Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Sept. 5, 1907, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE HENDEKSON GOLD LEAP THUliSD AY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1907; The Gold Leaf. THURSDAY. sni'T. 1007. Big Shipbuilding Plan t To be Located at Norfolk -Edward S. Cramp, Late of the Cramp Shipbuilding Company, of Phila delphia, Interested in Project An Enterprise that will Mean Much for Norfolk and Vicinity. Wilniiriglori Star. It is evident that Norfolk arnl vicin ity in to become one cf the greatest shipbuilding points in this country The natural advantages of Norfolk make it a city of destiny, so tospeak, and it is gratifying to note its position as one of the progressive cities of the South, indeed of the IN-public. From the Norfolk Virginia ii-I'ilot it is learned that the Cramps, of Phil adelphia, will locate a bi' shipbuild ing plant at Norfolk. Says our es teemed Norfolk contemporary: ' Kdward S. Cramp, late of the Tramp Shipbuilding Company, of Philadelphia, associated with George W. .Norris, of the banking firm of Kdward P.. Smith & Co., of No. oil Chestnut street. Philadelphia, have purrha d a ninety-five thousand dol lars piece of property fronting One thou.-aud feet on the main harbor, just opposite the Norfolk and West ern station, by one thousand feet on Perscara Creek, with twenty-five to thirty feet of water, or enough to ac commodate the largest vessel afloat, and will immediately begin the con struction of a shipbuilding plant, which w ill be one of the largest in the country. "The purchase was made from the Hardy Homestead Corporation, of Norfolk, with offices on Plume street, Mr. J. W. Hough, president. 'The papers closing this transac tion were signed by Mr. Cramp and Mr. Norris nearly three weeks ago, w hen a large sum of money was paid over. ''The charter has been drawn and will be shortly filed with the Corpo ration Commission. "A real estate company will be first formed and the property will then be turned into an extensive shipbuilding plant with a working capital of half a million dollars. ' In addition to doing all kinds of repair work, the plant will be con structed on such a scale as to be in a position to make bids for the con struct ion of t he largest type of battle ships. "The Philadelphia source from which this information came, gave as the attorneys for the Quaker City capitalists, Mr. Tazewell Taylor and Mr. I). Lawrence (Jroner. Confirm ation through the local attorneys could not be gotten last night, as both of thegentlenn n named areout of the city. "Mr. Ldward S. Cramp will be pres ident of the concern, the name of which has not yet been selected. "Mr. Cramp is a practical ship builder, and was formerly on of the heads of the great Cramp ship building Companj', of Philadelphia He is, however, no longer connected with that company, but will give his loug and varied experience to the Norfolk plant. "Mr. Norris who i. associated with Mr. Cramp, represents Large moneyed interests in Philadelphia, and those interests originally acquired tlieliay Shore Railway, when it was sold by the receivers a short time ago. "This is decidedly the most impor tant industrial development for this section since the decision of the Tide-water-Ieepwater Railway to make. "The purchase of this large prop city from the Hardy Homestead Cor poration will probably make the stock of that company worth four or live times as much as it has ever been. However no definite infor mation regarding this could be ob tained. "With large additions recently mad.' to existing plants, and the coming of this great enterprise, Nor ton's importance as a shipbuilding centre can at once be realized." We do not think that the Virginkin I'ilot exaggerates the importance of the Cramp plant to that city. Ship building is bound to become a tremen dous industry in this country at no far distant day. We are on "the eve f it and Norfolk will be in the swim. Negro Exhibit at Jamestown Exposition. We are glad that the colored peo ple of North Carolina have excelled the colored folks of any State in the South in their exhibit at the .Tames town Imposition. North Caralina is the only State that made an appro priationand that of $3,000 for the installing of such an exhibit, and she gave no less distinguished a man than her Ciovernor to make the ad dress on Negro Day at the Exposition. North Carolina has the best negro population of any State in the South and we are glad of the race enterprise and race pride they have shown in having an exhibit at the Exposition. A press dispatch states that men are dying rapidly in Chicago, while women are increasing with equal rapidity. Nothing strange. Merely the survival of the fittest. Charlotte Sens. -DG Wood's Grass Clover Seeds. Best Qualities Obtainable and of Tested Germination. Fall is the lest time for nowinp. You rest and improve vour land, and rest yourself, l,y puttinp fields down in permanent crosses and clovers. rite for Wood s Descriptive- iJ . ... vdidiotue, it-nine oesi Kinds to bow, quantities to sow per acre, and givincr full information about a!l seeds for fall planting, both for the Farm and Garden. Catalogue mailed free on request. T. W. WOOD & SONS, oeeasmen, - Richmond, Va. The Largest Itti Rwse Is Th: South rxu .0 4 0 The Making of a Successful Wife By CASPER 5. YOST. STARTING RIGHT. Settling Down the Most Important Part of the Busi nessHappiness Is Made. Not Found. Doi't Slart Wrong by Making an Ex pensive Bridal Tour. 8 Mm 'CopyrigS.t, 1Dj6, by Casper S. Yost. XL DEAR LITT't: CifttLr-I in have juHt receive your de I V l jijrhtful letter teliing me all about the preparations for your wedding, it carries iue back to tLe time, soine forty years ago, when your dear mother was making similar :.rrant:e nu-nts iuA I wrs doing a little htvui in the Kiiiue line myself. In those days the fashions in joyous ap parel for men were not so rigidly fixed as now. All your William will have to do is to raise the price. In my day it was different. To be sure, the cut of a mail's coat and trousers and hat for such occasions didn't admit of in iK-h variation, but he ltd more lat itude In the matter of color and goods, ami as to waisf-oasti. shirts and ties, he could a ;!.; far a-i he pleased with out i'ru ti:iiii any rul-s bad enough to shock society. I vividly remember what a deuce of a time I had try ing to decide be tween a bright yellow walst coat covered with little blue flowers and a white one with black dots on It. I finally had to ask your moth er's advice about it, and she fa-" vored the white' one. Of course What until your her preference daddy win. settled the busi ness, but my memory still lingers fond ly ii Ui.it ;, eliow vest. I wore a ruffled shirt that it took my old colored mam my a whole day to Iron and a blue necktie that made the little stars twin k!i it was .so brilliant. Ah, my little girl, you can't imagine what a swell your daddy was when he was a youngster. Idd 1 ever tell you about the time I had getting my bridal suit': I don't believe I ever did, and this Is a most appropriate time to reveal to you one of the dark chapters of my life. There was only one tailor in our town, and he wasn't much of a tailor. Hesides, he had a habit of looking on the wine, or its Missouri equivalent, when it was most inconvenient for his customers. I lis name was Johnson, but it wasn't Andy. lie resembled Andy in his affection for certain brands of corn juice, but that was as far as the likene-'s went. Well. I had given John son pretty free runge and oodles of time lu the matter of my outfit, and I made it a point to call on him every day and give him a mild lecture on the evils of intemperance, particularly when wedding clothes were involved. I held him up pretty well, and he was getting along tine with the job until the day before the great one, when an old pal of his from Kentucky blew into town. Then Johnson fell, and so did my h.ipcs. I was going home that night, with my feet in the tall grass and my head up in the solar system somewhere, as happy as a honeybee in .iu ne. when 1 met the tailor and the Iventiu-kinn coming up the road. They were arm in arm. and the Appian way wouldn't have been wide enough for them to navigate without butting into the fences. They were vainly endeav oring to sing "We won't go home till morning," and I knew Johnson well enough to be satisfied that they wouldn't, nor the next day either, un less I got a move on myself. I changed my mind about going home. Instead I rounded up my best man elect, and to gether we started out on the trail. We found them still undecided as to wheth er the north or the south 6lde of the road was the better for traveling, and we persuaded them to keep in the mid dle of it. It might shock you if I told you how we did it, but you must re member, my dear, that we were young and hot blooded and thu situation war ranted extreme measures. At any rate, we thought so, and we carried Johnson home on the soft side of a pino board. Lord, what a heavy man he was! My anus ache yet when I think of it We left him to the willing and active min istrations of his wife, and before he could get out of bed the next morning we were with him again. Maybe we didn't stay with him that day, and maybe we didn't watch every stitch that his nervous fingers put into that suit! Two or three times he tried to break loose, but every time we forced him back to work. Even at that it was dark and one sleeve of my coat was uly basted in when I rushed frantical ly to iuy room to dress. I got to your mother's home ten minutes late, and all during tl.-e ceremony I was in mor tal terror of that coat sleeve pulling Down Advica. But that was a long time ago, sweet heart, a long time ago. and it doesn't interest you much no doubt, because your dear little head is so full of your own happiness that your daddy's by gones pass y.u by, like the summer wieds, unheard. Besides, that wasn't what 1 Intended to write to you rbout when 1 sat down at this faraway desk. There are a ureat many things I want to say to you. I've learned a heap, lit tle girl, since I had that tussle with Johnson forty years ago, and maybe some of the things I've learned may &e!p you to find kappiness when yon have crossed over the line that sep arates the girl from the matron. May be it will and maybe it won't. It is hard for youth to see with the eyes of age, and all the wisdom of all the ages won't alter the fact that most of us learn by hard experience the lessons others would have taught us. Never theless us old fellows will keep on handing down advice to the end of the chapter, just hoping that perhaps a little of it will stick and do some good. Now, my dear, you are going to get married to William Jackson Rollins with all the frills that I can afford to throw around the ceremouy. That's A man was recently arrested in Greensboro for selling: beer under the name of "Yellow Ade," and upon be- mj; uuunu over to court put up a cash bond in erold. At the request of a loval subscriber we suggest that the gold so deposit ed was but another form of vellnw. ade, but we must positively decline to make this statement upon our own responsiDiiitv. Greensboro In dustrisl Xewt, right. That's what I like. Then you are going away on a bridal "tower," as they used to say down where I was raised, and after you've ripped around the country a few weeks and squander ed more money than William can make again in 6 3 x months you will come back home to settle down and "live happy ever after." That, I am pret ty sure, is as far into the future as you've got. and I guess it's far enough, but I wish you'd take a little time from lace. and ruffles and such entrancing fix ings and give a little considera tion, you allil DriUduu-n the ttreatn. William together, t that business of settling down. Did you ever notice, when I've takeu you to see a horse race, how much trouble a:id time are taken to get the horses lined up for a right start? That's the mot important part of the business, getting a right start, and it's a good deal more im portant for young folks just starting la married life. How to Be "Happy Ever After." I want to see you get a right start, little girl, one that will land j'ou and Bill at the post safe winners, and you'd better not have any mistaken notions about that "happy ever after" business. It's there, all right. You just bet it is. I've had forty years of it, and I know I know; but it doesn't come of itself, little girl doesn't come just as a matter of course. Hap piness is a manufactured product and every couple have to make their own Btock. I want you to get that stuck deep into your little noggin the very first thing. Happiness isn't found; it's made. And sometimes there's a whole lot of toil and a whole lot of trouble in the making, but as a rule the more the toil and the more the trouble the better and sweeter the product. That's another point that's worth remember ing. You've got to get rid of a lot of fool notions before you can get started right. It takes most people years to get rid of them, but I'd like to have you go into this business with your eyes wide open, with the full knowledge that you are not going to drift down the stream in an open boat with silken and per fumed sails and nothing to do but watch the landscape. There's some thing to do, my dear, something for you as well as for William. Married life isn't a simple speed trial on;a straightaway course. It's a hurdle race with handicaps, and you stand a better chance in the running If you know what the weights are and some thing about the hurdles. So If your old daddy bothers you with informa tion about the track don't get out of patience. He only wants to put you wise and save you as much of life's worries and tears as possible. He can't tell you everything; he can't know all that the future has in store for you, nor warn you against the unknown, but what the years have taught him he wants to give to you, and just remember that he does it not because he is Just old and garrulous, but because he loves you better than anything else on earth except your mother and wants above all things to see you happy. This Bridal Tour Business. I don't take much stock in this bridal tour business. I wouldn't advise you to cut it out. It's the fashion, and folks will say mean things if you don't do what everybody else does. But don't overdo it; don't splurge too much; don't let William feed his money to the dicky birds that will hang Don't let William feed his money to the dicky birds. around you going and coming. Too many young couples put their future fn pawn in order to cut a wide swath on their wedding journey. They come back bankrupt iu spirit and purse, worn out bodily by the rushing here ami yonder trying to cover as much ground in a given period as their legs will stand and getting peevish, bad tempered and broke in the process. It's a bad way to start, my dear. It stocks a weight on you that It may take years to unload, and too often it's the basis of bickerings that lead to per manent unhappiness. I don't know whether you remember Nellie Ander son or not, but she was a mighty fine girl, and when she married Tom every body said it was an Ideal match, what ever that may be. They weut off on a bridal trip with the announced inten tion of making things hum. And they did. Tom had to send home for more money to get back on, and when they did strike the tow u again they were so knocked out by worry and fatigue aafl indigestion that they were spatting at each other like a couple of cats on the back yard fence. And the worst of it is that they never got over it, for the last time I heard of them they were fighting yet. No. little girl, don't try to break any records on your bridal trip. Don't try to see how many differ ent kinds of posters you can get on your suit cases. Just pick out some nice, quiet spot, where you. can stay for a few weeks at a cost that will come within the limits that jour hus baud can afford, and, there pass the time together as sv eeTly and happily as you may, forgetting for the moment that there is anybody else on the face of this green earth or any other time but the present. That's the way to spend a honeymoon. That's what a honeymoon is for to get away from the world for a spell, not to get into the thick of it. Then you may under stand me. I say may, not will come back at peace iu mind and heart, know ing one another better and loving one another better, ready to get down to the serious business of married life la the ;r-ier spirit. That kind of wedding trip is pretty near as good as none at all. When your mother and I were married her horse was saddled after the ceremony and together we rode through the green bordered lanes to the little home I had prepared for her. That was all there was to it. It's the best way, I think, and yr t I can't advise you to do the same. Times chine and customs change v. them, and what was Ftrktly proper forty years ago won't do now. The trouble with even the kind of weddiug trip I have suggested Is that too much sweetness is likely to pall. I remember once that you got mighty tick on chocolate drops and you wouldn't look at chocolate drops Richmond, October 7, 8, 9, 10, 1 1, 12 Evrvkrt?v J rxrrnT fnrwnrA fn if. The wonderful success of last year has led to 1 r . r- .1 ML! 1M I.. TI -11 Jmartnuntl. pians ror a greater rair mis year, nommg u.e iu sue i " LIVE STOCK I $30,000 I AGRICULTURAL I GREAT RAC EXHIBITS IN PRIZES DISPLAYS ALL CLASSES BIG FREE SHOWS BEST MIDWAY SPECIAL SALES A BIG TIME EVERY DAY ATTRACTIONS FACILITIES ALL WEEK LOW RATES ON ALL RAILROADS-ASK YOUR AGENT ,1 I Write for f Don't For- 77777 fth!iill I W?1 I Popular Ratcsat the Popular Mecklenburg The Mecklenburg great waters sell best where they are best known. BECAUSE: 1st, They have merit. 2nd, They positively cure Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Kidney and Bladder Troubles, Catarrh, Chronic Malarial Poisoning, Scrofulous and Gland ular Enlargements in Tubercular Joints and Bone Diseases and All Skin Diseases. We have it demonstrated to us dailv that it is easv to sell our waters where thev are known, and as positive evidence of this fact we are now selling them in all parts of the Liiiteu Mates, from which guests have visited "The Mecklenburg," therefore it behooves us to ac quaint everybody with them, and to this end we are going to reduee the rates at the Mecklenburg Hotel so all may come and test these waters for themselves, for to know them is to drink them, and to drink them is to be cured. Hotel Rates. 1st and 2nd floors, without bath, 14.00 to 17.50 a week according to size of room and number of occu pants. 1st and 2nd floors, with bath, $17.50 to 21.00, ac cording to size of room arid number of occupants. 3rd floor, without bath,. $12.50 to $15.00 accord ing to size of room and number of occupants. Mrd floor, with bath, $15.00 to $17.50 according to size of room and number of occupants. Club House Annex with bath, $12.50 to $15.00 per week. Barnett Hotel Annex, without bath, $10.00 to $12. 00 per week. Cuisine and Service the Best in the South. Write at once and make your Reservations. MECKLENBURG HOTEL, CHASE CITY, VA. MECKLENBURG WATERS FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. for a year. Yet it was the finest kiod f candy. There's an old saying that you can't get. too much of a good thing, but it's wrong, very wrong. There's nothing Oner on earth thau the society of husband and wife, but nei ther at the beginning of married life nor afterward is it beBt to have too much of it. It's got to be modified by the diversions of everyday occupation before it will keep well. So I say don't string out your trip too long, even if you spend it in some seques tered nook. Preliminary Stock Taking. And, short as you may make it, my dear, don't put iu all of it billing and cooing. It's a good time for a little preliminary stock taking, a little figuring on joint assets, men tal as well ay financial; a lif tle pondering over plans. Don't get too all fired material; don't take yourselves or your future too seriously not just yet. Just build air castles for the moment and get yourselves ia shape to start life right when you sret back Waitiiuj for her to dress home; to start it as partners wholly devoted to each oth er's good; to start it with no fool no tions in your heads about each other's perfections; to start it with the firm de termination to take each other as you are and to build on that foundation a castle not of air, but of love, of labor, of mutual joys and mutual troubles that shall last till death do part. This isn't all I started out to say, but I guess it's about all you'll want to digest this trip. I can imagine Bill is walking up and down the next room with his hands in his pockets, wonder ing why in the world it takes a woman so long to drsss. That's one of the things he'll never find out, but when you go down you can tell him it was just a love letter from your next best fellow that you were reading. That will relieve his mind about the toilet and at the same time give him some thing else to worry about. Bill's all right, but I can't help but feel a little sore at him still for stealing my little girl's heart away from me. So I'll leave him and j'ou to your devotions until I go home again to play a little part in the great drama of your lives. Goodby. little girl, until then. Your affectionate father, JOHN SNEED. Yes, It's a Free Country. OoMsboro IJworil. It has come to the pass th tt an editor can't express an oppinion on any subject without being taken to task by some other editor who fails to view a question in the same light; or by some private citizen who walks aroumi continually with a chip on his shoulder and imagines that every editorial expression is a direct hit to him. Guilty conscience needs no accusing. Every editor, in com mon with every other person, is en titled to his opinion and should be entitled to express same without getting into a newspaper controver sy with the thermometer registering at 100. Newspapers and Crime. Trenton (X. J.) Gazette. Degeneracy seems to be the motive power back of the wave of crime that is sweeping through the city of New York and lapping other towns in the country. In most of the cases of assault reported by the newspapers little chil dren are the victims of brutal men who, judging from the published ac counts of their actions, appear to be actuated by an overwheming lustful mania. We are inclined to the opinion that publicity in some instances may act as a deterrent to crime, but we believe that the newspapers ought to be careful to aviod the publication of anything that is calculated to inflame the minds of passionate men and women to such a degree that they become blind to their moral responsi bilities and think only of their un holy desires. The New York newspapers devote columns every day to the setting forth of facts relative to crime, and the more revolting the crime the greater display of type in describing it. A sharp cenorship should be ap plied to all news of this -character that comes to a newspaper office. It should be the aim of every editor of a public journal to make of it a vehicle of clean and inoffensive infor mation. Every newspaper ought to be an upbuilder rather than a down puller of public morals. Every news paper ought to be a conservator of the best interests of the home. Every newspaper ought to be a power for good, and it can not be all this if it gives the greater part of its energy and space to a spectacular display of the miseries, sins and crimes of de degenerate men and women. Where He Missed It. ("barlotte Chronicle. In the course of the hearing of tes timony in the railroad suit, in New York, Mr. Justice asked General Man ager Taylor, of the Mobile & Ohio road, a witness, what he would sug gest that the Southern railway do in order to bring about the greatest prosperity in North Carolina. Mr. Taylor promptly responded: "To be allowed to go on as in the past. Be cause, as you have stated yourself, Mr. Justice, North Carolina has be come the greatest manufacturing State of the South, has the largest cotton industry of any State except Massachusetts, is the greatest plug tobacco centre in the world, and all this under the system of the South ern railway, for it is on the lines of this road that all these indus- I tries are located." If he had con j eluded his first sentence with "and igive fairer freight rates." he would have put it exactly. Hugh A. Leonard, formerly agent of the Southern Railway at Salisbury, who skipped about six months ago leaving a shortage of between $1,000 and $1,500, has l?en arrested in Idaho where he was working in a mine and will be brought back to North Carolina and tried. How did Jones make ali his mon ey?" ''Judicious speculation." "And how did Browu lose his fortune?" "Dabbling in stocks." Cleveland Leader. If the railroads will stop the unjust discrimination of freight rates against North Carolina towns they will put themselves in au attitude to receive the friendship of the great masses of the people of the State. That is of more importance than the passenger rate. Alabama without railroads, it is S-edicted, will be a serpentless Eden, aybe so, maybe so, but the devil will be to pay, all the same. New Bern Sun. Everybody lores onr baby, rosy, sweet and warm, WUh kisey places oa her n-k and dimples on Ler arms. Once she was so thin and cross, used to cry with pain Mother gave her CASCASWEET, now she's well again. iM at PnrkerV Two Prnr Stnrw. Rays From the New Bern San. A day of pleasure can yield yeaas of grief. The brave man rarely hollers when he is hit. It pains a true man not to be able to please all his friends. The smallest man is generally the one who belittles others. If you agree with everybody you certainly cannot be right yourself. All honest men are true to their convictions, regardless of the criti cism fired at them. A fishing worm is all right when you want to go fisning, but a very poor substitute for a backbone. Down iu Georgia they will shut up the saloons; but uncle Remus will still hold on to that 'ceitful jug. A newspaper that has no opinions of its own, but tries to agree with everybody's respect. The friends of just one candidate are not the only ones who belong to the party and have a right to their views about it. Much of the campaign thunder heard so far is a good deal like the old man's soda water nothing but sweetened wind. They are seeing Japanese spies down in Atlanta. Wonder what they'll see when they begin drinking blind tiger booze. If the Northern politicians will both let up and shut up about the negro, the South white and colored will get along all right. The Durham Herald remarks that "some of thecandidatesforGovernor seem to have nothing else to do." They haven't got time. No man who remembers Moore county court week of a couple of de cades ago will agree with the propo sition that hard cider is a soft drink. Taft says the South would cut more ice if it would try to forget about the brother in black. What's the use to try when the Northern politicians won't let us? Temperance and Prohibition. Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. Govenor Glenn is disposed to place little credence in the recent report that there was likelihood of the North Carolina legislature following the example of Georgia by pasing a State prohibition act. The Govenor says there is a 6trong sentiment in North Caaolina forState prohibition; "not, however as in Georgia ,but by a vote of the people, for we believe in the peolele ruling and unless public sentiment is behind prohibition it would be valueless." In this the Gov enor is indisputably and altogether right, as the.experience of Maine and Kansas has abundantly and conclu sively demonstrated. And yet there is danger of State prohibition, even when endorsed by popular vote not representing public sentiment in every and all localities within the commonwealth. In a State election it is both possible and probable that the vote in localities where public sen timent does favor prohibition, may be sufficiently large to overcome the adverse vote in the few where such is not the case. In such event enforce ment of the law would be not one whit less difficult than if State pro hibition had been effected by legisla tive enactment. In these localities prohibition would be "valueless" be cause public sentiment would not be behind it. True temperance is best promoted by local option the leav ing to each locality the determina tion of whether or not liquor shall be legally solJ. . . "I'm just crazy to be a reporter,4, said the rich man's daughter. "In sanity is no qualification," returned the editor closing the interview. Philadelphia Ledger. THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE HOME. Own your own home, it's a serious thing to liw iu ;i nouae" all yonr life. No real happiness is realized i., i;vi,r some one else's house. THE HENDERSON Loan a ESTATE COMPANY will help you secure a nice lioni- i,v jug you to pay on same in installments at about to s.Viu- r,u you pay for rent, and when you pay the full amount t have a place of your own and you have a houiep ii j f,,r j.NV , of a bunch of rent receipts. The man who owns his nvu, I)t'' is the one who takes the most interest iu his tu vn l home. The Henderson Loan & Real Estate Coin-,;,, v;;s J you u home to uit your taste and allow ou to .y (,,- s , an easy way. all ana let us raiK to you attout tmvit,-, HENDERSON LOAN & REAL ESTATE COMPANY. PHONE 139. P- O. BOX 116. 1 WATKINS HARDWARE STORE, Retailres of Quality and Price. Paints. Leads, Oils, Stains, Varnishes, Japa.la.c. Johnson Floor Wax. Jack Frost and Snow Ball Ice Cream Freezers. Garden Hose, Steel Plows, Lawn Mowers, Mole Tra; . Fibre Ware, Asbestos Isd Irons, Azurelite and- I.imoniie Goods. Protect your Buildings from Fire - - By using - - (B II IB US ALTAR PA II NTS. 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Garden Hose, Water Sprinkler s,Ice Chests, Refrigerators, Ice Cream Freezers, Etc. Come in and let us show how reasonable are our prices and how out-of-the-ordinary our offerings- AMIEIT& CiL WHY DO YOU USE KEROSENE AND SMOKE YOUR CEILINGS, CURTAINS AND WALLS ? See nudweiill conilice 101 tkat ELECTRIC LIGHTS ire better and fre quently cheaper. HENDERSON LIGHTING & POWER CO. Telephones Nos. 6. 2J, and 48.
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
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Sept. 5, 1907, edition 1
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