4 As an Advertising Medium f The Gold LeeJstandsnt the head of m a newspapers in this section, the Advertising Brings Success t f .1'lveriisp in the Gold r t : !. a ii Iiv it. flilwl 9 fZ i.Iamou r Bright w "Jp? .. lv, ihsitm columns. 4 t4) Sensible Business Men I i if n.itcoiitintifto fjend pood (l , .nt'V where no appreciable i J- . t urnr ar r-Hpn. l Thai is Proof That it Pays. I V a a looacco uisinci. 4 a SI ' The moat witle-ati'Aae nnil m- 4 Bl. ceneful men use its column with the highest ( Satisfaction to Tl Themselves Trlj a. MNING, Publisher. V(.) L. XXIV. The Has Correct Dress O. of Tl, "Modern M !?iod" fy tern of hii'h raoe tM . ;Tc jr.rronuced by p L. fc nays 5. i-inrnati, tj., satisfies good tirr s' r- rv ryv here. Ail Garirenf I.'i' Gl'.'clly to Year Moa' r a' mcWsle pitcr. i .-.:- ..! f-.; 1 ii t'. rr-.-.'y;. The Davis & Watkins Co, iii-:nikksox. x. r. FRANCIS A. MACON, DENTAL SURGEON. Office in oung Block. o ,-,. h(iiu: ! a. in. to 1 r. ni.. 3 to 6 p. !:.-i.eiiCM I'lione 88; Otlice Phone 25. fiim;itc fuinislieii when desired. -!,.ui:' tor examination. in. No I)!!. E. B. TUCKER, DENTIST, HENDERSON, IN.C. OI'HCr;: Over Thomas' Drug Store. DR. F. S. HARRIS, DENTIST, Henderson, N. C. OFFICE: Over E. O Davis Store. HENRY PERRY. INSURANCE. xtmmf line of both MFK A XI) FIRE n M I'AMF.S lein-osflit.'d. i'olii u s issued ..!..! risk pliM-ed to lw-st iidviintnfl''- Office: : : : : I" Court llouse. TURNIP SEED TIME Is hero aain. tint seed. We have ALL KINDS. BEST VARIETIES. NEW CROP. And everything else you Large and want in our line. complete stock at right prices Special Attention to Prescription Work. Only the best and purest 1 h ugs and Chemicals used. MELVILLE DORSEY, Druggist. OLD CLOTHES MADE NEW by the Henderson Pressing Club. W,. nr.- working for most all of the pronn i . iit . itiz.Mis of liViidiTfon and wo aieRliiil to s;iv we un- giving absolute eatisfaetion. W e tn.-irantee to take vourol.l clothes and make ili. in praeticnllr new so far as getting the ...! .iii.l dirt out"of them i coinvrncJ, at the i..vest irivs: anil if we fail to do so we wi .! vour work over again five of eharge. All kinds of Cleaning, Pressing. Altering, Repairing, and Dyeing a Specialty. i have had an experience of I t years and kn.,r niv business and do not slight any u ,.ik. We don't care how poor or how rich i niav be we give the same service to all. If v..i 'briiiii- vour nork to the Henderson l'r."ii.,. i bib von will get the best service in t!,.. f,f ,.f..)itiiii!r and pressing, altering and .ivi-iiiir vou have ever had in the town .i .v.".. -..r n-.n-L- wtit back promptly. 'P. .lot .linn.. 11M o. UK), and save yourself tt... .....t.i.. t ..Tniiin- or iirinsrinir vour work t. US. Henderson Pressing Club, .vniml Floor Keavis Building. X to Porsrv's Drug Store. xt I !:. I'U.VTT. Proprietor. THE "BOSS SIMPLEST. COTTON PRESS I STRONGEST. BEST The Murray Ginning System Gins, Feeders, Condensers, Etc. CIBBE5 MACHINERY CO. Columbia! S. C. FOIEYlSKlBIJEYCOIlE Hakes Kidneys and Bladder RfgU mm 7 a y Si fl GROWING ALFALFA. Finest Kind of Hay For Stock of all Kinds. a Higher Feeding Value Than Red Clover A Great Substitute for Bran. Offal and Other mil Feeds Can be Successfully Orown on Most Lands in the South One Acre Well Set in Alfalfa Worth One Hundred Dollars Summary of Interesting Test in Feeding Alfalfa to Cows. V. Koiner. Commissioner of Agriculture Virginia, in 1'rogrensive Farmer. Alfalfa will grow in favorable soil anywhere from eea level to 7,000 feet elevation. Good drainage is neces sary, as the plants are quickly killed by excess of standing water in the soil or on the surface. Water must never be allowed to stand on a field of alfalfa more than forty-eight hours at a time, for if the ground be- comes saturated ana is anowea to remain so for any considerable length of time the plants may be drowned out. Neither will alfalfa succeed if rock or other impervious subsoil Hps too near the surface. Although it requires a good drainage, it also re quires a fairly constant water supply and is likely to suffer from drought on deep sandy soil. Alfalfa hay that has been properly cured is eaten by all kinds of farm animals, and has a higher feeding value than red clover. It is one of the best soiling crops, and may be fed in this way to better advantage than if the stock are pas tured on the field. PREPARATION OP THE SOIL. The ground selected should be as free as possible from weeds as tnese are the great enemy oi young anaua, v..tlAr.inllir tvltan 1 1 UOU( 1 A SOWM III I tL Bnr!,Trr U i Rsmitifl1 that the seed bed should be put in the best possible condition by deep plowing and thorough harrowing, disking or rollimr. according to circumstances. It is best to prepare the soil long enough before sowing to allow it to settle. If the ground is not thor oughly moist it is best to wait until a rain puts the soil in the proper condition. After this stir the soil with a harrow as soon as it can be easily worked and then sow the seed. SOWIXO TnE SEED. Itmavbe sown in fall or spring, although in the South, fall sowing is more likely to be succesful. Alfalfa niav be sown broadcast or drilled. If sown broadcast, twenty pounds to the acre should be used. If drilled, fifteen pounds will be sufficient. The seed may be sown alone or with a light seeding of grain. If sown with the grain, the latter should be cut early for hay. The seed should be covered ngntiy uy narrowing ui tun ing. For the Southern States it may be best if the land is weedy, to free the soil from weeds by cultivation during the summer and sow the seed early in the fall. TREATMENT FIRST SEASON. If weeds are troublesome, the field should be mown with sufficient fre quency to keep them from smother ing the alfalfa. If a good stand is obtained and the field is not weedy, one or more cuttings of hay may be obtained the first season. The field should not be pastured during the first .year. Although it is necessary to go to some expense in order to put the soil in the proper condition for alfalfa, yet the meadow is so valuable when established id should yield profit able results for so many years that extra time and expense are ampiy repaid. But if the conditions men tioned cannot be had, it is betterthat the attempt to establish an alfalfa meadow should not be made; for un favorable conditions, such as poorly drained soil, insufficient moisture at time of sowing, weeds, prolonged overflow or excessive water in the soil may result in entire failure and ponseouent loss of time and money and, moreover, discourage theexper imenter and retard the development of alfalfa growing. (5EXEKAL SUGGESTIONS. Its value is so great as a feed that r 1 i 1. f (tnii OAIU some jarmers ciuim niciu mi wpII set in alfalfa is worth one uun- dred dollars, and a hundred acres is worth ten thousand dollars. une farmer in another State tried for nine vc-ars before he got a stand olalf alia. Now he has one hundred acres and makes annually five hundred tons of the finest bay, ana iroin mis Btart iu "rowing alfalfa hay became an ex- toncivo onttlp feeder, lie is now if ifo dfd it Thpre ysalfalfadidit rhere of farmers in Virginia wealthy and says nrp thousands who could do the same tbing. 1 nere are thousands of farmers who can o-row alfalfa on some parts of their Farms. Only a few acres would prove very helpful to any farmer. The hay is tiie finest for any kind of stock. It i.s so rich in protein that one and a half pounds of any hay is equal in feeding value to one pound of wheat bran. The tobacco lots are gooa places to "-row it, and following cowpeas plowed under, with the land well -iio,i iwfnrf sowincr the alfalfa, on ! thin soil 100 pounds of nitrate eoda per acre when tbe seea is sown, uuu another 100 pounds the following spring after the alfalfa has started to On red clav hills at the test farm over four tons per acre have been grown. To get a good stand of alfalfa is worth any farmer s most persistent efforts. Alfalfa wUl enable put down his feed bills. ! It is a great substitute for bran, offal and other mill teeas. ii is iue feed for the dairy, lor ait Kinaa ui voung stock. Hogs winter well on it witb but nttie gruiu. iucic inr better for sheep. The following of a most interesting test bv the State Lxpenment &ta tion in feeding alfalfa to COWS: .rii titrts OP FEEDING VALUE. - r,t rMv-.rl.ir.ina- milk and butter can be greatly redu'eed by if" " if E rZt inn rntPS pmting (Jam u' i-" - "Carolina, Carolina, BQbateiss , BrffftTggL mmmitajr the daily ration of the cow with some j roughness rich in protein, such as al falfa, or cowpea hay. 2. A ton of alfalfa or 'pea hay can be produced at a cost of 3 to 5 per ton, whereas wheat bran costs to $ 25. As a yield of from three to five tons of alfalfa cau be obtain ed from 1 acre of land,it is easy to see what great advantage the utilization of such roughness in the place of wheat bran, gives the dairyman. 3. In substituting alfalfa hay for wheat bran it will best in practice to allow one and one-half toeach pound of wheat bran, and if the alfalfa is fed in a finely chopped condition the results will prove more satisfactory. 4. When alfalfa was fed under the most favorale conditions, a gallon of milk was obtained for 5.2 cents, and a pound of butter 10.4 cents. When pea hay was fed the lowest cost of a gallon of milk was 5.2 cents and a pound of butter was 9.4 cents. In localities where pea hay grows well it can be utilized to replace wheat bran and in sections where alfalfa can be grown it can be substituted for pea hay with satisfaction. 5. These results, covering two vears tests witn amerent sets oi cows furnish Droof that certain forms of rouerhness in digestible protein can be substituted with satisfaction for the more concentrates, and should lend encouragement to dairy farms Rooseveltian Epigrams. The following epigramatic sen tences culled from President Roose velt's speeches in North Carolina are worthy of preservation. In impressing the duty of good citizenship the President urged char- acteristically the value of individual d iyi yirtue There are ge vral elements which a man must posse.ss before he can be a useful citizen and soldier of progress. In emphasizing tf d t of political and civic honesty and bravery, he said: "If a man isn't straight; the smar ter he is, the more dangerous he is.' "Mere smartness or brightness or astuteness by themselves only con stitute a man of peril." "The fact that a crooked man is able renders him a greater curse than if he wasn t. "A man must be decent in his home life, his private life, of course; but this is not by itself enough. The man who faifs to be honest and brave both in his political franchise and in his private business contrib utes to political and social anarchy.' "I don I care how good a man is if he is afraid you can't do anything with him. He is like some men in the jrreat civil war. Lofty patriotism counted mighty little when they ran away. They wouldn't stand pat. So in civic life a man who is timid is use less. He must have goodness, cour age and honesty." "No matter how brave and honest a man may be, he is worth nothing if he is a natural born fool. The val ue of a man to his country depends on his honesty, his courage and his common sense." "Education means the promotion not only of industry, but of that irood citizenship which rests upon individual rights and upon the recog nition by each individual that he has duties as well as rights in other words, of that good citizenship which rests upon moral integrity and intellectual freedom." "Self-government is not an easy thing. Only those communities are fit for it in which the average indi vidual practices the virtue of self command, of self-restraint, of wise disinterestedness combined with wise self-interest." "Tbe prime difference between civi- 1 1 it A. lized and uncivilized peoples is that in civilized peoples is that in civilized peoples each generation wosks not only for its own well-being, but for the well-being of generations yet un born." "Nothing is more injurious from every standpoint than a law which is merely sound and fury, merely pre tense, and not capable of working nut, tnncrible results." A past is a mignty good thing, good thing, but we can't depend upon things that are buried. Impromptu Rhyming. G. S. Wooten, LaGrange, X. C. The present Governor R. B. Glenn is a grand-son of Mr. James R. Dodge, who lived near Judge Pear son's, in Yadkin county. . I used to SO over to his house when a student h Pearson8 Law School, and he n . . . . , humoroU8 0id crontlpman. He was Clerk of the Su rname Court of Morgantou, for the Western District. He was a man of literary tastes, being a relative of Wo ah 5 no-ton Irviner. and married a nippe of Colonel Nicholas L.Williams. He lived on a hill with magnificent nnts. which was a auiet sequestered place, and an ideal retreat for a lit-1 prarv recluse. In early life he had been a lawyer and practiced in the western counties. On one occasion, ht vests makinsr a speech in court and when he had concluded, he found ly ing on his table the following lines, TOMttn bv three lawvers, Messrs. Swain, Hillman and Dews: "Here lies a Dodge, who dodged all good And dodged a deal of evil; Who after dodging all he could: He could not dodge the devil." Mr. Dodge replied impromptu: "Here lies a Hillman and a Swain W hose lot let no man choose, Thev lived in 6in and died in pain And the devil got his Dews (dues.)" No Case of Pneumonia on Becord. We do not know of a single instance where a coueh or cold resulted in pneumonia or consumption when Foley's Honey and Tar i,. iwi bn. It cures conarhs and colds - pget so do not take chances with some I unknown preparation which may contain I rifttes. which cause constipation, a condi tion that retards recovery from a cold. Ask re - for Foley'. Honey and Tar and refuse any in -nbstitute offered. Melville Dorsey.dragg.st. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER TrrTFfTffrrfTfTTTrrrfrrfrfrrfmfrTfyrfrrfTffTTfTffTTfTTfTTfTmrfrrrTTrTff I NEW GOOD FURNITURE, RUGS, ART SQUARES, CURTAINS. 1 Samuel Wa1tkiiis( Moore Cash, Less Credit Farming. New Bern Journal The farmers of the South are in bet ter position today, than they ever have been, to begin farming upon a system of more cash and less credit, for with the returns from cotton and other crops, except portions of the truck crop, the Southern farmer has money which can be easily employed in placing himself in the way of farm ing upon a cash basis, and using his credit, not to do business upon ex cept when necessity compels. Hie farmerwnonas tuecasnsijuuiu buy his fertilizers upon the basis of this pnsh. that is. if he can pay cash for one ton or two tons, buy that amount of fertilizer, and either farm upon that basis, or else make what other fertilizers he may need. This will give him the full interest in his crops, and make what he raises his own, instead of having bought his fertilizers upon credit, and so mort-o-a-ed his croDS in advance, and when these are gathered be unable to say when or how they are to be disposed of until the fertilizer account is paid. How can the farmer who farms on credit, getting his fertilizers and sup plies on a mortgage which covers his labor and what he raises, going to be able to say that he will hold his cotton for 11 'cents? He is going to sell onlv what is left after making good his obligations, and in most cases this means very little. The country store merchant can have something to do in this, more cash and less credit farming, for the desire to sell merchandise, rather to do business, causes too many coun try merchants to force farmers to take goods on credit, when such forcing credit means that the account may never be paid, lhe country merchant would not only best serve his patron, but also himself, by try ing to get those farmers who trade with him to do so upon a cash basis. The farmer who thus farms, upon the cash systems of doing what he for :3 vr0ns to succeed best, for hi9 cre(jit is going to be good, and he cau buy at less cost, than upon the credit system, which gives that additional prom, io m urup growing, besides being sole dictator as to the sale of what his farm pro duces, and not be compelled to sen in -order to meet pressing oongauouB in th whv of mortcracee upon ins crops and property. A dead give-away- -a will. oi There is a quality in Royal Baking Powder which pro motes digestion. This pecu liarity of Royal has been noted by physicians, and they accordingly use and recommend it exclusively. ROYAL BAKING POW0EH CO.. NEW VOWK. - j i Come and see how cheop 1 &.m Woman. An exchange pays the following tribute to woman: Who does not love the name? Who is so close to any being as his moth er? For whom would he die so soon, whose love is like her's? What cares she for his disgrace or even his sin? Her love is ever the same! She will joy in his prosperity and weep forhis sin and shame but never, never for sake him. She will watch over his bed of sickness and impoverish her self to raise him to health. Nor is she the only being whose love is thus deep and constant. She who has once plighted her faith and given her love to man will never withdraw it; in disgrace, in poverty, in prison, even she is still the same. She will love him in his degradation, and the deeper he sinks she will bind him the closer to her heart. Will man do so? Will he love till death.through reverse and misery? Not he; let but the re port of shame spot the fair charater of the woman he has loved, and his mockery of faith is broken he loves no longer. Alas! what tales might woman tell, of broken vows and severed hearts, of withered hopes and bruised affec tions, if she held but the pen. I thank ! God, woman has a power of her own to which, some day or other, every man must bow; he may revile, he' may, like a coward, attack her fair fame; but sooner or later, he must bow at the footstool of her beauty and confess to the loveliness which he has assailed and the heart which lie has insulted. It is well for the world that woman has a'power aris ing from her beauty and virtue which binds in a chain of invisible power the strong to the weak. That love, that tremendous power, still exists, and is as strong and as reckless as , . . -. 11 f At.- ever, and it would De wen ior me re- vilere of woman to remember that a day must come when they will bow in shame before the unsullied altar of love ud beauty, whose flames they have tried to extinguish forever. Nature Needs But Uttle. Nature needs only Little Early Risers now and then to keen the towels clean, the liver active, and the system free from bile, head aches, constipation, etc. The famous little pills "Early Risers" are pleasant in effect and perfect in action. They never gripe or sicken, but tone and strengthen the liver and kidneys. Sold at Parker's Two Drag Stores "lttejstd Her." 9, 1905. BIG VARIETY OF CHINA, CUT GLASS, 3 CROCKERY. selling. 3i Teach Intensive Farming. Maxwell's Talesman. The greatest good that can be done to the American farmer today is to teach him to make the largest possi ble profit from the smallest tract of land from which a family can be sup ported in comfort. A great influence operating today against keeping the boys in the country is that the boy does not have monev enough to buv a farm. It is unfortunately true that there is trend in the direction of the absorbing of farms into still larger farms, with a consequent diminution of population, as in Iowa and other farming: sections. The reined v for this is to demonstrate that if the value is in the boy rather than in the farm, and the boy is taught that by intensive, diversified, scientific farm ing a good living with a surplus pro fit that will provide amply for old age, may be made from a compara tively small tract of hand say ten acres with ample cultivation, irri gation and fertilization or even with out irrigation, because a hoe and a cultivator in the hands of a scien tific farmer may bring as good and better results in providing moisture for growing plants than a ditch and unlimited water in the hands of a lazy farmer. -44 a established anywhere in the South. So great has been the devleopment of this branch of its work that it pub lishes a daily bulletin of industrial and construction news for the bene fit of those who want to keep in daily touch with every new industrial, rail road and financial undertaking in the South and Southwest. Comparatively few i?ople realize what the higher prices which the farmers of the South have received during the last few years for cotton have meant to this section. During the last six years in which cotton has commanded a good price, al though less than the average of the preceding 50 years, the aggregate value of the cotton crops has been about $3,000,000,000, against $1,- 800,000,000 for the six low-priced years which ended with 1899, show ing an increase of $1,200,000,000. This vast gain has put the farmers ui tu ouuui uu tucii iwi uuiiiiiiuu , ior iuiure uuvuiiceiueui. kmj mi nu ll as stimulated the development of South has simply been getting out of banking and manufacturing and debt, accumulating experience and given new zest to people in every walk capital and preparing for the real of life. Controlling a monopoly of work of material upbuilding. Com- tbe world s cotton production, and destined to dominate the world's manufacture of cotton, having ad vantages for cheap iron production so great aa to give assurance that this section will become a dominat ing power in the iron and steel indus try of the world, having one-half of the standing timber of the entire country, and with agricultural and other advantages not surpassed by any other equal area of earth, the South has before it a period of such vast activity as no other section of America has probably ever seen. In this great development the Manufac turers Record has the satisfaction of knowing that it has been the South's great leader, and that in the future as in the past it will undoubt edly continue to be the greatest fac tor in the material upbuilding of the whole South and in bringing that section and the country at large into the closest possible business rela tions. A Liquid Cold Cure. A Cnno-h fivrnn which driven a cold out of the system by acting- as a cathartic on the bowela is offered in Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar. Clears the throat, strength ens the longs and bronchial tubes. The moth er's friend and the children's favorite. Best for Croup, Whooping Congh, etc. A Hsssd cold cure and the only Congh Syrup whieS moves the bowels and works all the cold nnl nt rh iTBtm Rnlt at. ParlrrVa Turn I " " Drue Rtores- THE SOUTff SJROGRESS, Striking Illustration of Its Great Industrial Development. The New and rlagnlflcent Editorial and Business Offices of the Manu facturers' Record, Which Ha Borne Such a Conspicuous Part In the Ma terial Upbuilding of the South, Now Everywhere Recognized as the Com ing Center of Agricultural, Indus trial, Railroad and Financial Activity New York Tribune of October 21. The new and maguificent editorial and business office of the Manufac turer Record, covering the entire second floorof the Merchants' Nation al Bank Building, which were thrown open to the public today, attracted general attention jand admiration. These offices, comprising 15 rooms, averacrincr nearly 400 square feet each, are divided by heavy plate- crlass Dartitions and doors, giving for so large a space a uuique and striking appearauce. A double wains coting about four feet high is so ar ranged that both the sashes can be dropped into it and the entire space thrown into one great room. The frontage is 120 feet on Water street, ruuning the full length of the square, with South street (Baltimore's "Wall Street") at one end, and Commerce street at the other. The splendid granite fire-proof building has only two stories, the lower floor being oc cupied by the Merchants' Bank, the largest national bank of the eity, and the the second floor by the Manufac turers' Record. The opening of these offices, which in appointment and furnishing are Erobably the finest editorial and usiness offices of any paper in Amer ica, emphasizes the marvelous indus trial development of the South, of which, for nearly 25 years, the Man ufacturers' Record has been the world-wide recognized exponent. In 1882. when the Manufacturers' Re cord was established by Richard H Edmonds, its editor and manager for the express purpose of advocating the material upbuilding oitne south, that section had scarcely begun to show anv eurns of awakening from the overwhelming destruction of the war. Lanrelv stimulated by the uu ceasing and inspiring work of the Manufacturers' Record in trying to ouicken the people of the South into greater effort for the advancement of their own section, and at the same time to attract the business world's attention to the unequaled combi nation of advantages of that section for the investment of capital and the development of manufactures, the South is now everywhere recognized as the coming center of industrial, railroad and financial activity When the Manufacturers' Record was started the South was produc ing about 400,000 tons of pig-iron a year; it is now producing about 3, 500,000 tons, or nearly as much as the entire output of the United States in 1880. Its bituminous coal out put, which was then about 6,000,000 or 7,000,000 tons, is now 70,000,000 tons, or 30,000,000 tons more than the bituminous coal output of the entire country in 1880. At that time the South had about G0.000 cotton spindles, representing an investment of $21,000,000; it now has 0,000, 000 spindles with over f 200,000,000 in cotton manufacturing. The capi then invested in manufacturing was 1257,000,000, and the value of man ufactured products $457,000,000; now the South has invested in man ufacturing largely over $1,250,000,- 000, and the Value of manufactured products is over $1,GOO,000,000. ! Railroad mileage has increased from SU,WU IU 1JCUJ1Y tilll'-n, uuu the value of the South' agricultural products from $CC0,000,000 a year to f l,70O,000,UOU. I These are but a few indications of j what has been accomplished in South ern development. They do not, how ever, begin to tell the full story. All that has been done is simply a begin ning. During this period of marvel ous industrial and agricultural pro-, gress the total population of the' South has increased about 00 perl cent ., but the total value of Southern ' products, agricultural and manufac- j lureu, nas ireuieu, uuviug uuiauwii from $1,100,000,000 to over $.3,500-; 000.000. Yet all that has been ac-, I complished is simply to clear the way i menting on this situation, the Mnvu- facturers' Recordtto which we are in- debted for these figures (for the Man- ufacturers' Record, by the way, has for the last 20 years kept up what in effect w a census bureau or thenouth- ern industries), makes the statement that within the next iu years me materiul advance of the boutli in; wealth and industry will far exceed all that has been accomplished in the last 25 years. Not only has the Manufacturers' Record nib. unceasing and tireie energy been pressing upon the world's : attention the resources or trie eourn, but it has labored in every line of thought to rrive life to its motto i "The development of tbe South means the enrichment of the nation." It has recognized that the develop ment of the South not only means the enrichment of the nation mate rially, but that it means a broader national spirit and acloser acquaint anceship of the people of all sections. In this way it has become a medium of communication among all, until it is almost as widely read by the great banking interests and manu- facturers of tbe Jortu and West as in the South itself. Publishing with minute detail a list of every indus trial, railroad and financial enter prise established in the South, it has become an invaluable aid to manu facturers, contractors, engineers and others who want to keep advised as to new enterprises of all kind to be SUBSCRIPT10R 1.60 Cut NO. 47. Gowan'sGoesIn There Is Your R.ei Why. iion In those three words is the whole secret of this wonderful Cure for colds, sore throat, croup, pneumonia all diseases that spring from colds. 1 1 in. Rub Gownn'i Pneumonia Cure oTct chest or throat and target it. Next day you're we'd. You ('mi't have to wait until a sticky mess is riiin-ytcd. It works wonder.; at or.ee. Cowan's riicuni'-tiia Cure i- the great hout'ckuld re;:icde fo. all twe "cold" ills. Rf A3 WMVT Nfi&lIBORS SAY 'I liarc ul Clownn'm Pneumonia Core for colU Mild croup with moat K ratify inn results. It gircs immediate and perma nent relief. "Rev. N. C. Ybasbv, "lliusbnro, N. C." "I have used Cowan's Pneumonia Cre with spteutlrtl results lor coughs, cold and severe pains in chest and lungs. It never fails to relieve 'Jno P. Scott. "Greensboro, N. C." All druggists sell (lownn's. Regular bottles, $1.00. Croup site, '2Z cents. By mail, if desired. Gowan Medical Co. Dor ham, N. C. FOR 190S Arvdu" nut nhoiili Im iiaiil without fur t her notice or delay. The Money fs Needed for Btrwt improvement and Knrl niir- powcH. The town's obligation in nut lie met aud payment of tnxe idiniild not Im with held. lVriiuH you hud not thought of lh mutter in that lilit. The taxea F.lust be paid later. IT IS Defter to Pay Now aud tie done with it. The longer the deluy the hnrtler it ib to pay. It in dcirahle therefore thnt all imthoiih will come forward and nettle at om-e tin the !nv require, aa tbe collection of all taxe will he rigidly enforced without regard to individual or cirrum- KtanccR. Uy attending to thnt matter Ott you will save me trouble and yourm-Jf coat, a I will he compelled to collect hv I.KVY AND SALE all taxea not paid by the time prescrihed. No dim-retion in alhiw-eil nie and cuulgcnce cannot be given. THAI) H. MANNING, Town Tux t'olle-tor. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights Ac Anyone sanding a sketch and deanintlon mar invention Is probsblr patentaM. Communlm- quickly ascertain our opinion iree w miner an Uonsstrtetlr confldantial. Handbook on I'aieuta ant ires. Oldest i Patent taken through Huiin A Co. receive , aire ireney for securing- jialertts. tpfeialnciic, without charge, la tl Scientific American. A handaomely illustrated weekly, .arrest rlr culaUon of any sctentula Journal. Terms. 93 year; four months, IL IMd by all newsdealers. MUtiri Co.38,B"""' Hew York Branch Office. C35 F SU WsnlilnaltfssiU.C. Henderson Furniture Co. r I We Sell Kverjthinjr in Furniture, Uiijts, Drujetcet, Picturen. Cook Stoves, Heating: Stoves. Best Felt Mattresses, (Jrndin of nil kind". and the elieajier i t r See Our Organs. A rordial invitation i extruded to the trading public to call nnd nee n. R. R. Satterwhite, Phone No. 1!H. Malinger. Telaer Building. f Sewing Machine Bargains. A ew slightly damaged Qlnnpr Qpuinor MarhinPC OlUtl Ot WIUS lldUl.llt5 Now on hand to tr sold at . . Mrc fnr Picri twuuiiu J no iui vaouy At th office of th( ar;i-. c...t ni.t-. n Singer Sewing Machine Co, feftfeVMsfosTSOfty rVf L. W, HOLLOBMN, manager As G. Daniel, Wh oft sale and Retail Dealer la . . . Shingles, Laths, Lum ber. Brick. Sash. Doors and Blinds. Full stock at Lowest Prices. Upposite South ern Grocery Company. - Henderson. N. C. f raw