Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Oct. 4, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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r; If Ym Wiat "TJ A BUSINESS Be Sore ADVERTISING Yoa are right by first writing an ad vertiaeraent setting forth the bargains you of fer, and insert it in the GOLD LEAF. Thus prepared for bus iness, you can Thpn fia Ahead. To reach the people of Hen derson and sur rounding coun try, let them you hold out to get their trade by a well displayed adver tisement in THAT 18 Worth Haiing IS THE FOUNDATION - OF SUCCESS IS iuv piicmccc 1 Woria Advertising EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR. fl Til 60LD LEAF. THAD R. MAKKIRG, PuMIslM. OAJROijnsrA., Gaboliita, JETfi aVeist's BLEasnsras Attend Her." SDBSCSIPTIOI $1.(0 Clib VOL. XXV. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1906. NO. 42. A Trite Saying. It Is a trite saying that no man la (ironjfer than his stomach. Dr. Pierce's tJi.ldfMi Medical Discovery strengthens tli' stomach puts it in shape to make pure, rich blood helps the liver uid kidnsys to expel the poisons from the Uxty and thus cures both livet and kid ney troubles. If you take this natural tiiixKl purilief and tonic, you will assist your system in manufacturing each day a pint of rich, red blood, that is invigo rating to the brain and nerves. The wisik nervous, run-down, debilitated ri.'iiiition which so many people suffer fn.rn. Is usually the effect of poisons in tlx- Mood; it is often indicated by pimples .r i-oils appearing on th skin, the face Lvwiiii's tiiiit and the filings "blue." Iir i'wrco'g "Discovery" cure all blood rrs as well as being a tonic that iii.i'S one vigorous, strong and forceful, li .- the only medicine put up for sale through druggists for lik purports that r n t.i ins neither alcohol or harmful li;tt)it-firming drugs, and the only ane, v-ry iujrrwlient of which has the profes iin:tl M..:rscmcnt of the leading medical ur.UTS of this country. Some of these eiyioreoiipMits are publi.-hed in a iittle ltok of . tracts from standard medical v.i.;is au- will x sent to any adiirer-s therefor by to Dr. R. V. "'W. Kuffalo, N. Y. It tells lust what Dr. I'iTc's medicines are made of. T::e " Words of Irals " for the several iiiifp-dieuts of which Dr. Pierce's medi-ciu- are com iioscd, by leaders in all the sever;; school of medical practice, and recommending them for the cure of the die.ixs for which the "(Joldeu Medical DiM-overy " is advised, should have far more weight with the sick and afflicted tli (in any amount of the so-called "testi monials" so conspicuously flaunted before the public by those who are afraid to let the ingredients of which their medicines are composed be known. Bear in mind that the "(Jolden Medical Discovery " has the badge or HosEsTr on every bottle wrapper, in a full list of its ingredient. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation, invigorate the liver and regu late stomach and bowels. Dr. Pierce's great thousand-page Illus trated Common Sense Medical Adviser will be sent free, paper-bound, for 21 one cent stamps, or cloth-bound for 31 stamps. Address Dr. Pierce as above. in. on r-ceiit of reouest tin et:er or postal card, addressed The Value of Tact. We Should Use Kindness and Ex hibit Tact in Dealing With One Another A Lecture by Rer. J. Klein of Sumter, S. C. Although tact is an essential qual ity in Jewish ethics, I shall treat this subject from a universal standpoint. The world is full of friction. A planet inhabited by millions of human be ings, cannot be free from th attrac tion of human forces. The desires, actions and aims of mankind cross one another in a thousand and one ways The religious beliefs, the PP tyrh. hticalview,tbej)opuUrptnion8oq TactY8 unifo men are repreHtniteu uy every nue and shade. The forces and the in fluences of environment produce among humanity the most different ! and opposing types, i,very country exhibits a peculiar national type. Every race, savage or civilized, has distinctive features which color all phases of its life, its dress and ap pearance, thought and institutions. In every country and in every people there are again differences of men and conditions. This fact of variety has become a commonplace. When we familiarly say, "it takes an Kinos oi people ro Wood's Seeds FALL roxt SOWING. Every farmer should have a copy of our New Fall Catalogue It gives ibest method of seed ing. and' full information about Crimson Clover Vetches, Alfalfa - Seed Oats, Rye Barley, Seed Wheat Grasses and Clovers Descriptive Fall Catalogue mailed fret, and prices quoted on request. T. W. Wood & Sons, If Richmond, 'Va. our Trade Mark Brand Seed are the ! e- . - :.! cleanest qualities obtainable. OR. F. S. HARRIS, DENTIST, Henderson, N. C. ttr OFFICE: Over E. G. Davis' Store. FRANCIS A. MACON, DENTAL SURGEON. Office in Noting Block. Olicn hours:: 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.. 3 to 6 p. Residence Phone 88: Office Phone 25. Estimates furnished when desired, eh a rue lor examination. m No FOR QUICK SALE ON EASY TERMS, S Good Farms. 300 acres Timber Land. Town lots improved and unimproved. INSURANCE, l:ire, accident, health and life. J. L. Currin. I The Best Truss ( r ! ! Is the American Silver Truss. Pronounced "the most perfect Truss on the market." We sell them. If you need such an appli ance examine the American Silver Truss. Drugs, Patent Medicines, Toilet Articles, Brushes, Stationery, Fountain Pens, Etc. Let us supply your wants in these lines. i Parker's Two Drug Stores. ( Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar mwbm, aaa expelvcotM from Vy (jenny RMvmg tha frOWeU. The lighter notes are struck, but not the pulse-like heavy cords. The po liteness of frivolous society is not the quality of kindly tact ortactful kind ness that should be cultivated. We may be the soul of politeness toward the so-called society world, bat harsh and unkind towards our inferiors, towards the masses with whom we have daily dealings. We may be graceful in our courte sies and polished in our manners, but brutally tactless in our real actions. Politeness is not tact. Many men are polite to the outside world and rude to their own families. Many persons are double-faced. On the one side they reveal a pleasant smile; on, the otherthey display a corn. - - uniform kindness toward all persons, whether they be of lower or higher rank, poor or millionaire, whether they be our inferiors or su periors. The kindness can be shown in a quiet, tactful and modest way,among the poorand unfortunate, among the neglected part of humanity, among the class of persons found in every community who are at the bottom of the social ladder. Living on a higher social scale, we are apt to forget the great mass of humanity around and about us with whom we have no steady rela- tions.but who nrft finnmprl r.r l Intvor make up the world, we are reany ; condition, who are so placed in their putting in a popular way the scieu- j trades and pursuits that they cannot tine demonstration, the guidingpnn- ri8e to the front. , With this class of ciple of anthropology that mankind j unfortunates we come in contact in has displayed varying moods and j doing charity, but we should always omdes that history means the study exercise tact, display sympathy aiid of these contrasting ways, that life is ! Use kindness. the sum total of all the influences of the past; that civilization is a con nection woven from the threads of mankind's multiform thought, life and activity. Since life is not a simple but a com pound, not a uniformity but a multi plicity, since all the forces of the past are acting and speaking in us, since 11 manners of men arecrowded upon this planet striving for different aims, thinking in different ways, moved by jfferent motives, followiiijr different nherited impulses, since mankind is .1 1 1 as many sideu as tne unman minu, and soul, we should have a tolerant ttitude towards the world at large, we should be sympathetic with the . . i 5 j desires ana aims 01 manKinu; we should use kindness and exhibit tact 11 dealing wit h the mass of our fellow creatures. Tact is kindness, used with discretion. Tact is sympathy, delicately adjusted. Tact is good sense, applied at the proper time. Kindness and tact are akin to one another. Kindness is the feeling whereby we avoid doing offense to others. Kind ness is the Uod-giveth gitt, the divine quality of mercy expressed in human terms. Kindness is the voice Harmon izing the discord of life, blending the harsh sounds into pure and sweet tones. When kiudness is coupled with discretion, the quality of tactfulness ia evolved. Tact is tne use 01 Kind ness at the critical moment. It may be in a word said or avoided, in a thought, suppressed in a malicious desire, checked in a sneering and slandering speech cut off. Tact is the rare sense of proportion wnereDy tne intelligent man adjusts nimsen 10 a situation in life, and makes himself elt as a sweetening and chastening influence. Tact is founded upon a clear, and thorough knowledge of the differences of men. Tact is the grace- ul art of polishing the rough places of life, of stroking the hand so as to smooth the roughness. As the skillful artist by one master stroke gives a painting a rounded ef fect, so the tactful person may, Dy a 1 7 1 ! supreme snow 01 tact, urmg peace and harmony among men. We should deal sincerely witn our ellowmen. and not in a subtle way. We should not coil ourselves into the confidence of others, and suddenly throw forth to give a mortal sting. Many persons are called tactiut wno have an art of insinuating them selves into the good graces oi tne world by deceit and trickery, by a nrettilv turned speech, by saying to each and every one just what he or . . X " sue would lite to near, out insincer ity and tact, are as wide apart as the poles. The truly tactful person is not insincere, for kindness is the guiding thread of his conduct. The insincre person can never be tactful besause tne motive is never kuiu uuu uumuu. The insincere Dersou imagines that he is U8insr tact by acting towards the world in a hypocritical way Watch this species of so-called gener al of tno.t! observe their tram of thought and course of actions, search deep into the motives.and selfishness found at tne root 01 sucn miscou ceived and misplaced tact. Tact can not be selfish, as Kindness cannot have the element of self. If we trace back the word "tact to its origin in the speech of Rome, the mother of modern langnage, tne keen armreciator of the delicate distinc tions of life. The source of the word is found m the Latin verb "Tango," "to touch, to ieei, 19 louca wita uaucuuu. But tact is not a mere polite quality Tact is not the smooth courtesy, made by the dude and the fop. Tact does not consist in me urn ficial etiquette of the so-called leader 01 lashion. Tact may appear in vue humblest and the meanest. Tact may be shown by the pauper to the prince and bv the prince to the pau per. The very fine gilt and glitter of superficial society, the so-called fash ionable usages, the smiles of the art ful, all these politenesses are merely the sham and show of courtesy, the deceptive parading of true and deli cate tact. It is true that human na ture loves to relax itself in innocent mirth and pleasure. The sorrows o: life are forgotten in the wild whirl o! joyous excitement. The sense of hu mor is sharpened. Smiles are every where seen. Life seems a round o pleasure. The world has become nlavirround asrain for mirth ana frolic. But in this phase of life the finer things are not creat !d ana rosterea Charity is often done in a tactless way that lowers and degrades a fellow-creature. Make your fellowman feel that he is your equal as a human being, and not that you are patronizing him. You object to such treatment from others. Be equally courteous to others. Apply the principle of tact to all men and all classes. Be equal ( ly kind and sympathetic to all per j sons. Never imagine yourself better than some one else because vou are in worldly position higher than his. What good will kindly tact not ac complish? How a few choice words will sweeten! How the balm of sym pathy, pressed to the aching wounds in a human heart will heal by the miracle of kindness. Hold your fel- owman's heart as dear as yours. Do not say to him words which would offend or disturb you if uttered by another. Be supremely kind, soft in heart, towards the misery of the world; compassionate towards suf- ering; unselfish in your "dealings: tactful and considerate towards all men. If thus we do, we shall mount, step by step, from the better, to the better still, and from the better to ward the best. -. . . A Badly Burned Uirl Or boy, man or woman, is quickly out of pain if Buckleu 8 Arnica Salve is adpphed promptly. O. W. Welch.of Teitonsha, Mich., Bays: "I use it in my family for cuts, sores and all skin injuries, and find it perfect." Quickest File cure known. Best healing save made. 25c. at Melville Dorsey's Drug Store. Why Be a Fool About Politics? Greensboro Industrial News But why fly into a passion over politics? Why indulge in practices when palying the political game that would be frowned upon and con demned by all decent men if used in private business affairs? These are matters to which the people of the State should give a calm, thoughtful consideration, and make up their minds to go into the fight, remem bering always: "Some fail, but one must win the prize: Go strive and conquer if you can, Bat if you fall or if you rise, Be each, pray God, a gentleman." of Many men give lavishly of gold, To build bridges and castles and towers old; If you want everlasting fame, a bonefactor be, Give the poor and needy Rocky Mountain Tea. Parksr's Two Drug Stores. Gra.nd Premium FOR. NINETY DAYS ONLY. IState Librarj The Whipping Post. High Point Enterprise. Jupge Moore took occasion to say in Greensboro, in Guilford County Superior Court, that he was in favor of the whipping post in the matter of punishment of two offences, those being for the mistreatment or abuse imposed upon a weak and dependent woman, and for cruelty to dumb animals. The immediate occasion for such judicial utterance was in the trial of a High Point boy a white boy for the larceny of a team, and the subsequent brutal beating of the horse he drove. The general public will agree with Judge Moore, aud it might add another to the list, if not several, but it strikes us that the ap plication of the lash to the back of the now distinguished set of va grants, idlers, loafers, half human parasites, or whatever else one might call them, would make a fine third selection. - First of all, of course comes the brute who would maltreat a woman he is lowest in all the scale. Still it's somewhat with this as with many other things or changes, where it is allowed by an enactment, we believe the punishment of flogging would be found-to fat so many crimes that many a cost to county and State would be spared such as today is named in food, fuel and general supplies in- county jiils and along the routes of active chain-gangs. Be it a return to things behind us, or what not else, we are with Judge Moore. Bring on the whipping post. . Many a man can only be touched through his back or his belly. All sensibilities seemingly center there. . i ' Judge Parker says he is "out of politics." If we remember rightly he was never very far in. Farmville, (Va,,) Herald. ' a & a r u. o 01 N ) H U X - 01 01 r o r n t- nir have been successful in closing a spe cial contract with The Consolidated Fountain Pen Co., of Brooklyn, N. YM whereby we can supply a guaranteed SOLID GOLD FOUNTAIN, PEN, The eltric JModel 1," To every subscriber, 61d-or new, who sends us a year's subscription and fifty cents additional. . The "Oeltric Model 1" compares favorably with any $2.00 pen on the market to-day. The pen will be forwarded immediately upon reeeipt of the money. A DESCRIPTION OF THE PEN. The pen is solid gold, 14k fine, the stock of which is made of the best quality of hard rubber and fitted in four parts; the pen points are perfectly fitted with iridium and the feed is guaranteed to How evenly, without leaking or blotting. The pens are beautifully chased as shown in the cut. l-J;a Defense of the South. rver. The Ke - bee J ournal,a. Republican Eaper pu : .hed in Maine and edited y Congr, Jman Edwin C. Burleigh, of Augu&.r has by a recent utter ance attracted the attention of the Washington Post. The latter re gards it necessary to present a few items from the biography of the Journal before commenting on its utterances. The paper was estab lished 1825, five years after its State was admitted into the Union. ."Be ginning life as a Whig.it naturally be come a Republican paper. But the most notable fact in the Journals career is thatduring the greater part of its eighty years it has been owned and controlled by Representatives little Jo's Church. How the Orphan Boy's Mite Grew Into a Fund to Build a Chcrch at the Barium Springs Presbyterian Orphans' Home. Cure For The Blues CXE UEtlCIXE THAT HAS KEYER FAILED the Joy of Health Felly Restore aai Ufa Refilled. "A Fountain Pen is a Necessity of the Twentieth Century." The Egyptians used a split reed; our grandfathers a goosequill; our fathers an ordinary steel pen. But to-day we want A Fountain Pen that dispenses with the inconvenient inkstand, that does.not corrode, that is always ready for use. Bears the manufacturer's guarantee that the pen is solid gold 14-k fine. If it does not prove satisfactory in every way we will exchange it for another, or return the fifty centg additional on return of the pen. This is an opportunity to secure, at a very low price, an article of superior quality that is coming to be essential to the comfort and con venience of every one who writes. REMEMBER THAT THE OFFER IS FOR NINETY DAYS ONLY. The Gold Leaf, Henderson, N. C. Coreapondence Stateaville Landmark. We think it a great miracle, and so it was, that the five loaves and two fishes that lad. gave our Saviour fed 5,000 and they were filled. But I think just as great miracle is being done at the Presbyterian Orphans' ! Home at this place now. t As many of our readers remember, a few years ago a little 5 or 6-year-!old orphan boy, named Jo. died at tm vwvtiwiu ' 1 I .1 . , ...... in Congress. Among its editors be-1 tI1!? R,ace:. V,w,e..Jo wa8 a verv fore the middle of the last century , ""native little fellow and no one was Luther Severance, who was one w.as stranger to him. Previous to of the seven Whigs in the national,1118 deat.o fi0ine fnend Kve him 40 House of Representatives who per-, Hf went to hl8 matron, and 'sisrentlv voted nfrjiinst, nnnrnnrmt- told her that some person gave him ! ing money to defray any part of the j cost of our war with Mexico. They I rallied around their leader, Tom Cor- wiu.of Ohio,aud applauded him when lie uevmreu nt me nouse mat n ne When a cheerful, brave, light-hearted woman la suddenly plungvd Into that perfection of misery, the BLUES, it is a sad picture. It is usually wis way : bhe has been Itxnng - out oi sort - do you know what I am going 1 with my money?" "No, Jo, were a Mexican he would 'welcome the invaders with bloody hands to hospitable graves.' The most dis tinguished of the Journals list of statesmen-editors was James (5. Blaine." The present editor, says the Post, is "a man of brains and some money and, to use las words. he said "Miss Celeste ! Miss Celeste 1 1 to do what are yoifgoing to do with it?" "I am going to build a church for the boys j and girls here, and I am going to have a porch to it, where the boys can hang their hats and coats when it's hot." Anyone would naturally have said, what is 40 cents toward Duiiamg a church? The above was character, as well as of ample flnan- PUWished, or a part, in Our I-ather-l cial resources." The record of the ees unes, after little Jo's death, and paper and its editors ought to be a HlP at t,me tlie Kim? and Head guarantee of fairness in its editorial OI au "urcues nas Diessed little job utterances, but "how conspicuously i 0 cents until it has accumulated a ic nas iaiiea to meet sucn aguaranr.ee " ' itohvj. mav he iude-ed from thisftTtrnct from ' Il act a site has been se!ected and YES ! GRAPE TOBACCO is just a little sweeter than any of the so-called sun-cured plugs made to imitate GRAPE, and they are all imitations WHY? because that rich, sweet flavor is peculiar to the genuine Leaf, and we have been buying and manufacturing it for over fifty ears. IT IS MADE BY A FIRM THAT KNOWS HOW R. A. Patterson Tobacco Co., Richmond, Va. This is the New 300 Horse Power ENGINE AND GENERATOR may be judged from this extract from an editorial m a recent issue, says the Post, which proceeds to quote from the Kennebec Journal: The new South has been a fruitful theme for writers and speakers during the post generation, and yet every little while there has been abundant and un welcome evidence that the old South has by no means passed away needs more capital, more enterprise, less demagoguery, less race material is being delivered on the ground. While not all the money that is desired to build "Little Jo's church" has been received, yet the building committee feel assured the necessary amount will soon be In their hands, so that when the Synod meets iu Statesville in November The South they will come out and dedicate Lit- ,ouV'- tie jo 8 cnurcn. ana truthitiiiv sav tne days or miracles are not yet past. prejudice, and race stupidity: but in spite of its heavy handicaps it has shared to j no small degree in the bountiful prosper- ity which the wholecountry has been en joying in recent years. The Post replies: Thank God, "the old South" has not passed away; that while she has "in recent years" been accumulating wealth, there has been no decadence of her man hood; that her Democratic representa tion in Congress, iu both Senate and , House, has, in a large degree, been dis tinguished by the best of the old-time American characteristics; that among the scores of ex-Confederate statesmen and soldiers, men who served in the Con federate Congress and in the army of the Confederacy, the grafter has been con spicuous by reason of his absence. 1 he Senate of Fifty-ninth Congress furnishes many illustrations of what the old South" was and the new South is. Com pare the venerable ex-Confederates Mor gan ana rectus, oi Alabama, witn tne representation in that body of the Em pire State, and you will not need to go further in the investigation. "Political stupidity, as the term is employed by the Journal, means Demo cratic solidity. If that solidity be a mif- iortune.it is easily accounted for. Ihe history of reconstruction is its all suffi cient explanation. The same kind of "political stupidity' would, under like conditions, prevail all over the North. The new South is too wise and patriotic to cut loose from the traditions, Habits, Soutbport, N. C, about thirty miles T, e 11 t-r-Z :" ueiow Wilmington. The construction migration or greed, or both combined, or any other cause or causes efface the Americanism of the only section in which it survives. j Nothing handsomer could be said of this section by one of the South's most devoted sons. The people of this section are under many obliga-; vicinity, some of this construction is tions to the Washington Post for costing $180,000 per mile. The sec this and similar utterances. It has tion between Marion and Ruthford- If an article ia imitated, the original is al ways best. Think it over, and when you go to buy that box of salve to keep around the I house, get DeWitt's Witch Haiel Halve. It is the original and the name is stumped on every box. Good for eczema, tetter, boils, cuts and bruises, and especially recommend ed for piles. Sold at Parker's Two Drug Stores. Southport the Terminal. In speaking of the South aud Wes tern railroad which is being con structed from the coal fields of Vir ginia and Kentucky into this state and across the mountains the Man ufacturers'' Record says: The South and Western railway, on wnicn construction is in progress in the southwestern part of Virginia and in Western North Carolina, will carry coal from the Elkhorn fields in Kentucky, and also from the Clinch- fleld region in Virginia. At Elkhorn the line will connect with the Chesa peake and Ohio, and like the Tide water, it is assured of a large business . , i? i in naming iuei as soon as construc tion is completed. The sencoast term inal, as heretofore stated, is to be at of this line through the mountains of North Carolina, where it was long believed to be almost impossible to uuuu a railroad, is one oi the im pressive feats of engineering in these years oi wonderful achievements. According to a report from that for Mine time; head has ached and back also ; has slept poorly, bvrn quite nervous, and nearly fainted once or twice; head dixzy, and heart beats very fast; then that bearing-down feeling. and during her periods she is exceed ingly despondent. Nothing pleafccs her. Iler doctor fcsys : Cheer up : you have dyspepsia; you will be all right soon But hhe doesn't get " all right.n and hope vsnishes; then, come the brood mcr. morbid, melancholy, everlasting UI.UKS. Don't wait until your sufferings have driven you to despair, with j'our nerves all shattered and your courage goae. but take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. See what it A for Mrs. Kosa Adams, of 819 12th Mreet, Louisville, Ky., niece of the late lien eral lioger Hanson, C.8.A. She writes IWir Mm. Pinkham: I cannot tell vou with pen and ink what f.vdia l'i Finkham's Vegetable Compound hn done for nie. I suffered with fnroala trouble, extrenia. latitude, 'the blues,' nervousness awl that all-rone feline. I was advistxi to try Lydia E. llukham s Vegitabls Compound, audit not only cured my femala derangemcnt, out n nas restore! nte to perfect healtn ami strengtn. rn buoyancy ct my ounircr rtuvs nas returned, and 1 do not sur er any longer with despondtmcr. aa I did be fore. I consider Lydia E. Finkham's V veneering table Compound a boon to sick and suffe women. If you have some) derangement of the female organism write Mr. Pinkham, Lynn, Man., for advice. TOWN TAXES. Office of Towm Tax Collwtoh, ff ENDFitsoN, N. C, August 80, 11)00. 1 THE TAX BOOKS FOR THE TOWN OF HKNDFliSON for the year 1006. have been plooe.1 in my hands for collection. All persons liable for town taxes for the current year aro hereby requested to come forward and settle immediately aa tbe law requires. Tbe money is it sea te meet m eaiifiiews of thTw and ladwlgmce cannot bt given. Taxes must be psld, and the aooner, the bet ter, lor all concerned. It in wall therefore to apply the first mon ey that comes Into your anus toward get ting your town tax receipt. THAU 11. HAAAIMI, Town Tax Collector. HENRY PERRY, INSURANCE. v A strong line of both LIFE AND FIRE COMPANIES represented. Policies iastied and risks placed to nest advantage. Office: In Court House. ton is to be tackled within a month, and General Manager Caples is re ported as saying that the work must be completed within a year or a year True and tried friends of the family Dt- and a half. The difficulty of this Witt's Little Early Risers. Best for results task and the wonderful results which apparently adopted the task of see ing the South is not misrepresented when it can prevent it. and beet to take. Rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes follow the use of these dependable little pills. They do not gripe or sicken. Sold at Parker's Two Drug Stores. The Inevitable Race Question. Macon (Ga..) Telegraph. t. narioixe uoserrer thus: A set o people who are fools enough to under take to ouiid a railroad through a place like this oughtn't to be distur bed no way.' From Elkhorn to ' &rfllhcinKiirr li a ss-wi M.ZII I iA nl.vnt I For what did Lincoln emancipate, ono m-aa m :i.fJ Ul ""." W ,,T .- tunnels in the North Carolina moun- raucuiHeitiuu put u.ck .eet, o.i iw.i.te j m. one of them 2,150 feet long, leeks for a brief drunken period in h.,t tua ..ai , rv,..,u the Southern States), if a row is to ,: in vi,! u ntfl to J irsuib in cicij iiiiiLiici ii iuyvii i iktii- ever tne colored orotner ventures to establish himself in the same block with the white? That is the Now being installed in the pla.nt of the Henderson Lighting & Power Company It embodies every improvement known to the building of Engines txnd Dynamos. Telephones, Nos. 21. 48, 6. Danger From The Plague. question which Sieks an answer ia the " , "r ,r"n TV or :..,i;fK, ; Coughs and Colds that are so prevalent, un- . . . i v- .i less you take Dr. Kmg s New Discovery for various sections of the North telling .. , . g. , , . . . I Consumption, Coughs and Colds. Mrs. (wo. a nf nru.tan.i t i " all8 OI r depreciation of property and the ruin of neighborhoods, caused by the invasion. Help Waited. The Dan River Cotton Mills. Danville, Va... are beginning to install machinery in their large new mill. The buildings and equipment in all respects are modern and up-to-date. Nice new cottages and tenement houses Plentiful supply of good water Work ten hours per day. No night work. Men, women and children can find-steady, profitable employment here. Inexperienced persons paid while learning. . Splendid school facilities. Ex cellent climate. Special attention paid to sanitary conditions and health fulness of operatives. , To families desiring a permanent location, many ad vantages are offered. ' Write or apply at once to " - Dan River Cotton Mills. : V Danville. Virginia.. are being accomplished by the engi neers are indicated by the expression of a mountain truide nuoted iu the ... . .. ... . I i ACHE 10c Bottle - 25c. Bottle - 2 Doses 8 Doses ASK YOUR DEALER FOR IT. two and one-half miles in length. ... t j walls, of Forent City, Me., writes: "It's a I I Godsend to people livrtiir ia climate where I I . I. - J f , . . m . a 1 I I The latest agitation has been ; J th"- prevent-' Po-ia, care. oooH hv tlm" Afrr-Ampripan I!Mltv ! '"""VV, gives wonaemn renei in A.iuma n M.l.oM f an on.Ft,JMd Hy Fever, and make weak long- VviUUauj O uuiwuuov wa u uiui v i , . a r:c X'. v.i, ..t Cooglis and Colds. 50 and 11.00. Qaaran- ing "apartments to let to colored tenants." According to the Sun, people in the block are expressing i by Melville bottle free. Domey. druggist. Trial For the moat 4Ucis ICS CaEAN if chcs-.rnoneti.taa'tltT That U all It e waca auda wita JcMIceCrcanPowdcr themselves verv vigorously. This was not all. An excited crowd gath ered iu front of the house aud the in evitable "rope" made its appear ance. Lincoln knew his Illinois neighbors well enough to foresee something of all this, and in his earlier periods he contended that the two races could never live together in either social or Eolitical equality. As late as 1862 e told a deputation of negroes that the colonization oi their race outsiae of this country was the only solution of the problem. Still later, nowever, when he perceived in what direction the Northern current bad set. he changed his mind, throwing cold water on his own excellent plan and even attributing malice toward tlte colored brother on the part of some of those who still regarded it witn favor. Do They Deserve it AH? Shelby Star " We notice in the Daners that Mar ion Butler is to speak in Shelby on Tuesday, Oct. 9th, to the Cleveland county Republicans. We know our Radicals deserve a good deal of pun ishment, but we cannot think oi any particular meanness they have been guilty of this year which justifies sending Marion Butler to make tbtm a speech. Every Republican ought to inqvire of himself lit there m no limit to the insult which tbe State organization gang proposes to heap upon him. , m s mm This is the season of decay and weakened 1 vitality. Nature is being shorn of it beauty j mwA liiimm. If vow would retain yours, for- tifT roar system with HoOjater's Bocky I Mountain Tea. 35 cent, Tea or Tablets. Parker's Two Drug Stores. sad it caa b mad sad frosjaa la leatUratas. Simp1 9: it ousieaia ot saa package tola a quae tot miik aud frsesa. Q aookifilfch-aU inr or luwini; : aa arTi sofar or A" 54 fcdi 14 evrrj.U'.or. m ih mm 4 wU.p'ii la tha package, and swuvred ay 14 ynn toon Comialstaoetm. Flva klads: I CN-wiii-.e. Vaniils, hmaaa, SUaarbenj sad IJ l'iJ!Tr-d. T " ,4 jinn j'.ikxji n . . i 'Urn, fur two rackap. lllwaCraMa Xdpe Itook Mailed rnm. Cearsec ran fass C I Eay, W . A. G. Daniel, Wholesale and Retail Dealer la . . Shingles. Laths. Lum ber. Brick. Sash. Doors and Blinds. Foil stock at Lavest Price. .Opposite South ern Grocery Company. HencUraon. N. C tlodol for Dyopcpclo Dljest whsf you met.
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 4, 1906, edition 1
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