Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / May 2, 1901, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE HENDERSON GOLD LEAF THURSDAY, MAY 2.-1901. ao External I GRADED SCHOOL CHARTER The Gold Leaf. henderson. n c. THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1901. A MIDNIGHT CATASTROPHE. (Denver Evening I'oiU) A tomcat sat on a moonlit slied and waibld a soi.tr to tit" night. A grav old inge of clrbian birth, but the hero of many a fight. And a "infill man who-e wicked 5-oul no jov for harmony dwelt From hU bnd arose in his red nightclothes (jiviiiK voice to the lajze lie !elt ! He a bootjack seized in bis vengeful bfnd and burled it out into space. And miles peeped out through the dry, was scars of the veteran tomcat's face Never touched ine :" be cried, in trium phant glee, and a laugh of derision IllfOUWed ! And the madman swore till the stars went out and the moon bid its face in a cloud ! Again did the tomcat raise bis voice in a hong to bis swet Marie, A;.d the echo quivered like current Jell In the thrill of the melodee. And the man in the window a shotgun seized, and it belched forth a rain of Anrl the tomcat sank in the throes of deatli on the roof of the old wood shed : With a grunt of triumph the murderer snuifht the embiace of bis couch iiiain. And the tomcat raised up its shot-pierced head and from it shook out the pai". And a'ul: "I've been slaughtered just four times now! Ive had trouble t.i beat the band ! Hut tiiougb slightly disfigured, I'm still in the ring, and i ve live more lives on band!" APPEAL TO REASON. Wh . all Classes and Conditions of Citizens Should Favor Taxation for Public Education. Kinston has Schools but the excellent (Jraded town has outgrown the present school buildings. To meet this demand they will vote on the (iiiestion of issuinir bonds for the erection of suitable buildings. In the Free I'rcss of last week Mr. Plato Collins, one of the most progressive citiens cif th:it nroyressive town, has I 0 an article advocating the bond issue from which we make the following extract. What is said in behalf of voting this special tax to increase the ellicieney of Kinston's Craded Schools is just as goad reason why we should vote in favor of continuing the Hen derson C raded School. Mr. Collins says: We appeal to the business men. laboring men. and young men to vote for the issue of school bonds, aud to the business men, we say that it is a "ood investment. For the small in- n creases in your taxes your property will be greatly enhanced in value and very business interest stimulated The equipment of good schools lays the foundation of Kinston's progress on a sure ami never failing basis. To laboring men, with children and to those without, we appeal not to be blind to vour own interests in this matter. Why? Because for an in crease in your poll tax of 'M cents you profit by the increased life and "hum of the town, by the greater de mand for labor and the consequent rise to the price of that labor, lhe opposition says to you your rents will be increased. Answer them back, then why do vou vote against it. since by paying high rent 1 really pay taxes for you? Answer him again and say if Kinston stands still, no arm, however willing, can find labor. employment, and that rents, however cheap, in a dead towu cannot be paid Ana then tor the investment oi your small proportionate part of the taxes your children, if anxious for knowl edge, may receive an education free that will unlock great opportunities to tho little ones who are the hope of your lives. ote for the bond issue that your children and the children oi your neighbors may nave, me op portunity of becoming useful and worthy citizens and be the better prepared for the struggle of life. To the young men we confidently appeal to help forward this work which lies at the heart of the prosperity and future life of Kinston. You who are to live here and work out your for tune in this town, we tell you that whatever Kinston is, that you will be. Whatever limitations are set about her progress will cling to and clog you in vour development We appeal to all citizens lav aside personal opinion and prejudice and vote for this question because it means a great stride forward for Kinston. We rejoice that the tide has set in now in favor of the issuance bonds. Our hope is that there may oe no ngnt, no contention among us. so that no tears mav le left to mark the victory for 4 he cause of education Let us join hands and keep forging Kinston to the front. Remarkable has been the avvakening and the de- . velopment of Kinston's commercial life, but one thing now is needed and that is the bed rock upon which it all should be built the equipment of adequate school facilities for our children, the fostering and stimu lating of a broad culture among our people that will mark the death of our provincialism and lead us into broad Catholicism. Splendid educa tional equipment and general educa tion means a higher moral as well as intellectual standard for our commun- ity- Prevention better than cure. Tutt's Liver Pills will not only cure, but it taKen in time will prevent Sick Headache, dyspepsia, biliousness, malaria, constipation, jaundice, torpid liver and kindred diseases. TUTT'S Liver PILLS ABSOLUTELY CURE. The cost of the Philippines to the United States is3,028 lives and $202,- 573,000 in monev up to April 1st. Ana an we nave to snow ior it is Aguinaldo. Cow Peas. The Famous Forage Crop and soil Improvers. WK ARE HEADQUARTERS for these and all Southern specialties, including Sola Beans, Velvet Beans. Pearl nrCat.tall Millet T.i.. Bermuda Grass, Ensilage Corn, Spanish Pea ants, Chufas, Sorghums, etc. Write for prices, andour interesting Catalogue i'8 mi' iiuutiuauoo bdoui inese crops. T. W. WOOD & SONS. - Richmond. Va. Symptoms The Llood may be in bad condition, yet with no external signs, no bkou eruption or sores to indicate it. The iymptoms m such cases being a vanaDie appetite, poor digestion, an indescribable weakness and nervousness, loss of flesb and a general run-down condition of the system clearly showing the blood has lost its nutritive qualities, has become una and watery. It is in just such cases thai S. S. S. has done some of its quickest and most effective work by building up the blood and supplying the elements lacking to make it strong and vigorous. 1 My wife used sev eral bottles of S. S. S. as a blood purifier and to tone up a weak and emaciatea 6ystem,with very marked enect by way of improvement. "We regard it a great tonic and blood purifier." J.r. uuff, Princeton, Mo. is the greatest of all tonics, and you will .find the appetite im proves at once, strength returns, and nervousness vanishes as new blood once more circulate! - j through all parts of the system. S. S. S. is the only purely vegetable blood purifier known. It contains no min erals whatever. Send for our free book on blood and skin diseases and write our physicians for any information or advice wanted. No charge for medical advice. THE SWiFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. WONDERS WILL NEVER CEASE. Candid Expression From the New- York Tribune on the Negro Question Beginning to See Things in Their True Light. (Richmond Dispatch.) Wonders will never cease," i s an old and true saying' yet some of tho wonders we run against are so ahso- lutely beyond our conception that they cause us to pinch ourselves and question whether we are really awake, and contemplating an actual ity. A case in point is an article in the New York Tribune. After all these years of denuncia tion of the negro mote in the South ern eye, the Tribune has discovered that there is a negro beam in the Northern eye. Moreover, it has dawn ed upon our esteemed contemporary th:tt the negro is not the ideal speci men of man it has been holding him up to be, and that there is such a thing as race prejudice and strong race prejudice at the North. Iafcing as its text the ditlicultv the negro finds in making a living at the North, which difficulty, it admits, is due to race prejudice and the unde- snableness of the negro as a citizen, the Tribune preaches a regular sermon on the duty of that section to change all this. The Tribune would not have the public think that its love for the negro is growing cold, and it would still nose as the champion of the a man and the brother,' although it recognizes that he is not a model member of society. Yet it confesses that the negro has few rights, if any, up in that quarter that any one feels hound to respect, and by implication admits that that condition is not al together unnatural. lteferring to the barring of the negro at the North from many of the spheres of labor, the Tribune says this is real ly a situation as important for North ern people to consider as the South ern phase of the problem, which they (the Northern people) have too ex clusively, and, perhaps too patron izingly, concerned with. lhe admission that the people of the North have been "too exclusive ly" aud "too phtronizingly concern ed" with the negro problem at the South is a remarkable one for the 1'ribune to make, especially in view of the heretofore self-sufficient air with which that paper has been lec turing the South on the way to man age the negro. Nevertheless, the ad mission involves the statement of a com ana important truth, that is justified by the article in the April Atlantic Monthty from the pen of Dan iel 11. Chamberlain, of Massachusetts, sometime reconstruction Governor of South Carolina, and from which we quoted extensively the other dav.j But the Irtbune while in the humor for makingadmission and confessions, springs another surprise. "Unless," t says, "the North gives the negro a fair industrial opportunity, it cannot reproach the South with its inherited prejudices, if his rights are there de nied, and if Northern ex-slave-holder ever sunk so low as solved thev must solve such part of it as comes to their own doors. Just there the Irtbune set a trap ior itseir. ihenro has never been denied "a fair industrial onnortun lty at the South has never been denied in this section, what the Tribune does not hesitate to declare is denied him at the North. As some intelligent negro in one of the Gulf States remarked not long ago. "No oiunern e-siavenouier ever sunk so low as to shoot down a negro for ask ing for work." The Tribune knows, or ought to know, the comparison this was intended to draw. rm . . . ... ine negro ai me outh is encour aged to work, and would have had still fairer industrial opportunities out ior ine patronizing concern in the negro problem in this section manifested at the North. That patronizing concern has more than anything else incited the negro to conduct calculated to alienate his white friends down here, and kep alive Inction between the races. Claiming, as we do, to be a better and more practical friend to the negro than the Tribune, we hope that the Northern people will take our con temporary s sermon to heart, and profit by it to the end of doing their duty to the negro in that section. But we also hope that they will profit by the logic and confessions of the Tribune, so far as these bear on solving ths negro problem in this quarter. That is to say, we hope they win stop their interference with the Southern negro problem and leave the South to work it out industrially, politically and otherwise. Than by so doing they cannot better serve the interests of both races. Every schooner has a master. In deed, some of them are four-masters. Lives of great men all remind us Not to be nipped in the bud, And departing leave behind us Footprints in the April mud." vv vv vv Full Text of the Act Authorizing the Establish ment of Graded Schools for Henderson Town ship, Vance County. Ax Act to Khtahmhh (iuADEU Schools' IN UnNDEIifON TOWSSHIH, IX ViNCE CoCSTY. The General Axtentb'y of North Carolina do enact: SI-XTIOX 1. That all the territory embraced within the limits of Henderson Township, in Vance County, State of North Carolina, as now laid our and established, shall Je and is hereby con stituted a school district for the white and colored children, to be known and designated as 'Henderson Graded School District." K1XTI0X 2. That the Board of Com missioners of Vance County are hereby required to submit to the qualified voters of said Henderson Township, within three months after the ratification of this act, at an election to be held for said Town ship, in the town of Henderson. Vance County. North Carolina, the question whether an annual tax shall be levied for the support of the Graded Schools in said Township. SECTION" 3. That at the election held under the provisions of this act, those favoring the levying of such tax shall vote on a written or printed ballot, with out device, with the words '"For Graded Schools" uppn it, and those opposed to the levying of such tax shall vote a written or printed ballot, without device, with the words "Against Graded Schools" upon it. The penalty for illegal or fraudulent voting shall be the same as in the election for members of the General Assembly. The Board of Commissioners shall give thirty days notice of the time of holding said election in a newspaper published in the said Graded School district. SECTION 4. That in case a majority of the qualified voters of said Henderson Township shall be in favor of such tax, the Board of Commissioners of Vance County, shall, in addition to other taxes laid upon said school district, annually compute and levy, at the time of levying other taxes, a sufficient special tax upon the property and polls of the white and colored persons of said Henderson lown ship to raise such a sum of money as the trustees hereinafter named for the said school district shall deem necessary to support and maintain said (traded Schools, which sum shall not exceed twenty cents on the one hundred dollars valuation of property, and sixty cents on each pole. Said trustees, hereinafter named, shall immediately after the elec tion herein provided for, report to the Board of Commissioners of VanceCounty what sum said trustees deem neeessarv to support and maintain said Graded Schools iiuring the first vear, and .in- nuallv thereafter the said trustees, thirty iavs prior to me time ior levying tn countv taxes, shall report to the said Board of Commissioners of VanceCounty what sum is necessary to support and maintain the said (traded .Schools during the next vear. The taxes levied for the support, of said schools, as herein pro vided, shall be annually collected as othf taxes are collected, and paid over by the sheriff or other collecting officer to the Treasurer of Vance County for the safe keeping and proper distribution of tin. same, and the said taxes levied and col lected for said Graded Schools shall be kept sacred and separate and distinct from other taxes, by the said officers, and shall be used only for the purposes for which thev were levied and collected. SECTION" r,. That the Board of Trns tees herein created, and their successors, shall be a body corporate bv the name ind style of "The Board of Trustees of Henderson Graded Schools," and bv that name shall be capable of receiving gifts. grants and apportionments, purchasing and holding real estate and personal property, selling, mortgaging and trans ferring the same for school purposes, and of prosecuting and defending suits for or against the corporation hereby created. Conveyances to the said trustees shall be to them, and their successors in office, and all deeds, mortgages, aud other agreements affecting real estate and per sonal property, shall be deemed suffi ciently executed when signed by the chair man ol the said Board of trustees, and at tested by the secretary of the said board. SECTION 6. That it shall be the dutv of the said Board of Trustees to establish Graded 1'ublic Schools for the white and colored children of said Henderson Graded School district, and the said Board of Trustees shall use and appro priate the funds derived from the said special taxes herein provided for, in such manner as shall be just to both races. without prejudice, and giving to each equal school facilities, due regard being naa. However, to the cost of establishing ana maintaining the Graded Schoo s for each race. SECTION" 7. That the Board of Trus tees provided for by this act shall have entire charge and exclusive control of the public schools and pronertv in the s.aid district; shall prescribe rules and regula tions ior their own government and the government of the schools, not incon sistent with the provisions of this act: shall employ and fix the compensation of officers and teachers of the public schools in said district; shall make an accurate census of the school population of the district as required by the general school law of the State; and do all other acts that may be just and lawful in the man Halifax county will probably be soon rid of four negro postmasters. Halifax, Littleton, Scotland Neck and Aurelian Springs will have white offi cers. This is good news and will be welcomed by every white man in North Carolina. Tarboro Southerner. : If ;'Mllft GfifiRM ifflmm agement of the public school iuterest in said district; PROVIDED, that all chil dren resident in the said district between the ages of six (6) and twenty-one (21) years old shall be admitted into said schools five of tuition charges, and the Board of Trustees may permit at tendance upon the said schools residing without the territory embraced m said (traded School district upon snch terras as the Board of Trustees may prescribe. SUCTION S. That all public school funds derived from the State and County of ance, and which may from time to time be collected and apportioned under the general school law, for school pur poses for the children in said district, and all monies to which said district mav be entitled by reason of any special tax, gift, grant, apportionment or otherwise, shall be paid to thelivasurer of VanceCounty, and shall le applied to the keeping of said Graded Schools under the order and direction of the said Board of Trustees. The said Treasurer of Vance Countv and his sureties on his official bond shall be responsible for the proper disbursement by said treasurer of all monies collected under this act and received bv him. . SECTION" 9. That the following per sons shall constitute the Board of Trus tees for said Graded School district, and shall hold office for the following terms, to-wit: D. Y. Cooper, J. B. Owen and F. It. Harris for the term of six years from and after the ratification of this act; Dr. J. I). Hufham, W. E. Gary and A. C. Zol- hconer lor the term of four years from and after the ratification of this act; J.L. Currin, C. A. Lewis and Geo. A. Kose for the term of two years from and after the ratification of this act. All vacancies oc curring in the said Board of Trustees from any cause shall be filled by the Board of Trustees for the term of six years, except in the case of death or resig nation, and in the event of either of these cases for the unexpired term of the trustee so dying or resigning. SECTION 10. That the said Board of Trustees shall have power to emplovand fix the compensation of a superintendent for said Graded Schools, and such teach ers as are necessary, and to do all such other acts as may be necessary to carry on the said schools; they shall have power at any time to remove the said superintendent or any teacher, and to employ others in his or her stead. SECTION 11. That the beginning and ending of the school term shall be fixed by the said Board of Trustees. That the property, both real and personal, of the public schools of the said school district shall become the property of the said Graded Schools, and shall be vested in the said Board of Trustees and their suc cessors in trust for the said Graded Schools: Provided, that in case of the discontinuance of thesaid Graded Schools all of the property thereto belonging shall revert to and become the property ot the public schools of the said district. SECTION 12. Under the direction of the said Board of Trustees the superin tendent elected by them shall examine all applicants for the positions as teachers in said schools, and certify the result to the said board, before their election as such teachers by the board; no other cer- terficates of qualification shall be neces sary lor such teachers before their elec tion as teachers in said Graded Schools. The superintendent shall also act as sec retary to the said Board of Trustees, snouiu tne said board elect or require hi in to serve. SECTION' 1 3. That the monies received as herein provided for shall be held by the Treasurer of Vance Countv to be dis posed of under the direction of the Board of Trustees, whose warrant, signed by the chairman of said Board of Trustees, and countersigned by the secretary of the said board, shall be the only valid voucher in the hands of the said Treas urer for the disbursement of the said money in any settlement required of him by law-, or by the said Board of Trustees. SECTION" 14. That it shall be the duty of the said Board of Trustees to make annually after the close of each school year a full and complete report' of the operations oi said Graded Schools to gether with a financial report, which shall show receipts and disbursements, and shall also make such recommenda tions and estimates and plans for the future as may in their judgment be advis able to the Board of Education of Vance County. Said trustees shall also include in their report such data and other in formation as may be required under the general school law. SECTION 15. That nothing in this act shall prevent persons acting as trustees from holding any other office of profit or trust wnne acting as trustee. jmiiOiiua ib. mat tne election pro vided for under this act shall be held and conducted in the same manner, and suB ject to the same rules and regulations as are provided for the election of county officers by the general election laws 6f tdis htate: .Provided, that the said elec tion shall be held at any time within three months after the ratification of this act, and the costs of 'holding said election shall be paid out of the funds raised by this act by the Treasurer of the County. SECTION" 17. That all laws and clauses of laws in conflict with this act, be and tne same are hereby repealed. SECTION 1 8. This act shall be in force from and after its ratification. ffiBB far (Mng A new reason bobs np in favor of the amendment. George White, the impudent negro Congressman, says he will leave the State if the amend ment is declared Constitutional. W inston Sentinel. . -r " mw "TTTTa ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made un der his personal supervision for orer 30 years. Allow no one todJecive you In this. Counterfeit, Imitations and Just-as-good '' are but Experiments, and endanger the health of Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys orms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic It relieves Teething' Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. The KM You Have Always Bought Bears the In Use For Over 30 Years. FRANCIS A. MACON, Dental Surgeon, Office, Young&Tucker Building, Under Telephone Exchange. Office hours 9 A. M. to 1 P. M. 3 to 6 P. M. i.-sidence Pbone 88; office Phone 25. Estimates furnished when deired. No enarge for examination. AGUINALDO'S MANIFESTO. He Heeds the Voice of His People Theee Has Been Enough Bloodshed, Enough Tears and Enough Desola tionHis People Long for Peace. I believe I am not in error in pre suming that the unhappy fate to which my adverse fortune has led me is not a surprise to those who have been familiar with the progress of the war. The lessons taught with a full meaning and which have recently come to my knowledge suggest with irresistible force that a complete termination of hostilities and lasting peace are not only desirable, but absolutely necessary to the welfare of the Philippine Islands, lhe rihpinos have never been dismayed by their weakness, nor have they faltered in following, the path pointed out by their fortitude and courage, lhe time bat come, however, in which they find their advance along this path to be impeded by an irresistible force, which, while it restrains them, yet enlightens their minds and opens to them another course, presenting to them the cause of peace. This cause has been joyfully embraced by the majority of my fellow-countrymen, who have already united around the glorious, sovereign banner of the United States. In this banner they repose their trust and belief that under ita protection the Filipino peo- f)le will attain all those promised iberties which they are beginning to enjoy. The country has declared un mistakably in favor of peace, bo be it. There has been enough blood, enough tears and enough desolation. This wish cannot be ignored by the men still in arms, if they are ani mated by a desire to serve our noble people, which has thus clearly mani fested its will. So do I respect this will, now that it is known to me. "After a mature deliberation, I resolutely proclaim to the world that I cannot refuse to heed the voice of a people longing for peace, nor the lamentations of thousands of families yearning to see their dear ones enjoy ing the liberties and the promised generosity of the great American na tion. By acknowledging and accept ing the sovereignty of the United States throughout the Philippine archipelago, as I now do, and without any reservation whatsoever, I believe that 1 am serving thee, my beloved country. May happiness be thine." To S'gmfy this important step in the pacification of the country, Gen. MacArthur orders the release on swearing allegiance to the United States of 1,000 insurgent prisoners. Life a Century Age. (Memphis Commercial Appeal.) One hundred years ago a man could not take a ride on a steamboat. He could not go from Washington to New York in a few hours. He had never seen an electric light or dreamed of an electric car. He could not send a telegram. He couldn't talk through the tele phone, and he had never heard of the hello girl. He could not ride a bicycle. He could not call in a stenographer and dictate a letter. He bad never received a typewrit ten communication. He had never heard of the germ theory or worried over bacilli and bacteria. He never looked pleasant before a photographer or had his picture taken. He never heard a phonograph talk or saw a kinetoscope turn out a prize tight. He never saw through a Webster s Unabridged Dictionary with the aid of a Roentgen ray. He never had taken a ride in an elevator. He had never imagined sueh a thing as a typesetting machine or a typewriter. tie had never used anything but a wooden plow. He had never seen his wife using a sewing machine. . He had never struck a match on bis pants or anything else. He eouldn't take an anaesthetic and have his leg ent off without feeling it. He had never purchased a 10-cent magazine which would have been re garded as a miracle of art. He could not buy a paper for a cent and learn everything that bad hap pened the day before all over the world. He had never seen a McCormack reaper or a self-binding harvester. He hsdoevercaossed an iron bridge. In short there were several things that he could not do and several things he did not know. nAnsrhf tins home the siirna- Signature of MT, TT MttiMV OTWffT. WrWYOWK CITY. JAMES W. HART & CO., Boot and Shoe Makers, Cheatham Building, Montgomery Street. HENDERSON, N. U. Work guaranteed. Repairing a spe cialty. Prices reasonable. lour pat ronage solicited. No man lives to himself alone. The rich and the poor are alike dependent upon each other. If all the poor peo ple should leave this community the value of real estate would decrease greatly; business would fall off and the wheels of industry become prac tically idle. As a community then we owe something to these people as well as ourselves something: beside employment and the right of citizen ship and the wealthy citizen ought not to think that he is doing other than his duty when paying taxes for public benefits, chief among which is public education. An intelligent community is more prosperous than an ignorant community; an intelligent community can only come through educating the masses. A Man once collided with an Op portunity. "Why don't you look where you are going?" growled the Man. You don't seem to recognize me," said the Opportunity. "No, and I don't care to. You have trodden on ray corns," replied the man as he limped away. Moral: Don't believe the people who say they have never had a chance. If you want to make a test of economy buying cheap goods. DON'T try it on a piano. Take something smaller which will not be such a loss, as it certainly is doomed to failure. Cheap and 44 just as good as" articles never pay. The only piano to buy is the best piano. The BEST is the. Sold on Easy Terms ai Very Low Prices. A postal will bring catalog and easy gfcg-riention this paper p!ease. AiREWu FURNITUBE Ai TJUSIC CO., "THE HOME . KT n $ furnishers." Charlotte, n c. Nerves KeecJ To feed the vital fires or they lose the power to regulate and control the body. Unnatural stimulants won't do. Like an air blast on dying embers they cause a sudden flash of heat then all is dead. Give the nerves plenty of fuel, and the worry and fretting, the headaches, the nervousness, loss of sleep, deranged digestion, neuralgia, rheumatism and heart troubles, that burn up the brain substance and destroy the nerve-force, will disappear forever. Don't wait till the fires are burned out. Beoin now. o " T13 troubled a4ong time with extreme nervousness caused by indigestion and the excessive use of tobacco. I used several bottles of Dr. Miles Nervine and it gave me firreat relief. I use it occasionally now, when restless and tired out, and always with good results. It keeps me in good nealtb, ana 1 recommend it to all who have weak nerve?. " Sam McKjelvt, Tax Assessor, Denton, Texa Bso 5MIes" Hesv$ffl creates a good appetite, stimulates digestion, quiets nerv ous irritation, gives refreshing sleep and sends plenty of fresh blood to the furnaces of the brain and nerves. 1 djU gijrwjtte- 'Southern ! Railway. THE STANDARD RAILWAY OF THE SOUTH. j The Direct Line to all Points i TEXAS CALIFORNIA, FLORIDA, CUBA AND PORTO, RICO. Strictly FIRST - CLASS Equip ment on all Through and Local Trains;Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains; Fast and Safe Schedules m Travel by the SOUTHERN and you are assured of .a Safe, Comfortable and Expeditious Journey APPLY TO TICKET AGENTS FOR TIME TABLE RATES AND GENERAL INFORMATION, OR ADDRESS R. L. VERNON, F. R. DARBY, T. P. A., CP. AT. A., Charlotte, N. C. Asheville, N. C. f No Trouble to Answer Questions S. H. HARDWICK, Oen. Pass. Agent WASHINGTON. D.C. Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right. The Biltmore farms will shortly make very extensive additions to the live stock department. The farms will soon have on the way thirty three brood sows selected from all the leading breeding estab lishments in England, and like the former importation, these will be the choicest that England can fur nish. They are expected to arrive about the middle of the month, stav ing in quarantine three weeks ami will probably arrive here about the middle of May. Shipments of thor ough breds and standard poultry nave ueen more numerous than evrr from the farms, the number increasing every year. During the last few days sales have been made to Cali fornia, New Jersey, Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, North Carolina, Honda and Arkansas. Asheville Citi zen. The News and Observer wants a pub lie official who does not think he is above criticism. This long-felt want will go unfilled probably till the millennium. The Southerner does not want so much. It only desires a State official now and then who is not a member of the Legislature. Tar boro Southerner. When a tadpole is turning into a frog instead of being happy he feels mat ne has a kick coming. Ivem & Pood! P8&0 payment nlan. t Fuel D. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart Ind TV rrrrliirr tVn 1 ... . in fruit, vegetable or grain fl A. I . I ierunzer useu must co j enougn Potash. 1 -,r pa. ulars see our pamphlets, send them free. GERMAN KALI W.-kk 9J Nassau St ; N.'..iv . Notice To Tie taratle Put; ATTENTION, AO I:TS! Mr. Jiilm C Drewrv, (''!). -ial s,c. Ninth Carolina mil Viij;inii (f n,Itj known and popular Cmupai .. THE MUTUAL BENEFIT. LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, OF NEWARK. N. J., Desires to announce tu its lanjt,. of Policy Holders, and t tit- li-ur, rublic generally, or oi t!i t'arlin thi Company will now ici si ii:m KSSin this State, and fiom ihiMtavii Issue its KplendKt and fleMtaHf m,1i. all neinn tne veryuest In-iimna- it liest late insurance Uomp.inv in the v If the local aeent in mr tnnn not yet completed arrangements, nd airecuy, . . . i - a JOHN C. DREWRY, 5TATE AGENT, . - - KAI.CIUH.k Assets 72.'.t.i!ii. Puid Policy Holders 1 si'.r.o'.i.ly Live, Reliable, Energetic Agents Wis At Once to Work For The Old Mutual Benef;: vYestibii Trains Double Daily Service Between New York, Tampa, Atla New Orleans and Points Sou and West. Schedule in Effect February 24M SOIJ I II Kill Daily No. :tl V Lv New York, P K It 12 M . m 12 W Lv Philadelphia " 3 '.tl p m 3 -V Lv Baltimore ' 5 4.1 p m fZ Lv Washington " 0 ..' p in b '-' Lv Richmond SAL 10 40 p m VI L.V reterbburg " 1131 pm lit Lv Norliua SAL 2 05 n in .1 J : Lv Henderson SAL 2 30 a in :tJ.' Lv Kaleigh :i4ta m .',tc Lv Southern Pines " 5 37 a m G 5T Lv Hamlet SAL :W a in k it Lv Columbia 1 SAL 8 40 a in 10 Ar Savannah " 12 10 pm 'i '-" At JacRsonville " 3 so p in Ar Tampa " 5 (Ml a in It ' No 4'i:s N'd Lv New Yoi k NY PAN i? :: a m nir- Lv Philadelphia " 10 '-') a m U 5 ; Lv New York ODSiCo i 00 p m Lv Baltimore IJ S P Co 3 Lv Washington N&WSB i Lv Portsmouth SAL IHio p in :o 'j' lv w e I don 11 .in a in u Lv Noilina " 12 .Via in Lv Henderson ' l 20 a in JH- Lv Kaleig.li 3 02 a in i'i'i Lv Southern Pines " 5iam Lv Hamlet " 1; 4:. a in o: Lv Wilmington SAL 3.n Ar Charlotte S A I. S 51 : m id ' Lv Chester Lv Ureenwood Lv Athens Ar Atlanta X SAL 10 08 a in 11 ' 12 07 a in It " 2 in m 4i" Ar Augusta C & W C 5 10 m Ar Macon C of Ga 7 20 m 1! Ar Montgomery A&WP !) 20 p 1' " A r Mobile LA N 2 55 a in i Ar New Oi leans L & N 7 :v a m Ar Nashville a C & St L 5 35 a Ar Memphis , 4 00 p "i 8 10 .HORTIIIiOIMI Da.h I. N" 4' -' Lv Memphi-N CJL St L 1 00 p 111 h4' Lv Na-hville 10 55 p ' Lv New Oi leans L Jfc N 7 45 ' Lv Mobile " y 2 1 a m Lt Montgomery A&WP 6 20 am ' Lv Macon C of (in h 00 a ni 4 Lv Augu-ta ; & W C 9 40 a m Lv Atlanta Ar Ai tit.ti SAL 12 oop in " : 2 4 p m I . - . . . . .1 1 ii ti iti ' 4 I Ar( he t r " ' V "' 4- Lv Chariot t A L 0 :w p tn " " ' Lv Wilmington S A L M ' Lv Hamlet S a L y :o p 1 Lv Southern Pines S A L 10 55 ( 1 Lv Kaleigh 1 00 a It. i' ' , Ar UenderLon 2 27 Lv Noilina Lv WVlrion Ar Portsmouth S A L 3 10 a it. 4 'J it -' 7 00 a n : if 1 v 1 Ar Was-hington N&WfcU Ar Baltimore B S P to Ar New Yoik ODSSCo I Ar Phila'pl.U NYPJcN oi'v" -''t Ar New Yoik " 8 4 p " f. N" 4 'f t- . f u n I! So. Lv Jacksonville ' 10 2i a i" 't LvSavamihh " 1 50 p n. n , Lv Columbia fi i ' I t t Lv Ha- let Lv S.uthern Pines " Lv Raleigh ' Lv Hendeison ' Lv Noilina " 10 32 p 12 2- 144am n 111 u 111 .1" SAL 409a u l't Lv Petersburg Lv Richmon l ' 4 - p Ar Washington P I Ar Baltimore 10 03 a m i' g Ar Philadelphia Ar New Yoik . ... Ik- Ill it 3 15 P 6 If"' NOTE. tDailv except sm traltime. Eastern time. .. j ' Dining Cars between New i b, Richmond, and Hamlet ami re trains Nos. 31 and 44. VI n a mi bi r n C A L p f m w li-a. the moat healing salve In te r
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 2, 1901, edition 1
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