Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Jan. 23, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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-G-OLID LEAF. "THE PEOPLE'S PAPER." -NINTH YEAR OF PUBLICATION THAD R. MANNING, Owner and Editor. Devoted to the Ikdustrial, EDUCA tional and material welfare of Vance County and North Carolina. Published at the lire and growing town of Henderson, in the centre of the Famous Yellow Tobacco District. A weekly resume of the News, Humor and General Topics of the Day. Published every Thursday Morning TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One copy one year. - ?2.00 " " 6 months, - - - 1.00 3 - .50 We desire a live agent and correspondent at every postoflice in Vance and adjoining Bounties. Write for terms. PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. We Invite contributions on all subjects of local and general interest ; views and state ments upon matters of public concern orig inal poems, essays, critiques, etc. One side of the paper, only, must be wri te n on and the real name of the writer ac company the contribution. No attention will be paid to anonymous letters. The editor disclaims all responsibility for the views or statements of correspond entsand reserves the right at all times to revise or reject any article he may think proper. Address all communications to GOLD LEAF, Henderson, N. C. THURSDAY, J 3f. 181K). JOURNALISTIC. The Durham Recorder celebrated its 70th anniversary recently by issuing a handsome 12-page illustrated edition. Brother Hackney is an enterprising publisher and a hard worker in behalf of Durham and her institutions. The illustrated trade edition of the Oxford Public Ledgerwas a very hand some and creditable publication. The publishers have done a good work for their town arid section and deserve to reap a rich reward from their labors. The Oxford Public Ledger will hereafter be published semi-weekly, four instead of eight pages in size as heretofore. Mr. Thos. H. Collins has sold his interest to Mr. John T. Britt, who is now sole editor and-owner. Mr. Collins will devote his time ex clusively to the job printing business. The Gold Leaf wishes both gentle men the fullest measure of success. The Wilmington Messenger is five years old. It is one'of the best papers in the South, ably edited and newsy, enterprising and progressive. We are gratified to know that it is meeting with good success, though its patron age will never excel its deserts. Its daily circulation has increased nearly 1,000 since Dr. Kingsbury has been on its editorial staff, and we hope it will continue to grow until 100,000 is reached. The Wilmington Star comes to us in an entire new dress of type, from the title head to the last line in the advertising columns, and looks as bright and bewitching as a seventeen-year-old girl in a new muslin dress. The Star has always been a prime favorite with us, and while it loses much of its individuality, as far as ap pearances are concerned, it has been greatly improved by the change. We are pleased to note this indication of prosperity. Mr. Bernard, the publish er, is to be congratulated upon his suc cess in making one of the best news papers in North Carolina. The Charlotte Chronicle is not as large as some other dailies in North Carolina but it is one of the newsiest papers in the State all the same. It is ably edited, intelligently conducted and well gotten up. The Chronicle is enterprising and progressive and is doing a good work for Charlotte and Piedmont North Carolina. That it is appreciated by its people is seen in its advertising columns and rapidly grow ing subscription list. Editor Haydn is giving his patrons a good paper and one that they have reason to be proud of. Under the present arrangement of the schedule we get the Chronicle in Henderson the same day it is pub lished. The Tarboro Bunner has closed its first year. The editor and proprietor, Mr. Henry T. King, says : This paper has worked faithfully and has the consciousness of knowing that it has accomplished some good more for others than for itself. The editor is a wiser man if not a sadder one, and the different phases of human nature with which he has had to con tend have taught him a life-long lesson that merit and true wprth are not the qualities most appreciated, but that designing flattery and erapty praise too often outweigh ftusiness principles and honest intentions. This is about the way it looks to the average country editor, and Brother King must not think his observations and experience are confined to himself alone. We wish the Banner still greater success in the future. The Messenger will shortly estab- ' lish Messenger bureaus, similar to our j Raleigh Bureau at Goldsboro, Fayette-1 ville and Charlotte. Wilmington : Messenger. ' The Messenger is nothing if not progressive. Continued success to this able and excellent newspaper. One of the biggest and most success ful things in the way of special news paper enterprise was the illustrated trade edition of the Washington Gazette, recently issued. It contained 30 pages,was embellished with a num ber of illustrations of prominent build landscapes and ". f 1- water views of its town and. immediate surroundings, together with a large amount of choice reading matter de scriptive of the charming and fertile region embraced by Beaufort and ad joining counties, the whole enclosed in a handsome colored cover. - All together it is the most complete and creditable performance of the kind we havp vet seen cominir from a town of its size, and Editor Latham has cause to feel proud of bis work. In getting out this special edition of his paper, involving as it did a great deal of time, hard work and outlay of money, he has rendered an important and lasting service to the sect on for which he had already done so riuch. It will be far reaching and permanent in its benefits, as time will prove. As the New Berne Journal says : It is one thing to be in possession of such a country, it is another to have the ability to tell of it so as to facinate the lovers of the beautiful and attract the capital which is the great and es sential need of the South. The indus trial issue of the Gazette is filled with choice literature, descriptive and his torical, and a charming and accurate account of a heaven blessed country that in natural advantages and pro- i gressivc development has scarcely an equal even in this highly favored clime. We congratulate our contemporary on the splendid success of its industrial issue. There is one editor who " struck luck" Christmas. Editor Mahone, of the Fort Worth Gazette, was presented with a purse of $600 in gold by ad miring friends by way of showing their appreciation of his services in behalf of the town and community. Editor RoscowER.of the Goldsboro Headlight, dips his pen in gall and proceeds to express his opinion of our Chief Magistrate whom he styles the "Junketing Governor." He says the fact that he is the Governor of the State is not one of the reasons people flock to see him wherever he goes; it is ab solutely the only one. The Headlight should not be so rough on the Gov'nor, Gov. Fowle has appointed Mr. Thos. B. Womac, of Chatham coun ty, Superior Court Judge to succeed Hon. John A. Gilmer. We had hoped to see Mr. Rob't. W. Winston, of Ox ford, thus honored. However he is young yet and and his reward may be in the future. He is a growing man and no doubt a coming one, as it is expressed now. Nfgro orators, white orators, and female orators addressing a mixed audience from the same platform,being a necessary part of a prohibition con test (vide Lynchburg), settles the ques tion so far as Danville is concerned. There will be no prohibition cam paign here. Danville Register. Hurrah for Danville ! She is sensi ble to take nothing of the kind that must come that way. What a sad spectacle. The spectacle is sometimes observed on our streets of women of refinement riding in single-seated vehicles beside negro drivers, from whom it would be supposed that they would shrink in stinctively. The temporary relation is well understood, but in spite of this fact, the spectacle is offensive to the sensibilities, and should not occur. Richmond Times. We have seen the same thing here and elsewhere. We agree with what the Times says. Further comment is unnecessary. From the appearance of the adver tising columns of the Chronicle Char lotte merchants must be prospering, in every Sunday's issue of that paper there appears an extra page of adver tisements. The Chronicle is such a good paper it deserves such encourage ment. Raleigh Evening Visttar.. Of course they are prospering. That is what they use the columns of their local paper for. Charlotte is known all over the State as one of the most enterprising, prosperous and progres sive towns in North Carolina, and when it is known what liberal use her business men make of printer's ink, this is easily accounted for. After a publisher takes an ad. from an advertising agent at 30 per cent. llow regular rates, allows the agent 25 per cent, commission, and then takes his pay in printing material at 45 per cent, above the usual price, at the expiration of the contract, he is pretty thoroughly done for. This cal culation of losses all around look like the publisher had would j stolen ! what he had got out of the wreck. Bellefontaine Examiner. Yet, there are numbers of publish ers who do business(?) just that way. They haven't got the moral courage, it would seem, to refuse an offer ten deted tkem, whatever the price or the conditions governing the same. Huckleh's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve, iu the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores Ulcers, Suit Khetim. Fever Sores, Tetter, ('happed 1 lauds, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions,and positively cures Piles, or no pav required. Jt i guarantee;! to " moncv refunded. Prire 2.1 nt n,r w. tie ir sale l.v M. Horsey, jan 5 1 SOCIAL. POINT. STAND- Keply to the Omaha Bee's Strictures upon the Atlanta Constitution for Criticising George W. Cable's Negro So cial Equality Ideas and Teach ings. In a recent issue of the Omaha, Ne braska, Bee, we find the following ar ticle, written by Mrs. Al Fairbrother, of Lincoln, Neb. The writer will be remembered as Miss Mamie L. Haich ett, formerly. The article speaks for itself. Readmit. Lincoln, Neb., Dec. 27. To the Editor of The Bee; In the Sunday Bee I notice an editorial headed Southern Prejudice," in which the writer criticises the Atlanta Constitu tion for predicting the social ostracism of Mr. Cable on account of his inti mate association with the negro, and characterizes the people of the South, en masse.as " ignorant, narrow-minded and intolerant." Being a native, and until recently a resident of that be nighted region, and having had, there fore, better opportunities to gain a personal, practical knowledge of its systems and intellectual status than one who has probably never lived in the South and has formed his opinions only from the hearsay evidence of those inimical to its interests, I desire to pre sent a few propositions and call his attention to a few of his inconsisten cies. In the first place, the writer in The Bee appears in the new role of lexico grapher, and treats us to a refreshing I definition of the word "prejudice." He says that " prejudice is an index of a narrow, uneducated mind, incapable 01 looking at a question except from one standpoint, generally an intensely personal one," while Mr. Webster-assures us that prejudice is an opinion or decision of mind formed without due examination ; pre-judgment, etc." From which we see that the fact of a mind's being prejudiced is no evidence of a lack of ability to judge correctly. The most learned and gifted are often the most intolerantly prejudiced, so TJie Bee's proposition that a preju diced mind is necessarily an ignorant one is a false hypothesis. An argument based upon such an assumption is like attempting to prove that a stream is shallow because it flows in a narrow channel. That the people of the South are opposed to the social equailty of the whites and blacks and will never rec ognize the claims of the latter to be admitted to private circles on such footing, no one will or wishes to deny. Opposition and prejudice, however.are two entirely different words, and it is possible to oppose a thing on reason able grounds and general principles as well as through self-interest, narrow mindedness and ignorance. It is notably the brightest minds of the South, those who have studied the question in all its aspects, who realize the true magnitude of the impending evil and aresounding the needed warn ing. It is presumable that those who have lived in the South and are thor oughly acquainted with the habits, tastes, disposition and capabilities of the race, are in a better position to observe, investigate and arrive at a proper understanding of the subject, than the speculative theorist of the North, who has as little practical knowledge of the negro, as he really exists, as a child has of a hippotamus after looking at one through the cage bars of a traveling menagarie. If there is prejudice at all on either side, facts and reason would go to prove that it is on the side of the enlightened North rather than of the ignorant South. Tlie Bee says : " God made and can tolerate the colored race, but the editors ot the Constitution cannot tolerate a white person who takes din ner with a negro." Yes, God made the negro and can tolerate him. He made the chimpanzee and gorilla also, and can tolerate them. Not that I would ir.sult our ebon brother by a comparison so onensive. I simply follow Tlie Bee's example and go a long way for an illustration. God made the colored race but He made it as it is, seperate and distinct and alto gether different from the white, just as he made one star to differ from another in glory,gems to differ m luster.flowers 1 m beauty, animals in form and intel- 1 ligence, and so on ad infinitum. He 1 has made different orders and grades i of creation, every kingdom, family ! and species ; and in this instance, to : guard against any possible mistake, in preparing the original clay, He took j the precaution to give it a different hue so that there could be no possible ! danger of getting the parcels mixed. 1 he Jiee acts upon the presumption that this process was accidental and is trying to circumvent the designs of the Almighty. The fact is, there is no question of toleration in it. Every thing is right and proper in its place. The African is as much a distinct branch of the human race, as much a part of the great whole in the sum of created things.as the American, Arctic, Australian, Mongolian or Caucasian. He is doubtless a link in the chain of FROM A progressive evolution j is happy, useful ; absence of any colored guests among and acceptable in his particular sphere, j that distinguished company. Hut nature has drawn a line of de j Is this prejudice? No. An African is markation between the African and j as much out of place in the select cir Caucasion races, and the social gulf, cles of the Caueasion as a jack -daw in that separates the two can never be j a flock of peacocks. No one questions spanned until science proves, that, as ! the right of the negro to mingle in so- a race, the former is in everv resrject the equal of the latter. When the North demonstrates this fact the South will lay aside its ignorance, narrow mindedness and prejudice," and fall a willing convert to the new faith. The Bee refers to the Constitution's ' criticism of Mr. Cable as "a tyran nous social prejudice, and claims that every individual is entitled to his likes and dislikes and to exercise his own j pleasure in the choice of his associates, j This is exactly what the people of the South think, but Tlie Bee is evidently not willing to allow them this privilege, since it would compel them to open their doors to an alien race.with whom they have nothing in common, and which threatens the very foundation OI ineir social fabric. I fail to see how it is any more tyrannous for the Constitution to dictate the social re lations of Mr. Cable, a public man and a representative Southerner, than for the people of the North to dictate to the South in matters of a similar private and personal nature. If it is madness to exclude a man because he mingles in other circles than those be fitting his birth and station, then the entire world in all lands and at all times, has been and is still in the straight jacket of social lunacy, since it has been the custom and practice of all civilized people from time imme morial. And if it is madness, there is method in it, Jn the -business world we see the world, and meet the world on a worldly footing ; but in our social intercourse we want congeniality, in timacy and friendship. While the man who leaves a beaten path of recognized respectability for the highways and byways of doubtful associations, may be in himself every way acceptable.his former friends who do not share his erratic predilections, and to whom such society would be neither profita ble nor agreeable, naturally avoid his presence for fear of deing drawn into uncongenial company. - This the right of every individual as well as of every community. "So we of the North," continues our generous and self-constituted guardian, " should not blame the pres ent generation so much as we should help to enlighten it." This is cheerful indeed. In the North the colored portion' of the population is only a drop in the ocean as compared with the South. In a town of 3,000 or 4, 000 inhabitants here there are rarely over fifty persons who have in their veins the taint of negro blood and the majority of these having more of the Caueasion than the African, and hav ing enjoyed superior advantages of education and association with the whites, cannot be taken as a fair speci men of the negro proper, as he revels to-day in his original stupidity and uncleanness. In any Southern hamlet of the same size they would coustitute at least fifteen hundred or two thous and of the population. Yet The Bee man would call npon the North, with out even a possible acquaintance with the negro, to enlighten the South in regard to its treatment of a people born and reared in its bosom and which constitutes more than half of its population. As well import a Hindoo to America to interpret the Christian religion. While the North may not be aware of it, it nevertheless remains a fact, that its zealous championship of this mongrel and much magnified race is due,not so much to an advanced civili zation and disinterested humanity, as to their erstwhile bondage, which has thrown around them the charm of romantic heroism and placed them be fore the world in the light of martyrs Supposing, for example, that a politi cal war had lifted from a condition of slavery and servitude the Chinese.Hin doos or North American Indians, all of whom are superior intellectually to the African. Would the fact of their having been ouce used and oppresse d by a set of people with no longer any right or power over them be any reason why they should be raised to the plane of social equality with those who had been cast in a finer mould, with loftier sentiments and higher fac ulties, and capable of following broad er paths. Of the negro as a slave I know noth ing, and being a child of the restored union rather than of the lost confeder acy! not prejudiced in favor of ante bellum systems. On the contrary, trunk the principle ot slavery was wrong and that the South is now suffer ing from the consequences of her great and grievous error. I do know, however,that the negro, until by amal gamation the African blood in him be comes entirely extinct,can never rise to the social level of the Caueasion. As he exists in the South to-day, he is un cleanly, shiftless and improvident. Virtue is to him a myth and honor an unknown quantity. His social stand ing is measured alone by the cut and quality of his clothes,and no crime or disgrace, however flagrant, lowers his standing with his dusky brethren, so long as the sounding eloquence of clothes attests his prosperity and re spectability. That the race is fast being merged into the white is a sad admis- sion, yet true. And with such an evil threatening their gates the people of the South cannot afford to admit a wooden horse into their social Troy in the form of such a precedent, as Mr. Cable would establish, Civily, the negro has been granted and enjoys unmolested all the rights of free born American citizens. He shares the undisputed liberty of the sleeping car and the passenger coach. He may attend the public theatre and stop at public hotels. But it is noticea ble that in select circles, alike in the north, southeast and wesf, the African is rigorously excluded. As a case in point, I see that a banquet was given last week in Chicago in honor of Mr. Rosewater, and that the occasion was graced by the presence of no less a personage than his friend Mme. Patti Nicolini. Among other conspicuous features of the entertainment was the ciety provided he is wanted there, but what a stir there would be in northern social circles were"" there issued a royal edict proclaiming that negroes should attend private gatherings and participate in their pleasures. I picture a brilliant assemblage. j where the beauty and wealth and talent of the city are gathered for amuse ment and recreation. I see The Bee man, who criticises the Constitution entering at a late hour bearing on his arm the voluptuous weight ot a dusky maiden, "some of whose ancestors were born in Africa.' No one would ques tion his right to choose his own com panion, but I venture to believe that the rest of the company would question the propriety of inviting him into that circle again. Mrs. Al Fairbrother. Mrs, Job Person's Remsrly. THE GREAT BLOOD -- PURIFIES. -:- It Cukes Cancer. Bead the following testimonial from a well known citizen of Halifax county : Rikgwood, N. U., May 2. 18ST. Mrs. Joe Person. . Dear Madam: Most gladly do I give you my name to place before the public bearing testimony of the miraculous cure effected on me by your most valuable Rem edy. Fifteen years ago 1 was troubled by What seemeu IO IK? lime C!fs ijm-niK on the right side of my cheek under the eye, resembling dry meal bran, which I could remove when I shaved, but they would return again in a short time. Soon an enlargement appeared under the same eye, attended with itching and burning sensations and sharp, darting pains from the affected place to the eye, causing great difficulty in closing the eye, eveu to sleep. Sometimes it would feel better, but never at any time disappear. Some physicians pronounced it eczema, others chronic ery sipelas, and all advised. me to lei it alone. This I did until two years ago, when a lit tle scab began to form right under the eye, resembling a wart, which I could not re move ; in size and appearance it soon grew to be as large as a strawberry, and the scabs came off and left the place entirely raw. Having fear of a cancer, I began to use various kinds of salves to heal it up, but never could I consulted with physi cians of great experience ; they said it looked suspicious of it, and advised me to have it cut or burnt out at once. 1 did not wish to do either ; and being persuaded it was in my blood, 1 resolved to try your Remedy, as it had been recommended to me. I did bo with the most happy results. 1 can say J am a well man. i cannot say too much for your remedy, it is worth its weight in gold. Before I had used one bottle I was hopeful, and at the expiration of five weeks the sore was entirely healed, the scales or roughness of the skin all gone, and left me a new man. I will give any one similarly affected any further in formation they may desire, and can only say, if tha public will give your Remedy a trial, it will speak for itself, and your suc cess will know no bounds. God speed the day that must dawn upon your future pros perity ! Yours most truly, James Carter Arkisgton. THE Equitable Life Assurance OCiETY. O Send for illustrations of the Society's Twenty Year Tontine Policies showing at maturity cash surrender values equal to a return of all premiums paid with compound interest of from 3 to 5 per cent, per annum, added. ft Free Tontine policy is a simple prom ise to pay, and is with out conditions on the back. The Society also issues a BOND which at maturity may be drawn in CASH, or EXTENDED at INTER EST. - It combines a SAFE and PROFITABLE in vestment with the most liberal form of LIFE ASSURANCE extant. Assets. $105.000000 Liabilities, 82,500,000 surplus, 22,500,000 H. B. HYDE, Presiient SI. W. ALEXANDER, V. P. CaUTon or'addressf J. R. YOUNG, Agent, HENDERSON, N. C. W. W. Rowland. K0WLAND & POWELL, HENDERSON, 1ST. C, Wholesale and Ketail Dealers in HEAVY GROCERIES, FBBDSTITFFS, &ca. Flour, Meat, Meal, Salt, SOLD .A.T IRIOIEiMOINnD PRICES. Dnr Ms, Notions, Boots, Sloes, Star, Coffee, Molasses, Symps, Cheese, Crates, Cates, Butter, Eos, &e. FIELD O SEEDS O OF O ALL 0 KINDS. Sash, Blinds, Doors, Laths and Shingles. can ana get prices belore buying W. E. SMITH, MERCHANT x TAILOR, HENDERSON, N. C. : Away From 1 Home for Tailor-made Clotlim, S-When you can get as GOOD WORK and as perfect a frt here as elsewhere? A full line of ' FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WOOLENS from which to select. Work equal to the best and a perfect fit guaranteed or no sale. Keep up home enterprise, sept 5. jr W. CUUUILL, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER! HENDERSON, N. C. TTcfimatps Tnr thn prection of buidlinc. anil Aiorc fri-r lnmliAr cnl taftafl I wilt ell all kinds of lumber at Piney Woodt prices, witn rreigntaaaeu. feb 9 lc.l THE YAEGER FLOUR MILL CO. Our wheat supply is from the farmer direct ; this beinj; the heart ot the winter wheat section. No elevator mixtures to contend against insures absolute purity and uniformity in our product. Coal banks at our mill door makes fuel a mere nominal cost. The above are important factors in ttie production of not only good flour but at the same time at reasonable prices. V7! seek the trade at prompt paying customers. Such we will strive right hard to please, and hope to make it an object to deal with us. Order illicit from mill. Either wire or mail. Private brands furnished to car load customers. E.'ri:vr : Moral Ulr, Jay tr Ciolden Keys, Queen of West. lCXTUA FAN CY : AVIit ilk, Our Hct, Kiii Hec, Old Oold, IHom Itsc. 23 Cents per barrel charged extra when packed iu sacks 1-10, , M barrel then repacked in large tow sacks ; also 23 eents per barrel extra w!in packed in wood half-barrels. v CHARLES J. ALSTON, State Agent and Salesman, INSURE WITH THE JETNAi MEE INSURANCE CO. Cash Capital, - $4,000,000 Losses paid in 71 yrs, oyer $64,000,000 City of Chicago, Hi:,S0O,O0O City of Boston, 1 ,00,000 CLAUDE HUNTER, Agt., Henderson, N. C. E. Powell, Jr. Hay, Grain, 4c, Ac, elsewnere. We buy in car load lots and The Cutter Trust "Busted." - This is the day of trusts and combines, and true to our reputa - , tion for always being up with the times and ahead of all would be competitors, we have formed one of our own. We have com biaed to put down prices on READY-MADE CLOTH INT r- HA Is. 15UUIS, SHOES. GOODS, TRUNKS, VALISES, UMBRELLAS, RUBBER GOODS, &c, and trust to the intelligence of the buying public to trade where they can get the best goods and largest amour: for their money. Jalk about your "cutter trust," but this is the biggest thin of the kind that has ever struck Henderson. We have cut price right half in two on many articles, and have whittled them down to low water mark in a droughty season on everything. The . trust fnust be downed and we are going to do it by savin" the farmers so much money on all goods they purchase from usthat they can afford to hold their cutters if they wish until the trust people will gladly pay them their own price. You have to fight the devil with fire, and we aregoing to fire .' such bargains at our customers for the next few weeks that rival dealers will want to fire us out of town. Wc have inflicted a . deadly wound upon high prices, cutting right and left with the keen blade of cheap values, and the field Vill be strewn with the mangled and bleeding and dying corpses of big profits and slow sale dealers who shall undertake to do battle against us. Call and see for yourself and you "shall be satisfied." Barnes, Stainback & Co., ' Leading Low Price Clothiers and Gents' taishers, Henderson, N. C. James II. Lassiter. W. T. LASSITER, STAINBACK k CO, i LASSITER BUILDrNG, HENDERSON, NORTH CAROLINA. iiHP- A FULL LINE V- 7gG0LD AND SILVER SHIRTS,lA lit COLLARS, ip, DiERWM.) , A visit to our double store will reveal tlie fact that we have a large and nssorted stock of General Mebchastdise, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, Ready-made Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Hats, STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, Sawr, VolTfe. Syrap,, MoUn Ml. rarmers supplies or an Kinas, riows, noes.oii""", '' injr at prices that cannot be undersold In this market. .,nble. We have a large and well selected stock and our poods are all fresb Our stock waslnever so large, never o fine and never ao cheap before. Call aua see y0TbaenkSn,r our f riend5-and customer for'the very liberal VJt Past, we respectfully solicit a continuance of the same m future, promising our wi deavors to please always. L A SSITEB, STAINBACK & CO. F.NTT.F.MPVS PrTwxno,,..' Henderson, 1ST. C. Stainback. C. K. Stainback "Jfl.iSKiifr." SB&JSl can save you money.
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 23, 1890, edition 1
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