Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Feb. 7, 1907, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
BSG THE HENDERSON GOLD L.EAF THURSDAY, FEBRUARY ,1907. The Gold Leaf I THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1907. j ! Uncle Silas and The Word Graf ting Tclb Wiiat He Knows About It and Werns of Its Dangers. Vr-ir;t.i '.- K. fry R. Douglas. ANF.W wonl li.is l;cn sprung upon us within liie last two or three year.-, my :o:i, :inl it means a iu-:ip more to the welfare and Iiappi'M-ss of mankind than any new Avonl for the last tifty years. It is calle.l "graftins." We all know that ly grafting slips into the limbs of 1111 old sour apple tree a farmer can produce uev and better fruit, but the word as now used doesn't relate to 1'ruit at all except the fruits of rascal ity. A few years ago the man who "graft Mr would have been called a thief, a ;ebl.cr and a swindler, and instead of walking around among us with his hat "r.uvn:i him not kjc and iiaijn a ueai TIFrL YELLOW." on his ear and Ixmsting of his financial nnimcu he'd have been hustled into stale prison. .lust at present we have a spasm of libera lity on. We are willing to be rob l.e l and wrecked and font to the poor house, and we ore willing to use soft terms toward those who despoil us. If a ch:ip shouM eoine into nr yard and sUmI our hoe. he would be a thief; if a lmam-icr worili .1 m Ilion dollars steals twenty thousand from us he is only" a "grafter" and mut not be brought to jnstiee. Tlnre is "grafting" going on all over the land. None is to; high or too I'W to be suspected of it. In order nor o hurt any o;k-'s feelings you should sub stitute the word "financiering" as often as possible. The man who financiers" yoM nut of your all might appeal to the law for damages if yoti called him by the right name. I'ive years ago if you met a highway robber as he wa-i out working up busi ness he would be humming a gay air and fueling that this was not such a bad oid w.n id after all. If you appeal ed t him l: leave yo;i enough of your cvu money to buy the baby a nursing bottle he would gallantly accede to the request and throw in a cigar besides. Hi was h ; t in his occupation. lie was :t hiii'iway robber and nothing e! Von cm i meet the same man to night. He hung on as lung as he could, but h.' v. i ; driven out of business by the gi-.H ".e;-s"" n.cii who juggle with ( iix-Us, raise die pi ice of the necessa r.es of bfi'. (ill the country with poor houses ami then steal the roofs off them. Your highway robber used to be caught now and then by some consta ble who didn't share the spoils with him. and he sbtod up and took his pun ishment like a man. At rare intervals your "grafter" is caught with the goods on him. There was a sip somewhere. lie never meant to be caught. He doesn't throw up his hands, however. lie emnlova from three to six first class lawyers; Ins triends kindly "tix" from three to six of the jury; some one with a polit ical pull sees the Judge. When the case comes to trial we find that we have been calling a shining light of honesty a thief an. I are liable in heavy ((.images. Apologies are handed out all around, and he goes on his way to graft some more. the air is full of It. my son. Almost every corporation and public official Is fu!l of it. We can't live without nav- iug "graft" for everything we eat and drink and wear, and we can't die with out oeing buried in a trust coffin. I've been slashing around on earth for sixty-four years, mnl I can't remember a time when it came harder on human nature to le honest. It's a nrettv hnr,1 thing for one man to buckle down and saw wood at 00 cents a cord when an other Is mailing $::o a day bv "financ ing. Whiie Fanner Ueub is grub bing out a bare living in his fields the constable his vote helped to elect la making $15 a day by permitting nutos ro speed at a higher limit than the law says. Nevertheless, my son, my advice to you is to hang on to yourself. Don't be carried away by the financiering ex citement. If the man who was called a roblr five years ago Is referred to as a grafter today another tive years may change things back. As a peopl "We get streaks on. We seem to go to Wood's Seeds. Irish Cobbler Seed Potatoes have proved by long odds the most productive Extra Early Po tato in cultivation. Read the let ters from truckers, in our New Descriptive Catalogue for 1907. We are the largest dealers in Seed Potatoes in the South; Maine-grown - Second Crop Northern -grown all high-grade stocks selected and grown especially fox seed purposes. Write for prices and WOOD'S 1907 SEED BOOK, telling about all seeds for the Farm and Garden. Mailed free on request. T. Y7. WOOD & SOUS, Seedsmen, Richmond, Va. the devil for a few years and forget , that- there is such a thing as Integrity, and then we haul tip short and begin to fill the state prisons with shining ' lights. There are signs in the air that a clnige is coming. When It comes . the jutir who is holding stock in a trust, the juryman who has been tau In? bribes, the, banker who has been In a palace ali your day: Dot vims all. Vhen Thill you bring in some Shoes to be mended?' "Never, you old wretch:" she shouts at roe ash she grows red in der face. "Do you know I vhas a married vhom an und der mother of seven children! I go right avhay to der jiolice und haf you arrested. Shoes? Why, I don't bring you some shoes to be mended if you vhas starving to death!" I vhas taking down der sign und going out of der fortune business vhea a fat man comes in, und says: "Hold on a minute, cobbler. I haf ten pairs of shoes to be mended, und I bring 'em around after you have told my fortune. Go ahead and tell me all you can." "Vhell, you are going to have some good luck," I says. "Dot vhas good." "You need some money in your busi ness, but you don't know where to get it." "Dot's a fact." "In one week from now you vhill go out in der evenings und sit in der park to hear der crickets sing. On der bench beside you you will find a wullet mlt $10,000 in it." "But I vhill have to return it to the loser, who will probably Ie some nurse girl." "No, you won't. Dot wallet belongs to a director of a life Insurance com pany. For twenty years he has drawn a salary o $20,ti00 a year und done nottings. His conscience how accuses him, und he leaves dot money on der bench for some poor man. It vha yours. Take it und be happy." "Und dot vhill surely happen tome?" he asks. "Sure. Mike." 'Vhell, somet'ings else shall happen too. I shall find an old liar. His name shail be Hans, der cobbler. I shall reach out like dis und take him by der neck und turn him around und give him five kicks so, und maybe lie won't leceiv;? innoivnt peoples no more!" It vhas hard times for me, und I like to shut oop der shop und go to bed vhen der policemaiis on dot beat comes in. "lbdlo, Dutchy! But how about dot fortune tolling?" lie asks. "I vhas out of business." I replies. "But you can't go out until you tell my fortune." "I vhas out, und I stay out." "Oh, you vhill V Cobbler, don't make any mistake o.i mo. I vhas der officer ou dis beat. 1 can run von in und get you )!;( mo.iths. Now. j-o ahead und tell me i!:it is going to happen in der mv:t year." I:'r coTimixsioner vhill hear of you. "Dot vhas r-o d." "lie vhill have you cail at his office." "Dot vhi.-: better!" "lie vhill smile at y-m." "Dot means promotion." "I'n.l he vhill tell y u t take off dot uniform U'.id get off der force ash ouick ash y :i can." I shall di'.tw some veils over vhat followed. Someti'.igs struck me on der head der vhas some roarings in my ears und lights Hashed before my eyes. und vhen 1 woke oop two hours vhas gone by und der undertaker vhas say ing to my wife: "It vhill c t y i om homered dol lars to bury i:i ground Vhy don't you p. it 1 ":: a co'Vee sack und dump him i.i c!.r river?" M. QUAD. "i'iueuk's" (non-alcoholic) made from rci from our Pine Forests usp1 for hundreds of years for Bladder mid Kidney diseasen. Med icine for thirty days, $1,00. Guaranteed to give satisfaction or money refunded, (jet our guarantee coupon from the Kerner-Mc- Nuir Drug Companj-. RESULTS OF "TONIC TESTS." Hr. Dales of Washburn College, To- peka, Kan., shows that "Halt Ton ics," except Anheuser-Busch 's Malt-Nutrineand Wyeth's, are really Beer. In n. recent, inane of tlicTnnpka .Tiuimnl Mr. Dales nroves that Malt Tonics sold in lluit ritv. with hnt. two pTeentinna contain more alcohol than does the aver age leer, according to investigations made by him. lie had been making a series of tests in the college laboratory over a period of nearly a year and has submitted his findings as a thesis for graduation. Kansas being a prohibition State, his naoer has created n. sensation ns mnnv of the prohibitionists were not aware oi me large percentage ot alcnonoi in many of the malt extracts thev were using as n tonic. Any drink containing over two per cent, of alchohol is under the ban of pro hibitory lflW. lis it is internreted in Knn- sas. Mr. Dales tried eleven different ton ics in preparing his analysis. Two of these.Anheuser-Busch's Malt-Nutrineand Wyeth's, were real malt tonics, rich in uuineni, properties ana snowing less taan two per cent, of alcohol. The re- mainimr nine 'tonieu'' netnnllv nrtntnin. w s-wkuaisaj A la ed more alcohol than the average beer anu were aencient in malt extract. "Kleven malts, nil thnt were on anle in Topeka at that time," said Dales, "were i i i i. .. purcnaseu ana determinations were made on them for alchohol and extract ive material, 'lne results of the analysis were as lollows: Extractive Name. Alcohol. material Pahet 4.68 percent. 8. fit ncr cent,. Schuster's ...3 4 percent. 8.71 percent. l-opoiu on B.n.u-t percent. p.4V percent. Pepsotonic 4.40 JohannHoff's..4.15 percent. 7.5Gpercent. Maitox 4.1( perceut. t .46 percent. Bohcninn 6.64 peroent. 5.97 percent. Mftlto-tone 3.80 Prima Tonic 5.21 percent. 7.77tercent, Wyeth'e 1.97 percent. 14.05 percent. Malt-Xutrine..1.79 percent. 14.31 percent. lakinsr them nn more in detail 4n. heuser-Bush's Malt-Xutrine seems the best and Wyeth's second. The others, however, are quite popular, probably because of their low price and high per centage oi aiconoi, ana are freely sold by the glass at soda fountains ae a bever I age." In explanation of the hi of alcohol found in so mnnv nf tha i it- Ton ics, Mr, Dales said: "As a matter of j fact, most Malt extracts on the market nave either be?n allowed to ferment or have had alcohol added before bottling." Your money refunded if after usiniz three- fourths (4) of a tnbe of ManZan.you aredia- "atisfied. Return the balance of the tube to your druggist,and your money will h cheer- miiy refunded. Take advantage of this of fer. Sold by the Kerner-McNair Drug Com pany. . - - Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets A Buy MUdn for Bnsy People. BrLnja Guides Health sad Beaewod Vigcr Jet form, 85 cents a box. Genuine niulV Hollmtoi Dmco Company, Madison, Wis. 30LDEII NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPL Grapes are heavy Potash, which must be re newed in the soil if the yield of the vines is to be kept up. Potash at the root of the vine means a pro fuse yield of luscious clusters on the frame. CflMPlXTral SHCRTfURtta Our free booklet, tells much you should know about plant fertilization. Write for it now. GERMAN KALI WORKS New York 93 Nnua Str et, or Atlanta, Ja.-1224 Candler Building IT ii r l 0 ffimsBD YES! GRAPE TOBACCO is just a little sweeter than any made to imitate GIVAPE, Ill WHY ? 11 because that rich, sweet flavor i:3 P we have been buying and manufacturing it for over fifty years. IT IS MADE BY A FIRM II. A. Patterson Tobac- m3BW- RHE msssm CURED The Circulation Stimulated Sloaris Address j There Is NEW LIFE For You! WRITE US a letter and tell us frankly and freely all your troubles. We will send you FREE ADVICE, by mail, and a valuable book on treatment New of diseases by the use of Dr. Bennett's family medicines; and, so many other valuable things you should know. All of our reme dies are sold by lead ing druggists. n CI US Top Miser. "What are your favorite books?" asked the literary pors v.i. "Really," answered Mrs. Shopleigh, T'I can't name them all offhand, but my husband's poeketbook heads the 1st." Houston Post. "Vacation." Croup can positively be stopped in 20 min utes No vomiting nothing to sicken or distress your child. A sweet, pleasant and safe Syrup, called Dr. Snoop's Cough Cure, does the-work and does it quickly. Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure is for Croup alone, re osember. It does not claim to cure a dozen ailments. It's for Croup, that's all. Sold by Thomas Bron. sun ; SIh-'p to; 't) !ss l'r it Man. a i-- :: i r a- ;;rto tan. She"s fr-t some a:o iothoa. She's rri a pair e f ;rog?'cs and A 5mo.l Kuard for lr nose.- She's got a veil quite tig enough For a mosquito bar. And now she's praying for a man Who's got an auto car. Yonkers Statesman. The relief of Coughs and Colds through laxative inflnence.originated with Bee's Lax ative Cough Syrup, containing Honey and Tar, a cough syrup containing no opiates or poisons, which is extensively sold. Secure a bottle at once, obtain a guarantee coupon, and if not fully satisfied with results, your money will be refunded. Sold by the Kerner MeXair Drug Company. - consumers of "Plant Food, of the so-called sun-cured plugs they are all imitations- peculiar to the genuine Leaf, and THAT KNOWS ROW o Co., Richmond, Va. r vv and the Muscles and Joints lubricated by using Price 25o 50c 61.00 j Sold by all Dealers Treatise On The Horsew5ent Free Dr. Earl S.Sloan, Boston,Mass. Strength for The Weak A torpid liver is always associated with in digestion. A disease but few of us entirely es cape throughout life. Do not allow this dis ease to exhaust all your strength, and take away the pleasure of a long, happy life. A bottle of Life will give relief. For this great medicine is the friend and companion of thousands who once suffered just as you do now. Martin Lowder, of Bridgeton, N. J., writes: "I have been a great sufferer of stomach trou ble and catarrh. I have been troubled and a roused from my sleep every night for thirty years on account of my kidneys. All of these troubles have been wonderfully relieved. The medicine has the right name NEW LIFE for it is life itself for me. I have used six bottles." Purchase of Address letters to Leading Druggists. Bennett Medicine Co., Norfolk. Va. A waken in?. "The Chinese are gettinsr to be quite expert in military matters, aren't Ihey?" "Yes; they are beginning to. realize that the man behind the gun is more important than the man behind the washboard." Washington Star. - Willie wailed and -.Winnie. i.wheeaed, while wintry winds whined weirdly Willie wrig gled while Winnie wheezed wretchedly. Wis dom whispers, winter winds work wheezes. Wherefore we write, "Use Kennedy's Laxa tive Cough Syrnp." Nothing else so good.' .Sold at Parker's Two Drag Stores. The Point of View. "Did your play fail because It was bad?" "My dear sir," answered Mr. Storm-" tngton Barnes, "no play fails because it is bad. Failure is invariably due to a lack of intelligent appreciation om the part of the public'-WashingtoB 4 ssiar. . . It's a good old world after all; If you have no friends or money. In the river yon may fall; Marriages are quite common and, More people there would be, Provided you take Rocky Mountain Tea. Parker's Two Drug Store. Omlr War. Meeker-My wife and I never quar rel. She does as she pleases, and I do LOO Bleeker-I see as she pleases. ,MfLkerrf course. I'm not looking for trouble.-Detroit Tribune. Piles of people have piles. Why suffer from piles when you can use De Witt's Carbobzed Witch Hazel salve and get relief. Nothing else so good. Beware of Imitations See that the name is stamped on each box. Sold at Parker's Two Drag Stores. Our Raleigh Letter. " GORMAN NEWS BUREAU, -Raleigh, N. C., Feb. 4. If the lawyers in the Legislature gt through looking after their own and agree upon the provisions ol the measure now pending in the Senate to fix the compensation of the prosecuting officers of the sixteen judicial districts of the State, several other bills of State impor tance will this week get a chance to pass through the legislative hopper. This Solicitors' Salary bill has for two weeks been a source of contention in the Senate and last Saturday was for the third : time made the - special order for further consideration this tim being set forj Wednesday noon. It is to be hoped that it will be finally disposed of so far as the Senate is concerned. There is little division of Bentiraent on the gen eral proposition to change the system from fees to a fixed salary bat the trou ble is over what that salary should be in the several districts and when the change should go into effect. . As the bill now stands, with the Aycock amendment, it wouid not go into effect till January, 1909, and as that amendment has been accepted by the author of the bill it is likely to- remain in the bill as finally passed. The fight 'Wednesday will be over the question of adopting the plan of Senator Howard to pay varying sal aries in the several districts according to the number of terms of court and the amount of criminal business transacted, save being fixed at eighteen hundred dollars and most of them ranging from two thousand to thirty-five hundred. As the bill now stands (after the adop tion Friday last of the amendment of Senator McLean) no solicitor shall re ceive more than $ 2,500 and if the usual fees as now paid do not amount to that sum he shall receive no more than the fees do amount to. At present some of the solicitors are receiving, under the fee system, more money than either the Attorney General or the Chief Justice, some of them getting four thousand and forty-five hundred dollars out of the office. A new bill has been introduced during the last week to increase the number of judicial districts of the State. There is already one bill in the hands of the Sen ate committee on judicial districts to the same effect, providing for four more su perior court judges and, of course, four tore solicitors. From conversations which this writer has had recently with senators and remarks made on the floor of the Senate during the several debates on the Solicitors' Salary bill, this Legis lature will refuse to pass any bill with that object in view. Nothingdefinite has developed yet with regard to what will be done by this Leg islature for the additional care and treatment of the uncared-for indi tent in sane persons of the State. There are several bills on the subject of "epileptics and idiots'" in the hands of the commit tees. But just what kind of bill the com mittees will finally evolve cannot be foretold with any degree of accuracy at this time. They have neglected and put off this pressing appeal of the helpless unfortunate so many times that it will surprise no one if this Legislature follows in the footsteps of its recent predecessors and fails to actually accomplish any thing that is worth accomplishing. I am actually and trnly sorry and ashamed, as a North Carolinian, to have to make such a statement. Bht it is the simple truth, r The Aycock and the Holt anti-trust bills are to be taken up the latter part of the present week by the committee and it is expected that the fight over them will be even a few degrees warmer than was the contention in the hearing of the railroad committee last week and week previous. Both of the anti-trust bills are very drastic in their provisions and their authors do not expected them adopted in their present shape. A joint caucus of the members of the. Legislature will be held Thurs day -night of this week for the pur pose of considering the proposition em bodied in a bill by Judge Winbourne to amend the State Constitution and extend the "grandfather clause" of the election law for ten years additional, that is until 1918. Unless some action is taken the time will expire next year, It will be re called that the Republican State Conven tion last year recommended an extension and at the time it- was credited to the Blackburn element of the party. Among the Democratic members of the Legisla ture there is a difference of opinion on the subject. Some favor the proposed extension for ten years and some for shorter periods, while others are opposed to extending it at all. Hence the calling of tne caucus to secure the majority sent iment on this important matter. LLEWXAM. ManZan Pile Remedy put up in conven ient, collapeible.tubes with nozzle attachment so that the remedy may be applied at the very seat of the trouble, thus relieving al most instantly bleeding, itching or protrud ing piles. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Sold by the Kerner-McNair Drug Company. COW UUCH FERTILIZER TO APPLY. The question, "How much fertilizer should be used per acre?" cannot be an swered definitely, but only in a general way. It is sometimes put in this form: "What is the most profitable amount that tnay be applied per acre?" Neither can the question in the amended form be exactly and accurately answered. The soil, its character, condition, preparation, etc., may be well known, or controllable factors, but we know not what the sea sons may be, says Hon. R. J. Redding, Director Georgia Experiment Station, De partment of Agriculture, In the Virginia Carolina Fertilizer Almanac. . We know that, some crops will bear larger amounts of fertilizers with reason able assurance of profitable returns than may be expected of other soils. A crop that occupies the soil from the fall season until spring, or early summer, will bear heavier fertilizing than will a crop that Is planted In the spring and ripens for Harvest m midsummer. The first case, is Illustrated by oats, wheat, or other small grain, or grass, especially when sown In the fall of the year. Such a cror occu pies the soil during the late fall and win ter, ana early spring during which pe riods the rains are usually abundant npemng ror barvest in late spring, or very early summer, before the burning summer heat and possible drouths of June and July. Oats and wheat therefore are ideal crops for liberal fertilizing. . Corn is rather an uncertain crop on the ordinary ory uplands or tne Boutn. - it nas but a snort period In which to devel op its flowers tassels and silks cover ing but a few days. If very dry weather hall prevail when this critical period Is approaching, and for some time after it is passed, the crops may prove a greater or less failure. There can be no second effort, no second period of blooming. It is different in the case of cotton. which , commences to bloom and make fruit in June (or even earlier) and con tinues - throughout the summer until checked. by a severe frost in November. It has a number of "chances." Cotton is therefore another Ideal crop lor iioerai ieruuzmg. A. small amount of fertilizers applied per acre will no aouDt yield a larger percentage profit on its cost. than will a larrer amount. To illustrate: An application of $2 worth' of fertiliser per acre. mar cause an in. creased .yield, of eotton (at 10 cents per pwraa; ox w Tame oi to xo fs, or a pront -of 206- to- 30& per cent, on Its cost. I have frequently had -such results. But ft does not Xoilow that twice as heavy an appli cation will produce twice as large re sults, or that tare times as much would cause three times as great an increase m ia ywm. m outer -words, the rate of, -increase In the yield' of cotton will not be In. proportion to the increase tn the amount ef. fertilisers applied. Two dollars worth of fertiliser per acre mar yield an increase in tke crop of It; but X worth, would not therefore brtaaj an Increase of Stt. But careful observation has shown that an application of S..te IS worth, of fertil izers (properly balanced) ts a safe amount to apply par acre an cotton, llm am. ers in Georgia have secured satisfactory returns from. an application of so much as 800 pounds per acre. -;. I thick CDS pounds a perrectly safe limit on upland In fairly good condition, well prepared and property cultivated tn cot ton. For corn, I would Halt thoaaseonf to 2ftt to 100 pounds per aero oswlA lands. . For TRADE MARK flEOISTERCO F. S, R0YSTER GUANO CO., Norfolk, Va. nn THE NEW IDEA EE1MEDY5 Horn tie Bonis ma tin Naarly all other eouh cures are constipating, especially tbofs containing Opiates. KsnnscYs UxatiTe For Sale Let Us Put a Buck's in Your Kitchen Buck's are cookers, bakers and happy home makers. You'll find Bock's Stoves are the most economical and labor saving on the market . Come in and let HDanvSeB & 01 t j This is the New ENGINE AND m , S IV? guess m W I 111 . M F7Cn & (If Which has lust been installed in the plant of the Henderson Lighting & Power Company It embodies every improvement known to the building of Engines &.nd Dynamos. Telephones, Nos. 21. 48. 6. fi Lucky the Maun Who rides in a CORBITT BUGGY. Made of the best material, well put together by skilled workmen. C) () () () () () 8 ) () (V ( Bviilt for Service We manufacturer all. grades of Buggies, Surreys, Carriages and Delivery Wagons. i() K HNDR.SON, Twenty -one - rimioe have been the standard Cotton and Tobacco guanos in the South because great care is used in the selection of materials. Ask your dealer for Royster's gouds and den't take substitutes said to be just as good. See that thw cade-mark is on even fHE ORIGINAL UXATIYE r?r? ii ii MATIIfE n I ii Best for Children U LJ at Parker's Two (2) Drug Stores. The oven of a Buck's Stove is roomy, well venti lated and per fect! v sanitarj. us show you our line, (BWM)ipsini)yo z o u c to "ok o E ; H X ts B.S J IS s 1-2 t a si 3 o O "o o n ti m w o W a I s 12 9" Mill c I -; 5 300 Horse Power GENERATOR 3 O, N. C. Years S V.t'.i." CUGH SYRUP CfS OBEY a Red Clorer Blossom on Ererj Bottle U Lt.MlTTWl (KtUtit Honey and Tar motes ths bowels, contains r.o Cwi can be greatly Incrfat-J 1-y yx special care to the health f . animal and fowl on the f .:.. Sick poultry, sheep, ca'.il . horses, etc., ileperul on tlv r ;. t to keep them well. Black-Dran Stock and Poultry Medicine keeps their livers work ins therefore keeps them well. Black-Draught Stock anJ I try Medicine js a pure, ii 'i vegetable, blood purifier, anJ by regulating the stomach, 1 VtT and bowels. It prevents and cures 11 . t i era, ChiJten Cholera, Colic, 1 temper. Coughs, Colds, Const tion. Fever, Loss of Appt-t Wasting Away, and all the c mon stock diseases. It is a perfect medicine fur k eral farm use. Try It. :'.-n- Price 25c for a large car., at All druggists and dakn AO couth errant eonUlnlne opia'' trXt ; to the bowel. Bee't Lxtivs K .:? f- Tar BOTCt the bowels asd eooU. t v - For sale by The Kerner-NcNair Co. See Us When You Want Lime, Cement. "Tite Hold" Wall Plaster. Brick. Shingles. Doors and Windows. Full stock at Low.-t It:-'"-fttoraKe Youn'n ok! mil!. Poythress Coal and Wood Co. 8 () ) Phone. No. $8.- FEELING () O ) () LIVER-ISH This Morning ' TAKE ii () ) ) ) Si A Gentle Laxative And Appetizer C), DAB 1 Whooping ZyVatl Mi" uon WL r 3 rerr bottieu Yv '(ifils
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 7, 1907, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75