Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Oct. 28, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
;u-r:i'i"-i' Unrigs Success., , , -; advertise in the (ioi,i ;.;.w , is shown by its well gfi liili il ;nl i'i t isinncolumus SENSIBLE BUSINESS MEN not continue to spend ood money whore no ... !, . i -i urns an- ween. Tuat is Proof that it Pays Them. As an Advertising Medium The (Un.ii Leak t-tands at the head .f Q llf HSpHM IS in tins s tion of tin- ICIMIOUS BRIGHT TOBACCO DISTRICT The most wide-awake and MiiT-sfiil business men use iU columns with the highest Satisfaction and Profit to Themsel?esJ H!DB. MANNING, Publisher. cc Carolina, Carolina, Heaven's Blessings ttzeistzd Her. 77 I SUBSCRIPTI08 $1.50 Cub. VOL. XVI. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1897. NO. 40. t lEJl o Ayer's k Cherry Pectoral , ir.i. -re tbau other inedi ,. j.ut then it cures more i '.j.c r medicines. ,t i f tin; cheap cough ...::. merely palliate; :d local and teinpo n : f. Ayer'3 Cherry .'..c not patch up cr , c. It cures. ' i Tisa , 1'ronchitis, Croup, .:v.- Cough, and every : . i,::h, will, wheu other fjil, yield to Aycr's Cherry Pectoral Ii i.tts a record of 50 yrtre of euros. S.!!i'l lor the "Curobook" -iri'i. J. C. Ay r Co., Lowell, Mass. o j Perfect I Healths Is Han's Greatest Blessing. J 'in ii r . t'i-i t'i'ct health it is neces- a ;y th.it Hi" l.looil lie pure, the M-ii-m I'm- tniui poisonous perms f m In r. iittaiy taints. As a perfect I'.I.OOD PURIFIER Mrs. Job Person's Remefly ? k till- t-vrrv requirement. Jt is tlie " j;iimi,i cleanser of the system and i !ii':.'i the blood extant. w t Scrofula, Old Sores, Rheumatism, Eczema, Tetter, I i :ri.i ,u .liM-uM-s f the Blood and f Sa:i t.-a.tilv yield to its treatment. J V vi disappoints. It has cured A ' ii-i it will cure you. A trial a will convince. Write for testimo a miN l'listntlice and Laboratory K.n KKi.i.. N . C. f N'i.i in Henderson by the Dorscy Drug Co., t I Mii I II. Thomas, J anj W. V. Parker. FRANCIS A. MACON, Surncon Dentist, HKM li'.KSON, NORTH CAROLINA Allueik in operative and mechanical t'-'ii-tiv. t charge for examination. ":!: Ir. l'.oyd's old rooms, over 1 i Mitchell's store. J ii. i;uiim;i:ks. Al'lOUNKY AT LAW, HKMIKliSON. - - JS. O "lif-: in Harris' law iniilding neai '"lift li'U-e. J yt. r. s. ii Kins, DENTIST, U'.;!.ksoN, - - N. C. UTor.c- over K. . Davis' store, Main f-.-r lan.l-a. lil. !.;. V nirlUh Diamon.l ItrnnJ. rENHYROYAL PSLLS r-iV r1glnol ol Only Genuine P -1. &tMv rt'ltatilas. udii i ) t --i.'inl tor iVtirhrtra Fn-tfuH Ih Vij3i- -i. -. .i Hran,i in Ked ami ti-li Dtfial V7 .. ir aied with bine rihNti. I ukC I ftf in.t imitatumw. At UraK'.t. or bcti3 4p 1 l-i nn; i fcr i-:irtifulr!l. t-nnn-mals : i T O "llt iU-r for 1 u.Ht ft," tn IttUr. t.v retam - r hi. -hcutttfMlCo.aMatUn 11 nee, MATCHING MATERIAL ..- .! in.,.,-n,. nml, .itnkinp; which often " ' - n l.iilnre. and something ' h a tn.-iteh" is never satisfac '.v. I li.-r.-'s one t hat von cannot ELECTRO-SILICON I Ml. I A MOt S 5..Vi:R POLI5H. ' ' !:. r,- w iiontl,;-r like it. Nearly ' ' i i"i- k. , i. -'s use it. A trial 'l : l':':tV ?.,!!! I 'Will TO ALL "!I wh'- llu'n thc secret of ' 1 - - il -ilei w;ue is vours. Simy send - a-.-ji.-.s on a p.wtal card to U K ( N . ;m cliff Street. New Yofk. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clenj,t and Unutifiet the hilr. l"n.mote lnxuiianl powth. Never Fails to E eat ore Gray Hair to Its Youthful Color. Curc rlp d.wn hair taUitt are subject to peculiar ills. Tha ight remedy for babies' ills especially worms and stomach disorders is F rev's Vermifuee has cured children for sn vo-ir 't iilns. Look about the ills aud Uio 'eUiCdy. Oi.a bottle mailed for 25 nt. i. 4 S. FULY, Baltimore, 314. i AN AUTUflN MORMINQ. (Hattie Whitney, in Woman's Home Companion.) 1 lie frost's aIeam where tlie dew was dripping Just in the space of a day atone the rose-deep edge ef the sun is sii through mallow mcUi f n, , nigh mallow ipping dawn. autumn bong of neither the thrush nor the linnet Kises and sweeps in a broken flow: only the breeze on a sweetbrier spinnet. Shivers a pensive adagio. lhe frost s agleam on the path 1 follow .Scarlet velvet the witch-hazel spreads' Adown the slope of the old mill hollow. Where dodder tangles its lustrious threads. What is there left of the summer's story 1 he faded roses, the daisies lost- n hat of her opulent glow and glory Quenched in the film of an autumn'f rost? Keep in the fringe of its willow cover, Where the javelin-points of sun are thrust. The stream that sung to a summer lover hclioes the song of an ended trust. In this State we need a measure re quiring the acts of the Legislature to be published in the newspapers imme diately after that body adjourns. As it is people live under laws concerning whose provisions they are ignorant, besides it will teiid to educate the public on the laws under which they live to have them published in their newspapers. The Charlotte News perhaps does not give the gentleman more than his simple due when it says: One member of the present State administration seems to be trying to do his duty, and he is Mr. C. H. Me bane, State Superintendent of Public Instruction. The public schools should be entirely free from all partisan influ ence, and Mr. Mebane seems to be striving to this end. It is gratifying to find something to commend in this administration, and fairness and hon esty when they do come out shine like a light in the darkness against the gen eral background of incompetence and inal -ad m i n ist ration. HIT HIM AGAIN. It. O. Burton may uot be able to do the Jekyll and Hyde act, but he knows how to occupy the dual positiou of railroad attorney aud attorney for the State's railroad commission. Caucas ian. Yes, R. O. Burton is a lawyer of great learniug and ability, so his known ability secured him the attor neyship of the State in the case of State vs Wilmington & Weldon rail road, and it was won, and now the property of said W. & V. railroad is on the tax books as is other property. We are proud that he will represent us ir. the courts. Haxseeder. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The hest salve in the world lor cuts Hruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Kheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures l'lles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 2-3 cents per box. For sale by Melville I )orsey, druggist. PRESS AND POLITICIANS. In many quarters newspapers act upon the idea that they are published for politics and politicians only. This is very largely the case with the coun try press of this State, where local in terests, possibilities of development and struggling industries are too often neg lected for the political industries which they assiduously cultivate, and for the interests of individual politicians, cliques or rings, which they consider themselves bound to promote. In these newspapers the single topic con tinually harpen upon is that which af fects the political fortunes of some in dividual "boss or set ot "wire-woric-ers" who bank together to "rule the roost" and control public affairs to the detriment or neglect of those material interests which should have-first con sideration. Newspapers must, necessarily, have much to do with politics, but when they convert themselves into specifi cally political "organs" they sacrifice the larger function, ot the newspaper press and limit their influences simply to the small circle in which they move and have their being. All the larger and more useful possibilties are sacri need or neglected, lhey are con cerned only to keep where they may enjoy the "pap" that flows from offi cial sources which they may help to create. They do r.ot concern them selves for the business interests of town, county. State or nations, lhey are simply partizan vehicles, which, as in dependent thought progresses, must move backward and drop by the way side, giving place, perhaps, to another set of political organs, which, in turn, will be subject to the same vicissitudes, whereas if the proper course had been pursued of consulting the true interests of the community at large and its manifold material interests, they would have established themselves as useful, permanent, desirable influences. Goldsboro Headlight. Dr. King's New Discovery For Con sumption. This is the best medicine in the world for all Coughs and Colds and for Consumption Every bottle is guaranteed. It will cure and not disaouoint. It has no equal for Whooninsr Coueh. Asthma. Hay Fever, Pneumonia. Bronchitis, La Grippe, Cold in the Head and for Consumption. It is safe for all ages, pleasant to take, and, above all a sure cure. It is alwavs well to take Itr. Kind's New Life Pills in connection with Dr. Kinsr's New Discovery, as thev regu late and tone the stomach and bowels. We guarantee perfect satisfaction or return money. Free trial bottles at M. Dorsey's drujr store. Keeular size 50 cents and $1.00. The Southern Gentleman. PECULIAR CHARACTERISTICS OF A DIS TINCT TYPE. His Word as Good as His Bond Cour ageous and Chivalric by Nature He is the Very Soul of .Honor Woman a Superior Being in the Estimation of the True Southerner. (II. S. Canfield, in Chicago Times-ller-ald.) "No gentleman will wear a mus tache." That was thc dictum of Gen eral iMonford Wells, over whose juiet rest in the heart of Louisiana magno lias have drowsily nodded for many windless summers. He belonged to the old regime the clean-shaven re gime, the ante bellum regime, the slave holding regime, the aristocratic regime. Fors non mutual genius, said the Latin chance does not change the kind. His type exists in the South to-day. It is not anywhere else, and, most of all places, not on the stage. Looking odd times at the black mustached, swaggering caricature who treads the mimic-boards and says sah" and "suh," I long for three things: To kick the actor, to kick the dramatist and to find some man able and willing to tell the people who and what a Southern gentleman is. He is distinct enough to be paint edand I believe that his painting would pay. It is time that we had him as he is a creature essentially different from the buffoons of Hoyt or the sero-comic fiasco given us by Clay Clement. The Southern gentleman was, and is, a man above the middle height, with clear-cut features. As in ninety nine cases out of a hundred he has not a drop of foreign blood in his veins, he looks like a transplanted Englishman an Englishman modified by some centuries of climate and ethe rialized by a less commercial mode of life. Long contact with nature has made him a man of broad views and healthy instincts. He does not know the value of a dollar so well as he ought, but, to balance that defect, he is utterly unacquainted with the many shady ways of getting a dollar. He is well educated in a literary way and is not infrequent a linguist. He car ries himself unobtrusively and leaves the swagger to the negro out for a j Sunday holiday. He and the New Englander, who is his antithesis in many things, speak the best English to be found on this side of the Atlan tic. The accent is somewhat soft and slurring, and there is something too much of vowed elison, but it has a pleasing sound, and he does not burr his "r's" until they rattle like castan ets, as is the case in many parts ot the west. rhe Southern gentleman comes of agricultural stock. He is used to woods and fields and horses and dogs. He is devoted to the chase, and is a good shot. Except in cities he does not bestride the bicycle, but he sits in his saddle with a sure grace; he has the huntsman's seat toes in and he rides from the knee, not from the stir rup. Woodcraft he esteems as a noble craft, and the art of venery as one of the fine arts. His physicial and men tal appetites are born of the fresh air and they are sound. He has poetry in him, as what country-bred people have not? and he finds much of it in animated nature. The song of birds, the clear belling of the deer, the sad dening cry of the wild fowl in the night all speak to the soul of him. Though its liquid and varied notes have been familiar to him since infancy he is never tired of the mocking bird, a music that pours from green thrones through all the moonlit nights. Host, hostess and guests in a Southern home will frequently drop all conversation and move to the front verandah to listen to the wild trills and roulades and braruras of the matchless minstrel in gray. The Southern gentleman is honest. It is a boast handed from father to son that his word is as good as his bond, and surely there could be no prouder boast. All of his recent education in a commercial way has not been able to grind this out of him. Instances are not infrequent of the surrender of homesteads in payment of debts, in proof of which existed only verbal ob ligations. The homestead it should be remembered is protected from execu tion by law in every State of the South. The Southerner regards an execution proof debt as he regards a gambling debt one that must be paid at any sacrifice since it is not recoverable by Where the honor ot a t family is involved women sell their jewels to wipe out the obligation. Business is done by word of mouth. There are such things as promissory notes, but they are not common. I am soeakine here of the country commu nities and not of the iarge cities. There ; T,n marlfpH difference between the U X.J s business methods of Atlanta and Bos ton. Indeed, since the close of the war and the insetting of the immigration tide the South has been much com mercialized. The type has not changed. That would be a work of centuries. But methods of life and modes of thought have undergone modification. This may be better for the country at large. We hear much of the glory and beauty of the "new South." But I doubt that it is better for the upper classes of the people. A happier man than the old Southernor has never breathed. "Mark Twain" declares that Walter Scott is responsible for the civil war. He means that much reading of "Ivan hoe" and "The Talisman" made the young men mad. They dreamed of riding with visor down and lance in rest for the honor of the name and the rescue of beleagued damsels. He is mistaken. The popularity of Scotl was an effect not a cause. The poems and prose of the wizard of the North were popular because the Southerner is by birth and breeding chivalric. He was so before Scott was born and will remain so while the same blood is in him. At least, I hope he will. This chivalry finds its most noticeable out let in the Southerner's attitude to women. The female of his species is on a pedestal. Now and then in the old days she struggled bravely to get down, but he would not let her. He objects to the new woman, not because he fears her competition, but because he thinks she is not true to herself. The Southerner's feelings for women is a queer mixture of passion and respect. He regards her as something to be loved, to be cherished, to be protect ed. He cannot get over . the belief that she is fragile, and he cannot be convinced that she is able to with stand hard knocks. To him all women are pure until demonstrated otherwise, and they are to be treated with deep respect. They are made of finer clay, and are, in fact, a superior order of being. It is one of the strongest tributes to the worth of Southern motherhood that Southern sons grow up in this belief, and it never leaves them. If a man imprudently attempt to decry woman hood to a Southerner that Southerner's mind instinctively goes back to his mother and he is apt to enforce his disbelief with the strong arm. Mar- ' CUDTH PLACE J 5 6 7 & 9 O Wi23 W 756 I riages are very happy in the South and there are few divorces. Indeed, in the lower Carolina there is no such thing as divorce. Betrayals are rare. Suits for breach of promise are practically unknown. Invasions of the household seldom occur. A Southerner who sued a man for damages for alienating his wife's affections simply could not live in the country. In every Southern home stands the silent sentinel of the fireside the shotgun. This may be against the law, but it keeps things quiet. I suppose that some day we will have a Southern gentleman in drama and in literature. It ought to be easy to draw him, but the painter should for all that he has seen of Hoyt, or Clay Clement, or Augustus Thomas. We have had the true New Englander in books many times. We have had him on the stage. "Shore Acres" is a notable instance. We have had the true westerner, although Bret Harte is not to be credited with his creation. Let us hope for the true Southerner. There is a literary lead in the South ii some publisher or magazine editor has the skill and enterprise to mine for it. Nuggets of Gold. (Cumberland Presbyterian.) Jealousy is an inveterate foe to hap piness. It is not the largest coin that is always most valuable. One never knows Christ 'till he loses sight of self. Some men will exchange character if they have it for gold. Humility is the most beautiful crown ever worn by any king. He who lives nearest the cross will use the fewest hard sayings about his neighbor. Dr. Pierce'a Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. As True as Gospel. Vanity is a danger signal. Silence is sometimes slander. Silence is a short session devoted to unfinished business. Some people make music while oth ers dance their lives away. There are three crowns: The crown f the law, the crown of the priest hood, and the crown of royalty; but the crown of a good name is superior to i hem all. Nothing is so narrow, contracting, har-ning as always to move in the same groove, with no thought beyond what we immediately see and hear close around us. A good and wise man may at times be angry with the world, at times grieved at it; but be sure no man was over discontented with the world if he did his duty in it. The regeneration of the world will begin when humanity fully realizes that its humanity is divine, and that life in its true sense means simply and always divine life. Intoxicating drinks have produced evils more deadly, because more con tinuous, than all those caused to man kind by the great historic scourges of war, famine and pestilence combined. It is better to take Hood's S.irsaparilla than to experiment with unknown and un tried preparations. We know Hood's Sar sapai ilia actually and permanently cures Hood's Pills act easily and promptly on the liver and bowels. Cure sick headache. The wax tree flourishes in the Andes. Its product is said to be very similar to beeswax. In a year a horse will eat nine times his own weight, so will a cow, an ox six times and a sheep six times. Try, Try Again. (.Good Housekeeper.) pain in the side a For mustard plaster. For nervous spasm, a little salt dis- solved in the mouth. For hemorrhages, small doses salt. of For sickness of the stomach a cup of hot water. For an emetic, one teaspoonful of cround mustard in a cup of warm u water. For insomnia, a cloth wrung out of cold water at the back of the neck ror wind colic, peppermint essence in a little warm water. For stomach cramps ginger ale, or one teaspoonful of tincture of ginger and one half teaspoonful of soda in one-half a glass of water. To stop the bleeding of a cut, pow dered rosin. As soon as the wound ' feels feverish, wetting the cloth around it in old water. A lew weeks ago the editor was taken with a very severe cold that caused him to be in a most nmerable condition. It was undoubtedly a bad case of la grippe and recognizing it as dangerous he took immediate steps to bring about a speedy cure. From the advertisement of Cham berlain's Cough Remedy and the many good recommendations included therein, we concluded to make a first trial of the medicine. To say that it was satisfacto ry in its results, is putting it very mildly indeed. It acted like magic and the re sult was a speedy and permanent cure. We have no hesitancy in recommending this excellent Cough Remedy to any one afflicted with a cough or cold in any form. The Banner nf Liberty, Libertytown, Maryland. The 23 and 50 cent 6izes for sale by Dorsey Drug Co. Never waste your time; waste some body else's. KEEP your blood pure, your appe tite good, your digestion perfect by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, which has power to keep you WELL. Shocked at the Seaside. WHAT ONE SEES AT FASHIONABLE BATH ING PLACES. Truth Learned at Last Ladies Have Legs asWell as Some Other Ani mate and Inanimate Things A Dis covery flade Where Fair Ones are Wont to Sport With Neptune. (J . D. O. (frcm Atlantic City) in the Ar- Kansas l nomas Cat.) I am in deepest,dark-browned hair widower mourning for a lost ideal. All ray flags turned to the sugar trust or gold bug pirate hu;, are flying at half mast and melancholy crape flut ters in bannerets of woe from every doorknob of my saddened soul, over an irridescent romince departed. I have painted the rims of dropping ears with hearse-plumes, as symbols of a grief that cannot be comforted. A pall of such all-pervading blackness has come over me that the game chickens of progress fly screaming to roost at noonday wherever I pass, as though a total eclipse or a chunk of Egyptian night had struck them. Amid the vast, impenetrable gloom that walls and domes me in. a mile high stack of blind black cats in a coal cellar at midnight would gleam like a sun-lit snowdrift, and Erebus itself would seem a sacred white elephant newly kalsomined for the circus pa rade. One of the sweet and graceful illusions of a lifetime has vanished be yond recall. It has gone glimmering like a pot of gold at the rainbow's end, the fairy godmother, the forest born'princess, the honor of theJUnited States Senate, and the many other phantasms of sun-kissed happy youth happy because so ignorant, so full of faith and hope. My first day, my first hour at a fashionable seaside re sort has swept away forever. I was raised under the courtly old regime, which taught a boy that "la dies do not have legs" that "ladies float like seraphs, or glide like sylphs, or move like qtreens, but never walk, because they have nothing to walk with." From my little boyhood until the evil hour that brought me to one of these ocean shore wallowing places of black-guard fashion, these dainty and delicate myths were cherished ar ticles of my creed. I believed in them devoutly and as unquestionably as I once believed in the emptier myths of American statesmanship and unselfish patriotism. In all my globe-girdling peregrinations I had never learned any better or worse. I had seen bal lets or opera choruses, of course; but simple son of the wildwoodsand plains that I was I always supposed those stuffy-parts of modern music and drama, were artificial mere automat ic devices to piroquette and kick with. But now. alas! a lady. I have the Dead-sea fruit of knowledge, and I am so ashamed that I dare not look up without my sombrero over my face. I beat a beet blushing as I think how much I know I know. I am wiser tkan I was, but I am no happier and, I fear, no better. No legs! Lidies have no legs! Great centipedes and Black Crook kicquitywinks! Then among all the lens of thousands of girls and women I have seen this summer there has not been a lad)! No legs indeed! They are like boarding house chickens all legs. There is nothing but legs: The American orient is hedged and riprapped with legs. The snow-white sands from Passomoquoddy to Pa-quo-tank, from Cape Cod to Old Point Comfort, are strewn with legs, bounding billows bellow "Legb!" surf has a surfieit of legs Land sea are full awave with legs, horizon is bounded with legs. The The and The The whole air is full of legs. My days are endless panorama of legs and my slumbers are haunted by legged night mares. I am fast becoming a legoma niac. Necromoncy is baby-play com pared with legroraancy. Much of the world's most treasured lore lies in leg-ends and allegories, and all law at last is but leg-islation. I now under stand why people clamor for theleg-it-imate drama and demand that all deeds and documents shall bear the leg-al stamp. Leg-bail is olten the best security, and leg ible handwriting is universally commended. A hand some leg-acy is always prized, and a handsome leg-I-see at every turn. No wonder Gray won immortality by a single perfect L E G. Legs, legs, everywhere. Legs of all shapes, sizes, colors and descriptions. Legs that range from slim and crooked tobacco-sticks to the ponderous carved supports . of a grand piano, such as Minnesota's hayseed legislature, a few years ago, proposed to array with those of the sculptured Hebes, Dianas and Venusesde Milo, in ruffled pantalettes or strings at the ankles, a la Mollie Anderson or Sallie Bernhardt in "Rosalind." Legs slender enough for rye-straws to suck a julep through, and legs collossally suggestive of fem inine rhinoceroses or hippopotamuses in tights. Legs that look like pump kin seeds, and legs exquisite in every curve and as ever lent symmetric beau ty to the alabaster image of a goddess or a grace. Legs knockneed as Xes, legs bowed O 'till they would serve for barrel hoops or parenthesis, and legs both knockneed and bandy-shinned at once. Legs so twisty ana spraoiy 1 a "ouck 01 a gin musi uc cij that they might travel both ends of a j closely watched, or ten to one she'll cross-roads or both sides of a Demo-' go off and marry some quack. cratic tariff at the same time, and legs j as trim and shapely as ever danced Greater New York consists of forty through a poet-arlist's raptest dream. ' five islands, just as many as there are Black legs and white legs, red legs staes in our flig. It might be appro and blue legs, yellow legs, green legs, priately called the Island City. 11 violet and royal purple legs. Ashes-of-roses nioonlight-on-the-lake, ele phant's breath and crushed strawberry legs, and legs of every hue and color, of the hosier's and dye-maker's art and nomenclature. Rainlos and irises, sun-dogs and aurora-borealises of many tinted legs. All the radiant glories of sunrise on the sea and sunset on the plains in the glinting and the gleam ing of gay, prismatic legs. From Mount Desert and Martha's Vineyard to Fortress Monroe and Beaufort the whole coast isa thousand-mile-long Summer Leg Show, and it is growing at a cyclone rate in immen sity, popularity and indecency. This year's display has been the biggest and the wildest ever known has, so lo speak, outstripped all precedents. And in all the vast crowds the two things that hav struck me first and hardest have been the homeliness of the women and the reckless disregard of the conventional proprieties. I never saw so many ugly women m any suffering summer of my life lie fore, and never lefore has my rural diffidence been so unfrockediy shot ked and shattered. 1 have had to keep my modest Western eyes tight shut or wear "blinders" like a country hearse mule, in all the time I have tarried beside lhe rolling deep. I have found out why the sea "waves" are so pro verbially "sad." Their sadness is the inevitable result of a three months' contemplation of the fashionable bath ing suit of the period, and of being freed to embrace such prodigious quantities and variences of feminine ugliness. Do you know that there is not a crocodile or sea-serpent on our whole coast this year from Maine to lowest Jersey? It is true true as tariff sta tistics on either side. There is not one or even a report of one. They have been frightened away by the ap paritions that have apparently broken out of the dime museum horror cham bers of the republic to wallow in scant costume atrocities in the shocked and indignant billows. Buckingham's Dyo for the Whiskers ii the best, handiest, safest, surest, cleanest, most economical aud satisfactory dye ever invented. It is the gentlemen's favorite. S harp and Sententious. A fool's find. company is not hard to Opinions never change the weather. Honesty has never found a substi tute. Gold loses its shine when it is got ten by guilt. A giant among giants is not aware of his own size. The best safe for your money is a prudent wife. The man robs others who does not makes the best of himself. The ass might sing belter if he didn't pitch his tune so high. Everybody says "Go up higher" to the man who is "getting there." Call a little man great and other little people wMI throw up their hats. To get the good out of the years we must learn how to live each hour well. A shallow man may always see the face of a fool by looking into a deep well. Safe and Simple. "Say, another fellow is marry my girl! How am going to I to stop ii?" "There is but tine safe way." "What's that?" "Get out an injunction." Hard money The money you to borrow. try Spain is buying cattle for Cuba. io.ooo American Prairie fires have destroyed 120,000 tons of hay near Webster City, Iowa. Handled without and forks, generally. gloves Knives Wild birds do not sing more eight or ten weeks in the year. than A putty red hot iron so that it can will soften old be readily re- moved. Web to the length of 2 miles has been drawn from the body of a single spider. Some people would rather prey on their neighbors than to pray on iheir own knees. A little world honor is much more desirable with some than all the riches of Heaven. The infidel may be sincere in his be lief, but he had a hard struggle to be come sincere. Some men will work harder and longer to plug up the hole in a nickel than to earn a dollar. Jerusalem is rapidly becoming mod ernized. There are now large print ing offices in the city. Pure religion is often the parent of loud shouting, but loud shouting is nevur the parent of pure religion. I 1 1 r . : 1.1 ..-a 1 Baby Guline? Kvcry mother feels an inde scribable dread of the pain and danger attend ant upon the most critical pe riod of her life. Becoming a mother should be a source of joy to all, but the SUlferiniT .mil danger of the ordeal make its anticipation one of misery. MOTHER'S FRIEND is the remedy which relieves women of the great pain and suf fering incident to maternity; this hour which is dreaded as woman's severest trial is not only made painless, but all the danger is re moved by its use. Those who use this remedy are no longer de spondent or gloomy; nervousness nausea ami other distressing con ditions ate avoided, thc .system is made ready for the coming event, and the serious accidents so com mon to the critical hour arc obviated by the use of Alother's Friend. is a Messing tJ -woman. fl.OO PER BOTTLE Rt all Dm Store, or sent by mail on receipt of price. BOOKS Con'a'nine inralnalile information ot core tatercftt to all women, will ls sent rntt to any allrr, ujKn application, t.y The BB1DFIKLD BEG TLA TO B CO..itlaat. Ca. The- Blood is the Life! Pure Blood is essential to good health. Thousands suffer with impure blood. Thousands who are afflic ted could be cured by tak ing AFRICANA, the only positive remedy. Africans run Khcuniuf inn of long landing. Africana cure Srrofuhi. Africans -uin Old Soich. Africana cur-en Syphilis. Africana cur-en Const ipnt ion. Africana run h Kxzeniu. Africana cures Catm-rh. Africana eur. H nil I'.Iood and Skin diseases. A trial will convince you of its merits SOLI) ItY lilHV.niS'KS. 4 COCELIN TI1AHK-M A1!K. Nature's Nervine and Rapid Restorative. An unfailing cure for Dina-ei of the Digestive, Nervous ami ;ene-itive Sys tems. A tonic of rare ellican 1 -r the old and younir and of marked wi for Stu dents, Teachers, and all wlin j-- engaged in liraiu woi k or close occii:ii . is. CURES: Depression, Tired Feclinos, Nervousness, Muscular Weakness, Restlessness, Loss o! Appetite, Hysteria, Palpitation ot Heart, Excesses, General Dlscomtort, Alcoholism, Nerve Weakness, and that almost innumerable series of dis eases and complication resulting from any derangement of the Nervous system. In valuable for weak women and nervous children. Steadu Nerves, Braced Sustem. INSlVl, Pfl.ft?' Sound Rest. t siNti Nerve ItV UUUIIII Good Work, Tonic. CONTAINS NO OWATliS OK l)AN(JI.KOL5 DKL'US TO nAMi A HAKIT. Fifty Cents per IJottle. If .1 lKtttles he ordered at one time, a copy 01 wnoie OOK jxiK will le in cluded free. AT DKUFGISTa AND DLA1.EIIS OK DIHfctT OK I S ON ItECKU'T OK l'KK K, 'M CENTS. Winkelmann & Brown Drug Co., SOLE rilOriUKTOHft, BALTinORE, MD., U. S. A. PIiverPILLS andTonic Pellets Cure all fonn disease caused by a lujnL'.i I.ivir ;.:i a The I i:::: I';!! ClcaHSCS The Tonic Vi.::-t Invigorates S. B. Moore, if '.in nst.iur;. Ky.. y: "I wa very Uiii'ju '. -r i'. . t ii.i : t rul (..Urn off anj jft-ttir.;f ii t. .'1 1 I had 1- prpsia and f p. I u;, 1 : In-:. 1 U-an uin Ramon's I.iv-r I"i:ii nr. ! 'J'-,r.!c !'!! t .-.c-cording to thc Ti'-Mor I'-'-k. ai.d a a rr ult I iniTtav-l in v-:;;';t IT; J.oucJ., Lr.X Irrl like a i.cw pm.'.-:." The V.-tie " !"' -'nr '; I'.k.V- . !' ?I! aVut ihrm, au'l n v.. ' - Trra'.mrr.t 1 ht. pt-nri .-vtryvcr'trt'. C- T:rtiim-nt. Zlc f-OUTl t..T J t 0 . k. i. C.-etnuWe. Iiac Real Estate Agent. Having gone into the Heal Kstate busi ness 1 take this method of soliciting the patronage of all who have real estate either to rent or sell. All business in trusted to me will have my prompt and K-rsonal attention. Kent collected lll 5 paid weeklyor monthly as requested. 1G sept--4.o 1.C LOW LAN D. AFRICANA will core Rheumatism aati'" Scrofula to Stay Cured.
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1897, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75