Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Oct. 17, 1889, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 rri AIlAni XliXJ VlUCOb NEWSPAPER ltt Published In YANCE COUNTY. A GOOD HEDIUH THROJSH VIIXII TO REACH THEPUBUC. -O- Power Print. ItgrRates on Application. THAD R. MiMIKG, Publisher. 0-jRoiasr, Ou?jr Atteintd -EECer 77 SUBSCBimOH$S.COtTeu. VOL. VIII. HENDERSON, N. C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1889. NO. 42. Presents in the most elegant "orm THE LAXATIVE And NUTRITIOU8 JUICE OF THE FiG3 OF CALIFORNIA, Combined with the medicinal virtues- of plants known to be :i;o;t rficial to 'the human i.:em, forming an agreeable and effective laxative to perma nently cure Habitual Consti pation, and trie many ills de pending on a weak or inactive condition of the KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS. Ii is the most excellent remedy known to ClANSE THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY V.'hcn on: i Bilious or Constipated. ' so that PURE B'.OOD, REFRESHING SLEEP, HZALTH and 8TRENCTH NATURALLY FOLLOW. Kvery one is using it and all are delighted with it. ASK YOUR DRUQG:3T FOR S2v"3T2E.TT3E3 0E 3EXGrS3 MANUFACTURED ONLY BY CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. tAU rr.Auchco. cal. Mirvn IE. fTY NEW YORKt N. V- Jones' Grove Tract of 1430 Acres For Sale. Fifteen Tracts of Fine Totaceo. Cotton. rt - m i t i ' ' itrain ana moer Lanas on Easy Terms. The undersigned committee of the Trus tees el the University of North Carolina, on Wednesday, the 13th day of November, next, at 12 o'clock, on the premises, will offer for sale, at auction, the Jones Grove of 1,430 acres, situated on the Chapel Hill aim ritisboro road. It will be divided int tracts of About 100 acres each. It is notei as one of the finest farms in the. State, being well adapted to bright tobacco, cot ton and grain. The sale will be by the acre at a moderate upset price, with no by bidder over that. The terms are one-third sash, the remainder in two and three years .with- 8 per cent, interest from date. Mr. W. C. Cole, agent, whose postoffice is Chapel Hill, N. C, will answer all ques tions and will be on the land every Wed nesday, until sale for the purpose of show ing it. KEMP P. BATTLE, JOHN MANNING, A. H. MERRITT. Chapel Hill, N. C, Sept. 16th, 1889. IT ". IS A : FACT I -O- That' every man, woman and child who trades in this market, can .SAVE MONEY " By buying'their foot wear at Anglea's :-: Shoe :-:Store. o The largest assortment from which to select, and the best goods for the least money always. New stock just in. Pro mote your comfort and preserve your health, by calling at our store and pur chasing from our large and seasonable line of cholse selections in BOOTS AND SHOES. All that you may need, for yourself or family, in our line. Our stock con:ists of the choicest of goods and . latest styles, "from the very best manufacturers, and em braces all grades ; and our facilities for getting goods are such that we cannot be undersold. We guarantee satisfaction to all our customers. A full line of Cents' Furnishing Goods, Trunks, Yalises, Umbrellas, &c. Believing 1 can save my customers money I respectfully ask them to call and see me. Mr. R. L. Green will be pleased to see his friends. A. R. ANGLE A, Jan, 1-1 c. Henderson, N. C. HENDERSON . Carriage Wagon Works, Grow & Marston, Prop 'rs. - We take this method of informing our . , friend and the public generally that we " are better prepared to supply Carriages, ' Buggies, Wagon, Oarts, ie., cheaper - ,:Un erer oeore. e nuke a specially t- uMnufacturing the -el,brated Alliance Wagon, iifthrt best wagons sold. It cannot l xoelWI. W.e have with us the finest Workmen in the State, mid are prepared to d all kinds of work with neatness and Aespatch. Carriage " Painting and Horseshoeing a iclAltY. Thankfurfor past patronpe, we hope b- good work and strict atten tiou to business to merit a continuance of the same. Very Respectfully, fan. 24 8 X. CROW & MAK8TOX. A PRETTY PICTURE. A SWEET, GLORIOUS COMMUNION, DESCRIBED BY HENRY BLOUNT, As He Saw Fall-Blossomed Christian ity in its Rich Fragraneeand Most Luxuriant Beauty. LWilson Mirror.J During the recent Convention of the Young Men's Christian Association in this place, we were reminded, by the sweet and beautiful and glorious ming ling together of christians in blessed communion, of another tender and touching and heart-melting comming ling of christians in a beautiful fellow ship we once witnessed, and which made a scene so sweet with the pure and delicious aroma of Christianity in its fullest bloom and richest luxuriance that we wondered if the angels in Heaven did not quit their own dear, sweet communion, and creep to the embattlement of the skies, and peep down with beaming approbation upon a scene that must have reminded them of their own sweet communion seasons around the throne of God. We were once in a city, and feeling sad and de pressed, and with heart bowed down in the deeps ot the "blues," we con cluded to call on a Baptist minister whom we knew, and to spend the eve ning, with him. It was good for us that we went.for we found the precious gleam of Heaven's own sunlight , there, which chased away all clouds of sadness and of care ; the very clouds did ope, and glory from God's Throne fell down and bathed in beauty the christians He did own ; we almost heard Him say, thy work is now well done, and bless ed immortality on earth is now begun. Yes, we did find there a scene of heav enly beauty. We found an old Episco pal minister, an old Presbyterian min ister, and an old Methodist minister all of them tremulous with the palsy of old age, and with cheeks furrowed with the wrinkles of many years, and with hair white with the spray that was being flung up by the breakers on the eternal sea ; and there they were these four old ministers met together and enjoying in this temporary com munion the glories and beatitudes of that blissful and eternally commingling together on that bright shore, where " my church" creed is heard no more. When we were presented to those ripe and niellow christians, ve remarked, as a preface to conversation, that we were reminded ot the meeting up yonder, when the pure in heart of all churches should meet together in a harmonious communion ; and spend eternity in singing hosannahs to the Lamb whose blood washed away the sins of the world. And the old Epis copal minister then took us by the hand and said, "My - brother, when I first left the theological seminary I had so much of theology in me and so lit tle of Christ that I honestly thought that it was almost essential for a person to, be a member ot " my church" in order to be saved, and I looked with bitter antagonism and scornful preju dice upon the teachings of all other denominations. But the older I grew the richer I became in grace; the near er I got to the Cross, and the hallowed shadow of a crucfied Savior envelops me so closely that I can hardly tell one church steeple from another, for they are all so near alike and they all point to Heaven and to glory, and proclaim alike the sweet and dear old story. I he old Presbyterian minis ter then took him by the hand, and with eyes streaming with tears, and with tongue tremulous with the quiver ings of heart-throbs, he said, "My btother, the partition that divides true believers is so very thin that when you sound the blessed name of Jesus in one place it is heard in all the different chambers, and all repeat praise to the Savior of usall." In the utterances of these old ministers welieard two of the grandest sermons that mortal lips can preach, for the glory of religion they did so grandly teach; they made us look to Jesus, who tor us all did bleed, to put our trust in Him, and not risk all on creed. And the other night, as we witness ed the closing exercises of the District Convention of the Young Men's Chris tian Association, and beheld christians mingling in such sweet fellowship, we were most tenderly reminded of the touching scene described above. And when, the heart of the eloquent Tuttle was melted under the warm sunburst of Christianity, which -glowed in that meeting with such Heavenly glory, he so feelingly and fervently exclaimed that hereafter he would preach more about those themes ,on which all had agreed, and less about those on which they differed, he touched many a re sponsive chord of reciprocal feeling, and the heart-strings sent out roaring waves of approbation in loud and long applause.' And the precious refrain of that grand, thrilling, electrifying heart-throb was caught up and re echoed by every dancing dimple of rippling rill, by every singing wavelet of murmuring brook, by every flowing current of loudly-roaring river, by every surging billow on ocean's pulsing deep, and going on and ? spreading in its widening sweep, it grew louder, sweeter, more beautiful, more sublime until the twinkling worlds above, atr traded earthward by its swelling melo dy, looked down from their glittering homes on high, and caught up the echoes and wafted them on siderial waves of glimmering radiance from earth to star, from star . to sun, from sun to Heaven, and then the angels, turning aside from the harmony their own pure harps are making, and lis tening with rapture to the sweet re frain that came from earth to Heaven they shouted Amen, Amen, Amen, until the whole celestial city trembled under the mighty sweep of that angelic chorus, which flew along the golden aisles of every worshipping temple, and ascended from tower to steeple, from steeple to minaret, and growing and growing and swelling louder until the whole universe of God heard the blest refrain, and shouted with that thunder of approbation that never dies, Halle luia, Halleluia.the Lord God Omnipo tent reigneth in the hearts of his peo ple, and Jesus has established the brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God. CAROLINA, MY CAROLINA. 1" Adapted, with apologies and thanks) to Miss Laura E. Brown, the bright young poet 01 me linie kock .rcanaat rres. Oh ! land of wondrous fruits and flowers, uaroiina, my Carolina ! O'er thy future no cldud lowers, Carolina, my Carolina ! But peace and plenty rule the hour, , With promise of still richer dower When all the world has come to see The wealth and beauty owned by thee, Carolina, my Carolina ! Thy foundations are laid in stone, Carolina, my Carolina ! With granite surplus worth a throne, Carolina, my Carolina ! . Thy fields of grain glow in the sun ; Thy ores the old world have outdone ; Thy springs with virtues rare are filled From Nature's healing force distilled, Carolina, my Carolina ! Thy cotton fields are snowy white, Carolina, my Carolina ! Thy " yellow tobacco" is golden bright, Carolina, my Carolina ! Thy forests are filled with noble trees That make thy wealth vast as the aeas ; Thy vales are crossed by waters sweet V hose voices all thy praise repeat, Carolina, my Carolina ! Oh ! happy land of sunny days, Carolina, my Carolina ! Thy birds carol ecstatic lays, Carolina, my Carolina ! Thy moonlit nights allure like wine ; Thy air is balm, a breath divine ; No other land so dear to me , O, I have lost my heart to thee, Carolina, my Carolina ! Weldon Fair. The 20th annual fair Qf the Roanoke and Tar River Agricultural Society will be held at the fair grounds at Weldon .Tues day, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, October 29th. 30th. 31st and November 1st. 1889. The premium list represents several thousand dollars in money besides many articles of value and diplomas. It is a liberal offer of premiums and will doubt less cause an unusually large exhibit and attendance. For all kinds of crops, for all kinds of stock, for all kinds of poultry, for dairy products, for manufactures other than domestic.for agricultural implements and riding vehicles, for horticultural pro ducts, for household fabrics and every variety of ladies' fancy work. Iu fact, premiums are offered for most every article that can be exhibited. 'Besides the splen did exhibits to be made at this fair there will be numerous amusements for the vis itors. The racing will be fine. There will be competitive military drills for $50 prizes, and calvary drill by the Scotland Neck Mounted Riflemen ; also a reunion of ex-Confederate veterans. The fair will be interesting in every department and we bespeak a large attendance from Hen derson. They are Here as Well as Elsewhere". The Chenoa, Illinois, Gazette says : Every growing town is composed of three elements. Those who work intelli gently and vigorously for its advance ment and future good ; those in a state of chronic indifference, and those who take delight, in, thro wing a wet blanket upon and discouraging all efforts of others by a persistent denial that any progress can be made and who boast of every town beingsuperior to their own. 'We term the last "croakers," but they really are something worse, for -the Opposition comes from an enviable' spirit thaf will neither act for itself nor allow others to do so. So soon as a town ceases to improve it begins to decay, and if its people try to depreciate the business of each other' the more rapid the decay. If a person' shows the ability to prosper don't -pull him backward through jealousy or crowd him down with cold indifference. , Does This Hit You? An exchange says : Those young fellows who stand in frout of public buildings to show their shape and those who stand sneaking near the church or school-house door to sort of catch a glimpse or catch on as you start home are not the ones you should marry, girls. They will do for you to ruin yourselves with or to split your reputa tion on, but boys who have the stuff in them, that make moral lovers and de sirable husbands, do not do things that way. it you nave any nigner aim man rubbing hair oil marks from the best dress you wear, or doing double work in after years for your board, be scarce with out-door waiters. For Rent. . ' . The store room in the Dorsey building lately occupied by Hight's jewelry store. For particulars as to terms, &c, apply to sept 5. MV Dorset. CHICAGO AND THE WORLD'S FAE THE METROPOLIS OF THE GREAT NORTH-WEST THE PLACE FOR IT. Some Reasons Why the Great Exposi tion of 1892 Should be Held in the Lake City. . Chicago Daily News. Here and there in an occasional LSouthern city a journal is to be found which seems to think it incumbent that it should antagonize the claims of Chicago to the world's fair of 1892. So far as this antagonism is lounded on belief in the superior advantages of any other locality no matter how er roneous such Deliet may be it is en titled to some degree of respect. But when this antagonism is based on such assertions as that 1 Chicago's vision is obscured by a contracted horizon of hate and malice and malignant mis representation of the Southern people, their enterprises, their loyalty, and their greatness" that although "twenty-five years, a quarter of a century, have elapsed since the war yet Chicago has had nothing but words of hate, vilification, and abuse" for the South and that "could Chicago once se-' cure the exposition, judging its future by its past, it would use the opportu - riity for poisoning the minds of the strangers within its gates against the South, its people, and its opportuni- ties when such statements are de- ; be added to the plethoric coffers of the liberately published as reasons for re- East. jecting Chicago's claims one of two ! Before this sum could find its way things is certain : Either the writers back again through the natural chan- are deliberately falsifying for partisan nels of trade serious embarrassment purposes as do their Northern copart- might result to every merchant and ners in the unholy effort to keep alive manufacturer in the depleted region, the fires of sectional discord, or they From Chicago the return would be so are fanatics of the stripe of.Harper of prompt that the effect would be hardly the old-time Okolona States. In either appreciable. event they are incapable of being reas- 4. The Southern railway connec oned with and hence unworthy of at- tions of Chicago extending South-, tention. west to the Mexican capital, South to With that other class, who honestly every point on the gulf, and Southeast but mistakenly believe that the inter- to the Florida peninsula are more ests of the South would be better sub- complete in every respect, cover a served elsewhere than in Chicago, the greater area of the "New South," and case is different. For them it may be are doing more in the wonderful de worth while to summarize some of the velopment of the vast resources of that indisputable facts which give this city mighty empire than those of any other a ; claim upon Southern support in our Northern city. efforts to secure the great exposition. Finally: It is to the interest of the And first as to the sentimental as- "New South" that the exposition of pect of the question ; 1892 should be held inChicago.be- It has been heretofore pointed out cause here only can the material re by the Daily News that the attitude sources of that region be properly ex 6f Chicago toward the South whenever ploited. If held in New York the fair that section was stricken by yellow , will be a more or less imperfect at fever has done more to remove the tempt at repeating the artificialties of bitterness of the war period than has : Paris, of Vienna, of London. The been accomplished anywhere else. It ( European exhibitor will be catered to was Chicago generosity largely which ' and consulted and toadied. Ward equipped the relief-boat Chambers in . McAllister's 400 snobs will dominate 1878; it was a Chicago physician who : the whole affair, and the American ex kept his head through the trying ) hibitor and the American visitor will scenes at Vicksburg when Lieut. Ben- j be snubbed on the one hand and apol ner in command of the expedition ogized for on the other, and himself an Illinoisan there died j Here in Chicago no American will of the fever, laying down his life in ; be compelled to take a back seal. The bearing succor and relief to those , European exhibitor, who goes wher whom he had fought in war. ever there is a prospect of reaping The same scenes were repeated at Memphis in 1879, and again last year when the whole South was panic - stricken by the Florida epidemic. Chicago on every occasion has thrown wide open her doors and welcomed the fleeing refugees. When New York was arresting these people for " violating" absurd and use less quarantines a thousand miles away and confining the. unfortunates on a lonely island in her harbor when her affrighted health officials, were drag ging Prof. Proctor from his hotel and consigning him to death in a hospital a Chicago physician, Dr. Rauch, Secretary of the State Board of Health, was fighting the unnecessary and bar barious quarantine and inviting all who1 chose to come freely into Chicago onH M-rtViprn Tllinmc I These repeated invitations have been accepted by thousands of well-to-do Southerners who, during the last dozen years or more, have sought shelter and - . j-ij ; laiua. vra. nine w imuu . vw-, uvu security from the dreaded scburge in .; with convincing proof. this city by the lake, and have here i G. W.B. Raider, livingseven miles from made "acquaintances and established business ' relations. In return, with treated and pronounced incurable. A sin- Cr.MtV.Arn Wnitalitv thev have gle bottle of B. B. B. did me more good true Southern hospitality, they na e fhan all thedoctors. i kept on using it and invited Chicago business men to visit every ulcer healed. them, and in this way Chicago capital ; p. C. Klnard & Son, Towaliga, Ga., . . - .,Ao ! writes: " We induced a neighbor to try B. has come to be invested m the unde-,; B B or catarrh, which he thought incura- veloDed forests, the coal fields? and the ble. as it had resisted all treatment. It de- J.ftLf VrAamn UW lighted him, and continuing its use he was iron mines of that great region. West- cred Jnd well." em energy, Western enterprise, West-; R. M. Lawson, East Point Ga., writes: n: ,i-i;( tvp mprwith Sonthprn'"My w"fe had scrofula 13 years. She ern.-abihtj, have met with boutnern . fc Krowin worse she lost her hair and open-handedness,-Southern trust, and ; her skin broke out fearfully. Debility and the Southern sense of honor, and the: emaciation and no appetite followed. After ouuiuciu , physicians and numerous advertised medi- result has been the marvelous develop- I nJe3 faiied, I tried B. B. B., and her re- ment of the "New South'." ; If any city in the Union North of the Ohio river has a claim upon the South if any such city is the distinct ive exponent of the great American idea, the one place where a great world's fair should be held that city is Chicago. 2. Chicago is pledged to the great est engineering work of the century a work that, measured by its inevitable results upon the material prosperity of the continent, will eclipse all that was hoped for from De Lesseps' gigantic undertaking. The completion of the great waterway between Lake Michi gan and the Mississippi river means as much to the South as it does to Chicago- " . When we have constructed the arti ficial link of the waterway Congress is bound by promise and precedent to complete the work by a corresponding development of the natural channel. This will result in an improvement of the Mississippi below the mouth of the Illinois vastly greater and more per manent than can be secured in any other way. It will directly benefit every city and town on the lower Mississippi and materially increase the importance ot New Orleans the natural gateway of Central and South American com merce. Our Own undertaking makes us the ally of every movement looking to se curing deep-water harbors on the gulf coast and of every , effort toward the development of inland navigation matters of vital interest to the great Mississippi valley. 3. Competent judges estimate that ! the World's Fair, if held in New York, will attract 1,000,000 visitors from the t West and Southwest ; that the average , expenditures of these visitors will 1 amount to $300 each, and that there ; will thus be 300,000,000 withdrawn j from Western and Southern capital to American dollars, will be accorded j every proper facility and privilege and ; every inducement will be held out to bring him over the water. But the managers of the Chicago world's fair will see to it that America and Amer icans have an equalShow. If the occasion is to be a profitable one to this country it must be indeed a "world's" fair, and not a cheap copy of a French or English or Austrian ex position. It must be one in which America North and South, East and West in all her greatness, her re sources, her development," and her in stitutions, shall be honorably and ad equately represented. Such a world's fair is impossible in New York. Only such a fair could be held in Chicago. The Invalid' Hope. Many seemingly incurable cases of blood poison, catarrh, scrofula and rheumatism lavebeen cured bv 13. B. B. (Botanic Blood hfvJ2ll'hf covery was rapid and completed. Oliver Secor. Baltimore. Md.. writes: " I suffered from weak DacK ana rueuma tism. B. B. B. has proven to be the only medicine that gave me relief." ; - . . - People Everywhere Confirm our statement when we say that Acker's English remedy is in every way superior to any and all other preparations for the Throat and Lungs. In Whooping Cough and Group it Is magic and relieves at once. We offer you a sample bottle free. Remember, this remedy is sold on a positive guarantee. For sale by M. Dorsey. l. A WORD FOR THE PRESS. THE VALUE AND IMPORTANCE OF A LIVE, ENTERPRISING PAPER. SfiTvrnif xr ah i IT attic- AVnnT-Orfl f at I tne irooatney nave iwne, are iwinff, and will Continue to be to Yon. Baltimore Manufacturer's Record. Many times within a few years we haVe urged upon our readers to sustain O .F .... I i,.vwi Twv,r. xwwMprl iW .. yit 1 j 1 were such in fact, and not in name alone. We know very well that all through the country, men are publish ing what are called by courtesy, news papers, that are no more like the genu ine article than a toadstool is to a mushroom. And as the one is unpleas ant and poisonous, while the other is palatable and nutritive, so the no-ac coum paper iban injury u aiiy immy, while a live, enterprising journal, now ever small, is a power for good. Within a few years newspapers have come into being in the South as thick as toads after a shower. Many proved themselves worthy the name, while many uioic- suuweu wuuuaivw; iu.. their proiectors naa mistaken tneir . r ' ,. , , vocation, ana alter a iew weess or months they disappeared, tniortu- nately the injury they did to legiti- .W, uimt juuiuaiuiuuiuuuiuii. mm uiv.ui. i T-u .r.n.. V.;.- .mkrinnito I x .""-J " ;" suDscriDers was a distrust 01 ana a con tempt for newspapers in general, and a desire to get hold of first-class jour nals and learn what was going on in the world without cost to themselves It is safe to say that the really able weekly newspapers published in the niirh iverap-p twentv readers to one aouin average twenty rcu. crs iu uuc subscriber, while lor mat numDer 01 readers mere snouiu uc at icust ioui subscribers. Now where does the fault . . i ii i i . e lie? Certainly not with the editors and publishers. They are, as a whole, the greatest workers in their respective . . communities. They give their time, brains, energy and experience to their vocation, and are usually the active promoters of everything that will bene- fit the public If they are at fault at all, it is in the fact that m their zeal for the public welfare they often forget their own, and give the use of their columns gratuitously when they should be paid liberally for the space occupied. The responsibility for sustanmg a live newspaper in any locality devolves upon the entire commnity. For mer chants it is the best medium for reach ing the people. A well-worded and well-displayed advertisement in a news paper draws more trade than all the circulars they can issue or hand-bills Mii.we n tw ?n tlm'r auu ux-wwv.j ".-j " f - counties. 1 he merchant should there fore advertise liberally, and also influ ence his customers to take the paper he uses as his medium. The latter will respect his opinion and follow his advice, and then, as their families read from week to week the miscellaneous columns, they will be insensibly led to feel many new wants that he can r J , supply, for every good newspaper con- tains items showing what other people, the world over, are wearing or eating, or what tools they are using, or what , new household stuff or labor-saving machines have been introduced, and reading about these things creates a de sire for them that will eventually lead to their purchase. The country newspapers of the South are doing far more for their localities than even their editors imagine, bvery item thev publish respecting new en terprises contemplated or started in their virinirv is seen bv some of the sharp-sighted young men employed on the " Construction Department of the Manufacturers' Record, and gives a cue. which is at once followed I On improved farms In sums of 300 and up until nil the facts are obtained. These wards at sewn per cent., and moderate .... -it -ui are puDlisnea as quicaiy as poiuic, so that thousands of capitalists and k.,,, ,K ht wl ner """" uv.u, " - i t would never reach, oecome iniormea of that new enterprise. Hundreds of men in small places whose names even were not known outride their own counties, have, during the past three years, been surprised by receiving cir- culars, price-lists and letters from num- erous manufacturers and merchants giving them the special mlormation thev wanted about machinery, tools and other things they needed,and have wondered how their senders heard of them. It either was because their home newspaper or one of our corres pondents gave the item about their enterprise that put the Manufacturers' Record on their track, and enabled it to tell the world their postoffice address and what they proposed to do. Many of these men have saved hundreds of dollars because of information thus re ceived and oucht to show their gratitude to their local paper newspaper, whose little item may nave ueca iuc pi nun cause of the saving effected. Support your home newspapers for the good they have done, are doing, and will continue to be to you. W. E. SMITH, PRCHABTx TAILOR, HENDERSON, N. C. clotnlng when you WQ get as good work and as perfect a fit here as elsewhere ? A iuu line 01 FOREIGN AKD DOMESTIC YiOOLEKS front which to select. Work equal to the Knot ... m At ..-m.J a penect ns guaranteed or no sate. Keep up home enterprise. sept 5. PROFESSIONAL GAUDS AYCOCK & DANIELS. C. C. DANIELS QOLD8BOBO. WILSON. AYCOCK & DANIKL.8 & 1ANIELS. ATTO RNEY8 AT LAW, WILSON, N. C. Aoy bagine8g entrusted to us will be promptly attended to. HENRY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, HENDERSON, N. C. OFFICE IN BUKWELL BUILDING. Co0RTs.Vance. Franklin. Warren.Gran- vine, united stales court at Kaieigu, ana I8upreme Court of North Carolina. references: chief justice w. n. n. S- - "r-H"" t. a"f. m. Argo, Dr. w. t. Cheatham. Dr. j. h. Tucker, .Mr. M. Dorsey, H. H. Burwell. Esq., nan, james awin Moore, Ex-Houcitor uen ofU. 8. Samuel F. PhllllDS. Office hoars 9 a m. to 5 p. m. mch. 7 S I. L. C. EDWABDfi, A. R. WORTH AM, Oxford. N. C Henderson, N. O "PP WARDS & "WORTH AM, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HENDERSON, N. C. Offer their services to the people of Vance Courts of Vance countv. and will come to Henderson at any and all times when his 8BiB,ance mav hv hi- nrtnr. marcn iv a - WATKINS LJL Attorney and Counsellor at Law HENDERSON, N. C. Courts : Vance, Granville and Warren, and the Fprlera.1 fVmrl nt. Special attention given to negotiating cn88; settlement of estates, and tigata - rJ M PITTMAN, torney at HFNnFUSOM M r Prompt attention to all professional busi ness. Practices In the State and Federal courts. Refers by permission to Commercial Na tional Bank and E. D. Latta & Bro., Char lotte. N. Cj Alfred Williams A Co Ralelsb. N. C; D. Y. Cooper and Jas. H. Lasslter, omce : Over Jas. H. Lasslter & Bon's store, nov 51 c. JMDREW J. HARRI8, ATTORNEY AT LAW HENDERSON, N. C. Practices In the courts of Vance, Granville "B .a !" counties, and In tb supreme ana reaerai courts or the Btate lupr Office: In Harris Law Building, next Court House. W. H. DAT. A. C. ZOIXICOFFKB. JTJAY & ZOIiLICOFFER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. HENDERSON, N. C. wf in-upiemeana f eaeraiconru or tbe Btate. Office: In Zollloofler's law building. Oar- nett street. feb. i. " . . R Jd ' DENTIST HENDERSON, N.C. Datlc Store, ir -r. 25. 1 c. "Office overE. O. Main Street The Bank of Henderson. (ESTABLISHED IN till.) General Banking, EXChMge & COllCCtlOIlS. 1rnvr?i Tn.v MOJNJliY TO LiOAK enarges. ioans repayable la small an- Dual installments through a period of five years, tnus enabling tne Dorrower to pay off hl? Indebtedness without exhausting his i crop in any one year. Apjpiy to wai. ti. . uuuuwxm, At The Bank of Henderson. TITW. II. 8. BUIIGW YX, I TT Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law, HENDERSON, N. C. Office: In The Bank of Henderson building. tt w. COOIIILL, j Jx. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER HENDERSON, N. C. Estimates for the erection of buid lings, and orders for lumber solicited. I will ell all kinds of lumber at Piney Woods prices, wun ireigni aoaea. feb. 9 1 c BOYD, Dental Surgeon, HSXDZBSOir,. s. I (TtTflGV Satisfaction guaranteed as to work and EriCrj. Offlc over Parker A Close' stow rain sire jjr. c. 8. 4
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 17, 1889, edition 1
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