Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Oct. 12, 1905, edition 1 / Page 1
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r I Advertising Brings Success f r : ;.riy to advertise in the Gold 4 - , L,ea.f is ii..vii by its well Ailed f '-tf'alvei tisiii; eolumus. j f'4r Sensible Business Men I 4 i5 ; noteontinue to spend good ' l lu-rtwy where no appreciable A f I - i .-turns fire xeen. i Tnat is Proof That it Pays. Ji As" an Advertising Medium The Gold L.etf statidsnt He head of neujHrt in thin section, the f famous Bright Tobacco District. The most wide-awake and buc ceseful men us1 it column! with the highest Satisfaction to Themselves. 1 R. MANNING,-Publisher. 0toirisr, Cakot-xn-a, IE3jba"ve32st,s Blessings Atteisto Her. 7i SUBSCRIPT10K $1.50 Cist VOL. XXIV. JTENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1905. NO. 48. - . . it Correct Dress The "Modtrn Method" system of fuVh-rraJ.- t.nV rirg ir-troduced by fe L. tl. Hays Li Co., ci Cincinnati, O- :!. fif-s ood dff.as.Ts everywhere. All Garments Wade Strictly to Yovr Measure .,! ! :te .rin i. 503 styles of foreign -. .- i mic (..!. ilcs fori which to choose. 7ie U avis & Wat kins Co, iii:nii:i:son. n. c. FRANCIS A. MACON, DENTAL SURGEON. Office in oung Block. !! hour-: 'J a. in. to 1 . hi.. : to 6 p. ni. K.'M.j.-ncc I'lioiie K8; Office Phone 25. rtiin:i!i's furnished when desired. No r! ufi- lnr examination. mi. K. J5. TUCKER, DENTIST, HENDERSON, IN.C. OIHCi.: Over Thomas' Druj; Store. DR. F. S. HARRIS, DENTIST, Henderson. N. C. In" Oi riCE: Over E. (i Davis' Store. HENRY PERRY. INSURANCE. Mroiiir line of l.otli XAVV. AM) FIltK i 1 M I'AMl'S represented. I'olii-ies issued :'l iiskm phieed to Iiest ail vaiit :i ire. Office: In Court House. Administrator's Notice. 1 1 . t v i n lc 1 1 1 . t i i li.- I ;is .'idiiiinistriitor of the Matt- of Ktilx-rt W. .loues. dii-eased. late of Value (unity. This is notify all persons having I'laims a;Mitist the estate of said de . .-as.-tl to exhibit t Iieiu lu foi mi' on or before t if I.-t day of September. I'.MMi. or tliisiiotire will l.i- h-:t ilfil in lar of their recovery. All persons imlelited to said estate will please make i m media te set t lenient. This Anir. tth. 1 :M."i. .lolIN W. .IOXKS. Administrator of Kobt. W. Jones, deceased. in!rev J. Harris. Atlornev. COAL FOR ALL PURPOSRS. Whatever your requirements may he we are ready to till them to ymir satisfaction. We handle the MKST COAL that inonev can l.uy. Anthracite, Splint, Steam. Also PINE AND OAK WOOD n length. -:- Satisfaction and prompt service guaranteed. Poythr ess' Coal & Wood Yard, -Phone, No. 88.- turnip seed time I here attain. We have the seed. ALL KINDS, BEST VARIETIES, NEW CROP. Ami everything else you w.iin in ourline. Large and ( nipletc- stock at right prices Special Attention to Prescription Work. Only the best and purest 1 'nis and Chemicals us" MELVILLE DORSET, Druggist. THE "BOSS " COTTON PRESS! SIMPLEST, STRONGEST, BEST The Murray Ginning System Gins, Feeders, Condensers, Etc. G1BBES MACHINERY CO. Columbia, . C. I! THE CLANSMAN. TWO CRITICISMS OF THE NEW PLAY written By Thomas Dixon, Jr. A Powerful Production from a Dra matic Standpoint, but Difference of Opinion as to the Cause of its Being: and Good Effect Upon the Public Mind Praised and Condemned. The Clansman, Rev. Thomas Dix fin's new play, was presented to pack ed houses in Raleigh last week, over 1,100 being paid to witnessthe two performances. That the drama is a powerful ai.d captivating one from a dramatic standpoint is not dispu ted. but therein a difference of opinion as to the propriety of its presenta tion a ml the good purpose it will serve. AVe publish below two opinions, somewhat diverse in nature, from the Raleigh 7 iines and the Raleigh Post, both of these editorial criti cism s dealing with the play rather than the players: Italeigfi Times. It is ever easy to be opinionated and to say and do things that wear not well before the gleam and glare of calcium. There wus presented in the city yesterday afternoon and hist night a play ''The Clansman.'' Thomas Dixon, Jr., the author of the book of that title, combined the parts of two of his stories, placed thescenes and the action in Piedmont, S. C, ami then bestowed on variant men and women the portrayal of those parts. In the local story of the play there is no hint or mention of the terribleness of portrayal. The thing stands out till to itself. There has been done nothing else that in any way approaches it. The Southern part of the world, and after that the entire powers of the Anglo-Saxon livers .and movers and beings will join in a hearty and full-souled trib ute to the Southern gentleman man, student, observer and physic fellow of deep research for what he has done and accomplished in setting forth the truth of conditions as they obtained in those days when the Southland lay in blood-stained ash es, when women were more than god-desi-es and men dared to be as they were gods among men and the gen erations that knew them for fealty and for fortitude and greatness. There will be found hundreds and thousands of critics who will lay to the shoulders of Mr. Dixon the lash the figurative lash that hurts as well as the plaited thong with all its liter al and full free stings. In the mean time it i.s well to stou and to take even more than a second thought iu the matter. In that learned man and close observer there is more than the depicting of fictional values there is a condition of things and af fairs as if the camera-obseura had placed it all in reproduction, stamped with the infinite seal ol the everlast ing iu consideration of truth. The play bears in its passages all that is vile and bad and bitterly uu aecptable to the men and women of the Old South. Jt is perhaps a lore i - .i ? .i . i irone conclusion in me minus anu hearts of most people that they have no desire to again witness the scenes and parts that indieatethe nearly powerlessness of the South and the actualities that then not only lurked in negro hearts and minds, but be came the Uppermost part, and par cels of their degraded and degrading souls. It was not a far cry for many of us to whom the parts of the play were but re-enactments of tragedies too terrible to put in words. As a thing of sociology there remains nothing more to be said. The scourge has in part, been removed. How much long er the sting will be felt God alone knows. Last night there sat and watched men who are at all times temperate and very careful; at the same time the enactments of the olden rule, when Anglo-Saxonism was to a great extent subservient to the calls and dictates of the Afro eniancipated, were so intensely ap parent that there was breathlessness and the ardent desire to go upon the stage and throttle those who carried out the parts of the new regime, in passages where glorious womanhood of the Old Soutli was subjected to unlearned brutality and all the things and parts that make up the bestial in mankind. We congratulate Mr. Dixon on this consummation of the art of writer and play maker combined. lie has before him the reach after higher things and everj- dear presience of) attainment. He has drawn and de lineated as few can and will dare to try. He has given in three hours what the world in its earnest part has long wished to know. The man who wrote the book and the man who planned and plotted the play has accomplished great things, great er things, perhaps, thau he dreamed over and builded for in the handling of one of the most perplexing and trying matters of the whole globe. The terrors of the real situation were presented and presented well. The author has displayed a real hero ism in making such a piece presenta ble and acceptable unto all the peo ple of the South and in time to the people of the North country as well. The production last night was not only a fair and true showing of re construction conditions, it was full of the effectiveness of the real. Many will recall the story of the same times in the little story that was written some years ago by Leland in his "Voice from South Carolina." In all of it there lies bitterness, and there lurks the spirit of the unaveng ed, of those who experienced treach ery and suffering and humiliation and the need of an expediency for t he reconstruction of crushed principles and stunned pride and crippled man hood and womanhood. It is perhaps true that all who saw the play last night, and at any time since its production, was taken tip Organized Under Comptroller of At this season of the year the people hereabouts "are reaping the fruits of the year's work. The proceeds of the harvest should be stored away in a good strong Bank. The FIRST NATIONAL BANK is just such a Bank and will serve you at all times with safety, promptness and courtesy. Our Savings Department Pays 4 per cent. Interest on time deposits and compounds this interest twice each vear. At this season, the fall of the year, we especially invite the ACCOUNTS OF FARMERS, guaranteeing our relations to be mutually pleasant and profitable. SAMUEL R. it a few days ago, will care not to see it again. To those, however, who have not witnessed its presentation we join in with others and add to their wish the desire that all of the South both, the older and vounger gene rations shall see such a thing and see it this time. The criticism of the players appears in another part of this paper. The theme is apart from the players. They are workers as human beings, toiling along their own lines. While there is a terribleness about the piece, there is that which is transcendent in the actuality of pain wrought history. The time will come when the people of the North country will cease to carp and condemn their fellows on this side the Potomac. Truth is ever trutli and it has come to be the trying lot of Thomas Dixon to tell it in print and from the lips of player folk be fore the footlights. Success and yet more greatness to this man, minister and playwright, who has lived and conceived by right eous sight, by intuition and heredity, the privilege of appearing as the true exponent of a great chapter in the history of the world that of naming and branding crime and false citizen ship .and proclaiming foralltime and to all peoples Anglo-Saxon superior ity, in its real cradle which was and is the South. Raleigh Post. If there is one excuse for putting "The Clansman" on the stage, that stands paramount to all other excus es, it is to make money. In that light it is a great success. The play is pop ular with the masses. The shrewd and brilliant author has wrought masterfully. He has compounded a remarkably mixture of good and evil. These elements are so adroitly interwoven that an attempt to sum it all up leaves the majority of audi tors guessing. But for the statement of the author that he regards the play as the most important work of his life (and he has wrought in legislative halls, in the legal forum and in the pulpit), and that his object is to teach the young and coming generations the truth about a grave problem, tnere would be little reason for any notice of the play further than the usual passing criticism that is given to stage attractions. The claim that every situation it presents had a counterpart in real life during recon struction daj's, and that its teach ings have a bearing and an applica tion as to the racial question at the present time, makes the wisdom of the performance a matter of extreme doubt. The Clansman is, as we have said, a mixture of good and evil. In one aspect it shows the friendliness, of one to the other, of former master and slave, their love for, and faith fulness to, each other. That is not bad; but it is a story of past years. It has nothing to do with the pres ent. It is not a living issue, and never will be again. The play may possibly give the younger genera tions a better conception of the mo tives and reasons behind the organi zation of the Ku Klux Klan, and in this we see the best that can be said of the play, because it is a deplorable fact that the original object and in tentions of the Klan were later car ried to unwarranted extremes and recklessly and outrageously abused. The evils portrayed grew solely out of base politics, and the social dream was whispered by scoundrelly carpet bag politicians. The conditions which rendered that situation possi ble have long since passed away, and they will never come again. There is no negro domination in this country and no such horrible lessons as The Clansman is giving are needed to prevent its return. The negro lieutenant-governor is made the strongest character in the play. This we do not regard as true to life. The negro was the tool of the designing carpet-bagger, and was a lump of putty in his hands. The Clansman story shows the reverse and alleges it to be true. It is not on record that any negro has ever gone Authority of Currency HQQB Capital Stock Resources HARRIS, President. to the daring extremes that are pic tured in the case of Silas Lynch. On the whole, we regard The Clans man as an overdrawn picture of con ditions that existed nearly forty years ago. In the light of present day conditions it does injustice to the better class of negroes in the South, in that Silas Lynch is repre sented as possessing the highest order of ability and the best educated men among the negroes. The most thrill ing and soul-stirring scenes in the play are the most inflammatory and incendiary. Just here we think the mixture of bad outweighs the good. The most striking lessons are ghast ly and unnecessary. With this bit of running comment and criticism of The Clansman we pass it up, hoping that the distance at which we are removed from the deplorable scenes in which it is laid, and the sober sense of those who wit ness the play, will prevent kindling anew the smouldering fires of race hatred. When we have spent two or three hours in imagination back in 1867, and poured a few thousand dollars into the yawning coffers of The Clansman's author, let us turn at once to the living present and take up the work before us of the indus trial and moral upbuilding of our country, the education of the masses, and the fostering of still friendlier at titudes as citizens between the de scendants of former master and for mer slave. Plans to Get Rich are ofreu frustrated by sudden breakdowns, due to dyspepsia or constipation. Brace up and take Dr. Kitg'is New Life Pills. They take out the materials which are clogging your energies, and give you a new start. Cure headache and dizziness too. At Melville Dor sey's drug store: 25c, guaranteed. Another Declaration of Independence. Charity and Children. Another Declaration of Independ ence has been signed by the men of Mecklenburg and it will be defended with the same nerve and courage that distinguished the signers of the other document. The fight for freedom by the news papers in Charlotte has been won. For some time to come the scars of the conflict will remain, but the bless ing of indepence will atone a thous and fold for all the inconvenience and trouble the struggle has entailed; and not Charlotte alone, but the newspapers generally throughout the State will reap the fruit of the victory. For BresJkf st Lin.cheon or Tec A few small biscuits easily made witji Royal Baking Powder. Make them small as small round as a napkin ring. Mix and bake just before the meal. Serve hot. Nothing better for a light dessert than these little hot biscuits with butter and honey, marmalade or jam. - You must use Royal Baking Powder to get them right. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NfW YORK Supervised and Endorsed by the United States Government, ftf. (D. $50,D)B)IB).(B)0 The World Misjudges. Monroe Journal. The world misjudges the man who works on, after having accumulated wealth, or even a competency, till the last expiring breath. How often do we hear it said of men who are near the journey's end, that they are just as anxious to make a dollar as they ever were. This is generally true, but we often misconstrue the motive of that desire. Many of the men against whom the charge is made, work on to make dollars, not because they love the dollars, but because they love the work they have always been accustomed to do. They do not always understand this fact them selves, and many of them never think J? 1 . . A A. . i 111 . ' oi me matter at an, out we aresatis- ! tied that this is the last analysis of ! the fact. They work on because I they have worked all their lives and 1 would be miserable could they not ' continue to work, and of course thev ..... ' . .. do the tilings thattiirougn longyears they have not only learned to do, but so love. The world says they are still greedy for the dollar. This attachment to one's life work is im mense, and about the saddest sight to be found is an old man who has been taught to believe that he ought to retire and is wandering about in an aimless sort of way waiting to die. Tht idea of dying in harness is not the sentimental one. It is a necessity for most men. The old man or woman who is forced to give up the old home or the old busiuess to "rest" or to go live with the chil dren, is generally doomed to a few years of misery when these years should be the happiest of their lives. It makes no difference how long you have been sick, if you are troubled with indiges tion, constipatiou, liver and kidney troubles, Ilollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will make you well. 35 cents. Parker's Two Drug Stores. It is charged that the whiskey in fluence is against Judge Shaw. Judge Shaw is one of the cleanest, honestest men North Carolina has had on the bench in a quarter of century ,but his friends are not helping his cause by resorting to the alarmist's methods. Merit still weighs with thinking men and they are in the majority in North Carolina. Ssilisbury Post. . . The printing offices over the coun try can now see where they were making trouble for themselves when they voluntarily, gave their linotype operators an eight-hour da'. Durham Herald. 3j 3 3 3 SAMUEL T. PEACE, Cashier. The South's Small Factories. Wilmington Messenger. No matter what kind of a manufac turing plant is started at the South it succeeds, is a rule to which there are very few exceptions indeed. Suc cess is the general rule, whether it be a heavily capitalized cotton factory or a plant on a small capital manu facturing some apparently insignifi cant article of trade. Where there are brains and energy tit the head of the concern there is sure to be success. While big cotton mills are building here and there in the South, this sec tion is being dotted all over with less pretentious manufacturing plants which turn out various kinds of mer chantable .articles. While these lat ter do not make sis much show or at tract as great attention as do the large mills for manufacturing the South's staple they are of hardly less importance to our section of the country. They add much to the prosperity of the smaller towns and surrounding rural districts. They furnish remunerative employment to hundreds of young men and young women and increase the amount of money in circulation in their imme diate sections. The building of new factories of this kind or the enlargement of existing ones is almost a daily news item in the papers. A noted instance of the latter is a handkerchief factory in Charlotte. On account of the great demand for its output the factory will be enlarged so as to increase its present capacity of dozen handkerchiefs three hundred a day to six hundred dozen. This factory operations only Inst January began And thus it i.s all over the South. The old mills are humming and new ones are building and going into operation as fast as building ma terial and the necessary machinery can be secured. They' are adding dailv to the wealth of the South, are making the whole section and her people more independent of the bal ance of the world. No longer is the South simply a producer of raw cot ton for the benefit of the New Eng land and European mills that they may grow rich selling back to us our cotton at big profitsafter it has been made into cloth. We are making the cloth and keeping the profits of its manufacture at home, and we are growing richer and richer every day by the change. A Splendid Idea. A new idea in a Cough SyrnpisadviUicedin Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar. H-sides containing Pine Tar. Homy and other valu able remedies, it is rendered laxative. mi that its use insures a prompt and efficient evalu ation of the bowels. It relaxes the nervous system, and cures all coughs aud .olds, croup, whooping cough, etc. A red clover blossom and the honey le is on ever- bottle of the Original Laxative Cough Sy nip Ken nedy's Laxative Honey and Tar. An ideal remedy for children. M others praise it . It i best for all. Sold at Parker's Two Prntr Stores. . -m The Winners in Life. The people who win their way into the utmost recesses of other hearts are not usually the most brilliant and gifted, says an exchange, but those who have sympathy patience, seli-forgetfulness, and that indefi nable faculty of eliciting the better nature of others. We have many friends who are beautiful and gifted, but there is not one of them whose companionship we enjoy better than that of the plain faced man or wo man who never makes a witty or profound remark, but whose simple quality of human goodness makes up for every other deficiency. For all Kinds of Piles. To draw the fire out of a burn, heal a cut without leaving a ncar,or tocureboil, sores, tetter, eczema and all skin and scalp diseases, use DeWitfa Witch Hazel Salve. A specific for blind, bleeding, itching and protruding pik. Stops tbe pain instantly and cures j permanently. Get the genuine. Sold by I Parker' Two Drag Stores. ALFALFACULTURE. REQUIREMENTS OF SOIL AND PREPARATION. Lucerine or Alfalfa May be Success fully Grown In Every Part of South Provided Only that the Soil be Quite Fertile, Well Drained and Well Pre pared Best Time for Sowing the Seed. Those farmers who are interested in the subject of alfalfa culture will be pleased to learn that the (Jeorgia Exjeriment Station has just issued a press bulletin on the subject, which contains .all the information neces sarry for enabling them to make a success in growing this "old plant un der a new name." Write to (leorgia Experiment Station, Experiment, (Ja., for free copy of "Press Imlletin No. 51, on Alfalfa Culture." The following extracts contain the cream of this little bulletin: SOIL PKKPAUATION ANU SKKlUMi. "As stated in the extracts quoted lucerne may succeed in every section of the South, provided only that the soil be quite fertile, well drained and well prepared. A soil that is abund antly supplied with lime is better for lucerne than one in which lime is more or less wanting. This defect, however, may bo remedied by apply ing from ten to twenty bushels of air-slaked lime iier acre, either as part of the preparation.liefore plant ing or any time thereafter. "The requirements of soil and preparation and the details of cul ture may be stated in order as fol lows: 1. The soil must be naturally fer tile, or must be lilierally fertilized, applying say from GOO to 1,000 pounds of high grade acid phosphate and from 150 to 250 pounds of mu riate of potash (or four times that amount of kainit) per acre. 2. lhe soil must be well under drained, eit her naturally or artificial ly. Lucerne will not flourish where there is stagnant water within three I or four feet of the surface. M. It is highly probable that a preparatory application of four or live tons of well rotted stable or barn vard manure ier acre will ren- Icr artificial inoculation unneces sary, llie nitrogen ol the manure will sustain the growtli of the lu cerne until the bacterial germs, al ready present in most Southern t oils, or contained in the manure, shall ha ve had time to multiply. 1. On a soil that is stocked with seeds of weeds, it is desirable to sow the seeds in the fall of the year, say as early as the middle of Septemlier and as late as the last of October, provided the soil shall have leen pre viously well prepared by deep plow-, ir.g and thorough harrowing, and provided also that there shall be sufficient moisture in the surface soil to induce prompt generation of the seeds and sustain the growth of the! young plants until strong enough to I withstand the first severe cold of the j early winter. The voting plants and i roots tire only half hardy and sire easily killed by an ordinary freeze. The roots become hardy and capable of resisting the severest cold. The annual growth of stems and foliage is always tender and unable to with stand a hard frost. "If conditions are not favorable for fall sowing, the next best time is early in the spring, after the danger of severe frost has passed. 5. After preparing the land by fertilizing and by repeated plowing ami harrowings, the seeds may be sown in the drills thirty inches apart and be covered not exceeding half- inch. Prepare and sow just as you j would to secure a fine crop of rut a-1 baga turnips, is agood rule for plant-j ing. Fifteen pounds of good Heed i are sufficient to sow on an acre of! ii'f it 1 T tn n l nit 1 1 1 if L'iiii'ii 1 1 1 1 ! a. id care. But if the surface be at all i rough, or other conditions be unfav-J orable, it will be well to sow as much j as twenty pounds per acre. 0. The plants, however thickly ' they may stand, will not require thin i; ning; and cultivation should !m? stif ficient to keen down the trrowth o weeds until the lucerne .plants fchall have gotten a go d start. The best ! tool for the purpose is a cultivator with narrow teeth; or it mav be ef fected with 'scooter and serai.' Af-1 ter the first year it is a good praet ice to run a disc harrow over the sur face twice, in directions oblique to the rows, to be followed by a smooth er and then ;t heavy roller, the ob ject being to destroy all winter ger minating weeds, loosen the toj) soil and reduce it to a level, smooth sur faee. This disking should le done in February, or just l-fore the new growth starts. i 7. An annual application should! be made of not less than 000 pounds of hioh grade acid pho;phate and J l-0 pounds of muriate of potash (or; 000 pounds of kainit) per acre. This, may le done in Februarv.at thetiiiie of the annual disking" Aflalfa seed are sold by all leading; seedsmen at about jer bushel, or cents per pound. II. J. BKDDINfi. Faith Not Necessary. Yon may be just as skeptical and pessimis tic as you please. Kodol r ii I digest what you eat whether you eat or not. You can put your food in a bowl, jour a little Kodol Dyspepsia Cure on it and it will digest it th same as it will in vour stomach. It can'tr! help but cur Indigestion and Dyspejisia. It is curing hundred and thousands some had faith and some didn't. Kodol will cnr you if medicine can cur you, whether you have faith in it or not. Sold at Parker's Two Drug Stores. . It looks like North Carolina is to become a great insurance center. The insurance companies already organized are meeting with such success that many new ones are springing into existence. Be careful and don't overdo the thing. Greeti- villc? Beflprtor. IHEADPl 13he GREATEST REMEDY On Eerth. Sold by dose, and in lOe, 15c, and '$5c bottles. Notice to Tax Payors. I SUA I placel I. ATTKNI) AT THK TIM I'.S AND s lM'low mentioned lor colieet inir the State and Count v tuxes for the year llMi.V Amos' Mill, Thursday, October 19 Middleburg, Friday, " 20 White's Store, Monday, " 23 Townesville, Tuesday, " 24 Williamsboro, Wednesday, " 25 Dabney, Thursday. " 26 Henderson, Friday, " 27 Kittrell, Saturday, " 28 I will tic in in v otliee in Henderson during the month of November. Please meet tne inn Keltic voiir tuxes iiihI kiivi- me trouble , mid yourself cost . 1 am n-ouirvd lv law to garnishee if poll taxes are not paid by No Vemlter 1st Your taxes aiedlle. TheStute, School aud County arc iu need of them. Hoping this notice wili Is all sulllcietit for you to come forward and pav voiir taxes. I-:. . pow i;i,l. Sheriff of Vance County, N. C. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. U AVI.Vi gl AI.lCIKll AS KXKCCTOII of the last will and testament of Ir. V. I. Judd. deceased, late of Vance county, thin is to notify nil persons havingrlainiHagaiuut the estate tocxliil.it them to me on orls-foro theL'Oth day of September. 1 itMi, or t Ins no tice will le pleaded in bur of their r-covery. All persons indebted to said est ate will please in like immediate payment . Tips Sept.eml.er l'il. 1 !.". L.i di: b..irni). Kxeeutorol Ilr. W. .1. J mid, deceased. Andrew .1. Harris. Attorney. In Buying Drugs. Look Out for Purity Illness is cured or prevented by projier medicines. ItouiedieH are uwlesn iiiiIcsh right, und they can't be right mik-sn made tip from frculi, pure Standard Drugs. lieiiicmtjer we are headquarters for Standard I'rugi. And we want to fill your prewriptionH at Parker's Two Drug Stores I'rcsh Mock of m:v cuoim i.m i:usi:i:i. W. W. Parker. Wholesale ami Retail Iruggist. , XPI711 O" o Machine Bargains. A few slightly damajrd Singer Sewing Machines Now on hand to lt sold at . RedUCCd PriCCS fitf CaStl, . , - , At thS Olhce ot the: Singer Sewing Machine Co, Henderson, V. C. L. MT. MOLLOMAN, Manager. A. G. Daniel, Wholesale and Retail Dealer ia . . . Shingles. Laths. Lum ber, Brick. Sash, Doors and Blinds. . Foil etock at lowest Prices. Opposite South ern Grocery Company. Henderson, N. C mEW&l
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 12, 1905, edition 1
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