Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / April 16, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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? - 991 r nT nmnm -nrr Trim State Libmy A BUSINESS Be Sure IfYca Vant AOYERTISIR& To reach the people of Hen derson and sur rounding conn try; let them yon hold ont to get their trade by a well displayed adver tisement in , Tie 60LD LEAF 1 You are rigbt by first writing an advertisement setting forth the bargain? yon of fer, and insert it in the GOLD LEAF. Thin prepared for bus iness, you can 1 H Vf lo Worth Having u me . FOUNDATION OF SUCCESS - is 1UV DflCIHCCC 16 Warifl Adtartising i I4 EVEKY DAY . IN THE YEAR. Then 60 Ahead. THAD R. MANNIKG, Publisher. " OIajrolhst-a:, Oarolzn-a, Tl&jr&isi's jB3L.ESsnsrcSrS -A,tte3ST3D TTira-" SUBSCBIPTIOK JUO Cash VOL. XXVII. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1908. NO;17. Making Good. There is no way of making Inntlnn friends likft "Making iood;" and Doctor Pierce's inediriite.t well exemplify this, and their friends, after more than two Uvade.H of popularity, are numbered by the hundreds of thousand. They have "made pood" and they have not made drunkards. A good, honest, square-deal medicine of known com position is Dr. Pierce' Golden Medical Discovery. It still enjoys an im mense sale, whilo most of the prepara tions that have come into prominence in the earlier period of its popularity have "gone by the board "and are never more heard of. There must be some reason for this long-time popularity and that is to be found in its superior merits. When once given a fair trial for weak stomach, or for liver and blood affections, its supe rior curative qualities are soon manifest; hence it has survived and groyn in pop ular favor, while scores of less meritorious articles have suddenly flashed into favor for a brief period and then been as soon forgotten. For a torpid liver with its attendant indigestion, dyspepsia, headache, per haps dizziness, foul breath, nasty coated tongue, with bitter taste, loss of appetite, with distress after eating, nervousness and debility, nothing is so good as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It's an honest, square-deal medicine with all its ingredients printed on bottle-wrapper no eoret, no hocus-pocus humbug, tiierefore fiou't decent a substitute that the dealer may possibly make a little big ger profit. Innit on your right to have vh it you call for. Don't buy Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion expecting it to prove a "cure-All." It is only advised for woman's special ail ments. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. Less advertised than some preparations sold for like pnnoses, its sterling curative virtues still maintain its position in the front ranks, where it stood over two decades a so. As an in vigorating tonic and strengthening nerv ine it is unequaled. It won't satisfy those who want " lxxze," for there Is not a drop of alcohol in it. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, the or(l 71. Little Liver Pills, although the first pill of their kind in the market, still lead, and when onco tried are ever afterward in favor. Easy to take as candy one to three a dose. Much imitated but never qi talcd. BENNETT H.PERRY Attorney at Laivv, Henderson, N. C. OFFICE: Harris Law Building, (next to Court House.) fity Barber Shop - Mlirrell & Page, Proprietors- (Xext to Barnes Clothing Store.) An Easy Shave, . . A Satisfactory Hair Cut Is what yon frot every time yon patronize this shop. We nr experienced Barbers, and give every customer onr very best service. Shop newly furniKheil throughout. Chairs upholstered in leater clean, cool, sanitary. Wc tolicit your patronage. MURREIX & PAGE. i mm co WELDON, N. C. Manufacturers of BRICK OF ALL KINDS FIRE CRICK A SPECIALTY. t& Prompt attention given orders. J. J. BETSCH, Henderson, N. C. Local Agent. OR. F. S. HARRIS, DENTIST, Henderson, N. C. tr OFFICE: Over ti. u. Davis Store Administratrix's Notice HAVING QUALIFIED AS ADMIXISTRA trix of the estate of Louis J. lleavis, deceased, late of Vance county, N'.C, liefore the Clerk of the Superior Court, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to me, properly verified, on or before the 12th day of March, 1901). or this notice will lie pleaded in bar of their recovery. All jier sons indebted to said estate ure requested to mnke immediate settlement. This March 10, 190. KMILY R. RE A VIS, Administratrix of Lew is J. Reavis, deceaad. GOAL AND WOOD. llest and largest stock Lump, Splint and Anthracite COAL ver handled in Henderson Also Saw d and Uncut woo o Split readv for the etove, we solve the wood"" chopping problem for jou. Prompt attention to all business. Poythress Goal and Wood Go. Phone No. 88 Laxative Fruit Syrup Pleasant to take The new laxative. Does not gripe or naruseate.x Cures stomach and liver troubles and chronic con stipation by restoring the natural action of the stom ach, liver and bowels. Refuse substitutes. Prloe SOo. For Sale at Patter's Two Drug Stores Senator Overman. The People of the State Will Not be so Blind to Their Own Interests as to Fail to Re elect Him. Wilmington Messenger. Not long ago the Concord Tribune offered to p.iy five dollars for every good reason offered .why Senator Overman should not'' lie "re-elected. That offer is si ill st n ling, but we have not heard of that paper having to pay out a single five dollar bill 0:1 its offer or that any one had at tempted to Keen re theprize.- Why this is so is perfectly patent. . No one can advance any reason for the Sen ator's retirement. There is one man in the State who thinks he should have the place, but he does not even dare to openly contend for the place or claim that the State would be benefitted by substituting him for the present Senator. We believe that he would admit, if he gave a sincere opinion and would put ambition and selfishness nside.that theSrate would be-doing it very foolish thitijr were it to put Senator Ovecvmn aside to bp replaced by any nier man in thp State, himself included. We cannot see how any man in the State can favor thp supplanting ac this time of Senanor Overman by any other man. Has any oiip got any fault to find with .Mr. Overman since he has been Senator? Can any onp point to a single act on his which has made him unworthy of the high office to which he has called by the people of his State? Can any one give a, good reason why he should by supplanted at this time by some one else? Can any man who may ask the next Legis lature to Hioose himself in Mr. O.er man's place give msy othir reason for its' doing so than the one that he wants the honor and the salary of the office? We have heard of no man yet mentioned for the place who would have taken the high position in his first term that Mr. Overman In? s and most certainly not one of them could go to the Senate and at the beginning of his terra take the stand that Senator Overman would after six years' service in the Senate. We do not believe the people of North Carolina are going to lie so foolish, are going- to pursue so suicidal as course politically as to retire Mr. Overman, in other words to gratify the personal vanitj' or political am bition of auy man, no n;atter how popular theiatter may be or how acceptably he may have filled some other office. The people know Mr. Overman and they recognize .the prominence he has given his State in national affairs and we feel sure that they will demand his re-election. Some papers in the State say that in order to secure his re-election the friends of Senator Overman have work before them. We cannot believe it. We do not believe our people are so blind to their own interests and to the enviable reputation the State has established through the high position senator Overman has takes in the Senate and in the council of states men of the union. His friends must see to it that in the choice of candi dates for the Legislature men repre senting the will of the people are chosen instead of the strikers of some opposing candidate. That is all that is necessary. Don't cough your head off when you' can Ket a guaranteed Remedy in Bees Laxative Cough Syrup. It is especially recommended for children as it's pleasant to take, is a gentle laxative thus expelling the phlegm from the system. For coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, hoarseness, and all Bron chial trouble. Guaranteed. Sold bv Kerner- McNairCo "Looks like ver head's been knock ed sideways; and how come that scar on yer forehead? "My friend, don't ask leadin' ques tions. It's nuthun more'n the 'Home label' !" Atlanta Constitution. Sees Advantage in Wheels. After one season's use of bicvles, the Pawtucket, R. I., Police Depart ment is an enthusiastic convert to the value of mounted officers. Seven wheels are owned by the city, and an equal uumber of officers are regu larly detailed as a bicycle squad The result is that the patrolmen have been able to care for larger beats much more efficiently than was formerly the case. It Saved My Life- Writes Eczema Patient. Bedridden Sufferer Completely Cured by Use of D. D. D. External Wash One of the most remarkable Eczema cures recently crediteu to the well-known I). I). I). rrescriptiop has just been re corded in Chicaeo. Mrs. E. Hegg, 1530 West Madison street, under date of Dec. 9, 1907, writes as follows: "I suffered three years with Weeping ix-'zema. It started with a little spot on my knee and spread fast ver my whole body. 1 spent hundreds of dollars and went to every good doctor I heard of, but kept getting worse. Nothing would stop the awlul itching and burning. "I had to stay in bed from the middle of May to the- middle of July. Then tried D. D. D. Prescription. This is the 9th of December- and I am entirely free from the terrible disease, v. v. v. saved my life. - " - "When I began, this treatment people were afraid of me. I looked 60 terrible My husband was the only one who would take care of me. D. D. D. stopped the itch at once, so I conld sleep, which had not done before. Then I began to get - better fast, and now my sua i clear and white, not a spot anywhere.' Just a few drops of D. D. D. Prescrip tion applied to the skin brings relief nothing to swallow or drink. e vouch for D. D. D. Prescription, also the cleans- TA T-Y tv n mg i. v. v. oap. W. W. PARKER, Druggist, Henderson. N. C. Get a bottle today at either of Parker's Two Drag Stores if yon have any skin uiHeagc. iH-gin yonr enre ar once. The Mistletoe Bough. Thomas Hay ties Bagley. " The mistletoe hung in the castle hall; The holly branch shone on the old oak wall; The Baron's retainers were blithe and gay: Keeping the Christmas holiday. " - The Baron beheld with a father's pride His beautiful child yonng Lorell's hride, While nbe with her bright eyes, seemed to be The star of that goodly company. Oh! The mistletoe bough. 'I'm tired of dancing now" she criwl "Here tarry a moment, I'll hide, I'll hide. And Lovell, be sure thou art the fimt to trace T he.de w to my secret hiding place,' Away she ran and her friends began , Each tower to search ench nook to scan And yonng Lovell cried "Oh where doet thou hide?" I'm lonesome without thee, my own dear . ' bride. . . ' Oh! The mistletoe"booeh. They sought her that nitrht, they sought her next day, They sought her in vain, when a week passed away, ' - ... In the highest, the lowest, the loneliest spot Young Lovell sought wildly but found her not, And years flew by and then grief at last Was told as a sorrowful tale of the past, And when Lovell appeared the children cried, "See, the old man weep for his fairy bride" Oh! The mistletoe bough. At length an oak chest that had long lain hid Was found in the castle; they raised the lid When a skeleton form lay mouldering there, In the bridal wreath of that lady fair, Oh! sad was her fate, when in sportive jest She hid from her lord in the old oak chest. It closed with a spring and a dreadful doom For the bride lay clasped in a living tomb. Oh! The mistletoe bough. A Farmer's Views on Advertising. "If mail order houses get $ 1,000 out of the county each month, that belongs to the home merchants, the fault is with the merchants them selves. The houses advertise and give us prices on everything. They tell us what th'y have and what they want for it. Of course weget soaked once in awhile. Then" we cantry come other houfe. Most of the home merchants who advertise don't quote prices. They neglect to tell us what we want to know the prices. Of course we can go to the store and ask, but you all know how it is one does not know so well what he wants to buy when he is at home. And here is where the mail order houses make their hit. They send their advertising- matter into our homes, and we read it when we haven't anything else to do. "Right here is where the home merchants fall down. If they talked their business to us in our homes the same as the mail order houses do,the people would be in to see them next time they came to town and in many cases make extra trips to see the things at once that they didn't know they wanted until they were brought to their attention. "The home merchant can save the expense of getting out a catalogue. We read the home paper more care- ully than we do the catalogue, and if the merchants want to talk busi ness with us let them put their talk in the home papers and put it in so that we know they mean business. The home merchant likely nine times out of ten sells his goods as cheaply as the mail order houses, and, I believe, in many things they are much cheap- er,but how are we to know if he does not tell us about it? Booker Washington's Good Advice. Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. Timely was the warning and sensi ble the advice given to Northern ne groes by Booker Washihgton in his address before tne Afro-American Council in New York Thursday night. "To members of my race in the Nor thern States." said he, "let me utter the caution that in your enthusiastic desire to be of service to your breth ren in the South you do not make their path more thorny and difficult by rash and intemperate utterances Be careful not to assist in lighting a fire which you will have no ability to put out." The negro has no worse enemies than those of his own race. located, be it said to the credit of the r . - 1 1 soutnern negro.aimost exclusively in the North, who never let slip an op portunity to inveigh against the al leged ill-treatment of blacks by Sou- thernwnites, unless it ds tnan nmicea class of Northern whites typified by Warren J. Keifer. of Ohio, buch a course hat served no other purpose than to engender and keep alive race prejudice to the injury and detriment of the negro, When Northern negroes and whites of the Keifer stripe realize this and leave the Southern negro to work out his own destiny without suggestion, advice or interference from them, one of the two principal stumbling-blocks in the way of the black man's progress and advance ment and of a correct solution of the race problem will have been removed. The means of removing the other lies in the more enlightened among Southern negroes the teachers and preachers especially following this advice also emanating from Booker: "Every iota of influence which we possess should be used to get rid of the criminal and loafing element among our people and to make de cent, law-abiding citizens.' j . - i 30 days'. Trial f 1.00 is the offer on Pine ules. Relieve Backache, Weak Back, Lam Back, Rheumatic pains. .Best on Sale for Kidneys, Bladder - and Blood. Good for young and old. Satisfaction gaaraateed or money refunded. Sold by Kerner-McNair Co. ii " So your son-in-law has a family tree. Yes, answered Mr.Cumrox, but I'm kind o' suspicious that some of us A me r can citizens aren't going about the work of preserving the forests the right way. Washington St&r. A Common fllstake. L Many women mistake kidney and bladder troubles for- some irregularity pecaE&r to the sex. Foley's Kidney Remedy, cwiiscts irregularities and makes women well. Miss Carrie Harden, Bowling Green, Ky., writes: "I suffered much pain from kidney and blad der trouble until I started to use Foley's Kidney Remedy. The first bottle gaTe me great relief, and after taking tie second bot tle I was entirely well." Sold at Tarker'a Two Draft Stores. - I, i . i pi i i .; . u- - ..; - . - - .... ..... -..,- ' ' The only Baking Powder made fffjlillllgp I with Royal Crape Cream of Tartar IfS S, 1 1 made from grapes KgtSM " Insures healthful and 1! delicious food for every f&sYT1 Vs. - noirie-rreYgry day L vMn Jl Safegaanfs yea? food agaiast iHliirfW y: m Ptospfcate of lime frTU ,'iiii i ii l.lifl.i.1.u . i mmn mi nm nmi .l i"" V f .i " I Southern Standard of Sahsfacton U U 3? W W .tsJ Uk- U Ul? HQ.6LKS LARP Nature made it, and made it right, the just-right cooking-fat for all purposes, the 5 economical substitute for but ter. There's no indigestible hog-fat in it. 'It's the pride of the South, her leading s agricultural contribution to international food-purity. laSYAwe THE BEST AND ONLY ?TO 09 X Life. Fire. Health. Accident. Tornado, and Other m v - k. 8 INSURANCE ( 8 is WHILE YOU, YOUR PROPERTY, ETC., ARE INSURABLE. 0 WHY WAIT until the opportunity is gone and then grieve over CQ your negligence? x The Henderson Loan and Real Estate Co. C v was organized for your protection and we.. have the BEST V POLICIES in the Insurance, line, Y O We have an active Loan and Real Estate Department I 0 and can always loan money and sell property on easy terms. 0 Onr Rental Business is growiug rapidly nnd we will be 0 glad to take charge of your property and list some for saleorrent. HENDERSON LOAN c If you buy a it is worth the Corliittf THUS jSy' """" " " l - rjMBinnr biijggy - HENDEnSON, N. C. GET - ' 3 & REAL ESTATE CO. 3 Riisrfifv at 25 cents a lb money investd. CdD. Mr. R. L Durham's Book. Mr. Zach McGhee. the Washington correspondent of the Charlotte Obser- . t 1.1 11 i. A ! rer, naame lonowjug interesting bjc- cial in that paper recently, relative to the forthcoming novel of Mr. R. Lu Durham, of Charlotte: . Senator Tillman, President Roose velt, the Booker Washington lunch eon at the White House and a purely imaginary South Carolina newspaper . . 1 1 i. : a. . mair, logeinerwiin some lnwrvsung South Carolinaand national politics. form the basis of a thrilling novel, whose theme is the race question, is being published by lu C. Page & Co., oi UiJston. xim uook wmcn, us utuueu The Call of the South" is written by Robert Lee Durham, now an attor ney at Charlotte, but who lived for several yeara at Spartanburg. Ad vanced copies have been received in Washington and are beginning to create a sensation. Tillman is not specially a prominent figure in the book.4 The name given to mm is "Killam" and his identity is unmis takable. - v-. . The imaginary -newspaper man is a Washington correspondent whom the go7ernor of South Carolina ap points to an unexpired term in the United States Senate and who after wards runs for the Senate against Tillman. This is merely an incident, however. President Roosevelt, wliose identity is artistically revealed through the heack but not opaque veil, is the centrakfigure. He' lunches several times with ne- igroesand expresses what isin the south thought to be the typical north ern view of the race question, which is that the color of one's skin should no more bar social aim political rec ognition than the color of his hair or eyes, rue Jf resident comes to a tin- ferent conclusion when he nnds that his daughter has secretlv married a negro who is a highly cultivated oc toroon and a graduate ot Harvard, and when the first offspring of this marriage shows a reversion to a re mote ancestor and is black, the Pres ident's heart-strings, crack and he dies. The name of the president is Hayne Phillipps. His boast is that he is all American. "My mother was a South Carolinian and my father was from Massachusetts" is a favorite way of his putting it. Rutledge is the name of the iourn- alistsenatOr and maks the principal speech uf the senate in opposition to the. President's rare views, which views, however, are not extreme enougn lor tne nery ana picturesque "Killam." A campaign meeting at Spartan- bursr is described und the hot time which often characterizes the Gaff ney meetings is referred to. Mr. Durham shows a power of de scription and of dramatic presenta tion truly wonderful, and in artistic finish his book beyond question sur passes anything yet written on the race question. He does not present a succession of the incoherent thrills so noticeable even to the non-critical readerx)f Tom Dixon's melodramas; It is one artistic sensation. It is also free from the sectional bias, so char acteristic of writers on that subject, Vi VWi V IrTrT" ,Tr ' the most powerful way yet presentedU l. M m. .i 4 : :k ...... :.. the Southern white nian'n views of the matter of social equality, of the races. It is being recalled in connection with this book that Mr. Durham, who is a trhstee of Trinity College, North Carolina, was one of those who voted against the expulsion of Prof. John Spencer Bassett who made some ex travagant and quite ridiculous re marks about the superlative great ness of Booker Washington. Durham was living at Spartanburg at the time, and he told his friends there that while of course he did not agree with Prof. Bassett that Booker Wash ington was the greatest man next to General Lee the South had pro duced since the revolution, but he did not believe it proper to put a college professor out of his job forentertain ingor, if he wish, expressing such'u view. Durham is a young man of versa tile accomplishments and many-sided interest. His book shows it, though his friends who know Qf his cornpre-. hensive mind, his prowess on the foot-ball field as well as on the golf links and of his bearing as a captain in the Spanish-American war knew it already. , ' The book" will be out some lime during the coming week. Meantime it is being read here with avidity by a number of prominent public men who have secured advanced copies of the book. I ' -! . . 4. . William H. Anderson, M. D.t "of Sda Springs, Ida , nays that Bee Laxatir Congli Syrup Las relieved coughs and cold where all other remedies failed. It gentle lax a tire effect especially reccommend it for children. It in pleasant to take. Forcoogha, colds, hoarseness, whooping cough. Moaey refunded if not satisfied. Sold by Kerner McNair Co. 'Don't Bear Malice. Atchison Globe. -A mail who harbors malice is liable to commit murder. A man who hates I another a longtime is enre to get into a fisrbt with him sooner or later, and when tbe fight finally comes there is likely to be mischief done. Men wait j for years for the first- blow, and the first blow is liable to be with a dead ly instrument. Don t waste yotrr energy in hating deople. Such a course would make you wretched and finally get you into troubie. He Got What He Needed. 'Xine yean ago it looked as if my time bad come," says Mr. C. Farthing, of JIUI Creek, Ind. Tw'l was so ran down that ; life bung on a jtrj slender thread. It was then my druggist recommended Electric Bit- . ' I bonghfc a bottle and I got what I needed strength. I had one foot in the grave, bnt Electric Bitten pat it back on : the torf again, and I've been well ever sine. I Sold under guarantee at Melville Dorsey's drag store. 5 Or. .... The State's Resources. Congressman Thomas Speaks of the State's Great Develop ment. Eastern Carolina One Huge Truck Garden. Mt. Olive Tribune. During the consideration of a bill before the National House of Repre sentatives several days ago, to pay certain tlaims for stores and supplies taken by the f ederal army , in the South . during the CiviUWnr, Jlon, t Charles R. Thomas, Representative i from this district, submitted some in teresting remarks rel-itive to orth Carolina's growth and progress in population,agricultit,manufactures and general development in the last decade. After referring to the glorious history of the State, and of some of the great men she has produced .Con gressman Thomas spoke as follows of agriculture in North Caeolina,with especial references to the trucking in- l dustry in this Eastern section which will be perused witn interest by in hune readers: "Having every variety of soil as well as climate, the crops of the State are diversified and numerous. It is a land of corn and wine, of grape and fig, of sunshine and liowers, und pro duces all the staple crops corn and cotto, wheat, oats7 rye, barley. Perhaps the greatest progress of the State, however, agriculturally, has been in the raising o'f tobacco and the progress made in the cultivation of truck crops. Eastern North Carolina is particularly favored in its climate and soil, its nearness to great mar kets, and ready means of transporta tion, so far as the raising of truck crops is concerned. It is today one f the greatest, if notthegreatest, truck gardens of the country, and in my Congsessional District in the territory around New Berne, my home, and in the territory lying along the Atlantic Coast Line Railway from Goldsboro to Wilmington, the sums of money annually realized from the eariy truck crop run into millions, and the output is more readily computed in hundreds of carloads than in. any other way. "A traveler along the line of the Norfolk & Southern Railroad and the Atlantic Coast Line in eastern North Carolina during the trucking season, in my Congressional District, will see a landscape which appears one huge truck garden. Everything that a fertile soil and kindly climate will produce is grown in eastern North Carolina. Every variety ot early vegetable and fruit is produced, and every variety almost is a -moneymaker. No section of the United States has made greater progres within the last t n years in truck farming than eastern North Carolina. Men have made fortunes in raising asparagus, lettuce, strawberries, and other early vegetables and fruit. The strawberry crop in the counties along the Atlantic Coast Line from Golds boro toWilmington,inWayne,Duplin, Pender and other counties, is worth millions of dollars annually. About the towns of Mount Olive and Faison n the AtlanticCoast Line,the straw , T K UnA ,: berry business had its first start.and the soil there and all along the line of this railway has been found to be well adapted for the production of the finest fruit. The first really fine berries sent north are from this sec tion of North Carolina. Of course, earlier in the season strawberries come from Florida and from other more southern sections.but there are 1 none of them equal in quality to those I I produced in the counties of Pender, I Duplin, and Wayne, in North Caro lina. The Irish potato is one of the leading truck crops, grown for the early market,, and from the city of New Bern alone over 100,000 bushels I, of early Irish potatoes are shipped annually, and the crop in the adjoin ing county of Pamlico and other sec tions is a very large one. In eastern North Carolina are also grown the finest crops of lettuce, celery, cucum bers, and other early vegetables. It is not -rare to get fa.IKH) an acre from the winter lettuce growing. A thousand bushels per acre is a com nion crop of cucum ber,and the North Carolina asparagus is a standard article in the northern'markets. Be sides every variety of early vegeta bles and fruits, including the' straw berry crop, eastern North Carolina, of course, produces also the staple crops of cotton and corn. In the western part of the State and in the Fiedmont section are cultivated all the staple crops of cereals, as well as tobacco . Foley's Orioo Laxative is lest for woim-n and children. Its mild action and pleasant tast make it preferabkr-h violent purga tives, smb aa pills, tablets, etc. fores eon f stipation. Sold at Parker's Two Prug 1 Stores. Honors for the Deserving. News nnd OdserTer. ' Governor Itabun of Georgia, for whom Rabun county and Rabun Gap are named, was born (like the present Governor of that State) in North Carolina. His birthplace was in Hal ifax county, North Carolina, in 1778. He was Governor of Georgia und died in office in 1819. Gens. Beu Mc- Culloch, Felix 11. ZolHeoffer and Jan ins Daniel, all three billed in the Civil War, were born in that county, us were also Willie and Allen Jones, " 1.1,. 1wnmAfv r s Wmmml M Judge Daniel and others deserving of memory, uen. W. K. Davie Jived there. Man V- other counties can show a long list of illustrious dead. -Would it not be conducive to pa triotism for oar counties to gather uo portraits of its most distinguished dead and hang them in their , court houses? " - Herecomestbs Spring Winds to chap, tan, freckl Use Pinesalvr" CarboTiied (Acts like a poultice) for eats, sores, boras, chap- ncd fine, bands and face. . It soothes and beak. SoUl by Keiwr-MeValr Co. .- ' i aJjjjj ir ' ' " km The back is the inainspring of woman s organism. Jt quieKiy cans attention to trouble by aching. It tells, with other symptoms, such as nervousness, headache, pains in the loins, weight In the lower part ot the lxly, that a woman's feminine organism needs immediate attention. In such, cases the one sure remedy which sneedilv removes the canse. and restores the feminine organism to a healthy, normal condition w. LYD1A E-PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Sirs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia Ave., Uocklanti, Me., says: " I was troubled for a lonr time with dreadful backaches and a pain in my 6ide, and was miserable in every way. I doctored until I was di&eouragt'd and thought I would never get well. I read what Lj'dia K Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had done for others and decided to try it ; after taking- three bottles I can truly say that I never felt so well in my life." Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East EarL Pa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham : "I had very severe backaches, and pressing-down pains. I could not sleep, and bad no appetite. L,ycna t nnit ham's Vegetable Compound cured me and made me feel like a new woman. FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. link- ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have len troubled wun displacements, inflammation, ulcera,- i 1 !il iioii, nuroja tumors, lrreguianues, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. HRlStURtf&RNBE : a. m : ufc i : Fire Health Fidelity Accident - Casualty Mnsuranco uepanmen Citizens Bank, 1UCUABD C. GARY. Manager. Henderson Marble Works (Branch of the Suffolk Marble Works. ) We are located on Garnett street,- next to A. T, Barneo new brick building. W are prepared to handle or execnte any work in the MarbWVor Granite line." No larger dealer in the marble boxine in tbe South.. It will lie to yoor Intercut to pay on n vWt. Henderson Marble Works. HENRY PERRY. INSLAANCE. A strong lin- of both -LIKE AVI) FIRE COM PA X I ES re(rewn U-d. Policis Uoed and risk placed to tet ad rant ag1. Office: In Court Hbosr. ii A. G. Daniel, WkeUsal so Retail . DeaUr la . . Shingles, Laths. Lum i bcr. Brick. Sash. Doors and Blinds. Toll stock at t Lowest Price. Opposite South era Grocery Company . " Hdron, N. C. v MS jiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiB it..
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 16, 1908, edition 1
1
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