Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Dec. 30, 1897, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE HENDERSON GOLD LEAF THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30. 1897. The Gold Leaf, ESTABLISHED 1881. THAD rmANNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Ore copy "tie ear, -( months, 4 - t -J .50 vVe ii.-sir' a 1-ve agent and eorrsio!-de!tt nr cvi'ry jMi-tnllicf in Vaice and adjoining r-i.iTit!'-. r . . "irr s 5:i'.l.-fict- on all s:ujeet-01 .ncal Ifl ge!)elil !!.tM't al:i opinions upon vatter(if public concern, are invited. The editor will not be reponsibl for the views or statement of cm re-powlents -and rf-t-i -v-s 'In- riiiiit at all times to evise or lej-e; any article he think proper. One Si'l-. onlv, ol tin- pf. per must be written on and tin- real name ot.the writer aecompanv the contribution. No attention will be paid to anonymous letter-.. Ir iiik people of Henderson the moneyed men will pull together we believe anoiher cotton mill could soon be added to the industries of the town. Some New England m il nun might be induced to move down here in view of the c hanged condition of things, which imkes tne Sou'ii a s 'ug com petitor m the- cotton mill industry. Think ai.ou; this and act upon the suggestion: serious holiday aixiijent in as he vn. i.e. A serious accident occurred to a lare party of metry-makers m'Ashe ville on Christum l)iy, in which thirty or forty persons were njired. The crowd was e-n-tuccl in firing a salute from an old cannon, and the ac cident was the result of the explosion of a thirty pound can of powder. Jo septi 1'iiiC h was perhaps more seriotisiy hurt than the other-, his nose and mouth bein torn out of shape. John Ingle and Vernon Stntell are also re ported seriously injured. The hitter's brain was penetrated by a missile, and Ingle will probably be totally blind. In reloading the gun which had not been swabbed a live spark caused the explosion, of the powder can with a report that made the earth tremble. A telegraphic extract says: A moment later there was a scene to make sick the hearts of those watch ing the hill from their homes on the river. In the smoke that rose from the explosion they saw human beings run blindly here and thereover the hill falling and rising only to fall again as they frantically rushed about, blinded and powder-burned, and madly try ing to extinguish their flaming clothes. Those who were unhurt ran to the aid of their unfortunate plaj fellows, smoth ering filming clothing or cutting the garments from their bodies. One man was blown or rolled completely down the high bluff 300 feet nearly to the river. The hill was dotted with blackened, groaning figures, some of whom lay almost perfectly nude. A number of the injured were able to walk from the scene, while, cots were provided awd gentle hands placed the more se riously wounded on them and con veyed them to aii old lesidence ne uby which was improvised into a. ;hsp;ital' HOW TO DO IT. If you want to injure your town and kill it as dead as a door nail, just start right in and talk down its enterprises, run down the men who are endeavor ing to do something; abuse every thing that is not according to your particular view of how it should be done; discourage every man who is manufacturing the least thing in your community and refuse his goods; just let your property and sidewalks go un improved and teb people it is good enough for the interest you have in the town; buy all you can on a credit, from every business man you can, and let your account run indefinitely, and then curse and abuse your creditor when he wants the principal, to say nothing of the interest on his goods for which he pays cash, and the obli gations he has shown you; take up with every thing andsend your money off to strangers in preference to Had ing with people you know; refuse to take or advertise in your town papers, but spend your money with journals that have no more interest in you than the amount they can get out of you, and then abuse your town fur not having bigger and better papers; use your nlluence and money in building up other towns instead ol the one 111 which you have habitation; find fault with something in churches, and be rate this thing or that thing in your schools, and the efforts of your people; just j imp right in and pull apart all who are trying to pull together; just withhold your patronage, sympathy and cheer from your own people and keep your business men and their en terprises down to the lowest possible notch, and volume of business, by placing your kind words and patronage somewhere else on every fancied wrong you can hunt up and pick up. Just keep up these things, and in the course of time not a very long timeeither if you do not give your town a black eye and lay it out ;n a state of commercial unconsciousness, then the past history of all these prac tices will not be verified and a won derful phenomenon will be revealed in the life of a community never before heard of or recorded. Durham Sun. All Wise Heads agree that the use of a liver pill after din ner, or to accomplish special results, is an important step iu civilization. Dr. Tierce's Pleasant Pellets are better than anv other liver pills in almost every re spect. They're the smallest, easiest to take, most natural 111 the way they act: 1 cheapest, because there are mure iu each ! Don't be persuaded into buying lini package. We all have weak spots. Gen- meats without reputation or merit erally it's the liver. An active liver pre- : Chamberlain's Pain Palm costs no more the blood. "Pleasant Pellets" luve a 1 .... .,u, ,,,.,,, , llM,ls tonic effect upon the liver and the general system. They cure coustipation, indiges tion, dyspepsia, dizzy spells, sick or bil lions headaches, and all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. Fine linen Neckwear all of the latest it vies at '2 cents, just received at J 5. MINES' CLOTHING STORK. GENERAL RW5ERT E. -'I;E E. A Distinguished V Northern , Manjs Opinion of the Great CliiVtaiiiHAs (ireat as Napoleon or-Voii Moltke; Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews,' theVdii: tinguished president of Brown Univer sity, recently debvered a jecture in Chicago upon Gen. Rol-ert . E:'-Ee.e, wh:ch has attracted more than "usual, interest both North and " South: Dr. Andrew is rcogniz-d throughout .the length and breadth of this country as a bold, original and independent; thinker, and his u'terances on an y' sub ject command attention and respec. The lecturer declared that General: Lee was no; only the greatest soldier; which the war produced, but that, in. many phases of his genius, he was the greatest soldier of modern times. : As Dr Andrews served in the Union army this candid expression of opin ion in regard to the military skill and '. prowess of the South' great soldier can not fail to awaken deep interest, in both sections. The Chicago 1 imes-Herald gave a report of the lecture from which the following is taken: ' -Dr. Andrews proclaimed Genera! Hubert E. Lee the most valiant 11 ml" most heroic military genius of modern time from the stae. of Central Music hall last night. He did not discredit, the bravery and vulor of the leader's under whom he himself fought. He rave the head of the Confederate army, more glory because he had to face kill ing problems in addition, to the ordi nary puzzles of the severest fii'lit tjra'l hi.-lory known. The oration was, o'l.'e of masterful eloquence, delivered by. a man built for an orator, with a ro-l!:nrg voice and the presence of a giant. lie t-poke with the air of powerful alul firmest conviction. He praised Gen. Lee and pictured the rreat intellect of the lost cause: as one of the most won derful of all American history. lie thought the General carried out- the instinct which was horn with him the love of the art of war and the heart to carry on the war inherited from an ancestry which could be traced to one of the fiercest of the companions of William who tailed away from the shores of Normandy and conquered England. "General Lee joined the Confedera cy because Virginia asked him to,"- said the doctor. "He was a Virgin ian. The call of -Virginia lo any of her sons is the voice of law and duty. He had the faith of the crusader; his let ters would make a guide to holiness. He was always a soldier, never impure in thought or act, never profane or ob scene, lie did not touch the cup as did Grant, Hooker, or I'hu Sheridan, and when he lost a fkjht it was never said of him that the defeat was due to a habit which makes men's heads into muddles. He was never outgeneraled by Grant in all the campaigns from Rappahannock to James lliver, never trapped and never caught napping. It usually happened that when the men on our side ordered a march at 5 a. m tiiey never made more loan nail tne distance between the two armies. Lee had ordered an advance at 4:30. "I fail to find in the books any such masterful generalship as this hero showed, holding that slim, gray line, halt starved, with no prospects of audi tions. and fighting when his army was too hungry to stand and the rifles only useful as clubs. ; His courage was sub lime. He was as great as Gustavus A'blpi!iiH. of .Xapoiean, or Wellington, .of Von. -Sttfttfefe.. lfi.3: .cause was not HV.e- fovt-t'aitse.so "iMHek ivs. is: .8'us:pe.c.te.d; All mat was goon -iu nis. e.a.tise is grafted into our laws and constitution 1 no doctrine ot Mate s riglits as now interpreted by the Supreme Court is in exact accordance with his claims on the point. Geueral Lee lost at Gettys burg because the federal troops had received a new motor of tremendous strength whose power no one knew General Hancock. He also lost because Meade's meu were lighting on union soil almost within hearing distance of the prayers of their wives aud children for victory. They were at their hearthstones. Men are tigers when wives and families are the inspiration of war." Before closing his tribute to the South's great soldier, Dr. Andrews de clared that the final overthrow of the Confederacy was not duo to the fact that General Lee was outgeneraled but rather to the fact that overwhelm ing numbers on the Uuion side coupled with the hardships and priva tions which the Southern army was compelled to suffer, made the success of the Confederacy impossible. With the decades which have elapsed since the late war between the states, much of the bitterness of feeling engendered by that conllict has passed away; and while the South can now, without the least prejudice, contemplate the superb qualities of Grant and Sheridan and Hancock, it is also true that the North can fully appreciate the heroic virtues of Jackson, Beauregard and Lee. The summary of his estimates of Lee, compared with the Federal gen erals is that he was as brave, more watchful and doubly skillful, in addition to having his head filled all the time with miseries and disappointments which did not exist on the other side of the line. He concluded by declaring that he was glad the republic is getting into that state of mind where it is be ginning to give credit to manhood aud valor, without regard to section, boun daries or parties. narriage of a Former North Carolin ian. Mr. 11. II. Mitchell, a former citizen of this community, was united in mat rinWny Dec. 23rd to Miss Leua Bus sell, of Santa Kosa, Cal. Mr. Mitchell for years was a valued member of the faculty of the Pacific Methodist Col lege, and has. a large family connec tion in North Carolina. A peculiar co-incident in connection with his mar riage is the fact that Mr. Mitchell's father, who was once a teacher, was married on Deo. 23rd, 1S50, at the j same hour his ton joins iu wedlock just 41 years later while engaged in teaching. If you want to buy good goods cheap go to II. 1 MU.MASU-N S. I ami its merits i.ive been nmven l.r t-st of many years. Sueh letters as the following from L. ii. Pagley, Hueneme, Cab, are constantly being received: "The best remedy for pain I hare ever used is Chamberlain's Pain Balm, and I say so after having used it in my family for sev eral years.'' It cures rheumatism, lame back, sprains and swellings. For sale by the Dorsey Drug Co. COOPER'S WAREHOUSE Sends Greetings to Its Friends and Patrons. . To Our Friends, the Tobacco Plant ers of Virginia and North Carolina: "A;s appropriate to ths seas n we :take.;this occasion t express our high app'reci'atioiV .f the very li!eral pat ronage, given u- during the xear now drawing-to a clue. "' i'erhaps not in the whole history f -our -long experience in the waren u-e business has it been more- satisfactory in many respects. Cerainly no house ever epj e l or appreciated the confi dence and patronage id mends more yal, with whom 10 do business was a greater pleasure. At the same lime we find cause to congratulate; t.he tobacco planters as well." Prices ruve rul i higher than last seas n. and this lias-meant a great deal Tor the' fcrmrs. " But not all that they' deserve, 'for noxjbVsof our people are entitled" to enjoy t-je fruits of iheir labors-in s'o-h'igb a degree as the sturdy t i l le'rs .0 f the-' so i f. ..The pbsuect- w:e be.rieLve.-is for bet ter ,p"r ices in A iH ur?. Pces&iit 'ij.nii'ca tib.nos point oto a- shorta'g.e' in brig-hi to baccos-in this crop, a'ijd farmers woiijd (b well to ''sMck a pin" (ie.r.o aikI try to. make the kinds Uha ar.e l-ikel'v sell' best. We are never adviScares fir oy.erprodi'.ci ion of any ki.wd's . .cr.Mps.' B it we look I t a more tnerwus ii-i'u.-' . sumption or ail products., c.ojise.epieivtl'y prices will likely 1.1 ive no. a,Kd.-' our people shouid plant accord t'ogl v.. ' ' Both tobacco and coito.n will be -in demand bef re a new crp's made-;'a.!,id those who plant liberally will be-apt lo. get the "plum." O jr observations are that those w-kw frianl full crops;, cult i vate better and in ire carefully and make better and mu re profitable crops. Taking this view of the situation, would it not be well for planters to put in ful crops, manure highly and cultivate welj, and when the returns are all in they will not have cause to regret it. ' .. Whether the Crop be large or small Henderson will continue, to I the "Capital of the Golden Belt," and Cooper's Warehouse headquarters for highest prices. " The renown of one is the glory of the other, and hand in hand they go together, the record of the two combined being ''more pounds of farmers' tobacco sold annually for more net money than any other house or market." The secret of success with Cooper's Warehouse has been to give its patrons the best possible service always to treat them right and make their to bacco bring the highest market prices That this fact is recognized and ap preciated by the great bodyol tobacco planters throughout the counties of Virginia and North Carolina tributary to Henderson, is shown in the growth and development of our business and the rapidly expanding territory from which it is drawn. But we are not content to atop here Gratifying as has been out success here tofore, we are seeking to largely in crease our business, and to that end during the coming year we shall be more alert and active in the interest of our patrons than ever before if pos sible. The same conscientious care and attention to all business entrusted to us will be given whether th- owner is present or not. In fact, it is the rule of the house to look after the handling and sale of tobaccj sent to us more carefully if anything than i the owner was here to attend to it himself. Gratefully acknowledging the libera and generous patronage that his been extended to us iu the pist, we cor dially solicit a continuance of the same, promising our best efforts to serve you to advantage and please you with results. And now, standing upon the borde line of the old and the new year, we turn our face hopefully to the future wishing our farmer friends abundant 1 1 . . nappiness ana success and a ncn re ward for their labors during 1898. With the compliments of the season I am, Very truly your friend, D. V. COOPER. December 30th, 1897. People often wonder why their nerves are po weak; why they get tired bo easily; why they start at every slight but sudden sound; why they dp not sleep naturally; why they have frequent beadacnes, indigestion and nervous Dyspepsia The explanation is simple. It is found In that impure blood which is contin ually feeding the nerves upon refuse instead of the elements of strength and vigor. In such condition opiate ani nerve compounds sijiply deaden and do not cure. Hood's Sarsaparilla feeds the nerves pure, rich, red blood; gives natural sleep, perfect digestion, is the true remedy for all nervous troubles. rui Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. $1 per bottle. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. ii Qjif cre Liver Ills; easy to HOOU S r HIS take, easy to operate. 25c dents' furnishing goods in alletylesand prices to twit the times at HARDEE'S. The INFLUENCE of the Mother shapes the course of unborn generations goes sounding through all the ages and enters the confines, of Eternity. With what care, there fore, should the Expectant Moth er be guarded, and how great the effort be to ward off danger and make her life joyous and happy. OTHER'S FRIEND allays all .re lieves the Headache Cramps, ' and N a u- sea.andso fully pre pares the system that Childbirth is made easy and the time of recovery short ened many say "stronger after than before confinement." It in sures safety to life of both moth er and child. All who have used Mother's Friend " say they will nev er be without it again. No other remedy robs confinement of its pain MA customer whose wife used 'Mother's Friand,' says tbat if she bad to go through the ordeal aeain, ana there were but rocr ooiues to ue obtained, and the cost -was $100 XX) per bottle.-be would bave them.' Geo. Layton, Dayton, Ohio Bent by Mail, on receipt of price, f 1.09 PER BOT- T'WS. HOOK lO "BArEUTABl jrHXl.KB " niailed free npon application, containing ' val uable information and voluntary testimonials. THC BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA. G A- SOLD BV ALL ORUCfilSTS. We Sell -0 .EVERYTHING In the Line o! Pure Drugs and Druggists' Sundries of all kinds, Toilet -and Fancy Articles, Perfumeries, Extracts, Combs, Brushes, Paints, Oils, &G. THE Dorsey Drug Go Wholesale and Retail Drug, gists. Notice. BY VIRTUE OF POWER (JONFER red upon me by an order issuing from the Superior Court of Vance county in a cause therein pending entitled "D. Y. Cooper vs A. J. Wright and wife, I shall ON MONDAY, JANUARY 3RD, 1898, sell at public auction, to the highest bid der for cash, at the Court House door in Henderson, one certain tract or parcel of land partly in Vance and Granville counties, adjoining the lands of John L. Wright, Mrs Clarke and others and bound ed as follows: Begin at a white oak at John. L. Wright's and Mrs. Clarke's cor ner, on. the North edge of the church path and run thence S. 83 W. 116 poles to a stone, Miss Uamile .1. Wright's corner; thence W. 212 poles. Miss Wight's corner in Crews' line; thence N VJ, W. 86M poles to a red oak Crews' corner; thence S. 87. W. 293 poles to a pine, Crews' corner; thence S. 50, E. 80 poles to the be ginning. Containing 141 acres. It being that tract of land bought from 11. K. Whittke and wife by deed dated 29th Au gust, 1885. This 21rd Nov., 1897. A. C. ZOLL1COFFER, Commissioner. Notice of Sale. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF THE power of sale conferred upon the undersigned, George B. Harris, Trustee, and contained in a Deed of Trust executed by Jas. S. Poythress on the 1st day of Feb ruary, 1992, and recorded in Deed of Trust Book No. 1, page 492, in the office or the Register of Deeds for Vance county, for the purpose of securing the payment of the indebtedness therein mentioned, default having been made in the payment of the same, at tne request 01 tne bolder or the same, will sell at the court house door in Henderson, N. C , at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, on Monday, the 17TH DAY OF. JANUARY. 1898, the property conveyed by said Deed of Trust, to-wit: Beginning at a stake on the East side of Ransom street, J. D. Cooper's corner and running thence East 100 feet to a stake in Cousins' corner; thence North 182 feet to a stake R. M. Powell's corner; thence West 1G0 feet to a stake on Ransom street; thence along said street 182 feet to the beginning. The same being the land bought by said Poythress of H. H. Bur well and wife Sophie W. Burwell Sept. 18th, 1891. GEORGE B HARRIS. December, 11th, 1897. Trustee. Notice. HAVING QUALIFIED AS ADMIff istrator of the estate of John D. Clarke, dee'd. before the Clerk of the Su perior Court of Vance county, this is to no tify all persons holding claims against said estate to present them to me on or be fore the 11th day of December, 1898. or this notice will be pleaded in bar of the recovery of the same. Persons indebted to said estate must make immediate pay ment. This 11th December, 1897. JOHN L. CURU1N, Administrator of estate of John D. Clarke, deceased. -A. O. Zollicoffer, Attorney. Notice, I II AVE QUALIFIED AS ADM1NIS trator of S. A Burroughs, dee'd" and herely notify all persons having claims agairst said decedent to exhibit the same to me before Dec. 30th, 1898, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery Henderson, N.C.. Dec. 30th, 1897. T. T. HICKS, Administrator of S. A. Burroughs, dee'd. FOR THE Best & Purest Liquors, Whiskies, Brandies, Wines, Gins, Ales, Cigars, Tobacco, Oysters, Call at Dave's Place. t HARMS' WAREHOUSE, W. H. Jenkins will ' now we have The Best Lights ! the Most Room! the Politest Help! and the Largest Orders in Our History Will be bound to tell to the interest of our patrons. More men sold with us last season and more pounds than in any other of our history, notwithstanding the short crop. The market is oiifio all nlH irnst.mrifvrs arid keen everv new onn dVUAVU JXX UCW LU KlCLjjJ CLUXJL WO CAiX s ucuoiuiuiuuuu yivuiuv - " : x - Better Lflglht than We Have 5s 'aie IinnipossSbMfltyo Better AccommodatSoinis If your Tobacco is here in a storm it is dry no leaks to disturb. Our buyers have ample capital and are anxious to fill orders that are crowding them. The HARRIS WAREHOUSE shall be the ;?best place to sell your Tobacco regardless of bombast and fine talk of other men or markets. Our Business is to Please, Our Past Record is Our Guarantee. Don't be deceived but SELL YOUR TOBACCO WHERE YOU CAN GET THE MOST MONEY, We know no man can surpass us for any facility to handle, to display or to dispose of your To bacco, and we pledge our best efforts and personal attention to every pile put on the floor and to every man present or absent, without regard to race or color or any other condition. We Guarantee Prompt Returns tor all Tobacco Stripped Us and the Best Prices ttie Market Can Afford. BThanking our friends for the very liberal patronage given us in the past, we respectfully solicit a continuance .f the same in future, promising our best endeavors to always merit the confidence extended our house. Harris, Goocbl & Company. o o 9 There's Clothing and Clothing! 2 Some bad; some good; some better; but only one kind of BEST t That's the kind you'll always find at BARNES' CLOTHING STORE. We won't have any other kind; and when you get a thing here we guarantee it to be worth every cent you pay, or you g-et the money back. Men's and Boys' - CLOTHING, FURNISHING GOODS, &c, At prices heretofore unheard of in Henderson , Our stock was never larger, the quality better. OVERCOATS JVt pretty much YOUR OWN PRICE. We do not intend to carry over a single one of these garments to next season. See our Exquisite Display ol Neckwear. All the latest styles and nobbiest effects. Great variety to select from. And cheap as well. w r r a rivTr- Q L. yy mKiir, q cooKHccoKKo:oooocoooco m m I rm FINE i Up to ALEX. T. BARNES' Furniture House. HARRIS, QOOCH & CO., Owners and Proprietors, Henderson, North Carolina. 3S SAME OLD FIRM WITH A NEW AUCTIONEER do our auctioneering everything calculated M m i I ' (VI :i n 'J IT I r CHAIRS. Date, Piano Finish. 3 FINISHED IN 3 Oxblood, Peagreen, 3 Purple, Gold, Mahogany and Quartered Oak. UPHOLSTERED IN 3 Leather, Seats and Backs. 1 the present season so that we feel siu0 to please and give entire satisfaction. The Pleasure We strive to merit the patronage of the public by making ic both pleasant and profitable to deal with us hence mutuaPy satisfactory. Therefore, We Cordially Invite Your careful inspection of our Splendid Stock and Varied Assortment of STRICTLY SEASONABLE Merchandise which has been judiciously selected under a determination to fully satisfy even the most scrupulous and exacting tastes. Special Inducements Are Offer'd In our Super!) Lines of Dry Goods and Notions, Dress Goods, Trimmings. Shoes, Hats, Furnishings, &c, all o! which are most complete. Our goods always have th: Quality and the Style, and then too the Prices flre Always Rioin These essentials are those for which we strive and stmly to give you. ami past successes fiP'y warrant continued ami persistent effort. Our constant aim is for fair and square dealing the kind that brings you back to our store. STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, In addition to the above we carry at all times a full and complete siocl: of Staple and Fancy Groceries, Flour, Salt, Shipstufis, ! luj , J re. &c. These we buy in car load lots and can seU same v. l olesale or retail at Bottom Figures. Give us a call whvn in want of anything in our line and see if we can't make L to your advantage to trade with us. HENRY THOMASON, Notice of Sale. UNDEK AND BY VlUlTK OF THE power of ale conferred jpou the undersigned Fletcher K. Harris, Trustee, and contained in a Deed of Yrtii-t executed by L. L- Edward and 1. A. Edwards hU wife, on the 2Srh day of January, lwo, and recorded in Deed of l rut Hook No. 1, page ; :S1, in the office of the liegister of Deeds for Vance county, for the purpose of securing the payment of the indebted ness therein mentioned, dafult having been made in the payment of the sain, at the request of the holder of the same, will sell at the court house door In Henderson N. C. at public auction to the highest bid der for cash, on Monday, the 17T11 DAY OF JANUAKY, lm, the property conveyed by said Deed of Trut, to-wit: Hounded as follows, viz- On the North by tS. J. Matthews old tract I now L. L. Edwards' JandJ, go the East by James Amos, on th South by K L. Duke, on the Wet by liufus H. Duke containing forty-two ncres more or less Henderson, S. C, Dec mh. 1807. FLE1CH EH K. HARRIS Trustee. Of doing business chiefly con sists in giving satisfaction to every customer it is the key to success in all lines of trade. A pleased customer is one secured. Notice. BY AUTHORITY OF THE i'OWW of sale conferred in a Trust U--d exe cuted on the 30th day of NovemU-r, 1. by T. U. Glover and Carrie M (ilotw.t.n wife, and registered in Trust Ded B 'k 1 page 2. in the oflice of the Regi-t-r o. Deeds of Vance county. I shall f,,r cash, by public auction to the highest bid der, at the court house door in county, N. C. on the 17TU DAY OF JANUARY, H". the property descriWnl in faid Tiut 1"1 as follows: Situate on the road l-JiJ from Williamsboro to Townesville begins at the corner of the wbdi on tlit Taylor's ferry road j then down aid r'15 about a North course to a fine E. O. Iy lor'g corner: thence along E. O. Taylor linetotte roplar Spring btanch: thence up said branch in a Southeastern direction to the first fork; thence a straight lir.e u an old gate place at the edge of the wood, thence a straight line along the edje the woods to the place of beginning tne Taylor's Ferry load; containing by estia tion one hundred acres. This 13th Dcc7, 1S9. T. T. HICKS, Trustee.
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 30, 1897, edition 1
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