Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Feb. 15, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 Cash. THAD R SUNNING Publisher. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1906. NO. 0. VOL. XXV. " Carolina, Carolina, Hjeaven's Blessings Attend "EEezr. i r ft i "1 i I i i 4 i Pit Correct Dress j T l O ft 1 ft Jt . 1 J lie modern ivif itio. high-grade teiWinj introduced by a L. E Hays & Co., of Cincinnati, O., satisfies good dressers everywhere, a All Garments Made Strictly to Your Meaiure 500 ttvle of foreign tri- tic iur from tvhirh to rhoote. The Davis X Watldns Co, iii-:nii:i:sn N. c. FRANCIS MA O 5 DENTAL SURGEON. O'Mc ;n u v. HI- cl- )1ic li-'ii- : '. i '- : K i o I'll M.otij . I" mi : Kiiiil'--- III l)i-li.-t ' I '-lie- ClrK'lf 'OI c II"' !!' "'I' 1)H. K. . TUOKKK DENTIST, OHM : Over 1 -' Drui S DR. F. S. HARRIS, DENTIST. jrrjr- '' ft .1 : Ov r !:. O I) More. DeWIit's Jffitf Salvo For Piif.6, Burns, Sores. FOR QUICK SALE ON ikVi TERMS 8 -! I". I I 1 1 1 s , ! iml)' r I i n I iiwn 1 1 1 mi llu unini:"' vt't I. INSURE N C E, I'm-, aci'iik n ' , lu alt h ai ;( lilt-. J. L. Cvirrin. DOING WELL, THANK YOU. Tin- business of the Henderson Hrniii li of the Singer Sewing Machine Go. Hum iui'I tin tntioiifc of nii'iit. full, t li st expei iii ; i ii n Wht'ii we en in.' hf-r.' we rented from Mr. V. S. I'arki r with the privilege' of lensin for :'. t. rni of Year, if the huxine hhouhl piove sal ir-tnetory. The leas.- Iuih li. in li i i ami t he Hen derson 'Irnnrlt is one of the pernin lu'ievf of t In- town. We en me here to .! hnsMins ami are h. re to stay. If the SISGCR SEWING !HCHIt wan not the lent iiii.l mir methoil of iloinir himinrss t he most satisfactory ninl attrai tive to our customers we could not rile this. I onin in an.) l.-t us show yon the utron point ami superior mlvan-tntf.-s of the SINCr.K Singer Machine Go,, Henderson, V. C. t. IV. HOLLOMIN, Manager. Administrator's Notice. F T AVINti Ql AI II 1I U AS AIMIM- tiatop. will, th- w,ll jiimexeil. of ti e estat-' of .Ins. pli ti '.ViIm.ii. .I. i-.ms.'iI. late of Vanee eouut.v. this is to notify all iersoiis h.i inn rlainis anaiiist t he it.ite of sai.l ih eea(i;'il to exhihit them U for.- tr.e on or befor. the4th .lay of .Iannar . 1 .'(T. or t his not '.e.' will U-lea.l.-.l in l.ar of their recovery. All persons in.l.-l.ti-.l to s.ii.l estate will "please make imnnvl'ate set tl.-nicut. Tint. January 4th. ll'H.;. i: v. wilson. Administrator of Joseph 1. WHson. ilei-easeil. K. F. IV No. 1. South.rlaml. Vn. AN1M1KW .1 II A K1IIS. Attorney. A. G. Daniel, Wholesale a- d Ketaii Dealer in . . Shingles, Laths. Lum ber, Brick, Sash. Doors and Blinds. Full stock at Lowest Trices. Opposite South ern Grocery Company. Henderson. N. C. FOLEYSHONEYTAR Oort 0il PrtVMU PMomeoia a svftcm ot a every .Lit a u....uter of the ,ieiiucat gets niarncu, nor is it every presl deut that has a daughter like Al.ce Roosevelt. So it is not to be woudered at that the Ameri can people and the whole world, for the matter of that are in terested in the event of Feb. 17. Even the kings and em uerors are Bit- J I VI88 EOO.SKYKLT A3 A BABY. tins up and taking notice. Practically every pollinate of Europe is to send a weiM.iij? present. It is said that the pope will honor the occasion by a token of reineiiilii ; uce, and it is not improba ble that the sultan of Turkey, the em press downy, r of China aud the mikado of Japan may p?t into the game. Your Unc!e Sainu 'l has grown big euouffh to be th.- fashion, even though his repub lics n notions are not exactly acceptable to t' o royalties who remain to pester the world. Let it be said to the honor of Miss Ho fvcH th.it she decided to marry a man n.ther than a title. That the man is an American is nil the better. After ti e n'" :ui e of so many of our heiresses to p: ices, dukes, counts and other v.-e"k"ngs with noble nicknames this is n frntef.:l variation. This is an age ff men. not of title" of deeds, not of eeiiiin-s. In America this is especial ly true, for ours is a land of men and of dee.'.s. nnd it is well that the daugh ter of n president who is himself so iVniT-rntic hmild thus honor the gen It's 'f her country. Yet i!ety In Washington long pre1! ted Hint the darghter of the White House irould wed a title. Ru mor in tli-r t city of rumors has it that theeo N not an unmarried titled mem ber of any foreign legation at the na tional enpitil that has not had designs on her. RePes. the castles of Europe nre full of inor" of the sort. Then there is A ia. She might have been sultana of S'.ilu. True, she denied that f'ory about the sultan of many wives ofT'-rii g her his hand and the upper left hn-.l corner of his heart, but o'.or; .f the Taft party insist that the prop - -n 1 net-tally took place. It Is too g o 1 a ta' t j be pnnlTed out by a mere denial. Yi'hy t.poil so exciting a ro m;i: ee by the prosy statement that it is not a fact? Wasl iv..on rumor also says but v.-bn does it ii t sny? that Congress man Lon'vorth had to propose seven times before he was finally accepted. Here Is a man after our own heart. I!e .leser'-es her. All the world loves a lover, tin : e pecially a lover who knows what he wants and will not ! I t-i'-o no f r an nnswer. T.uekv seven! The v.iy-l'i- number that has been sung by oriental foe' and Is held in rever e: . e by p. oole even farther west. Never : 1 it turn the trick in a better cause. That uni.m, dependent oa a s .n;h "j;o;iM'ng of the question" by a per istcnt lover, shou! 1 be a happy one. Ot-.e otlie- th ug is there that should not be o- e ' ..".;ed Mr. Longwortb the IIjii. Nicholas Longworth to whom be all honor f r his good taste, luck and perseverance, hails from Ohio. Does that not solve the riddle? The state that gave to the world a Grant, a Sher man and a Sheridan; where were born a Stanton, a lloweus anu an jmiibuu; that was the home of one Harrison ami the birihplace of another and that was both the home and birthplace of three other presidents; the state of Corwiu. Gidding. Chase. Thurman and Taft to say nothing of Hanna. John Sherman and Rockefeller! There are people who have gone so far as to say that the only thing President Roosevelt lack is an Ohio birthplace, but if he cannot have a Ruekeye birthplace he can at least afford a Buckeye son-ln-law. lie can have the state related to hha by matrimony if not by maternity. As for Nick Longworth, as he is familiarly called by everybody about his two homes at Cincinnati and Wash ington, he is a thoroughbred. More over, he has wealth, birth, position, education, social distinction and all those things prized by certain classes of people, but withal h . possesses the more fundamental qualities of manli ness, independence, intellectual stamina tind uprightness that are esteemed by every one. His family has been a lead ing one about Cincinnati since the be ginning of the nineteenth century. He i can point not only to a grandfather, but i a great-grandfather. There are people who would give money for a great grandfather in fact, they have been known to do so and have thus had an cestors made to order. I Mr. Longworth also has a great-great-grandfather, but perhaps he would not point to this forbear with so much pride, that worthy having been a Tory at the time of the American Revolution. As a result of his sympathies with George III., his lands near Ne ark, N. J.. were confiscated. This fact caused the great-grandfather, another Nicholas Longworth. by the way. to emigrate to Cincinnati in IS 3. when he was twenty-one years of age. He became a law yer and took the defense of a horse thief for his f.rst case. As a fee he re ceived two copper whisky stills, which he traded for thirty-three acres of land, then in the woods, but now in the very heart of the city. Before he died the land was valued at .-r2.000.000. He also went In debt to the tune of $3,000 to buy an old pasture lot and was sharply reproved b one of his friends for his extravagance. n lived to see that land worth near!.- i-, m vh as the other. He took up g v- culture and made it ccnn -"'tv 1 ' He "athered about h in i ; ire 1' point ing- an ii ti n '- ; ' collection - III FOi Joseph, the grandfather of the p.v-iont Nicholas, gave Cincinnati her art ui.iieuui. Joseph's daughter, now tlu' wife of Rehamy Storer, the Amer ican ambassador to Austria-Hungary, wa? the louuder of the famous Rook wo ! potteries at Cincinnati She was I herself a proficient painter of china, receiving a gold medal at the Paris ex- FtopftkBs IT Mess AUk ftlbs Essojftav Mamoii i& M. Df Tfes Gn6 S5. position for her work. Her brother 1 was Nicholas Longworth, father of our Nicholas. Many stories are told of this ; elder Nick. He was a judge of the ! Ohio supreme court and was noted for his exceeding gravity. So marked. In deed, was his solemnity that a woman of his aequaintanee named her pet owl "Judge Iiongworth." When the real Judge Longworth was once visiting In he- home the entire company was star tled, not to say embarrassed, by having a maid burst into the room in great ex citement with the shrill announcement: "Madame! Madame! 'Judge Long woitli has laid an egg." Nicholas Longworth, the real Nick, not the old one, w;.s born Nov. 5, 18GU. He was graduated from Harvard m 1891 and was later admitted to the bar, th .rlt he never practiced. He pre- REPRESENTATIVE NICHOLAS LONGWORTH. . .o u- ve himself to art, music, spo-.i, earing for his estates, and Anal ly l oi.tics. His first otBce was that of a member of the Cincinnati school board. He also ran for the legislature, buv was defeated. He tried again, and th.s time was successful. Two years later he went to the state senate, where, in collaboration with the attorney gen eral, he prepared the present municipal code of Ohio. In 1902 he was elected to congress from the First Ohio dis trict and re-elected in 1904. Congressman Longworth is devoted to out of door life. Is an accomplished horseman, boxes, fences and plays ball, tennis and golf. He Is not a hunter and fisher, however, and has never been known to indulge in any sport that Involves the taking of life. He is a gjod swimmer and loves the water. His chief recreations, however, are so cial. He is a familiar figure at ban quets, receptions, balls, pink teas and otlK- similar functions and is a favor ite vherever he goes. He is a member of exclusive clubs in Cincinnati, Wash ington and other cities. He is a mu sician of more than amateur ability, playing well on the violin and piano and even acquitting himself with cred it as a singer. He often gives musi cals in his home city, which is one of the great music centers of America. But. though devoted to society ani pop ular with women, his feminine admir ers had about concluded that he was proof against affairs of the heart that is, they had so concluded before his attentions to Miss Roosevelt became noticeable. Since then nj lover was ever more devoted. The society dames early discovered the direction of the wind, so that wherever the president's daughter was invited Mr. Longworth was included. When Miss Alice would go to Newport or New York he found it convenieat likewise to go to Newport br New York. He even journeyed with her in a trip alf round the world and pack and was so constantly In the company of the fair one that other -would be suitors deserted the field. One of Longworth's 6lsters Is the Countess de Chambrun. At her mar riage the Duke of Manchester was present and seemed in a temper be cause he was not invited to sit at the bride's table. It was explained to him that this was not the custom In Amer ica, but the statement failed to mollify bis anger. Afterward the noble duke made himself so disagreeable over the Incident that Nick Longworth threaten ed to punch bis face, after which Man chester subsided. - There is anothet story to the effect that on a wager Nick Longworth drove a golf ball through the streets of Cin cinnati, though he had to pay for some broken windows as a result of the escapade. Relative to his lore for music, it is stated that George Ward Nichols, an nncle. founded the Cyeinntl coaserr- WHHT tessswlft erf RsjfirsssKl&tiw Mm dSksff'Thm a TatH- Mer IFapistts atory and also started the famous mu- . Bical festivals. Judge Nicholas Long- worth also gave freely to promote ; these enterprises, .-ml the donations I have been continued by the son. A I friend has said of the popular congress i man that "Nick is one of the best ama teur violinists in Cincinnati." It is not generally known that be spent sev eral years abroad studying music, but such is the fact. He was a pupil of the celebrated Ysaye. from whom he has many letters and one of whose violins he owned. Later lie traded this instru ment aud another almost equally ex pensive for a So.oOO Stradsvariti.;. pay ing &J.000 "to boot." He attends ail the best musical concerts and is an en thusiast on the divine art. In appearance the prospective son-iu- iaw of the president is rather above medium height, of an athletic uuild and an easy, quick and graceful car riage. His face seeins rather long, which effect is heightened by an ab normally high forehead, partially due to baldness. This gives an intellectual cast to a countenance whose features, while regular and handsome, are not especially distinctive. In manner he is not effusive, but cheery and cordial. He is a good story teller and a hail fellow with everybody. He is cautious about going into new enterprises, but once in he lends the whole energy of his character to whatever he has to do. Mr. Longworth's Cincinnati home is a square, oid fashioned mansion, half hidden in vines aud called Rook wood. It is situated on the Grandin road and is surrounded by ample grounds lieautified by the highest art of a landscape gardener. The house Itself of which Alice Roosevelt is to be the future mistress contains rare paintings and art collections, the music room being especially notable. FUTURE WASHINGTON HOME It is iu Mr. Longworth's Washington bouse, however, that the newly married couple will spend most of their time for at least the next two years owing to his congressional duties. This man sion, situated at Eighteenth and Q treeta." only two or three blocks from the White noiw, is already pointed Y,r . -iff -yr ill iU W&'m Si - ;w - - - ' KdcBlsEss Lcin-j-simllb IT M ; smi IKISs AkcsSsits Mess iadfejffiidteEi ssiBdl.Vivaososs out to ili-joe "seeing Washington." The i house is spacious, but unpretentious in appearance, aud already contains near ly as notable a collection of tapestries, paintings aud other works of art as the Cincinnati home. To these will be added the presents given to the bride on her trip to the far east, where Japs, Chinese and Filipinos vied with each other in bestowing costly souvenirs on the "white princess." as they persisted in calling the daughter of the American executive. The tariff duties alone on these articles is said to have amounted to $2,G00. As to the bride herself, she has been In the public eye so much for the past four years that it is hardly worth while to recount here her triumphs, so cial and otherwise. To say that during this ti-" b"s been easily the most MISS ALICE c-.u:.-,;. ' .'. ; i'g v jniaii in the world is i.m i ; ; :-t what has been said o( !; n I i ;' ' i 'i in her own land and rJjrj-U. i . iLv? day in 1002 when she christ the kaiser's yacht Me teor to tii ; .-e.-.ent few weeks have passed th;:i her name has not been in tlio pa ic- . iliis has not leen alone due t 1 t that she is her father's diugiiie.. ' : i:i no small degree has iK-eu owiiig ii her own piquant, inde pendent ami vivacious personality. She is in love with life and gets the joy out of everything. That initial public event i:i which sdie stool w ith Prince Henry aid her father and broke the bottle of champagne over the prow of the Ger man emperor's yacht occurred in Feb ruary, by the way. The short month is a ml letter one in her career, it seems, as it is to see her marriage, as it saw her birth, which occurred twenty-two years ago. Her molher, formerly a Miss Leo of Boston, died three days after the birth of Alice, but the second Mrs. Roose velt, whom the president married three v s.' . r- v y . .y OF BRIDEGROOM AND ERIDL years, late;-, L. been more than a moth to the girl. Miss Roosevelt was educated iu private schools till she was eighteen, when she made her debut in Washington society. Before that event not a little of her time was spent with her mother's people in Bos ton. In the vicinity of their Brook- p.5 ' Una ffclhe tera cS Rscwit's k.tz7 IPeirssEy (Tr- hue home MioS Alice has always been popular. The older people cherish her for the sake of her mother, Alice Lee, for whom she was named, and the younger people for her own sake. Wherever she has been at New York, Boston or Washington she has ever drawn to her a large number of girl friends, aud after she lieeame the cyno sure of the world's eyes she yet clung to these companions of her youth. To them she shows her most vivacious and winning side, does acrobatic stunts and skirt dances for their amusement, slug coon songs and makc3 herself generally so lively that there are no dull mo ments in her vicinity. There is a dash of originality and audacity about this daughter cf her father that is distinct ly Roosevelt ian. JOHNSTON RCOaEVELT. l'or ex.;.-., foreign dijii rtivs.-c! i:i 1 his bosom a polling in . .'. ilie:-c i ; ti e story of the ::.;;;( who. of curse, was brave -;t toggery, with lictm with medals. Ilap conversation with Miss Roosevelt, she asked him to give the I istory and signification of the various fecorations. Glowingly he told her, in his broken English, and finally, point ing to one. said, "Zat Li v.v order of ze seven kisses." Quic'.; a? a flash she answered. "I'll give yo i ten for it." But ei tlier he lacke 1 gallantry or did not wish to put with the medal, for the offer wrs ;;ot accepted. The same evening v matched quarters with a youuT-officer r.nd shocked sjine people by Singing back over b"r shouMer as she left him. "Iti::en:l.er. yju owe me $2."i!l." At aiviher time, it Is related of her thfit si. rr-de hi a ra'lway car riage with t . j y )".!g Ya'e sitn'.enis at her feet an I ; t v :ctel not a little at tention by ii :;g a g ven snake in their f a'-":; ever I a:i ;.i. When a -Led .i -nhe I'.'t . -.vi.'.i Lir curious pet she answered th :t .she p!::ceJ it on the cur tain r.i:l let it cat; h t'.ies. She is origin:; 1 fnd not bound by fa: hio:i unit ;;s it su ts her. She is dis tinctively a sl.irt v.aist girl, and while -he t:re:--s t:.sti;y : i; 1 well dees not ill'ect extensive and lavishly expensive wanlro' .." an I is not a slave to clothes. Y t l!ie most aristocratic society of Washington :.::! few cities have a set more exclude La:; looked on her with ap.'iroviug eyes and murmured, 'She'll do." One summer at Newport !:e intrjduceJ the innovation of car rying a cane and did it with such a i-hic grace that she made it the style. s juite an expert sleight of hand x.fcr.uer and often entertains small groups by doing diCicuit feats In this line. Yfhra needing a hat for egg tricks or the like she uses her father's cowboy sombrero. Her penchant for startling thing3 was shown by the fsct that she was the first woman on earth to go down in a submarine boat, tak ing a trip to the bottom of Narragan sett bay at least two years before Tresident Roosevelt made the world gasp by a similar feat. Despite all this Alice Roosevelt has a shrinking side, dislikes the publicity of her position, or did before she got used to It, and refused for years to per mit a photograph of herself to bo tak en. It was only the ruse of a clever artist, painting her in an antiquated hat and threatening to use the picture unless he could get a photo, that caus ed her to sit for a likeness, but the shy slip of a girl of four years ago, at which time this incident ocenrred, ia hardly the Alice Roosevelt of today. She has grown In poise, In experience and in beauty. Alice Roosevelt's appreciation of her father has been shown on many occa sions. At the launching of the Meteor her first glaiwe afjer the ehrlstenlnc i i! 1 c6pvniKKt BV was not at Prince Henry or the assem bled thousands, but at the familiar face beside her, and the answering look of Theodore Roosevelt showed that he un derstood. At another time Miss Roose velt left the senate gallery iu high in dignation because Senator Carniack of Tennosf.ee had spoken in criticism of the president. It was au impulsive act that would not have b en done by one mote trained in the ways of the world, but it revealed what v;n iu the girl's l-eart. Alice Roosevelt's trip to the far east was the climax of her girlhood. Trior to that time she had visited Cuba and Porto Rico, where she received popular vations; New Orleans, where she was ihowretl w-it!i hoiurs such as had nev er been shown a woman in that proud city, and the St. Louis exposition, where she became at once the chief at traction of the show. As a member of Secretary Taft's par ty her slight figure dwarfed even that of the gigintic Taft himself, while the senators, representatives mid other high dignitaries were scarcely one-two-three iu tl.e ou'ar estimation. Iu Ha waii and the Philippines she was shown almost royal honors, while in Japan she was received by the mikado and in China by the empress dowager. Her honeymoon trip to Euroiie, which will fie taken next summer after the congressional session is practically over, will complete her trip around most of the world. Until that time the newly married couple will remain for the most part in Washington. Thewed ding itself will easily eclipse any social event that has ever occurred In the White House. Tl.e nuptials will be celebrated i:i the historic east room, ami Right Rev. Henry y. Satterlee of Washington w ill officiate. There have been many similar cere monies witnessed hi the executive mansion, the last one being that of tho marriage of President (J rover Cleve land to Miss Frances Folsnni, twenty years ago. The one most nenrlv nn- proadiing t'e- present affair, however, was the wedding of Nellie Grant to Algernon Sartoris. It is the only other marriage ever celebrated iu the east room. The home life of Grant was much like that of the present occupant of the While House, and the heart of the silent man was wrapped up in his daughter. One of the unexpected parts of that brilliant event was the pres ence of some uninvited guests In the persons of little Jesse Grant's baseball nine, the ragged urchins creating both amusement and consternation by dodg ing about among the swell guests. Prior to the civil war there were a number of White House weddings. The first one was that of a relative of Mrs. Dolly Madison, who was quite a social leader in her day and made the event a gala occasion. During Presi dent Mo!!!':c's regime his daughter. Ma: l.i. vra.j r.rtrried in the blue room to Ler co;ts;::. Samuel I. Gouverneur of New Yor'.;. Only a few invited guest.; were present. Six years after ward John Adams, son of President John (i-.iincy Adams, was wedded to his cousin, Mi.s Helen Jackson, the ceremony o;- un ing in the White House. Two we ldings occurred during Jackson's incumbency of the office, one of a niece of the president and the other of the d r.tghler of an old friend. Pre.-i'.'i : ; Va:i ilu.-cn'.s koh was mar ried v.frite hi-; father wa; In olSce, Lnt the event ii 1 not occur iu the execu tive nian.-'iju. The most brilliant of the early Wldte House vv;M!:-g; v.-as lliat of the :.-ii:ght..v .' i'e-scVi:: Tvier to Wil- ilai.i V. ."if ." Vi . i:i n..t. H ..... . . i . - last o- . ''irgiuia executives, end Virginia ho:;p!f.!ity was the order of the day. President Tyler himself was married a reeon 1 tints whlla in office, but not ia Washington. Now ;ie Uio.e gr!i event, th'. most r-v.aMe of '.: list, is to glad 'en the home f An s ri-a s -h! f of ;t.i.e. Both ill h's n'-couut and for the sake A his sensible da;-. gate; !:? Amera-a-i people enter into tLe joy of the o-ermiou. J. A. eiG!:::to Jlen Past Sixty In Danger. More than half mankind over nixty yrara of ogi" minVr from kidney nnd Madder dis order. iiHuallj ehlargement f prostate Eland. This in both painful and duiig-rou, and Foley's Kidney Care nhould le tuken at the firMt sign of danger, tut it correct irregu laritiea and ha i-nrel many old men of thin dieaie. Mr. Rodney Ibjrwtt, lit k Port. Mo., writen: '-I nnVrel with enlarged pron tte gland aud kidney trouble for ye.-ira and after tilling ttvo bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure I f lietter than 1 have for 20 years nl tliouiih I am now !il jnm M." Melville Dorsev. Tiie hs'.iboaril Air Iine lias leased thirty miles of railroad iron to tin FoxhuriT I.uintte'r (siutanv. to run a standard ;run; road from Vauyliati-i j ui Warren county, to Home point near the line letween thi nm H.ilif ax count i'S. The Ifase wan rK-ordl in tho retKter'rt oftiei; this week, and covers five pap? (typewritten) jf the nford. It provides that when the lumber company wis through witli the iron the same t-hall revert to the Seaboard Air Line. Iotiis burr Times. A Healing Gospel. T1j Kev. J. C. Warren, pastor of Sharon Baptist churrh, IWair, Gt... says of Klectric Bitters: -It's n. (Jodseod to tonnkind. It cured me of lome bark, atiff joints, and mm plet physical eollaae. I aas so weak it took me half an hour to walk a mile. Two bottle of Electric Bitter have made me so strong: I have just walked thrw miles in ."0 minute and feel like walking three more. It haa made a new tnau of me." (ireatest rem edy for weakness and all Stomach. Liver j and Kidney complaint. Sold under guaran tee at Melville Doraey a drug tor. Price .Vie. It is at least to bo hoped that the Mr. Morris incident will not involve us in a difficulty with any othercoun try Durham Herald. Uare yon been but rayed by promise of quacks, swallowed pills and bottled medi cine without result eseept a damaged ton acb? To tboae we offer Holliater'a Eocky Mountain Tea. ;15 centa. Parker's Two brnjr Store. ' L CXlnnnlftCaroljna) I Jk mbm ii ySlMarifiTii Mj -k bcrcsjiourYiclJs Per Acre I in W Trill cnvtuee yiu tht you can "lnortji' y:.;ir yW Lis p-r nt-ro" a:il you m-ou'i t:vt to kwj It ft eri't, eiihe.-. Uiwl wlmt Heaur. Wherry k Shi-:, rf tho MmrnoUa Fruit l-'iitin, !nr'::t, Mi., write: "From t-o tiered ol M ruwberrlo. on which 1,000 pou n Ja of Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers per acre were utvl. we cleared f ront of $75.00 per aere moro than be other U ncrenof trmwtrrle which hod only 6o0 pounds of tbia fertiltxer.' Thus double the quan tity of thrso fertilizrraon each arra of auy crop, and more than doubly "Incrwiso your yields per aert." Il sure you nuy ouly Virslniii-Car-11 na Fortillxors. Vlrtlnla.Carolina Chemical C. Richmond, Va. Atlanta. Oa. Norfolk, Vs. Havannuh. lift. Durham. N. C. Montgomery. Ala. Chirlestou, S. O. Mmphia. Tenn. Baltimore. Md. Shroveort, La. KILLthc cough and CURE the LUNGS WITH iseoveiy rCr.SUMPTIQM Price FOR OUGilS and yOLDS 50c & $1.00 Free Trial. Surest and Uuickobt Cure for all THROAT nnd LUNG TROUB LES, cr MONEY BACK. 1 FEELING LPVER-ISH This Morning? TAKE NOTICE. Statk r Noiitii ('aiioi. Ms to Jack Hargrove. James Itul- Publication of Su niiiiou l(M-k. n rid John ItullfK-k .A liu I John Hargrove mid Willixni ifetidel-soii. Yon and cni-h of you are hi-rhv Munitioned to iipjienr at the Clerk's oftb-e of the Suierior Court of Vuiire count v on Mnn-h 1, lt0, to nnswer the (M-tition of V. II. l'nrrihh ns d niiliiMt rntor of Willis Hargrore, deceased, in wliirli he is risking l'HVe to sell ii tract ti .. iicri-s of bind in Nut bush township. Vnnce county, tliat di'si-ended to the heirs of Willis Hargrove, deceased, to raise a fnnd to pny tlm debts of said llrgrove. and the costs of mlininist rat ion If you fail to plead, answer or demur to said s tilion by Marh I, ItlOO. letitioner will apply to the court for the re liel sought ia the petition. This .1 untin rv I'Kii; IH'MtY I'KltHY. Ch-rk of Hiis-rior Court of Vam e county . T. T. Hicks, Att'y for p"-titioner. THE IMPLEMENT GO. RICHMOND. VA, ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR Fencing, Hoofing, Barb Wire, -Poultry Netting. Wrius for prices and catalogue. We carry cue cf the largest and best etocku of Farm Implements in the South, r.nd can are vou H tacney oa your purciiax-r. Vt'uzU I ever you need, -"'l our prices be- I fere purcLa.m;. R Cpccbl birs'iifsiu Farm Wafons cn.l t3ugc?es. liv-it KtiUes. i--v Prices. The Implement Co., 1332 Ma ii , fiicfeaoisif, Tl SAW it'JLLS. LIGHT, MEtlU.n AND HEAVY W000-WC:K1N0 .V.ACUIMISV FOR EVERY KIND Of V0'X ENGINES AND COlIX'-i AND 5lZliS AND TOR CvfiRV CLASS OF SERVICE. ASK F0H OLit ESTLMATE BEFORE PUCIN0 VOL'S CRDE2. JG'.BBES MACHINERY COMPANY COLUMBIA. S I A Gentle Laxative And Appetizer
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 15, 1906, edition 1
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