Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Nov. 28, 1889, edition 1 / Page 1
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4 The Oldest NEWSPAPER Mi Published In A GOOD MEDIUM THROUGH WHBI TO REACH THE PUBLIC. T1HCE COUNTY. -O- Power Print. StgrRates on Application. ill THAD R. MANNING, Publisher. 1 "Garoltn, OABOLmA, Heavens Blessings Attend TIrF ' , SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 a Year. VOL. VIII. HEyDEBjoyTc THURSAVryQVEMBER 28, 1889. NO- 48 iUOKESSION L CARDS DR. G.G.TAYLOR, Dental Surgeon, linilcrsoii, North Carolina. -O- Oilice in the Young Block. Newly fur nished with the latest and most improved instruments and machinery for the thor ough and satisfactory performance of all work in the line of operative and mechan i cal dentistry. Charges reasonable. oct. 10. J Dental f Surgeon, Nggs HESDK HSON , N . 0 ailfriciiMii sMiarantewl t work and pri is. i 'tWr 'iter Pari -r iV floss' store . -itn t,( 1; t 4 a AYCOCIC & DANIELS. (;ol.J)Si!()lU. C. C. DANIELS' WILBOX. 1ANI13L.S ! A YUOCK & XI. OAIKLS, ATTO UN KYSi AT WILSON, N. C. LAW, Any business witrusM d j iomptly attended t. to us will be It. HEX ICY, ArrORNEY A.T LA W , HENDERSON, N. C, OFFICE IN BURWELL BUILDING. "oiTitTs: Vance. Fraukliu. Warren. Gran ill United States Court at Kaleigh, and Supreme Court of North Carolina. IlKFKKKNCK-i:-Chief Justice W. N. H Smith. Mon. Augustus s. Merrimon, Gov li.Liiiel G. Fowle. Ifoii.T. . Fuller. Hon. T tf. vriro. l)r W. T. Clieatliam. Dr. J. II. Tucker. Mr. M. Dorsey, II. II. IJurwell, Esq., II. n. James Kdwiu Moore, Kx-so.iCit r Gen of U. s. Samuel F. Phillips. Olllce !nurs 9 a in. to 5 p. in. mch. 7 3 I. C. EDWAUDd, Oxfc.rd. N. C. A. It. WORTH AM, Henderson, N. C. , I WAKDS & W O UT H A 31 , -vXTORNKYS AT LAW, HENDERSON, N. C. Offer their services to the people of Vance county. Col. Edwards will attend all the Courts of Vance county, and wilt come to lleudersoii at any and all times when his iMiMiHiauce may be needed by his partner, inarch 1!) a H. T. VV ATKINS, Attorney and Counsellor at Law HENDERSON, N. C. Courts : Vance, Granviile and Warren, and the Federal Court at Kaleigh. Bpecial attention given to negotiating loans, settlement of estates, and litigated cases. jan.5. T. M. PITT MAN, ATTt)KNKY AT l..A"W , HENDERSON, N. C. Prompt attention to all professional L jdi iiukh. practices in the State and Federal court. llefers by permission to Commercial Na tional Hank and K. I). Jntta & lsro., Char lotte. N.C.; Alfred Williams & Co., ICaleigh, N. C.; D. Y. Cooper and J as. II. I.assiter, Henderson, N. C. Office: Over Jas II. Lasslter & Son's store, nov 5 1 c. A1KEYV .1. IIAKKIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW HENDERSON, N. C. Practices In thecourtsof Vance, Oranville Warren and Franklin counties, and in th 8upreme ar.d Federal courts of the State. Office: In Harris Law Luilding. next Court House. W. H. DAY. A. C. ZOLLI COFFER. AY A2 ZOLLICOFFEU, .-V TT OIINKYS AT 1 A VV , HENDERSON, N. C. Practice in the courts of Vance, Granville Warren. Halifax and Northampton, and in th- Supreme and Federal courtsof the State unice: lu .oiiicotiei-'s law Dununig, oar nett street. fed. 9-6 1. HARRIS, DWNTiST HENDERSON N.C Davie i-Offl08 over ial Street G. Store rr r. 25, 1 c. The Bank of Henderson ESTABLISHED IN i88a. O General Baniing, Exchange & Collections MONEY TO LOAN On improved farms in sums of ?300 and up wards at seven per cent., and moderate charges. Loans repayable in small an nual installments through a period of five years, thus enabling the borrower to pay off his indebtedness without exhausting hi crop in any one year. Apply to WM. H. S.BTjRGWYN, At The Bank of Henderson. -yAV. H. S. BUKGAVYX, Attoriiev.amlCoimselIor-at-L.aw , ' HENDERSON, N. C. Office : In building. The Bank of Henderson j y It. O. s. BOYD, E. TT W. COGHILL, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER HENDERSON, N. C. Estimates for the erection of buidlings and orders for lumber solicited. I will ell all kinds of lumber at Ptney Woods prices, with freight added. feb. 91 c KEY. A. J. DIAZ, THE CONVERTED CUBAN. He IMiih s Hi Christian Experienf -c Before the Baptist State Con vention. Biblical Recorder. Rev. A. J. Diaz, of Cuba, being present, was requested to give his Christian experience. He said : I want tell you how I led to the Truth. Some years go there was war in Cuba, and I see black flag, and that means Spanish soldier kill all they see if they don't agree with them. One night I got plank because soldiers all around me, and push out to sea, not to come to United States, but to get from home and soldiers. I was on my plank and one ship come long and took me to New York. It cold there, and I said I freeze here, for no cold like that in my country, and I took pneumonia and go to hospital. Me know noth ing of your language so you see me couldn't talk, but so sick. Then one Baptist lady come to me, but I was sick, and she talk to me, and I don't know what she said, and 1 o sick I so sick I can't write, and she kept coming, and I wonder what she said, for she keep looking at me. I said well she must be one lunatic, and she read one book, and I said, ' let me have book,' and she said 'yes.' I went out to translate it to my language, and one friend said, 'you get Bible round here in your own language,' and I went and got me one, and Holy Spirit come, and I read about blind man, and I prayed ; yes, I was twenty- five years old, and never prayed be-; ore, and Lord come down and help j . T 11 Tl me, and L,orci help me ail since. 1 said my people need this book. I look back to Cuba, and war was over, and went back to home, and said to my 'ather, ' you need this book , and he said 'no, it heretic religion. My mother, I love her,and she good moth- er, but she saia ' no. i went to some doctors in hotel parlor, for I know some medicine, and I read Bible, and next Sunday fifty come, and next Sun day more come, and keep on coming, and priest said, ' this man ruin busi ness, for all people are here ; and peo ple believe priest, and I went back to New York. I heard some ladies in Philadelphia want man to carry Bibles to Cuba. They send me, and I go back to Cuba and talk to people. My people need this religion. I love my mother, but love my Master best. She mad with me, and I eat my breakfast ; she say nothing, for she get mad be cause you know she talk too much,and she can't say nothing from Bible. I must do for these people, so I organ ize Baptist church, and my mother there, and I don't like that, foi I thought she come to get mad. 1 tear she want to rebuke me, so I look somewhere else ; and next Sunday I had baptize folks, and my mother she come and say, 'my son, you wan't me?' I say, yes, if you believe;' and I took my mother in my arms to baptize her, and 1 say 'I can't say ceremony now,' and I so full I just laid her down in the baptistery, and I W IT .1 - say, i,oru jesus, mis is my moiuer , and I thank God every night for her ; and then I baptize my father and my sister and all mv people, and mv mother-in-law. Went to another city, and one man come to me on cars, and said, 'is this Mr. Diaz?' I say, 'yes He sav. ' vou mv prisoner. I say 'no J ' J J A I done nothing.' He have soldiers on both side of me who say, ' come.' And thev out me in tail, and I say, ' what I done ?' and nobody say nothing ; and I read my Bible loud as I could, and people say he crazy.' Mayor he come and say, ' you filabuster, for you got guns in boxes. But I say, ' no. they no filabuster boxes ; they Bible boxes.' I go to hotel ; people all come here, say, you filabuster,' but I say ' no.' Mayor he come look at me and I look at him and talk about weather, and he talk about the Bible. I say He say ' no purgatory here. ' no ;' and he say, ' there no infant baptism here in the Bible ;' and I say ' no.' And he say, ' how is that ?' and I say that, that is hard question, but you right Mr. Mayor; no infant baptism in the Bible." And he keep on talking, and I feel well he put me in jail once, and I don't know what he do now. Well, he showed me telegram and say, ' you catch that man, A. J. Diaz ; he talk to folks and set people on fire, and you put him in jail so he talk no more, for he be one filabuster.' And he put me in jail again, but Bible in his hands made him read, and he come to me and I baptize him, and I baptize more peo ple, and I baptize jailor too, and I baptize mayor. I thank you for your good attention. We tried to report Bro. Diaz just as he uttered his talk in broken English. Clothing for men and boys. Tremendous stock boots, shoes and gents' furnishings at oot 24 Watkiss'. LKT US BE THANKFUL. TChicago Herald. J Thanksgiving Day will soon be here, How thankful we should be We've all been spared another year, How thankful we should be. But there are other blessings yet Whose absence fills us with regret, Which if we could in some way get How thankful we should be. If women who attend tire play, How thankful we should be, Would put their Eiffel hats away How thankful we should be. If fate would condescend to choke The joker with his ancient joke And the croaker with his chronic croak How thankful we should be. If tongues were all attached to brains How thankful we should be. If "hogs" were barred from railroad trains How thankfnl we should be. If fads and foibles were tabooed, If gum were not by ladies chewed, If death would kindly steal the dude, How thankful we should be. But let us be to fate resigned, How thankful we should be, For Providence is good and kind, How thankful we should be. There are many things which we regret And wish were otherwise, and yet If we a nice, fat turkey get How thankful we should be. Gambliiiff and Agricultural Fairs. Kinston Free Press. 1 The Free Fress is glad to see tnat a very determined stand against the licensing ot gambling at agricultural fairs is being taken by many of the leading papers of the State. The fol lowing from the Henderson Gold Leaf is a sample of the determined stand that a number of the best State papers are taking : " For one the Gold Leaf will not lend its influence to any fair in the future that does not advertise 'No gambling allowed.' And then if we find that the people have been deceived we will denounce the fraud and hold the officials up to public scorn and contempt." The Free Press takes its stand along with the Gold Leaf and other naners. and will make no mention of I i 7 anv lair that does not aaveriise " lo gambling allowed." We hope that all papers that feel the interest of the peo ple at heart will join in the denuncia tion of such licensed thieving at agri cultural fairs, whose ostensible object is the benefit of the people who are robbed. Thanksgiving: Dinner. (Youth's Companion. It is not necessary that the Thanks giving feast should be sumptuous. There need not be turkey on the table, nor mince pie, nor plum pudding, nor ice cream. The plates and dishes need not be of fine porcelain, nor the spoons and forks of solid silver. No colored man need stand behind any of the chairs, to deprive people of the pleasure of waiting upon one another. All may be very plain, heap and simple. Last Thanksgiving a father who was-in pecuniary straits ;ook home for his boys' dessert two quarts of hot pea-nuts, and they were received with shouts of laughter and applause. He says they were the pleasantest Thanks giving hit he ever made in his life. But there are some things which are essential to the success of a Thanksgiv ing festival. Every one must be pres ent who ought to be there the whole family circle within reasonable reach ; the unpopular members of it, as well as the popular ; the ill favored and the handsome, the unfortunate and the fortunate; those whom nobody par ticularlv wants to see. as well as those whom everybody delights to see ; wel come all on this glad day ! There is a strange pleasure in the occasional meeting of the most incon gruous DeoDle. Drovided the spirit of innocent gayety gets into the ascend ant. and remains there. Every one says, " Who could have thought that old Cousin Dick and cranky Aunt Abigail could have been so agreeable !" Each person must, of course, leave his troubles at home with his old clothes, or button them up close and tight in his innermost pocket. We all have troubles, and there are times when it is proper to tell them ; but on occasions of family festivity it is good to forget, for a few brief hours, that there is such a thing as trouble in the world. Family affection is a source of so much happiness and help to us that no fair opportunity of strengthening and increasing it should be allowed to pass unimproved. One bale of cotton to the acre will pay a profit on the cultivation, while if vou onlv make a bale to two acres you will do well to come out even, and a bale to three or four acres will bring you in debt. It costs no moro to cul tivate an acre of fertile land than an asre of Door land. 1 he system of m- tensive farming must be adopted. Re strict the area and increase the fertility This should be the motto oi every farmer. Nashville Argonaut. AN ESSAY ON TEMPERANCE. Keal Before the Silver form Club. Spring Ke- EV MItSS KATE J. PA It HAM. Published by Request. The following essay was prepared by request and read before Silver Spring Reform Club at a recent meet- It is highly creditable to the author, a young lady only about 16 years of age, and will no doubt be read with interest by many."! My friends, it is with fear and trem bling, that I rise to speak to you upon the grand yet fearful subject of Tem perance ; grand indeed it might be, were it in my power to do it half the justice it deserves, learlul lest 1 say something that in some wav prove an injustice. Young gentlemen and young ladies, do you not feel it an honor to say that you are a member of anything so noble as a temperance club? If you do not let me tell you that you ought to. You are engaged in one of the grandest battles in which mortal man ever fought ; you are helping to carry on a work that Christ Jesus begun, by saying that no drunkard shall inherit the kingdom of Heaven. Let me ask you a few questions. What is at the bottom of the dark crimes being com mitted to day by the young men of our land ? Only a short while ago a hor rible murder was committed right here in our midst. What was the ground work of the whole affair ? What is fast making victims for the jail and penitentiary? The answer comes clear and strong, Whiskey ! Whiskey ! Young man, what are you doing to break down this evil ; young lady what are you doing to uproot the curse of this age ? Let every man and women ask themselves the question what are we doing, are we encouraging intemper ance, or are we defending temperance? You are certainly doing one or the other. Those that are taking part in this great work are trying to crush a monster that willexti?gush the bright est lights in our land; that will devour everything in its way with it's poison ous fangs ; that will make penniless widows and orphans ; that will fill our Presidential chair, our Governor s pal- i 5 rr ace, our pulpits, our lawyer s omce, our judge's home and every other high and honorable office in our land with tottering wrecks slave to the red wine. They might have been men honored and respected by all had it not been for this detestable drug, and yet from day to day men license the sale of it. Before we stop people from drinking we must stop the sale of what they drink, for as long as men are li censed to sell it so long will men drink it. We call our republic a free one, but unless the hurricane of intemperance that is speeping over our continent from ocean to ocean be checked in some way, the time will come when we will be living in a land ruled and governed by whiskey drinkers. With such a thing staring us in the face how can we sit with our hands folded, say ing by our acts that as long as whiskey doesn't molest us we will not try to abate the swelling tide? It will be too late to say when it has enveloped the whole world in its fiery flame that you would have done all you could had you ever thought how it would end. Now is the time. Now do not delay. Ere tomorrow's sun shall sink in the golden West some that you love dearly may be too far gone for reformation. Go vo-day and speak to that perishing soul. Mothers, sisters and wives, how dare you say that as long as whiskey doesn't bother you and yours you will let it take its own course with others. . I ask you to reflect for a moment upon the poor gray-haired mother, tottering upon the brink of the grave, yet dread ing to enter for she knows there is no restraint for that wayward yet precious boy when she is gone. Why won't some one come and tell her that they will carry on the work she has begun and let her go on her way in peace to Heaven ? Why you say I would be afraid I would not do as well as some other person. My friend, if you are in the right God is going to help you. He will give all the assistance you need. Oh, the homes that are being made desolate, the lives that are being wreck ed by strong drink! Forget not the prayers that are continually ascending to the Throne of Grace from lips upon which time has tread with heavy foot steps, hearts that are crushed with grief. Bringing such scenes before you who can blame you for trying to exterminate the cause of these trying realities? Young men here present, God for bid, that any of you should ever dar ken the pupil of that flashing eye with strong drink. May you never bow that aged mother's head in grief. Be too manly to ever cause a wave of trouble to roll across that peaceful breast. May the sunset of your fath er's life never be :louded Jy any of your misdeeds. Oh, assure him by your good actions that all is well ere his silver locks shall glisten with the dews of Eden. Never crush that sis ter's proud heart with sorro'. But live in such manner that she may feel that she has a brother in whom she can trust ; that is an honor to society. In order to do this, young man, you must be a foe to the red wine. Look not upon the wine in all its beauty, a serpent starts beneath the flowers' that crown its brim whose deadly fangs will strike the heart and make thy lustrous eyes grow dim. Why when we look upon the wine a harmless thing it seems, but just let your imagination stretch to the homes where it is a frequent visitor and you will conclude that it is the most vene mous of all reptiles. There is no doubt as to whiskey having caused more sin and suffring in this world than all other evils. When we think of the thousands of saloons ill tins ouuiiiiy lih iak.i ij jiuiuujj , when we think of the numerous allure ments for the young men, into the broad way that leads to everlasting de struction and the few places where they are taught the way of truth and light we wonder how other people can re main unmindful of the the temptations and snares that surround the youth of our land ; we condemn them for it never thinking of the years we have wasted, gone, lost, without a sigh. Whiskey drinking men and boys, how do you think you would like to receive the death summons in a dram shop? How would you like to be called from such a place to meet the Judge of judges, called from a saloon to appear at the bar of Almighty God? How solemn the thought, yet howvery possible. The change can be wrought in the twinkling of an eye. Those that are visitors to these places of evil, is it not as probable that you will be called from the bar room as any where else ? Why cer tainly it is. My friend, it is too late when the death-angel is fluttering his snowy wings around you ; it is too late when you are entering that dark valley ; too late when you are cross ing the stormy river of death ; too late when you are writhing in seas of fire and brimstone to wish that you had never heard of a bar-room ; to wish all alcohol and liquor in the bottom less ocean. To prevent all this never let your shadow darken the doors where rum is sold. Let no one entice or persuade you into such a place. Never go where the volatile poison is sold and you will never bring shame or disgrace upon your name by using it. Young lady, upon you rests a great responsibility, perhaps far greater than you have ever thought. How are you exerting your influence for good or evil ? Oh, you say you have no influence. You can't shirk your duty in any such way, there never was a person that didn't have some influ ence in some direction. It is your duty and you cannot get out of it, to give your example if nothing elce to the work in which you are engaged. You do your part, exert your influence lor good and rest assured that God is going to do the rest. You may say why I have done my best and do not see any good results. Why long years after your soul has passed beyond this vale of tears ; long after friends have committed your body to the cold damp earth ; after your flesh has wasted away in the dark and silent tomb, your influence will be living here, perhaps winning souls to Christ, or perhaps snatching the precious lambs from his fold. All of this de pends entirely upon the way you have lived. If we do our work right world our Father in Heaven ward us hereafter. We may in this will re not live to see the fruits of our labor, but some one will. Let us remember we have a just God and a recording angel, by whom all our deeds, good or bad, are penn ed down uoon the book of remem- berance, to be proclaimed before the whole world at that last great day when the Great King shall ascend the celestial throne and exclaim to each individual where they shall spend eter nity. Young lady, when you see some loved one depart, when you see that young man whom you might have re formed, with God's help, when you see him Eroinir into that dismal dun- geon, won't the sting of remorse be too hard to bear ? Then, O work to day S Girls, if you can keep a young man from going in the wrong from erring strong drink, will you not gladly do it ? If they do wrong, and drink now and then, don't give them up, reason with and encourage them, that is if you see that they are trying to do right. On the other hand if you see that they make no pretensions to right then scorn them. Never give their practice your sanc tion in ever so remote a degree. Let them see that as long as they do not act as gentlemen should you do not wish any of their company. Do this and you will soon see a marked change. We hear people say there is no harm in taking a social glass now and then. You may call it social at first, but what will it soon be ? Intemper ance is insidious; it does not come at once with its burning streams to con sume the heart of its victim, but slow ly and gradually drags itself along, taking one after another, until the fashionable, genteel, moderate drinker has become the reeling, bloated, de graded drunkard. There is some thing in the idea of taking a drink with a friend, or in swallowing a cup of sparkling wine upon a public occasion exceedingly pleasant. The young fail to see the danger of the pratice. They can not perceive how it is that a man is led from moderation to brutal ex cess, and hence use the wine cup free ly and without fear of any evil conse quences and so it has been with those who have become intemperate. Not one of all the thousands who have gone down to drunkard's graves, and have entered upon a drunkard's eter nity ever supposed that he should be come a beastly, degraded inebriate. Such an end never presented itself to the mind of any young man, as for the first time he drank his social glass. But step by step, the habit erew unon him : day by day the fatal spell was thrown around him, as deeper and deeper he descended into the vortex of wretchedness, until the j last lamp which shed upon his path was put out ; the last star of hope sank ; in darkness. So ends the social glass. I Young men, with the fact before you, that intemperance is destructive to ( health, to life, property, business, to ' all things good, how can you,, by the 1 use of wine, bring such ruination upon yourselves ? Though the golgother of drunkeness is before your eyes, though ; all past is pointing to the long army of inebriates who have perished in the march ot time, yet you drain the cup, swallow the beverage of hell as though it was the water of life. Those of you who have been so un. fortunate as to violate your pledge, j come and openly confess your wrong, show by your actions that you are sorry and beg forgiveness, and I assure VA1, tw vnn will he readilv fonriven : you that you win De reaany iorgivcn , r r c ' a. . 4-y i trac ! fnr if we forgive not men their tres passes neither will our Heavenly Father forgive us our trespasses. Oh, never trifle about any thing so solemn as the vow you made when you joined this club. Remember you called upon Almighty God to help you resist the temptation. It you haven't that help it is because you have never asked it. Brothers and sisters, let us work faithfully as long as God is on our side we may be sure of victory, for if God be for us who can be against us? Let others say what they will we know we are in the right and let's stick to it. We know that we have accom a plished good and if we work and trust in the Lord we will accomplish more. We have erased a good many names from our list, but remember friends unless the dross melts away the gold will be spoiled. Political Excerps. TBellefontaine (Ohio) Examiner. As soon as Campbell was nominated for Governor, the Democratic party began to hump itself to elect him. The late Democratic victory in Ohio was " as deep as a well and as broad as a barn door," and of course .-i ...Ml J Quo Foraker to Mahone : 1 " Cheer up, you ain't alone ! For I am knocked out. too, As thoroughly as you." ; A Republican exchange heads the announcement of a forthcoming Bou langist demonstration in Paris as fol lows : " They Think They're Alive." The Republican party, we may add, is afflicted with a similar delusion. The weakening of the Republican party by the tariff reform agitation of the last year and a half, prepared the way for the recent series of Democratic victories, and rendered them compara tively easy of accomplishment. The Bellaire Tribune, a Republican paper, hasperpetrated altogether the best joke of the season." It gravely notifies its party that " There Must be no Steps Backward." The Tribune ignores the solemn fact that is party is "stuck in the mud," and it's not in a position to locomote in any direction. North Carolina is the only State in the Union that fills the entire list of field products and minerals, and she produces one mineral, Hiddenite, found nowhere in the world. If capi talists desire to invest in mines of any kind, let them come to North Carolina. it I'rescnt in the most clegsnt brm THE LAXATIVE and NUTRITIOUS JUICE or THE FiGS OF CALIFORNIA, Combined with the medicinal virtues of plants known to be most b T.eficial to the human system, forming an agreeable and effective laxative to perma nently cure Habitual Consti pation, and the many ills de pending on a weak or inactive condition of the KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS. It is the most excellent remedy Vnowr to CLEANSE THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY When one is Bilious or Constipated SO THAT PURE BLOOD, REFRESHING 8LEEP, HEALTH and 8TRENQTH NATURALLY FOLLOW. Every one is using it and all are delighted with it. ASK YOUR DRUQOIST FOR MANUFACTURED ONLY BY CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. iOUISVILLE. KY NEW YORK. H. IT IS A FACT I That every man, woman and child trades in this market, can who SAVE MONEY 15y buying their foot wear at Anglea's :-: Shoe:-: Store. The largest assortment from which to select, and the lest poods for the least money always. New stock Just in. Pro mote jour comfort and preserve your health, by calling at our store and pur chasing from our large and seasonable line of choice selections in BOOTS AND SHOES. AU that you may need, for yourself or f in n Gur stock cons,ist9of . . r ' . . - . . ! the choicest of goods and latest styles. from the very best manufacturers, and era 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 Gents' Furnishing Goods, Trunks, Yalises, Umbrellas, &c. Believing I can save my customers money I respectfully ask them to call and see me. Mr. K. L. Green will be pleased to see his friends. A. It. ANGLE A, jan. l-l c. Henderson, N. U. hdiTrson ! Carriage Wagon Works, Crow & Marston, Prop rs. We lake this method of informing our friends and the public generally that we are better prepared to Hupply Carriage, BugKiep, Wagon, Tartu, Ac, cheaper than ever before. We make a specialty in manufacturing the celebrated Alliance Wagon, : oii r th best wagons sold. It cannot i be ex-IlHil. We have with us the rinent : workmen in theNtnte, and are prepared to dial) kinds of work with neatness and despatch. i , Carriage Painting and Horseshoeing: ; a specially. Thankful for past patrons we hope good work and ftrict atten tion to business to merit a continnt nee of the same. : Very Respectfully, ian.'M 3 1. CHOW & MARSTOS. YOU WOULD LIKE TO HAVE AN EX CELLENT Life :-: Size :-: Crayon And One Dozen Cabinet Size Photographs for $5 Five Dollars, $5 Wouldn't you ? Welliu can get them at NewfilFs Art Gfc Work equal to any. No use going away from home, or waiting for some traveling " picture man" to come along, when you can get a better likeness and save money . in the bargain right here in Henderson. ??7A beautiful Life Size Portrait In ! Water Colors or Pastel, 10 to f 15 framed complete. All work hrst-class. NEWELL, The Photographer. Gallery over Dorsey's Drug Store. DON'T FAIL I to send 10 cts for the Largest, Handsomest and most complete Catalogue of 'TYWt PKESsks, C17TM, &e.. published. LOWEST PRICES. LARUEST VAKI1TT, National Type Co., SS S. Tsi at. riIILADB(KLi. Please mention this papei. i
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 28, 1889, edition 1
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