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THE HENDERSON GOLD LEAF THURSDAY, APRIL 10, W02. The Gold Leaf. HENDERSON, N. C. THURSDAY. APRIL 10, 1902. FEED BABY SLOWLY. ONE CF THE MOST IMPORTANT FAC TORS IN CHILD REARING. H canon Wliy Food Should Sot Be Tumlilrd Itapldlv Into Ihe Little !(uinarh dlce Wliloli Appllea to (ironn I'olka am Well a Babea. In the proper bringing up of a child there is nothing absolutely more im portant th;in this one thing to teaeb It to eat slowly. livery groom knows and observes the nili' In the rare of a horse that rapid mting Is fatal to digestion. There are sorts of patent mangers j0 prevent tin- horse swallowing his oats too jiiidily. The man who hits no patent iiiingcr knows enough, when neces sary, to put a Mono in the manger, M-iitti ring the o:its around it, so that the horse may be compelled to eat slowly. If the hi.rse's inclination is lo gulp down water too fast, the c-are-I'nl man will put a big sponge in the water, compelling slow drinking. A child's appetite, when he is al hnMil to ;( rapidly, is always in execs.-; of his actual needs unless the hild is in bad health. The reason for th;s is extremely simple. The child era ex fix.d because his body requires to manufacture new tissue. He is Mowing, ami he must not only replace the u.-cd up tissiu-s that bis daily life' destroys, but be must make new flesh, !. w muscles, new hone and new blood every day, adding weight a nil size. The seii'-at ion i f hunger is not the era .in-.: of an empty st i:i::-h, satisfied .- :- on as the stomach is tilled; it is a laving tbft i- I'e't by the nerves all i.w-r the body. This eraing cannot 1 o--ibly be satisfied until the stomach ha I? ,:i!i !! work of transforming ll.e (":'! iui blood, llcsh. iii!!.sc!es, etc.; o;ise.?;c!;:ly I lie sensation which we i:.i! ! j il i : ' i ieisi' is long after the child or eiov. :i ;i rs:.n h is rapidly :ib s .il: d :;s miieli I'ikmI as it really needs. A million iVulish parents urge their cl.iiilri :i i- e:. great deal and always let tic ::; e.i; as much as they want to. Vet : ii ;!nsc know that a famished man iaj.cn -i a wreck will eat himself !. :-.llIi If huir-iry -!ti m:!v iii :i 5 . . :;llov, d to do so. The very 1! goes to the same excess, lesser degree. The great safeguard against that excess in eat ing, which kills ! per cent of men be fore their time anl which accounts for '.'. per cent of children's diseases, is slow eating. Nearly all children eat too rapidly. They i!n so l, nature. Slow eating is a matter of eibtcation. Itut too often the motbir or the nurse teaches the child the habit of eating fast. When the baby is little, it is fed one spoonful at a time. Ilefure it has time to half chew or even gulp down the first tea spoonful of food another is held to its bps. of course it swallows what it lias in its mouth and seizes upon the next mouthful. The habit thus incul cated by foolish adults often ruins tbo child permanently. Four factors count in the healthy as similation of food, factors which par ents and nurses should remember. As suming the food to be properly prepar ed, thoroughly cooked and wisely se lected, there comes, first, the work of the teeth, which prepare the food for easy digestion; second, the action of the saliva, with which the food must be thoroughly mixed in order to mini mize the necessary work of the gastric juices in the stomach; third, the work of the stomach itself; fourth, and most important, a proper supply of blood and of heat. Force your child to chew slowly and thoroughly every mouthful. If noth ing else will do. compel him at fre quent intervals to lay down his knife and folk that the importance of pro longed chewing may be impressed upon him. hmi't allow your child to gulp down water or any other liquid with his solid food. If you allow him to drink while he eats, the salivary glands will not act. They will not need to act, for he will be able to swal low his food easily when it is made moist by water. You can't do anything to help along the unconscious process which goes on in tin stomach, but you can do ev erything to help that process by at tending to the fourth necessity, which demands blood and the heat of the blood in the stomach. Allow no child after eating lo take violent exercise, to study or even to read an exciting book. The !ra in has lirst call upon the service of the heart, and as soon as the brain is excited tin blood leaves the stomach and goes to the head. The muscles also when too violently ex erted draw the Mood away from the stomach. It is absolutely impossible for a child or a grown person to digest properly or to get strength ami vitality from what he cats unless for at least a half hour after eating the stomach be al lowed to monopolize the blood supply. Children should be kept quiet in some way. cspctiaily very young chil dren, after they have oaten. In the case of very young babies nature at tends to this mercifully by making them g i to sleep as so n as they have absorbed their tuilk. Older children ought not o go to sleep directly after eating for pti siological reasons which may be explained at some other time; but they ought to be quiet and calm. Tens of thousands of children in homes where this newspaper is read are ruin ed in health by studying right after meals. Tho public school system which gives children too short a rest ing period in the middle of the day is responsible partly for this, and the home studies at night are also respon sible. Every word that is said here applies to grownup people, of whom not one In a hundred has ever been taught to apply to himself such common sense care as is bestowed on a second class horse. New York Journal. The neat of Irrigation. 1 find that I want a whole lot of water-live or six times as much as I sup posed I did and you want a large wa ter supply back of you. While irriga tion is a grand thing in the east and the time is coming when all our streams will be used for irrigation, yet the one great thing needed is the cultivation of the soil. If you cultivate enough with the right sort of tools, you will go through wondrous droughts. Don't for get that cultivation is the best of all Ir rigation, and if you are going to Irri gate with water prepare to Lave a whole bunch of it. II. E. Hale. NERVOUS troubles are cured bv Hood's Sarsaparilla, -which en riches and purifies the blood. It is the bet medicine for nervous PEOPLE. YOUNG PLUM TREES. 1 rnnlna and Training Practically Described and Illoatrated. The horticultural department of the Vermont experiment station for some time has devoted a large share of Its attention to plums, covering the whole range of plum knowledge, from varie ties to pruning and culture. This gives them an opportunity to speak with more than usual assurance in offering general practical directions, from which only those relating to pruning and training are here reproduced. The old notion used to be that plums preferred a heavy clay soil. This is still true for certain classes of plums, in i insr l'itrxixo. Oni'-yoar-clJ trees ju.st from the nursery, on the lei:; pruned for planting:, on the right. particularly the doinest icau and dam sons, but other varieties thrive in oth er soils. Taking all kinds of plums together, the best soil is that which would be suitable for apples, and the general rule regarding apples is that they will thrive en any soil well suited to potatoes. Almost any soil will do, provided only that it is wll drained. It must not hold water either in sum mer or winter. The hi st plum trees for planting are either one or two years old. In gen eral, it is pr :babiy best to order two-year-old trees, especially of domes tiens and damsons. The trees may be set either in the fall or spring. In gen eral, the latter is to be recommended. The method adopted by Horticultur ist Waitg'n it! pruning and training young trees is as follows: The young trees as they come from the nursery have the loose and broken roots cut off. The top is pruned to a straight whip by the removal of all branches, and this whip is cut back to a height of two or three feet, depending on the va riety and ihe strength of the young tree, chielly on the former. At this point where the whip is cut back the head of the tree is to be formed. Dur ing the lirst summer a number of branches will be sent out from all sides of this straight stock. These are carefully watched and their number regulated by pinching off all those which are not desired. From four to six of these side branches are preserv ed, the object being to have them as well distributed around the trunk as possible, so as to give the tree a proper balance. On a thrifty tree these side branches will make a growth of two to four feet each the lirst year. The best plan is to cut off the tips of these branches early in September or late in August, so as to stop growth , and harden them up. Care must be taken to see that stickers and water sprouts are kept rubbed off. At the opening of the second spring the tree consists of a short trunk with four to six diverging branches. These are cut back to a length of six to eight een inches. The weaker the tree the more closely it is shortened In. On these four to six branches the head is then foi mod. From one to three new bra itches-preferably two are allowed to grow on each branch, and these are treated during the second summer just YOT.NU IMM HUE. Knd of the l'.ist year in the orchard. s the primary branches were treated during the iirst s .minor. Again the whole growth is stopped late in August or early in September so that it may harden up. A tree carefully handled in this way will usually be iii bearing condition at the end of the second year and should give' a moderate crop the third year. Thereafter the system of pruning is somewhat i"ifL'erent. Some men prefer to cut back their plum trees severely every year. Others prefer to remove only as much wood as is necessary to keep the top fairly open. The warning of Professor J. B. Smith i f New Jersey as to the visita tion of sevetueeii year locusts, duo this year, concludes with the advice to those who plant trees this spring not to prune severely. How many people try to show their smartness rather than work for the glory of God? A HAPPY HOME Is one where health abounds. With impure blood there cannot be good health. With a disordered LIVER there cannot be good blood. s revivify the torpid LIVER and restore its natural action. A healthy LIVER means pure hlTTTtl mm Pure blood means hearth. Health means happiness. Take no Substitute. All Druggists. A , i - vv- 'Ac g Tuffs N COWPEAS FOR SEED. A Strong Demand For Them Prom Yarloua Parta of the Country. The following announcement ex The growth of cowpeas for manuring plains itslf: land for hay and for seed is rapidly ex- The friends of Hon. James A. Lock tending throughout the Maryland and hart of thi, Anson, county in West Delaware peninsula, says an Orange ern North Carolina, will, with confi Judd Farmer correspondent. As a land der.ee, present his name to the next renovator it is valued highly, especially Democratic State Convention for on land that it not too light. It gives Associate Justice of the Supreme increasing satisfaction as a hay crop, Court. He is in every way eminently and there is a strong demand for seed qualilied for this great office. He is from all parts of the country. More a man of letters: a profound thinker; seed was grown and saved the past a lawyer of superb attainments, a year than heretofore, but most of it Is splendid specimen of physical and still in farmers' hands, as they dislike moral manhood, and in every way to sell at present prices. An occasional measures np to the requirement carload has been secured at about $1.25 which a man ought to possess who per bushel. If the market goes to $1.72 aspires to this great office. In those or $2, a large increase of acreage for seed purposes will be planted. As ordinarily harvested the yield ranges from fifteen to eighteen bushels per acre. The most popular variety is the Early Black, though some earlier maturing but less known varieties are preferred in some sections for seed, Experienced men claim that the price will not get much lower until sorje bet- ter method of shelling the seed is found. The usual practice is to pick the pods by hand anil separate them with a pea sheller or thrash out by hand. It costs from 40 to 50 cents per bushel by this method. The hand shell er cleans from fifty to sixty bushels per day. Attempts have been made to shell with a wheat separator by making j some changes in the mechanism, but ; generally with poor success, and, al though some machines seem to do bet ter work than others, too many peas are broken in the process. The small ( State; one whose personal life is be seeded varieties suffer less from break- j yond reproach; one who has felt age than the Early Black and larger j enough interest in the State to fight kinds. A Delaware man thrashed 200 ; actively for the preservation of the bushels of New Era, a very small party and we expect to see a just seeded kind, with a wheat thrashing people place those things to his outfit, passing the entire hay through credit. I beg vou to do me the kind the machine. The expense was small, DesS to carry" this message lo your and there were no split peas, but he people estimated that 20 per cent or more re- j q BOYLIX, mained in the hay. However, he se- , ror ncro find wna nnito well cnftfifxt Keligion should be the rule of life, not a casual incident of it. Disraeli. WE ARE PREPARED TO SELL 1E&IH Cheaper Than Coal or Wood; to Handle. Prices CONTINENTAL OIL CO. Galveston, Texas. C&piteJ. $250,000. B. C. F. LEONARD, Pres.. Of Harvrva (Si Leonard Elev. Co. Until the allotment at stock at 10 cents per share, minimum subscription 100 shares. Our first well is a uar anteed 6 inch pusher (capable now commenced and soon to Top Heights, where we are surrounded by gushers, 2 within 25 feet. Fortunes have been shares or more and deposit the money in your bank, to re main until gusher is in, and we fail. Round Trip Ticket to Beaumont and Return Free To any number of investors who will deposit $5oo in their bank to be paid us for stock, after any one of their number has visited the field and finds our proposition as represented; itherwise the money to be returned to subscribers. We have 10 acres at Beaumont, 5 at Sour Lake, with more land at Damon's Mound and High Island. References: S. O. Young. Secretary Galveston Cot on Exchange; State National Loan and Trust Company, and Adoue & Lobit, bankers, rated at $1,000,000. v AGENTS WANTED. Continental McGlure's yl RE you interested in your fellows? Are sou concerned in the affairs -of life ? Do you care anything alout the great men zcho have brought about the tenditio'ts t : which you lire, and tho.e who are in power to-day ? Dj you enjoy whoie. ome, animated stories that are true to life ? Do you care for beauty in any fin ? Then there is no escape for you ; you KUjt join the army who read McClure's regularly. A FEW FEATURES FOR 1902 New Romantic Love Story b booth tarkington. author of T.he Gentleman frot Indiana " and " Mcriiieur B aucaire,' 1 a tale ot love thwarted Kit triumphant, of" gallant men and beautiful women. It deals vi 1. ,i f c in Indiana at the time ot the Mexican War. True Story of the Standard Oil. By ida m. tar bell, author of Life of Napoleon," " Life of Lincoln ," etc. A dramatic, human story of the first and stiil the greatest of sii trusts- not an economic treatise, but an exciting historv. Greatest of the Old Masters. By JOHN LA FARGE. Interest ing and helpful papers on Michelan gelo, Raphael, Rembrandt, etc. , their finest pictures reproduced in tints. Mr. Dooley on His Travels. I lis views upon the typical New Yorker, Philade'phin, Bostonian, and in habitant of Chicago and Washington. William Allen White on Tillman, Piatt, Cleveland and others. L'i'ustrateJ prospectus, dticribtr.g in fa.i S. S. McCLURE CO., 141 -155 ONE DOLLAR A YEAR But at any price THE BEST ! Hon. James A. Lockhart for Associate Justice. particulars he is equal to any man in j the West whose name has beeu men- lioned and none are his superior. It appears to me, that other things being equal, the Democratic Convention in making nominations, should select those whose work for the party has been constant, faithful and unre- milting, men whose distinguished services have made it possible for the party to have honors at its disposal, A working Democrat is certainly more worthy of the honors of the parly than an inactive one can be. Mr. Lockhart has at all times been a faithful servitor of the party, has never been indifferent to its best in terest, and when it was in peril he i stood by it with an unswerving devo- tiou and in this section led the van to redeem it - We shall present to the convention a lawyer whose ability is the equal of any other in the profession in this -..., Chairman Dem Ex. Com. Anson 3 Men are respectable only as they respect. Emerson. in .ML Easier and Less Expensive on Application. Par VaJvie of Shares, 10c. J. F. WILLIAMSON. Secretary, the price is exhausted will sell full paid and non assessable, of earning $i,5oo,ooo annually) be finished in Block 32, Spindle made in Oil Stock. Buv 25o to be returned to you should WRITE AT ONCE. V V Oil Company. Clara Morris's Stage Recollec tions. Stories of baivir.i, Bern hardt, Mrs. SidJor.s and others. A Battle of Millionaires. By the arthor cf "Wall Street Stories." The Forest Runner. Serial Talc of the Michigan Woods. Josephine Dodge Daskam. More Child Svirics. Emmy Lou Stories bv GEORGE MADDKN MARTIN. Kjny crier fej.ttrr t ser.t free to an? adjren East 25th Street, New York, N. Y. SB ...iiui.r... ...a'.'ii.u-n jii--,t,r.:. ill Afcgetable Preparalionfor As similating the Food andRegula ting the Stomachs and Dowels of Promotes Digeslion.Cheerful nessandRest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine norIiieral. yOT "N AR C OTIC . iapc afMDrSAKl'ELPITCfWe PjKtfJcm Seal' yilx.Sfnrut RolIU Sail -jiaite Seed t BtCurbatuUrSeda HtmtSeed- 1 Migar A perfect Remedy forConsUpa Fion , Sour Stonwch. Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feveri sh ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature oT NEW YORK. yiiD 1 1 tin tire tin gheta'a flsrC ft a EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. 1 m vu uvy u A SOUTHERN ENl RPRISE FOR THE SOUTH SYDNOR & 709, Til, H3 E. Broad St., Richmond, Va. IS THK SOI TH THK IIIKA HAH PKKVAII.KO CI F I II S T - 0 1 ASS. One must take an expensive trip North to purchase it and then must pay the freight and hift- prices to pet it. Hut Snvdor & Hundlev conceived the idea of a STIIICTLY FIKST-CLASS HOrSK.earrviiifr a big stock of MKD IUM to the HIGHEST GRADES OF FURNITUHE, and coupled w ith Lace Curtains, Upholstery and Draperies j Departments, established in the South at a point where cheap rates could be obtained and a long: journey cut half in two, and have established such a store. They today extend an invitation to the people of North Carolina taiiii nginiii ona nearov otaws to visit tnem in tneir STRICTLY MODERN ESTABLISHMENT. J and nainia and nearby States to Stock is now complete to overflowing, many improvements have recently been made. All goods marked in plain figures and a. cash discount of ten r. per cent, allowed. SNYDOR & HUNDLEY, The Leaders, J RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. J jr III Strong, 0 Best 0L SOLD illlp C1EEI1C-E L0WE5T PRICES. Get my prices and examine stock before buyin elsewhere. Will make it to your interest. i HENDERSON, N. C. fe f OOOOOQO' 1 m mxinM For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years lo) Al THE CENTAUR COMmNT. HIW VOPK CITY. 1 HUNDLEY, $ IN THE lAHT THAT WHK.V IN NKKII OK F U It N I T U It E 3 J visit them in their Serviceable Vehicles ! THE KIND WE SELL. A U HTllfFfF ILP flakes and Fully Guaranteed. FOR CASH OR ON TIME,. Poor arc made rich er and more productive and rich soils retain their crop-producing powers, by the use of fertilizers with a liberal percentage of Potash. Write for our books sent free which give all details. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York City. J. E McCRAW, Tirvrver !J and Stexn Fitter, HENDERSON. N. C. We to everything "r line f !? Steam Fitting to CVlTVe l.t Menli:;r .n ?hnt rtntice t n)..!er:ite prire. ROOFING AND GUTTERING A specially. Best qnnlity jalvaniy.tl irnn nml tin used in cur work. Stove pipes, elbows and repairing kinds. Sole agents for f all "Perfection" Roof & Iron Paint Your patronage solicited. Satisfac tion as to work and price or no pay. Montgomery St., Op Cooper's Warehouse HENDERSON TELEPHONE -COMPANY The following Toll Kates will be etTee tive December 3rd. 1900. FROM HENDERSON: Iturlinjrtmi, 40 Clms' Cit y. -"to H'larksville. 2." Dunn, Durham. . :$ Enfield. Fnmklinton. l. Cireon shorn. l.'i (iroonville, 4.") (loldsboro. l i Hirh Point, "() Hillsboro. Littleton, 2t Louislmrjr. - Mercer, 40 Nashville. : Oxford. 1" Raleigh. : Rocky Mount, ;." Scotland Neck. 10 Sinithheld. 40 Spring Hope, :iO Marhoro. 40 Wake Forent. 'J? Warrenton, 20 Washington. .0 Weldon. Wilson. : Winston, ",". F. C. Toepleman, (General Superintendent . mm 0 PPT S ISM? "ll,W mm Styles. www ZMestibuhi, Trains Double Daily Service uiiniv.il nn 1 ui a., Ki'Tpj f New Orleans and Fo t ts Sou and West. 1 Schedule in Effect March 2eH, MHIIIWAIH,. "Villi Lv New York. V K K : Lv Philadelphia I.v Italiiinoie Lv Wa-liinumn V .s l: ; Lv Kichtiioii1 A 1 ii Lv IVterbuiK 1; i in 2 i Lv Norlina SA L Lv Henderson S A L Lv Hairijth Lv is-mthern Pines " l :i ; In u' Lv 11 a in let Lv Columbia Ai Nivatiiiah Ar Jacksonville 8 A 1. SA L 1. i ! 11, t I Ar St Augustine S A L Ar Tampa SAL 1 J4 Lv New Voik NY PAN t; Lv Philadelphia " Lv New York 01).sh:. i. Lv Ualtimoie liSl'l'ii Lv WahiiKiou N&WMJ Lv roitsinouth Lv Weldon SAL II, . 1) .. 1J . Lv Noilina It: Lv lteiuteiMiu Lv Kalt-iKli Lv JHtutliein Tines Lv Han. let 1 .1 !!, - ! II. Lv Wilmington SA L S A L Ar (Jhailotte Lv Chester Lv IjiieeiiwiMal SAL '' in ! ,; 1 . ;i in - -i I' it i. : , ;: 1' hi ;;. Lv Ath n?i Ar Atlanta X Ar Augusta C& W C C or Ua 9 . i Ar Macon T -"I1 in i; ' Ar Montgomery A&Wl' ;i lm m t; Ar Mobile LAN -j a m Ar .New Oi leans & N Ar Nashville . ; A ISt L A in m ., Ar Memphis MHIIIIUAIIII 1 a.l N.i. :;; Lv Memphis N C A St L 12 4". i,.. Ii ,ii : Lv Nahville 'J : in ,, Lv JNew Oilcans LA: s ih p m Lv Mobile " u .; ,i a n, Lt Montgomery AAW T ii a m i ,i ,; Lv Macon C ot (ia Him am 4 v , Lv Augusta C&WC I'M'.-, am Lv Atlanta Ar Athens Ar Greenwood Ar Uhe.-ter S A L 1 on 1,0011 Km;, " ! in I12.,' .". 1 1 i i;i 1 yxk " 7 17 Ik 4'i '- Lv Charlotte SAL 7 :; in 41 Lv Wiliiiington SAL no.. ; m Lv lUnilet SAL 11 on p in , Lv Southern i'inesb A L 11 :; ui h :;4 s Lv Kaleigli " ' tr. a m nn 1 Lv lieiitteriou ' VI in x-. Lv Norlina SAL ;: .1.". a in 1 1' ; Lv Weldon r w v. in 3i ; Ar roitsinouth 7 nam ;,T, Ar Washington NiWSH C J' 1 If, 4: 1 1., Ar Baltimore Ii S 1 Co Ar New York OUSSCo Ar lMiila'itLU NYP&N t" I' " -! ArNewloik " Sljiiiu nvfu No m Vi sa l 'J (10 III w Lv Tampa Lv St Augustine SAL h a m Lv Jacksonville s A L nil" am ".; Lv Savannah ' 1 ."... n. U i:i Lv Columbia " 7 or. m Lv Han let ' in 4" p in Hi".- Lv Southei 11 Pines " 1 1 :::: tn v-M Lv Kaleigh 1 n in 11': Lv Henderson " ." n7 m l- Lv Norlina " am 14' Lv Petersburg SAL 5 r, a in 4 Lv Kichuioml " C ::" a m 4r Ar Washington W S Ky 10 in a 111 " : Ar Baltimore P H Ii 11 -'' a m 11 : Ar Philadelphia " 1 :: p m J Ar New York " 4 1:; m G NOTE.-jDaily except Mn.ilay. : tral time. Easlein time. JAS. M j;ai:k. First Vice-President and ;.-i, al M: IL E. I. 1)1 N II. General I'K-t'n.ri Sf A Short Ocean Trii- Thp rtct Jui;.htf .1! tfou!: to NEW YORK and NORTHERN AND ME SUMMER RESORTS IS VIA OLD DOMINION Lf AND RAIL CONNLCII0N5- F7xpress steamsliips la 1 daily, t-xcept Sundav. at 7 Old Poii t Comfoit at H iy ! 1 York diiect. afford ! I ; through passengers from tli- -west and West to i-it Point orufort ai;d Vi 1 1 mute. 1M- 3 Fo tickets and b-iim:i: apnlv to railroad ticket aj- HOWELL. General Ac-"' N J. F. MAVKK, Agent, l... ' Itichmond, Va. H. B. WALKER, J. J ' B Traftlc Mer, Cie". ''asS NEW YORK, N V. OXFORD Al lENl! nTTrrnTftiT nn nnrrmnrrA' ClIlT' 111 w 1 a 1 1 1 m iii- Miiiinr.r i Lfiit' , SCHEDULE IN EFFECT ?1AMII No. 21 Leaves Henderson No. 23 L-aves lletideison No, 22 Arrives from Oxfool c No. 24 Arrives from Oxt r ! Train No. 21 makes clo-- r ,,:"'- Norfolk via Jeffreys a d !, .Sf and pint-i North, arriving . 3:,r p. m ,,a J Tiain No. 23 leavini: H--' 1 ' r. , p nr., makes in mediate e-" ,c .tr font for Duilian., Gieei.h : h i and Charlotte and all point-
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 10, 1902, edition 1
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