Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Feb. 16, 1893, edition 1 / Page 4
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"I THE HENDERSON GOLD LEAF THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1893, The Gold Leaf. HENDERSON, N. C. THURSDAY, FEB. 10, 1893. NEW YEAR'S SONG. Come, new year. And strew pale roses for thy sister's bier! liove- are 1 urned cold that at her birth leapt d high. When thou art old, thou, too, forgot, shalt With all thy golden glories faded, sore. Come, new year! Sleep, dead year! For dear delights are flown, and days are drear, For oh, for oh, bleak lie the fields and bare; Woe is me woe winter is everywhere; With eyes that see not, ears that never hear, .Sleep, dead year! Come, new jear! r.ut silentlv! Let fall no foolish tear J-'or cankering care, or grief, or joy gone by, Mnce all mast yield to age and change, and die, With past j ys cherished, perished, .ays once rear, Sleep, dead year! Sleep, dead year! Soon on spring's breast your violets shall peer, liurst from earth's casket fcr thy pleas uring Purple and gold, her tender treasuring, Hark! the lirst robin, singing loud and clear! Agnen Hcrard in Boston Tramertpt. RULING A HUSBAND. Prize Ese ay on This Interesting and Fruitful Subject by a Mo bile Girl. The New York Once a Week started a prize competition for women writers, the subjec being "How to Rule a Husband." Miss L. U. Kobertson, of Mobile; won the prize, a set of Charles Lever's works, by her contri bution as follows. No husband is invulnerable to love, tact and common sense. He will yield as surely to such a scepter as the needle dots to the pole. Let whoso ever will test the following rules : First, love him. Not with senti mental gush, but with that frank trust that knows no suspicion even if you find the letter of another's fair hand in the pocket which you are mending. I'. is likely an appeal for charity or some indigent widow begging a posi tion for her son. Nothing makes a man's heart so obdurate as a wife's d istrust. Do not indulge in prying into his affairs. If he does fool you a little, are you the happier for detecting it? If he still clings to bachelor days' habits of lingering out late at night, do not indulge in tears and upbraid ings. Bestir yourself. If the sitting room's upholstry is too fine for him to loll upon move it out. Lay his favorite papers in the corner, and especially never tear up his "latest." Set a comfortable easy-chair, stripped of all jingling furbelows, close by. Put slippers and dressing gown in easy reach. Appareled in a dainty, becoming gown, await his coming as you used to do as his sweetheart. Greet him winsomely, however late the hour. Honey entices bees; vinegar never. Such home comforts will so permeate through him that thereatter he will stride by all of the allurements in town to get to it and you. Then be compan ionable. If he likes politics, meta physics, the turf or chess, and you do not, appropriate some of that spare time devoted to novels in posting your self. Study like you used to do your Ltin to avoid beioer "kept in." If you desire to keep him in" just chat upon his "l obby" with him and you will have no trouble at all. If you wish him to spend his even ings at home with you, do not save all of your graces and smiles for out siders and deluge him, like a shower ba'h, with complaints and household tribulations as soon as he comes in from the day's business cares. You wi : simjii be si ending them "alone," fo. he will remain out late, hoping to fin i your to stilled in slumber on his return. If he is a huntsman do not plant the entire back yard in flowers and then say there is no place for a dog. Humor hi ; fads of fishing and bird hunting if y u want to keep him from hunting worse amusements. To prevent his eyes from ever turn ing to seek beauty and grace in other wo aen make yourself as sweet and attractive looking at home as lies with in your power. . Remember how much care and thought you used to spend to win his heart; now exercise some of ;t to keep that heart. Live within his income, however sm.ill, and you can always readily get money out cf him. Never make bills that he can not pay and he will always be agreeable, genial and loving. Do not Income extremely affec tionate when you want something he will learn the trick. Ask frankly. The shy tremor in your voice will never meet refusal. When he comes in with brow stern and lowering, do not imagine that he do- s not lov: you, and seek solitude to cry about it. Somthing is the matter. Maybe it is a tiesjierate crisis. Adroitly decoy him int j conversation upon a pleasant topic. He will do so to hide the con flirt within. Then when stillness crtjps over the house and you are alcne, lay your hand tenderly upon his shoulder, look trustingly into his facj and ask, " What is the matter to-night? Isn't something troubling you?" The whole world could not keep him from telling you, while all tea sand upbraiding in Christedom could not have extracted it from him. Possibly your timely sympathy saved bin. from sinking beneath it. Never allow him to become inde pendent of your society. Do not leave him alone and forlorn to swelter thr ugh summer's heat to make money, wh le you are off spending it in " cooler climes." If he has to stay, you stay, too. and he will deem you an adorable woman. Though he may be an Ananias him-! self, a man abhors a Sapphira; so be truthful at all times. Nothing turns a r, m's hear into stony self-will like a woman's prevarications. Never tell to corfidential neighbors, nor to fashionable friends what he ha confided in you, and you will soon know all that he knows. Nothing makes a husband so reserved as the feeling that his wife tells everything. Never contradict him. "Silence" is a weapon that he can not carry, hence he soon surrenders. Above all, do not " pout." A Doutinz wife can make a man commit reckless deeds in a week that a month s kisses cannot remedy possibly never. Study his idiosyncracies. .Never combat them openly. Go around them like you would an obstacle in the road. Soon you will govern him completely by seemingly letting him rule you. CRUSH THEM BY LAW. Webster's Weekly, of last week says: Now that the Democratic party is to come into power in both State and nation, we hope to see the people rise up as one man and insist that such thieving combinations as the American Tobacco Company shall be crushed by the law. Senators Vance and George are already at work upon a bill to cut the ground from under this monster abomination. Let the State press arouse the people and the Legislature to the importance of taking prompt action, so far as State laws can be made operative, etc. To whomsoever will lead in this crusade the Observer, for one, will say, "On! master!" wherever he goes it will follow. Its face is ?ti as a flint against all trusts and j-ombines, whether cigarette trusts, ; dd trusts, or what not, that propos- either to name the price upon : .-iven raw material and thus grind face of the producer, or to reguuic the price of the finished product and thus- take advantage of the necessities of the consumer, or both. Bad as others may be, however, there is no trust the greed of which is so great or the iniquity of which is so palpable as that of the so called "American Tobacco Company," and the Observer bids Godspeed to Senators Vance and Geprgein their undertaking to "cut the ground from under this monster abomination." Whatever the State Legislature can do in this direction it should do by all means. Charlotte Observer. BE BRAVE AND CHEERFUL OP SPIRIT. There is a sense in which the present moment is to every one an end of life. It is that to which we have been tend ing from the beginning of our days. We cannot afford, like certain tour ists, to move along our way with head down, and with eyes and ears closed to all that is about us, as if there were nothing to us in the wayside, simply because we are trying to reach a higher goal. Not merely what lies at the end of the road, but the road it self, is the Christian's destination. The best way to live for the future is to live the best way for the present. Heaven begins on the road heaven ward. Advertising Wisely. The wise business man can do two things judiciously he can spend and he can save. It is not the peDny pincher who gets rich, it is the one who keeps every dollar active. It takes a good deal of money to adver tise persistently. But this money paid out is like sow ing seed the harvest follows. Hoard ing is like putting grain in a bin there is no crop the next year. Be gener ous in circulating money this is not squandering. Be careful, though, in the way you spend. There is a point at which liberality becomes extravagance, and that is fatal. Look beyond to-day's purpose aod if to-morrow, or next week, ap proves it, you are pretty sure to be right. American Advertiser. The'Remains of Jefferson Davis to be Removed to Richmond. Richmond, Va.,Feb. i. A meeting of the board of directors of the Jef ferson Davis Monument Association was held here to-day. presided over by Mayor J. Taylor Ellyson, Presi dent. The following resolution was adopted : Resolved. That it is the sense of this board that the remains of President Davis be removed from New Orleans to Richmond and re-intrred in Hollywood cemetery on May 30th, Hollywood me morial day. The manner in which the electoral vote was split up in several States is quite interesting to note. In four States the vote was divided. In Cali fornia Cleveland received 8 votes, Harrison i; in Ohio Harrison got 22 and Cleveland 1; in Michigan where the vote was by districts, Cleveland has 5, and Harrison 9. The most interesting case, however, is that of North Dakota, where Cleveland, Har rison and Weaver each received one electoral vote. On the whole Mr. Cleveland's 277 votes make a goodly showing, being 43 more than he needed. He could have gotten along very well without any from New York, New Jersey and Conneticut combined. Elsie Diggs, who lives at Detroit, wants a divorce from her husband, the late William Diggs, who died ten years ago. She says that she was once the wife of Thomas Piper, an old soldier, who was disabled, in the army, and who died before securing a pension. She married Diggs, but afterward learned that he already had a wife. Now she wants a divorce lrom the late Diggs in order that she may recure a pension as a dependent widow of Piper. Greensboro offers inducements to manufacturing industries, seeking suit able locations, which no other city in the South can boast off. We have all the natural as well as the artificial ad vantages necessary for any kind of manufacturing enterprise. Free sites will be given and every reasonable de mand granted. Come along, gentle men, Greensboro is the place you are looking for. Greensboro Record. Don't lie awake at night. Take Sim mons Liver Regulator and secure restful sleep. HON. W. H. KITCHIN. His Services to the Democratic Party Recalled A Deserving Tribute From an Uninterested Source. fAsheville Citizen. Editor the Citizen : My atten tion has been called to an article in your issue of the 25th inst., headed " Plain Talk," and which was copied from an exchange. The article states in substance that it appears from the Raleigh correspon dence in several papers, that Mr. W. H. Kitchin, of Halifax county, will probably be appointed collector of internal revenue for the eastern dis trict of North Carolina, and says: " We can not credit it, for in all candor this gentleman has already re ceived all the honors from the Demo cratic party that he is entitled to for the present." Some time since, my attention was also called to a paragraph in another paper in which a fling is made at Capt. Kitchin, and especially his imprudence was alluded to. I trust that you will pardon me for what I shall say in these few lines. I do so without any suggestion from Capt. Kitchin directly or indirectly. I do not know all the different can didates for collector of internal revenue for the eastern district; I do know, however, that some of them are my warm personal and political friends, and I am sure that none of them would object to justice being done to one who has accomplished as much in behalf of the Democratic party and people of North Carolina as any man within her borders. Surel), our people can not so soon have forgotten that when the eastern section was in a state of anarchy and distress; when her bravest and best people were in terror and despair; when her women and children were in daily peril, that, foremost amongst all the men in that territory, absolutely at the peril of his life, Capt. Kitchin bade defiance to radical power and authority, and re gardless of any and all consequences to himself, took the lead in restoring white rule in those counties, and con tributed largely to their rescue from degredation and ruin. The character of the man is shown by this incident : In 1884, whilst I was canvassing the State in company with Judge Faircloth (whom it affords me great pleasure to say I regard as one of the purest and best of men) late one afternoon, in an extreme western county, I met Capt. Kitchin on horseback. As he rode up to us I noticed that his lace was exceed ingly pale and showed evidence of physical suffering. He said that he expected to meet Trull, a Republican speaker, the next day, about twenty five miles distant, and that he would have to ride the greater portion of the night to reach there. I told him that I did not see how he could make the trip. I then noticed that his pants had been cut open at the knee and that his leg was enormously swollen. I called his attention to the condition of his knee, and he said : " It makes no difference; I will fill the appoint ment if it kills me." I mention this, which is a very small matter as compared with many inci dents in his career in Eastern Caro lina, and I do think that it is unkind and ungenerous for any man within her entire borders to say one word which could injure Capt. Kitchin in any way. They say, that he is imprudent. Well, it was " imprudent" when the Light Brigade rode to certain and glorious death upon the Russian bat teries at Balaklava! It was "impru dent" when the matchless legions of Lee hurled themselves with loud cheers upon the intrenched heights of Gettysburg! It was "imprudent" when Col. Duncan K. McRae led the The Genuine Illustrated Unabridged Encyclopedia Britannica. The full set is now ready for delivery. It is a reprint, in large type, of the last (9th) English edition, over 20,500 pages, including more than 10,000 illus trations and 200 maps. The 84 volumes are strongly bound in 12 volumes, cloth; price of the set, $2O.O0. The same bound in half Russia, $24. 80. Index volume, if wanted, extra, cloth. $1.00, half Russia, $1.40. Size of volumes, 8 by 10 inches, by 3) inches thick; weight, about eiz pounds each. 5 Cents a Day Membership in the Encyclopedia Britannica Cooperative Club costs only $1.00 extra, and secures the en cyclopedia on payments of only 5 cents a day or $1.00 every twenty days. American Supplement. Magnificently supplementing the Eng lish edition(complete in itself , of course) of the Britannica, especially treating American topics and living biography, we publish as follows : American Supplement, edited by Howard Crosby, D.D., LL.D., and others, 5 volumes, 8,843 pages, and Index to entire work, 579 pages, the 6 vols, bound in 3 vols., cloth, price $6.00; half Russia, $7.20. Sample of the Encyclopedia can be seen at the office of this paper, and you can save a little in trouble and cost by joining at once with the editor and some of your neighbors in order ing sets. Call and see it anyway, which costs nothing. JOHN B. ALDEN, Publisher, 57 Rose St., New York. 1 5th North Carolina regiment to anni hilation at Williamsburg ! But, in the ges to come, history will furnish no page upon which aught can be written against the memory of the officers and soldiers who were made forever famous in these conflicts. If it seems best to those who con trol the offices in North Carolina that Capt. Kitchin shall receive no position, he will not be heard to complain; but I must be pardoned for saying that justice and gratitude both demand that no North Carolinian, and espe cially no Eastern North Carolinian, should ever say one word which could n any way wound the sensibilities of a man who has risked so much for the people of this State when she needed brave defenders. Verily, has it come to this, that the camp followers and suttlers shall be considered of more consequence than the color guard? As Capt. xvitchin did not support my nomination for the office of Gov ernor and as I am not a candidate at the present time for any offke, and would not accept one if tendered me, I trust that this communication will not be misconstrued. It is not meant as an endorsement of Capt. Kitchin for the office of collector of internal revenue, but it is the impulse of my heart to do justice to a man whom I know has suffered much in behalf of the Democratic party and of the peo ple of North Carolina. Very Respectfully, Chas. M. Stedman. Political leaders are concerned about the formation of the cabinet, but the people at large give it no harrassing thought. They have unbounded con fidence in Mr. Cleveland, and with him at the helm they can sleep in the midst of a tempest. Mr. Cleveland will enter upon the administration of the government entrenched in the af fections of the American people. With wisdom matured by experience he will make no great mistake. Knowing that there can not be a Democratic admin istration with Repubiicans in office, such changes will be made as will comport with the national honor, the good of the service, the interests of the people and the success of true Democ racy. New Berne Journal. The students of the University of North Carolina have resolved: "In appreciation of the services of the man who deliberately surrendered the pres idency to instruct the people in the correct principles of government, and especially of taxation ; who preferred to teach the people rather than to rule them; to send ten delegates to the in auguration of President Cleveland, and earnestly request all colleges and universities to unite in a grand student demonstration in honor of the great political teacher." A wag walked into a crowd of Third party people gathered at a store in this county an evening or two ago and exclaimed, "What did I tell yen! I'm just from town, Cleveland's i.'-cted and cotton is 9 cents!" " How a. out peanuts?" one of the Weaverites m liciously inquired. The wag was tqual to the occasion. "Mr. Cleveland says he's afraid to touch peanuts yet ; they are too green for little Ruth." Tar boro Southerner. The world never knows what loud prayers some men can offer until they are called upon to pray for the sins of their neighbor. Take Simmons Liver Regulator after your dinner. It prevents dyspepsia and indigestion. There is one day in the week to go to church, and seven to love thy neighbor as thyself. Despondency, caused by a diseased liver, can be avoided by taking Simmons Liver Iiegu lator. ALL READY FOR THE NEW YEAR! PhHv , IL JUJL! nl) lUAlUMUiU lUXi MILL UlAit True to its past record, COOPER'S WAREHOUSE will continue to stand for the FARMERS' INTEREST, guaranteeing to every man rich and poor, old and new cus tomer alike the Best Attention, HIGEST PRICES and Fair Treatment. "EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALLSPECIAL PRIVILEGES TO NONE," Is the platform we stand on this Campaign for the Farmers' Tobacco. It is a well established fact that for the past 19 years COOPER HAS SOLD MORE FARMERS' TOBACCO THAN ANY OTHER HOUSE IN THE STATE. There has been a cause for this. It is Hard Work, Prompt Service, Honest Dealing and Satisfactory Prices. The moral is plain : Always sell your tobacco where it will pay you best. Do not allow persons who are interested in other markets or houses to mislead you by their "pie crust promises," but go to that house and market where your tobacco will bring you the MOST NET MONEY. The testimony of thousands of patrons is in favor of COOPER'S as the place. By an advantageous change in schedules, Farmers along the Wilmington & Wel don Railroad, can now leave home early in the morning, come to Henderson, sell their Tobacco upon the Livest Market in North Carolina or Virginia, and return home the same day. Personal attention given to the sale of every pile of your Tobacco. Quick sales and prompt returns made on day of sale. Highest Prices guaranteed at all times. Hogsheads furnished. Tobacco nicely graded. Thanking my many friends for their very liberal patronage in the past and promising to spare no efforts to serve them acceptably and to protect and promote their interests in future, soliciting a continuation of the same, I AM, VERY TRULY, WANTED! NAMES! FOR 200,000 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION, Published at Atlanta. Ga. THE PARMER'S FRIEND, A HOME C031PANIOJ. Has already 156,000 subscribers The largest circulation of any weekly newspaper in the world. THEGKEAT SOITHE UK WEF.KLV. Its Agricultural Department is the best in the land. Its Women's and Children's columns are of unusual domestic interest. Its special features cost more money than is paid by any ten Southern papers combined for general reading matter. Its news columns cover the world. Bill Arp writes for it. lr. Talmagc preaches for it. Joel Chandler Harris (Uncle Remus), Wallace p. Reed and Frank L. Staunton are regularly employed by it. A. M. Weir (Sarge Plunkett) has a weekly letter. 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Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 16, 1893, edition 1
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