0 A Good Advertisement A Clean, Attractive Paper That is r ail all over Mruros liui iions for I host- n ln ust its advert isiiiej minimis. Such a p.ipt r is the ll. ii- lersoil (iol.li 1.1 A I . The proof of the claim is ill lhetsl thereof. Columns open to lutli In lit ver ami t-keptie. ii Are You One of Them? In n live, progressive paper, tliat has n, diameter, circulation, influ ence and the resp-ct of itn readers, comes nearer producing ,-eult.i than any other method. It is worth your while to consider Hi" ioi.i Lkak When You Want Results I - mt sags- TME Tiifl SIMS IF THE BOLD LEAF ARE PPJMTED THIS WEEK, A gnrY PES TO YOU WITH TE S!lT OF DUB iwI?lBi" " VOL. XIII. - HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1894. Xo7 A New Danger. ..-rcMt i:niLrrr threatens all o'er the -' pl" ., the South. An evil tiiat is steadily growing, and unli-ss checked will cause threat misery and suffering. Liver Medicines, called by all t, , the druggist to be handed to th people when they call I'm- Si m n ons Liver Regulator, lie ware! There never has li.-en more than one Simmons Liver Regulator on the mar ket. Take nothing else. The person who tries to persuade you that anything else is just ilie same is not to be relied upon, nor is the dealer to be trusted who tries to sell you another article in its stead. You know what Simmons Li-r Regulator is, because it! i- has done von good. No;! . . , -. , - . . i ilmi In- deceived into trying anvthing else. Wait until the Old l'riend. Simmons Liver Regulator, has failed you, then will be t ime enough to t iy s -UK-thing else. Remem ber, Simmons Liver Regula tor is what you want. It is put e.p only by . H. Zeilin & Co., and a Red Z is on every package. I o A Dl CT O ' C HAIR BALSAM Clcantst'S anil bautt!iea the hair. 1'roinotef a liixurmnt growth. Never Fails to Bestore Oray Hair to its Youthful Coloi-. Curt m-ulp (iiMHM Jt a. hmr lulling. r r I 1-arkf r CiinKer Tonic. U nr. s 1 ,. nnii. W.nk l.iinsr., Ihl.ihlv, Iii.liK-"!""'. 1 1 "' 1 "" tU- HINDERCORNS. ;n "jy : "',rv7TlVr n'T i - m n 1 Have Something to Tell You. No Long-Winded ARGUMENT NEEDED HERE. Clothes, Shoes and Hats AJRE THE CHEAPEST AND BEST THE LEAD 1 That tinuall v is where we are con strix ing to he. sjmr.- ri'tl on h the approbation will ot our many and srexul will ot ctistomers. And you will find us - riht there" when it comes to carrying a choice ami iresh line oi We ai Fancy Groceries, I I SIC. IK IN CANNED GOODS, Tobacco, Ciprs, Snuff, &c, &c. We have also a select stock ot the purest and best LIQlOPiS. Pure N. G. Corn Whiskey a Specialty. Our Motto The Best is none too trood tor our cus tomcrs. Our Policv To sell at the Lowest Living Prices. Give us a call. JOS. T. JONES & CO., O'NEIL BLOCK, Hr.NDKRsox, - N. Carolina. A BASE SLAXDERER." A PICTURESQUE LIAR IS THIS FELLOW. A Sorry Cuss Writes About North Carolina and the South Why Don't He Pull up and Leave His Going Would be a Happy Riddance. r Charlotte Observer. 1 Some weeks ago we copied from the Worcester, Mass., Sv, a generous, kindly article in praise of the South and in compliment to North Carolina in particular urging Northern in vestors to come to this State instead of going West. The Sy has had a reply to its kindly editorial, and it comes from North Carolina. It is appended herewith, caption and all : A WOltDUF PliOTKST. A VAXKKK IX NOKTll CAKOLIXA WHO KIXWS TIIINCS l.'XI'LKASAXT. ItALKicu, X. C, Sept. 5, 1894. To t hk Emtoii ok tiik Si'v : The Southern papers are copying an article from you recommending Northern people to go to the South for homes, uinl particularly to North Carolina. I can not believe that you are intested in misleading your own people. You may have been down in this country as a visitor or on an editorial excursion ; in which case I can understand how pleased you were with the slick hospitality and the loud protestations of love for the Northern people. Now, my friend, do not think such an experience falls to the lot of the Northern people who settle here. I have been here for 10 years, and know whereof 1 speak. 1 at lirst thought I could declare my political sentiments freely- I am a Republican. It was not long before I was classed with the ' niggers," and my family and myself were called "carpet baggers." I was soon aware of the fact that I had brought my wife and children among a people who are narrow-minded, iniserlj', and penurious, and who hate all North ern people. Our people are looked upon as legitimate piratical pre)-, and it is not considered vicious to skin a Yankee out of everything he has if it can be done. A Yankee can have no political standing in the South he must drop his politics if he comes here to live. This is true of all the Sout vn States. I have been in nearly all of them. 1 know, too, that many thous ands of good, intelligent and honorable Northern people came to the South to live right after the war. 1 can truth fully say that (J0 per cent, ot them went back North as soon as they could get money enough to pay their way, and not one per cent, of them took li.u k ten per cent, of what he took South with him. Thcie is no place in the South for Northern people; there is no welcome except t the ear with a hope of getting Mime Yankee money. Millions of Yankee money is buried in the South, and there it will remain. I know the people from the most im portant political and business autocrats to the meanest white trash and the ignorant negro. The native Republicans are not as friendly to Yankees as the KuKlux Democrats. Head " A Fool's Krrand" aud you will see the position of the unfortunate Northern men in the South Judge Tourgee was a prophet. lie foretold it alf. Now, for (Jod's sake don't lend your influence to send your neighbors South to be harrassed and persecuted. 1 talk from an experience which 1 want my fellow Northern citizens and friends to know. As to politics, we have no Republican party in this State now. Since 1.SS2 there has been nothing but a machine, used by some native white trash Re publicans and trading negroes to get olliee with. This machine recently met in Stale convention and joined the l'opulisis and political anarchists. So now the disgrace which heretofore attached to Republicanism through the senrvv set that controlled the Federal patronage is no more. 1 If you want to be true to your peo- I pie tell them to keep their persons 1 and their money out of the South. ' I hope you will find it agreeable to I publish this. 1 can go into details with convincing facts if my position is as- ' sailed. S. I The first question that presents itsclt to the reader of the forgoing is, Why docs Mr. 'S. persist in living among such a people? If he has been here tor io years he must know that they arc not going to change their character, and that things arc not going to improve for him or his family. When we hear a man abusing the locality ot his nativity or adoption, the locality in which he lives, we always wonder why he does not get out. That is the only rational thing for him to do. It would be idle for S. to reply that he has gotten too poor to go away. The time has not yet come in North Carolina when a sub scription can not be raised to get transportation out of the State for a man who talks or writes about it as he does, if he wants to leave. The next question is as to the facts. Are they as S. represents them? No honest Northern man who is living in North Carolina, behaving himself as becomes a good citizen and prosecuting a legitimate business will say so. There are hundreds, thousands ot such citizens in the State. Many oi the most prosperous and respected citizens of this good city of Charlotte are Northern men and Republicans. They are foremost in business matters and they and their families are at the top of the social ladder. They hold their political views with as much tenacity and assert them with as much boldness as any Southern Democrat here holds and asserts his, and are not ostracised in business or society on account of them. Northern men come to North Carolina to look out investments and often buy property without their politics being known or considered, and they are as tree afterwards to either keep them to themselves or assert them as they choose to be. Everybody knows about the genus carpet-bagger who swooped down on us here after the war and who worked politics and inflamed the passions of the black people for what he could put in his pockets. He was hated and his memory is a stench, but no one thinks now of calling a Northern settler a carpet-bagger any more than he thinks of calling him a Hottentot. The presumption is that he comes to make a citizen and to earn a legitimate living, and this presumption stands until he himself negatives it. If a man came here and set about at once to run Slate or local politics, he would probably find that the public did not approve him and society here would not be very congenial, but this would apply whether he came from the North or the South, from Maine, California, South Carolina or Virginia, and whether he was a Republican or Dem ocrat. But it is not true that a North ern Republican must come here and play shut-mouth about his politics, or apologize for them, in order that he may live in peace and be respected, and every one ot them in the State knows it. As to what S. has to say about the Republican party as it exists in North Carolina, we have no comment to make beyond this : that there are many better men in it than he evidently is, and this is not to be construed as meaning that we have any other than a very poor opinion of it. A. Household Treasure. I). W . Fuller, of ('ana joliarie, N. Y., says that lie always keeps I)r. Kind's ew Dis covery in the house and his family has always found the very best results follow its use; that he would not be without it, if procurable. O. A. Iykeniati, Druggist, Catskill, N. Y., says tha't Dr. King's New Discovery is undoubtedly the best eolith remedy; that he has used it in his family fur eight years, anil it has never failed to do ail that is claimed for it. Why not try a remedy so long tried and tested ? Trial bottles free at Melville Dorsey's drug store. Regular size oOe. and LOO. The Best House in the Best Market in Corps of Buyers Largely Increased -o- We are in the field in to stimulate us, we have prosperity of our friends And not on any past record, while OURS IS THE VERY BEST. Every man who patronizes our House shall be THE BEST MAN AND GET THE BEST POSSIBLE PRICES, and no condition or trick shall hinder us in this resolve. If you want to sell a load of Tobacco our advice shall be honest and freely given, and OUR PRICES THE BEST. If you want a WAGON OR BUGGY we defy competition. " Old Hickory" Wagons and Tyson & Jones' Buggies speak for themselves. If you want the Best Accommodations for Man and Beast, the very Best Attention for Your selves and the Heartiest Welcome while here, together with the FATTEST POCKET BOOK when you go home, OUR HOUSE IS THE PIACE, Come ajntid See ! Youb EPME3SrXS, Harris, Gooch & Company. Hard To m-et the present Hard ! I?V1PC TinirK on KariiiT I t i 1 1 O will sell to fanners direct, for Fertilizers. c&sli. .om1 t-t-r;iiizers at the Lo treat V bolesale Priren. vr fa.. far rVwn !nr?j-in And Pe&ncta. &t S13tO Trucking C'rns nd Potatoes t l.oO Onta. Tobacco ar.d Fruits - 16-H A? Mi i 1:.. ..f P.:t .. h Kaia:t.Sc!ph.-.t PoU'h. B.w BU"-k. " le s,kl 1 1,1 i1 e-a& small i)uhW-. Jx-iid two 3c nmr i r j W.!. I'll" JIH. .V , Fertilizer .Vmi:i .rr. -ulmre .iltl. Perfect Fitting SljirtT What tveru wen Dressed Man wants Bny i (MM- M Invented and Maimfacturd bv G. 1). Emhmie Tie Finest and Cheapest Dress Skirt in the Known World. This wonderful invention iives a Uosom handsome shape and latest styV ; and is so placed upon the shirt that it can be worn a week without a break or wrinkle. Made from 2100 Linen, Wamsutta Muslin and bosom lined with heavy Butcher Linen. EVERY BOSOM GUARANTEED TO OUTWEAR THE SHIRT, it fits perfectly and gives constant corn fort, lhe set ol the bosom and neck-band prevents any disagreeable feelihp;. In everv point it is the BEST OF ALL SHIRTS MADF.' Try one and you will nev er wear any other. Beware of imitations. None genuine without the EIGHMIE TRADE MARK. New stock just in. The Stainback Company, Ssolo AnnXn lor Vanrn County For the Greatest Improvement in a Shirt ever Produced by Man. LARGE STOCK OF . Hats, Siloes, Underwear, Dry Goods, sc., AT LOWEST PRICES. OftAIIAIU HARRIS, GOOCH & CO., Owners and Proprietors, Henderson, North Carolina. full.force, and having the most flattering successes from the past years no eye to turn backward but every energy shall be turned to the future and ourselves. We shall depend for our prosperity on . mt? u H 1 1 t - - mJSSn& of Bull.TiU. Kmc ill.. KacrV J -OW" "When I bri Sir i'?r.itt I oouid not: Bfo7T. Afler. Id. .:,Y wir. Tht KnapiCTKI fip- Weight Hi '.bt 195 Ita S6 nrea a lBrem;t of Smonlbs' trrt-; BnsU. 46 m. 37 in. Ilia. m,t. I n 11 iM o-w btaf. iMj WaM... ) (a. in. il i:. md Mir. -r all i,rm: !v fntnds art .Hipf ST in. Ka. in m-vr-i. WU1 chrrft': rcr!v c tr)T!iri with itamp mclowd. PA'TIESTS TREATED 6Y MAiL. confidential llamlin. K Sunif. Scad ( emu in itamn lot parunUart Is M.a.W.F.Simt.M1CKEISnUUL6lrEiH.IU- It- J. Hjitit.l. 1.1 1 1 . . ,i"irtWk" ' 1 it own bom;. mi:al SHKLL-, tOKN. FLOUK. X.-, in the Celehratert CC nil HAND MILL, PraM'r'" aJ.UU lOO ier cent, more made in keep ing poultry. Also l'OWHIS MILLS AM) FARM Fi:i:i 3IILLS. Circulars sent on application. WI LSOX BROS., Kaston, Pa. mm LfL K9 CTiicks out c.f 159 fprt!:e et:;s. iiiarariif3 absolutely self-rwjuUiTiii ; arid to hatch fully ou pe-rcf-ni. of f r l.V fiitcs.or montrv rttfurul'tl. l:ason- able in price. St-If-r'.-irulat:::; Brooucra. beuU 4 eta. Vir CjJalu.-iiH. tt itirnonia!.-. vie. j Vi. M. SHEER 4. 3RO-, Quincy. III. f-f . fgrSSjSsr Record TOO percent. : DARLING. A little maid with sweet blue eyes Looked upward with a shy surprise Because I asked her name ; Awhile she bent her golden head. While o'er her face soft blushes spread Like some swift rosy flame ; Then looking up. she' softly said, " My name is Mamma's Darling." " Tell me your mother's name, my dear," And stooping low 1 paused to hear The little maid seemed musing ; "Why mamma's name's like mine you know. But just because we love her so. We call her Mamma Darling." " Tell me your papa's name," I cried Tl , little m n i ,1 o n.si- vvAttr I " My papa V Don't you know ? ' 11" i , . . . : .. . it1A i..t, 1 : 1 iiy, eei ruuve uie uau) uieu Mamma and 1 have always tried To chear him from his sorrowing, And my Mamma and I love best To call him Papa Darling" What did you call the baby, dear ?" The answer came quite low but clear : " The babv oh, I wonder what They callliini now in Heaven. But we had only one name here ; And that was Baby Darling." Swift years Hew by, and once again That little maid so tender Stood by my side, but she had grown Like lilies, tall and slender. This time, twas I, that called her name, And swift the blushes grew like flame At rosy mist of morning. 1 clasped her in my arms and kissed My tender-hearted Darling. How's This? We offer one hundred dollars reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., prop'rs, Toledo, Ohio. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney lor the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in in all business transactions.'and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, wholesale druggists, To ledo, Ohio. Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, wholesale druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. One of the attractions at the State Fair will be the cyclorama of the bat tle of Gettysburg. Those who have seen the great painting pronounce it a magnificent work of art anJ a realis tic scene. Having seen a similar one we do not hesitate to say those who visit the fair should not fail to see this. It is both interesting and instrutctive to look upon. All drue;ist3 puaranteo Pr. Miles Pain Pills to Mop Headache. "One cent a dose." the State! Ample Capital at Their Command o- pi rnrmn Tri rniinur- git tixoiniu i uxrnunt Pold oatrijtht, norwnt. nortryaltT- Adapted f . to City. ViHaor Coontry- Ndd in ry home, whop, wore and office. O reaUwrt wstvma lfnre ana i-t wmi trr on eartn. Ageau makf from 5 Co $S4 frrr dar. One in a residence means a ami to ail the neighbor. Fine inrametstit. no 7. work Anywhere, any distance. Completeready for j ijrim. Warranted. A moser maker. Writ 1 WW. P. Harrison Co.. Clerk 10, Colimbu. Q il c jn RECORD BREAKING. I WHAT THE YEAR HAS WIT NESSED. Some Marvelous Records Made by Athletes, Horses, Steamships, Ac Are we Not Ahead of Feudal Times in This Respect as well as Others? Baltimore Sun. This year will be memorable in the annals of athletics, sports and physical achievements generally for the raising of the old standards of performance. Records have been broken right and left. When the trotting season began Nancy Hanks's record of 2.04 had stood unbeaten for a long time. Alix has brought it down to 2.0334- On the pacing track Robert J. has lowered the record to 2.01 '3, beating Mascot's previously fastest mile by 2' seconds. Directum has made a new record for two-years-olds by pacing a mile in 2.0734. Fantasy has made a new trotting record for four-year-olds by covering a mile in 2.07. The wonderful j)erformance of Flying Jib at Chillicothe, Ohio, last Saturday, when, hitched to a running mate, he paced a mile in 1.591-2 is tne crown ing track feat of the season. This feat is made still more astonishing by the fact that the last half mile was paced in 583 seconds. The best previous pacing record made by a horse hitched to a running mate was that of Westmont who, in 1SS4, at Chicago, covered a mile in 2.01 3. Robert J. still holds the pacing record, but Flying Jib's work has made it probable that in the near future a mile in two minutes or less will be paced by a horse running without a mate. Nearly all the old mile turf records have been broken this season, and we must not forget in this brief review of it that Ducat, at Sheepshead I5ay, on August 28 last, ran a mile in 1.39 carrying 113 pounds the best one mile time ever made on a circular track. Passing from fast horses to swift men on wheels, we find nearly all the previous bicycle records have been sur passed in 1894, and probably the next month will break them still more. J. S. Johnson has made a half-mile spin against time in 54 seconds. One mile has been flown over by J. P. Bliss in a fraction over 1.52. With standing starts N. Duller has cycled two miles in 4.04 4-5 ; while J. S. Johnson has spun three miles in 6.26 3 5, four miles in 8.38 3-5, and five miles in 10.48 4-5, E. C. Bald has made a mile in competition in 2.05 4-5, F. J. Titus has covered 26 miles and 1,489 yards in one hour, spinning against time. And the best previous twelve, hour competitive race time has been beaten by Walters in London, who made the astonishing run of 258 miles in that time, oi 2iy4 miles on hour. Many other new athletic world's records have been made within the past month. The best world's running time for 300 yards has been lowered to 31 3"5 seconds. The farthest throw of a 56 pound weight has been in creased to 35 feet 10 inches. The best time of a 120 yard hurdle race has been lowered from 15 seconds to T5 3"5 seconds. The fastest time for swimming 100 yards was 1 minute and 12 seconds until September 15 last, when it was reduced to a fraction below 1 minute and 9 seconds. A new swimming record for 880 yards has also been made for the world, the old one was 0 3 5 seconds slower. The greyhounds of the sea, as c Atlantic steamers are not unfitly callrd have also been contributing to the record-breaking of this phenomenally fast season. The Cunarder Lucania made her last passage from Queens town to New York, or, to speak more exactly, Irom Daunt's Rock to Sandy Hook 2,782 miles in 5 days 7 hours and 48 minutes, or at an hourly average spted of 21.77 knots. This beats the best previous record, which was also made by the Lucania 5 days 8 hours 49 minutes. This ocean-racer now holds the best records x the eastward as well as the westward run, her east ward time being 5 days 8 hours 38 minutes. The American liner JVew York has broken the best previous record of time between S uthampton j and New York, which she hac. steamed, 1 over a course of 3,030 miles, in 6 days ', 7 hours and 14 minutes. The best j run to Southampton from New York is still that made by the Hamburg American liner J:uerst Bismark, which 1 t 1 made it in o aays 1 1 nours 44 minutes. Truly we live in a rapid age, and if we have not yet reached " the place that kills," it seems likely that the extreme limit alike of human energy and endurance and of the power of machinery and steam is in sight. As we see from these records, the carefully bred and trained horses can pace a mile in less than two minutes, and yet the trained man on his steel horse can beat him by nearly eight seconds. Neither animal nor human flesh and blood can be expected to go much farther in the way of overcoming the obstacles of space and distance and enlarging the possibilities of time. It is no longer a debatable question whether in physical powers the best men of this age excei the best men of ancient times. There is no well authenticated record of a Grecian athletic feat that has not been beaten by the athletes of this nineteenth century. leader's swiia across the s swiu across the., ,, .l J,.- far outdone when the ; handle can be sola for. Helle-spout was late Captain Webb swam across the Straits of Dover from England to France. lxid Byron had already 1 eandei's feit. The Sjurtan lis Gripped dead mi com pleting ;. . v ..: 2 m.!i, ind :t wis thought l . ): 11 it surprising th.u he should, as 1 lis distance was regarded as very 1 i-i. We have no record of the speed at which I .id as ran, but as to the distance covered it was trilling compared with the distances tfiat many of our running athletes cover. That the modern man is of a bier breed scientific inquiry Ins nude certain. The size of the heroes of c1js.ic days, like most other things about them, was mythical. It was only in statuary that Ajix and the other large. limbed men of antiquity ever had existence. Many years ago an old-fashioned tournament was pro jected in England, and the corslets and greaves of the mailed men of the Plantagenet period were pulled out ol the closets of the old castles to be used by the modern descendants of the " brave knights of old." It was at once discovered that the nineteenth century Englishman was much to tall in stature and large in girth to get into them. And thereby perished the long-cherished fiction that the human race was physically degenerat ing, and that the men of to day were ' not the men their forefathers were." We may, as we look over all that has been done on land and sea in lowering the racing records, alike ol men, horses and ships, feel that we are indeed the heirs of all the ages in the foremost files of time." We have faster runners, stouter swimmers, surer marksmen, better rowers and yatchmen, finer horsemen than ever were known to the Europe of feudal times or the Athens of Homeric days. We have better ball-players, too and Baltimore the best of them all. At all events, we have the pennant. HUle May Bentley j Born a Genius Disease Threatens to Cut Short a Noble Career Sut Hood's Sarsaparilla Restores Ccod Health. Llllio May IiitlryU an accomplished rlocii donist ami ii:.t;u.il l;rit iMaki-r i,f only i:! year f age. She is the only cliiM temperance JocU arer before tli public. Her cenim, however, lid not exempt her from an attack of a discaso if the blood. Jlcr own words best tell the story: " C. I. Hoed & Co., Lowell, Mass.: " I heartily Join with the many thousand that are recommending Hood's Sarsaparilla. I had tcen troubled from infancy with srathrrliiKs In tho bead. 1 was compelled to leave Hchool uimhi the doctor's advice. He thought It was the only thlutf to save my life, but I Continued to Crow Worse. I was persuaded finally by a friend to try Hood's Sarsap.irilla. The use of one bottle acted ef- Hood'ssP"Cures fectively upon the Mood and I began to ImproTe. After the use of three bottles tho gathering ceased and I am cured of my former trouble. I owe my life and will always remain a true friend to Hood's Karvaparilla." J.11.1.IK Mav Hrnt l.KV, Shelby ville, Indiana. Cet IIOOD'H. HOOd's Pills act e.:sily. yet promptlj fllucuUy, cm the liver and bowel, a-c au4 .COLD IN HEAD. ELY'S CREAM BALM. Quickly absoilici!, 'lcaiiscs the Nasal ravages. Allays J'ain and Inflammation, HeaNtln' Ntrcs. Protects the; Membrane from additional ('old, kcMore the N-nse of Taste and Jmim-II. DIUIXTIONri KOK I M.N;; ( HI AM IIAI.M. Apply a particle f the. Halm well 1 j into t!i- nostrils. After a moment draw a strong breath through the nose. I'm; three times a day, alter meals preferred, and Im--fore retii idg. I'l ice ." cents at druggists or by mail. Y.IA' liKOTIl KU .-; Wan en st.. New Yuik. TEACHER 5i A IIIO!ll 11. P. W. V.'ANTKW 'n ecli count v for ill-work. Will i.mv i 7.ek-!. r ,'. .. . !'. .x 17(17. Philadelphia, pu. l;0K THIN ri;orLi:. It makes thin out the figure. KKMhDV f-.i ri-ni- and f;iCes 1 1 til ; :nnl found I is the .VIWIIAIM) lelUiliei, containing (.nnriiiilerit Absolutely II firm !-. I'l ice, piepaid, 1 per lox, '! for ?. Pamphlet, " HOW JO ,EV FAT," lie, The THINACritA i'AK, 0i:i llioadway, New York. Notice. To Consumers of Coal I am liver now prepared to le COAL AND WOOD. Will keep on hand a ok! supply suitable for ail pur poses. I have been selling COAL here for 10 years and can instruct you to the best kinds for stoves, grates and steam purposes. All orders received at the store will have prompt attention. Yard be tween the depots. Prices as low as the jiualitv ff Coal I J. W.GREGORY, Henderson, N. C. CATARRH THNACURA

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