES:
THE CHIEF REQUISITE TO
SOUTHERN PROSPERITY.
The Fallacy of an Exclusive Agricul
tural System.
Baltimore Manufacturers' Record.
Never before has the fatal mistake
of Southern farmers, in devoting their
attention wholly to the cultivation of
cotton, been more strikingly portrayed
than in the letter of Judge Kelley pub
lished in this issue of the Manufac
turers' Record. No country, it mat
ters not how fertile its soil may be, can
ever secure permanent prosperity where
all interest is centered in the produc
tion of one crop, whether that be cot
ton, tobacco or wheat. In truth, to go
still farther and quote the opening
words of Judge Kelley's letter :
" In all ages and countries, nations
whose people have devoted themselves
exclusively to agriculture have been
liable to tbe horrors of famine. This
proposition is one of universal applica
tion, and is as demonstrably true of
our country, in the closing years of the
nineteenth century, as it was of Egypt
in the days of the Pharoahs.
The South has fully tried the ex
clusive agricultural system. How is it
possible under such a system for a coun
try to attain prosperity when so large
a proportion of its people are forced
to remain in absolute idleness ? When
agriculture alone prevails where is em
ployment to be found for those who
cannot engage in that occupation?
What is to become of those who, under
other circumstances, would be engaged
in industrial pursuits? Where will the
many women, young and middle-aged,
who have no one to support them, find
a means of earning a livelihood ? Con
trast the condition of such a country
with that of one where a wide diversity
of employments is open to every one ;
where the shops and foundries, the
cotton mills, the woolen mills and
other innumerable industries afforded
work, not only for the men, but for
the women compelled by circumstances
to support themselves. And then it is
not only that work is furnished to so
many, thus adding immensely to the
aggregate earnings of a community,
but the non-agricultural classes must,
of necessity, be the consumers of what
the farmers produce. To every farmer
adjacent to industrial centers there is
given the opportunity to diversify his
productions and to find a home mar
ket for all that he can raise. Of what
good is it to tell a farmer to abandon
the exclusive cotton system and diver
sify his crops if he is so far away from
a market as to make the raising and
shipping of fruits, vegetables, poultry,
etc., impossible ? Build an industrial
town within five miles of that farm and
it will not be necessary to urge upon
him to diversify his crop, for he will
learn that quickly enough. Given a
home market for all that he can pro
duce, the Southern farmer will soon
revolutionize the farming system of
that section.
As one contemplates the condition
thousands of the people of the purely
cotton districts of the South, he can
not but feel that the great need of these
people is employment. They are cut
off from the opportunity of securing
work. No greater material blessing
can come upon the South than the de
velopment of such industries as will af
ford this needed employment. This
great inestimable blessing is rapidly
drawing nearer. From Virginia to
Texas new enterprises are daily coming
into existence. They are opening to
thousands and tens of thousands prof
itable work, and prosperity is coining
to many who have for years endured
poverty. Are the people of the South
willing to check this growth by adop
ting free trade ?
History in a Nutshell.
Philadelphia Press.J
The Federal Constitution has four
different dates fixing its adoption and
ratification, its going into effect and
the organization of a government
under it. Thev are all worth remem
bering now.
September 17, 1787, the Constitu
tion was " done in convention by the
unanimous consent of the States pres
ent," George Washington signing first
for Virginia as president of the con
vention. This step is celebrated this
week, and it needed to be followed by
the ratification of nine States before a
government could be organized.
June 21, 1788, the last of these nine
States needed to put the "new roof"
of the Constitution over the land, as
the phrase then ran, ratified the Con
stitution and tt became the law of tl e
land as far as these States were con
cerned. March 4, 1 789, the first Wednesday,
of March, the Constitution became
'practically operative." Tbe Su
preme court was called upon to pass
upon this question (Owings vs. Speed,
S Wheaton, 420) and it decided that
while the Constitution was adopted
September 17, 1787, and was' ratified
June a 1, 1788, yet these acts were
only preliminary and preparatory to
the creation of a government whose
effective operation under the Constitu
tion began only with the date set for
its organization.
April 30, 1 7 89, General Washing
ton was inaugurated as the first Presi
dent, and the government, which went
iato effect Atarch 4,. or nearly, two
months before, was set in motion with
two of its departments, executive and
legislative, complete. The judiciary
was not organized until after the ap
proval of the act of September 24,
17S9, creating the Supreme court.
Do not marry for riches my son, but
remember the husband of an heiress is
seldom obliged to get up at five o'clock
in the morning and build the fire.
. .ESQ.
ran
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varl. A marvel
of purity, atrengtb aud wholeaomeneaa.
More economical than tbe ordinary
kiodr, aud cannot be old iu competition
with the multitude or low tea', abart
weight alum or phnpht6 powder.
Sold only ti can. ltoTir. Kakimo Pow
der Co , lOil Wall St. NY, aug. 15,1c
PROFESSIONAL CAKDS
T.
M. PITT3IAS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
HENDERSON, N. C.
Trompt attention to all profeaaloiial but
ne. l'ruclicea In the Blate and federal
court.
Keren by permhislon to Commercial Na
tional Bank and ti. l. lAita & UroM Char
lotte. N.O- Alfred William A Co., Kaleiali,
N. C; I. Y. Cooper and Jaa. II. Litklur.
Henderson, N. C.
Office: Over Jaa II. Lasalter & Son'a store,
nov fi 1 c.
A
ItDltEWJ. IIAIHtlS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
HENDERSON, N. C.
Practice In theoourt of Vance, Granville,
Warren and Franklin couiitlcw, and in tbe
Supreme and Redvral courtn ot the Htate.
Office: In Cooper building, over J, L. If.
MUdlllier'a.
JJTENUY T. JOUDAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Notary Public and Public Administrator,
for Vance County,
HENDERSON, N. C.
Piactlcea In the eooru of Vanc. Warren,
Frtuklin, Grtuvllle and Peron cuuollra,
and n the hnpreme and federal court.
OAlce: In Harwell brick bulldlug.
L. C EDWARD,
Oxford. N.C
A. R. WORTH AM,
Henderson, C.
E
UWAUD8 &. IVOltTUAM.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
HENDERSON, N. C.
Offer tbelr mrrrlcen to the people of Vance
county. I'-ol. Krirards win attend all the
Curt of Vance county, and will eome to
Heuderon at any and all time when bU
asaU.ance may be needed by bU partner,
march Vt ,
W. H. DAT. A. c. zoLLicorrta.
AY & ZOLLICOFFJStt,
ATTOllNKYH AT LAW,
HENDERSON, X. C.
Prattle In the court of Vance. Gran villa.
Warren. Halifax aod Nortbawptoo. i-.1 In
th mo preme and Federal roorU of 1 he HI Me.
Ofliee: In il&rri law buildiay nexnotha
cou rt bouae. fe. 6 L
J)R. C.
8. BOYD,
Dental
isi rf- Q 11 rrr Ann
BCVOIMOV, v.o
Satiafactlon guaranteed aa to work and
rk. . C)m over Parker A Cloaa storew
lain aire feb 4 a.
CUT YOUX HEAD OFF!
DA.VE HAWKINS, THE OLDEST
barber in Henderson, ba an enl .
able reputation in the tiuaiaen. Hi
abop, over Corrin'a btUHn! loor, I
bpdomely and comfortably Atud o,
and be klvea an eay abave and fault
iooablfl na!r eoL