Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Jan. 20, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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nam il mi Be Sure , A BUSINESS If Yea Wtat State Library You are right by lirnt writing an ad vertinenient M-itiiiK forth the. ImraioH jou of fer, und insert it in the GOLD Li:.F. TIiuh prepared forbu ineBi. you can Then Go Ahead. ADYBTISIKS in at is tVirtfc Haiing IS vortii Advertising l.VIIUY 1AV IN THE YEAR, To reach ths people of Hen dereon and sur rounding coun try, let them know the induce ment you hold out to get their trade by a well displayed adver tisement in IS THE- FOUNDATION or SUCCESS mv Bttciitcec cJ III bULU LLATjj THAD a. MANNING, Publisher. Carolina, Oarolina, Hjeatezst's Blessings Attend Her." SUBSCRlPTiOI $1.50 Casb. VOL. XXIX. HENDERSON. X. THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1910. NO. 5. ... . . , 1 , ; : Five Years of Heart Trouble Cured by Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy "I'.cforc I began taking Dr. Mi!'V Heart Remedy I had been si;!T ring from heart trouble for ov r five years. I had pains in left side, and under my liinildcr blade, could not sleep .!! the left side, and was so short i,f breath the least exertion v.';:!d bring on the most distress ing palpitation. I had scarcely t ikt n a half bottle of the Heart liicly before I could see a marked change in my condition. When I had taken six bottles I va- cured." MRS. C. C. GORKEY, Northlield, Va. if there is lluttering or palpi- t.i V. (. ! ; :i it is an indication of a akin ss of the nerves and mus - i the heart. It is not neces ',y diseased jut weak from ' r srk. The heart may be vi. just the same as the eyes, !i or other organs. You : make a weak heart strong taking l)r. Miles' Heart Rcm- let a bottle from your .',i-t. take it according to di-'on-N, and if it does not bene- he will ret'--'1 your money. Stop and Think One Minnte! fi-it h your Dwelling worth at tt pii si iit jiriee of huildingmaterial n: ! i'lhor? ll'.w m ncli Insurance i. i Mi ea rry? I.. avinjr ii total amount 1 1 insured, I .s . hlaze in your house will r.; ;-'' hundreds of dollars of water il un.iX" t" your house and furniture in .i eir minutes. Protect Your fta with Plenty of Insurance It's Good, Safe, and Cheap, at The Citizens Bank. Thos. B. Bulloch, ;SSK;S5 Foley's Kidney Pills, What They Will Do for You They will cure your backache, strengthen your kidneys, cor rect urinary irregularities, build up the worn out tissues, and eliminate the excess uric acid that causes rheumatism. Pre vent Bright's Disease and Dia bates, and restore health and strength. Refuse substitutes. For Sa.Ie by all Druggists. fity Ba Barb Page, Proprietors' An Easy Shave ! A "Slick" Hair Cut! - : vim ovt i-vry time you patronize -' "i' We are experieuped BnrberH, and v i ii-t oiinT our very lest nerviee. '.! furnished throughout. Chairs -: :-! in If.-ster elenn. cool, sanitary We solicit your patronage. MURRXXL & PAGE. t:I would like lo iruide suffering women to a sure cure for female troubles," writes Mrs. R. E. Mercer, e t( Frozen Camp, W. Va. ' I have found no med icine equal to Cardui. I bad suffered for about iour years. Would have headache for a week at a time, until I would be nearly crazy. I took Car dui and now I never have t!ie headache any more." v4 D 1 ini The Woman's TonFc - ; The pains - from which ; a many women suffer every; It s not :safe to trust to strong drugs, right at -the time of the pains. Better to take Cardui for a while, before and ater, to strengthen the system and cure the cause. This is the sensible, the scientific, the right way. Try it er ShoP ure I Take jn The Problem of Life. Count Leo Tolstoi's Farewell Address to the World Life is Given Us for Happiness, and It is Each Man's Busi ness to Make the World Happy, Says the Great Rus-1 sian Reformer The Attain ment of This Aim Depends 1 Upon the Conception We Have of Our Lives To Wish All Men Happiness Forever, Means to Love All Men. The frrat Russian rpformer, Count Lyef N. Tolstoi, the idol of the Rus sian pnasant and a thorn in the Bide of Russian despotism, qrives the fol lowing as his farewell message to the world: My farewell message to the world at my age every gieeting is also a farewell is my view as to how life should be framed in order that it may be henceforth, not as heretofore bad and Had, but as God wishes and as we wish ourselves; that is, that it may be full of happiness and content ment. The att ainment of t his aim depends upon the conception we have of our lives. If my conception of life is that my body (the body of John, Peter, or Mary) is given me in order that I may rind in it as much pleasure, joy und fortune as possible. In that case my life must always, under all cir cumstances, be miserable or bad The reason is that what Idesireevery one else desires. As every one wants the greatest amount of pleasure, and as the nuni total opleas?ure remtiins the same, there is not enough to go round. Therefore, every man who lives for himself must take something from others, hate others and make others unhappy. Even those who attain their purposes are never hap py; they are tortured lest others should deprive them of their wealth, and envy others who have accumu lated more thau they. The life of all men who live in the body must be miserable. All such men are unhappy. Life is given to us for real happiness. But to attain such happiness a man must under stand that the real life is not in the body; that happiness is not reached in obeying the body's dictates, but in obeying the dictates of the spirit which lives in all men. The spirit asks for spiritual happiness. And as the spirit is one in all men it asks for the happiness of all. To wish all men happiness forever, means to love all men. And the more a man loves, the freer and more joyful is his life. The world is so constituted that de spite the best efforts no man can live as his body demands, because what his body demands is sometimes unat tainable; and even if it be attained, that is only at the cost of fighting with others. But the spirit, the soul, can always live happily, because all that it demands is love, and to at taiu love no man has to fight wit! another. The more a man loves the nearer is he drawn to others. Why then do we not love? Each will be ha ppier and he will make others hap pier and more contented at the same time, All holy and wise men of the world, and Christ Himself, taught that our life is miserable through ourselves; that Power that sent us into life, which Power we call God, did not send us in order that we might tor ture ourselves, but rather that . we might attain the happiness which we all desire. They tautrht also that we fail to attain the desired happiness only when we misunderstand life, and uo as we ousrht not to do. We complain of life, we complain that it is ill ordered. We fail to un derstand that it is not our life which is ill ordered, but that the mistake is ours in doing what we ought not to do. We act as acts a drunkard who complains that there are too many drink shops, forgrettinir that the drink shops could not exist if there were not so many drunkards. Life is givn to us that it should be happy. It is our own business to make it happy. The way to make it a certain chain of unbroken happiuess is to live in love and not in hatred. We hear on all sides that life is bad and miserable because of its bad in stitutions; we need only, we are told, to change the bad institutions into good ones and life will change for the better. Do not believe that any particular institution can make life better or worse. Those people who most thirstily 6eek for the best institu tions are themselves living in discord and quarreling. The institutions which some propose as the best others declare to be the worst; they desire to substitute their own ideals, which ODDonents agree to be very bad. And even if all institutions were the best i conceivable, men could not live with them owing to their being used to a bad life, and we are content with it. We pretend that we would live better among better institutions. But how could institutions be better while men remain bad? Must men be made better? At pres ent all they do is promise you a good life if you, leading a bad life, fight with other men, overthrow them by force, and kill them in order to attain better conditions of lif That is, you are promised a better life if you be come worse than you are. That is a delusion. There is only one way to attain a better life, and that is to be come a better man. V Happiness, the happiness of your self ; and others, can never be based upon the fallible institution sustained by force, but only upon the health of the soul. Only through the soul can the individual or th community at tain the greatest happiness. The true happiness which every human heart pants for lies not in institutions up held by force. It can be attained at f 1 i 1 "ir" "i ruin TUESDAY, We have consigned to us by Dr. V. E. Turner about SO High-Class Res idence Lots on College Street, Tanyard and Walden Avenues 2 blocks from the centre of town city. Don't fail to lots at AT YOUR OWN PRICE, on Easy Read the big advertisements posted FREE BAND CONCERT! A part of this land will be sold a part to colored people. Be sure and erty that will surely American Realty & Auction Co., GrvEENSBOHO, N. C. See tKe Famous Penny Brothers The Twin SELL LOTSOISTB .A. ZMZHSTTTTZE any moment of life, by the path of love. Such happiness was granted to us hundreds of years ago. Men, how ever, failed to undersand it and did not grasp it. Now the time has come when we must accept it; firstly, be cause the folly and suffering of our lives have gone so far that our state is unbearable; secondly, the teaching of Christ has now become so plain that no man can fail to see it. We reach salvation only by realiz ing that our life does not rest in the body but in the spirit of God which lives with us; that therefore all the efforts hitherto directed to the im provement of our bodily life must be directed to one single and essential work; that each must extend his love not only to those that love him, but as' Christ says, to all men, espKjially to those who are alienated from us, or hate us. Today our life is so far removed from the ideal that it seems impossible to transfer our interest from worldly things to the one essen tial and unaccustomed work of love. That, however, is a delusion. To love all, even those who hate us, is really so remote from our souls as to hate all and fight with all. A change in our conception of life is not im possible; the real impossibility is to continue the fight of all against all in which we are now engaged. Only such a change can deliver men from the suffering they now endure, and the change must therefore come sooner or later. Why should we torture ourselves instead of rememberimr that the greatest happiness is destined for us? I All depends upon ourselves. The path is easy and direct anS.brings nothing but happiness. An objection is raised by those who suffer, by the poor and oppressed. "That is all right," they eay, "for the rich and the rulers of men. They have the enemies in their power and can afford to love them. For us who suffer and are oppressed, that is an other matter." That is not true. It is still easier for the poor than for the rich. The poor ned do nothing that is against the command of love; thev need take no part in deeds of violence. For the rich the gospel of loye is harder. The moment that the President oaused the removal of Mr. A.C.Shaw, of Rockingham, N. C, because he stood for real conservation and would not be gagged by the exploit- era, that monent every beotenman in North Carolina lost faith in the President's practice of justice. They know Shaw is honest, conservative, clean. Mr. Taft has gone over to the Philistines. News and Observer. A Wretched Mistake trititr TR?nfal distress of i:i.w. TkAM'. ni nocwi iw Listen: 1 sui- L tiro. A s mv -w- "I -g u fprwl much from Piles." writw Will A.. Marsh, of Siter City. N C, "till I got a box of Buck; tin's Arnica Salve, and was toon cared, u , rii. Few Sores. Lwma, Out. Chapped Hands. Chilblain, vanish be fore it. 25c at Melville Dorsey a. For headache Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills G 55 HENDERSON. N. O January 25th, 1910, and depot. In one attend, for here is increase in value. Vi Trf.ii it 2 Whislcey. for the Sick Room should be selected with the greatest care, as much depends upon its rich, nutritious properties and absolute purity. You can always rely upon THE PURE. FOOD i; is: answering every requirement. It is distilled, aged and bot tled with special care and for the express purpose of being used as a. healthful stimulant or tonic in the iiorae. SUNN Y BROOK Bottled in Bond 13 U. S. Government standard (lt9) proof and every bottle bears the "Green Government Stamp" showing the correct age and quantity. Insist on getting the genuine, accept no substitute. SUNNY BROOK DISTILLERY CO., Jefferson Co., Ky. f4 A- FULL BY EXPRESS PREPAID It SEND YOUFl ORDER TO H. CLARKE & SONS, Inc., 1205 E Main St, Richmond, Va LAZARUS-GOODMAN CO., Roanoke, Va. hi n SHIPPED IH PLAIN BOXES. FATHER 80 two trying winters neither of-them had a cold, and were able to walk farther and do more than for years. I think Vinol is perfectly wonderful It certainly is the greatest blood-making, strengthening tonic for old' people I ever heard of." We want every feeble old person In this town to try., Vinol. We will return their money without question II It does not accomplish all we claim lor It, . W.W. Parker, Druggist, Henderson AMD Na of the very nicest the place and the Terms. in the town and surrounding country. attend this sale and Suburban Realty & Auction Co., RALEIGH, N. C. skey QUARTS$ 5 SEND REMITTANCE WITH YOUR ORDER. - SV1OTHER 76 ur ennns SHiPPPn r n n " I The aged father and mother of a prominent Boston lawyer safely carried through the last winters by - The son says : M My father and mother owe their present strength and good health to Vinol. During the last two DUULJL 10 C op 11 A. parts of this thrifty time that you buy to white Deonle and you can buy prop Auctioneers ! ! A STARTLING STATEMENT. New York fled'cal Authorities Claim Dysp psfa to be a Pre-disposing Cause of Consumption. The post mortem statistics of the biff Npw York hospitals show that Hum1 case of consumption arf lue at least indirectly, to unchckw dys pepsia, especially when the victim was predisposed to tuberculosis. Dyspepsia wears out, the body and brain. The weakened, irritable stom ach being: unable to digest food, the body does not receive the required nourishment, and the victim becomes thin, weak and haggard. As a result, the body becomes a fertile field in which the germs of disease may lodge and flourish. Therefore, the person who permits dvsoeDsia to Drotrress unhindered is DlliltV of rrnr.rirnrir.rr nngrH tha Aa- velopment of one of the most insid- ious and fatal diseases known to mankind. Dyspep&ia may be completely erad icated if properly treated. We sell a remedy that we positively guarantee will completely relieve indigestion or dyspepsia, or the medicine used dur ing the trial will cost the user noth ing. This remedy hasbeen named Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets. (Vrtainlv no offer could be more fair, and our offer should be proof positive that Hexall Dyspepsia Tablets are a dependable remedy. Inasmuch as the medicine will cost von nnthirio- if if r.f i.unofu you, we urge you who are suhenng with indigestion or dyspepsia to try Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets. A 2."--ent box contains enough medicine for fif teen days' treatment. Fr chronic cases we have two larger sizes, 50 cents and f I 00 Remember you can obtain Rexall Remedies in Henderson only at our store The Rexall Store. W. W. Parker, Druggist. Alarmed. There was a young lady named Banker, Who slept while the e hip lay at an chor; She awoke in dismay When she heard the mate say, ''Now hoist up the top .sheet and spanker." Distant Relationship, Chicago Daily Socialist. "Ar you , related to Barnej 0'Brien?"Thomas'0,Brien watt once? askd. "Very distantly," replied TbcTmas. "I jvas me.mother's Brut -child Bar ney was tbeivinteenth." f . -mow . Kev. I. W. Williams Testifies. 1 Rev. I. W. Williams, Hantinpton. W. fs-. write" a follows: "Thia t roeertifr tb.rt I used Foley's , Kidoe , Eemdy for nerroo exhaustion nd kidn-T trouble and am frw tosa? that Foley's Kidney Remedy will do alt that yoa claim for it." ScUd by all DrcR- 1 Talk to Farmers. Address of Dr. S. A. Knapp, Head of the Government Demonstration Work in the South, to Mecklenburg Farm ers at Charlotte. High Prices Have Come to Stay, and the High Wage is Just as Permanent, Therefore Mak ing it Necessary for the Pro ducing Classes to Adjust Themselves to Problems Growing Out of This Condi tion, Declares Speaker. Charlotte Observer, 12th. "This is an age of high prices and we have every reason to believe that they have come to stay. It is there- ore, necessary lor tne producing classes of thecountry to adjust them selves to the problems growing out of hiffh wage, for this, too, is a pcr- manentfixture with us now." This was one of the innumberable numlier of philosophic sentences ut tered during the splendid address yesterday afternoon of Dr. Seaman A. Knapp, head of the government demonstration work in the South, be fore a large and representative audi ence of Mecklenburg farmers. The address was one of a series which Dr. Knapp is deliverinar in a number of Southern States, his first speech hav ing been delivered Monday at Lynch burg, V a. llis subject yesterday was How to Make a State in W hich the Hural Masses Will Prosper." lhere are two ways to make a great and prosperous Common wealth, said the speaker. "First, for every man to do his best in his appointed sphere, for the the Tanner to develop and perfect his farm and make it a profitable source of reve nue, a delightful home, and from it draw the means that will enable him to meet his share of the expenditures necessary to call into existence the great public utilities for high civiliza tion. Under this plan every citizen is bound to do his best and contribute his share. From this standpoint there must be no looseness; no idle ness, rich or poor; no strikers, and no squandering of money for mere pleasure without an ultimate good. This plan I discussed in Virginia. It is the individual plan where labor leads." THE MORE MODERN AND COL LECTIVE PLAN WHERE CAP ITAL LEADS. "The second plan in making a gr-at commonwealth is one in which capital goes in advance. The great railroads penetrate the country and pave the way to settlement; the lands are drained or irrigated, as the case may be; great reservoirs are made at the sources of streams; forest' reser voirs are established; water power utilized and irrigation on many tracts made possible. "There is a third plan which is the one which we have iu part followud and it should be properly called the plan of wreckage. Turn the people loose on a fair domain to do as they please without law or experience; val uable timbers are destroyed, soils are wasted, rivers are silted and filled with debris. Finally the rainfall be comes irregular, great floods and drouths follow. Everything is done for temporary gain, regardless of the rights of posterity. It is not too late to remedy this evil and let us apply the remedy of the second plan the use of capital in making a great State. The most expenditure of capital is for the control ol the water, both the raiufall and the soil water. This we can treat under three heads: i "f1) Regulating the water supply in the rivers, the great natural drain age arteries. "(2) Reservoirs at the sources of the large and small streams. "(3) Keforewting and conserving the timber and willowing the small streams. "In oniwthat we may have some adequate comprehension of trees, I call yourattentionto the experiment i Valint. He found that a wngle oak 'J itHit b;,J two 'eet and iuches in diameter, 39 inches from the ground took from the ground and passed into the atmosphere one hundred and thirty-two tons of water iu a Reason. An acre of sueh trees would take from the soil and pass iuto the atmosphere five thousand, two hundred and eighty tons of wa ter duriug the leaf period and the leaves in addition would retain upon their surfaces about one-fourth of the rainfall, making in all that the trees would dispose of about eight and a quarter inches over the entire surface. I11 addition the roots of the trees add to the poresity of the soil and enable a large portion of the water not disponed of to le some what permanently retained by the soil. The evaporation from the sur face of reservoirs and ponds aver ages about ten to fourteen inches during the five monthsfrom May 1st to October 1st. Now this vast body of water sent up by the trees and taken from the reservoirs produces as enormously cooling iniuence on the atmosphere no that they dis charge the clouds and regulate the annual rainfall. The effect of this would be Increased precipation in the warm weather and warmer in the winter and this means evaporation because it requires a thousand de jrees of beat to pass into vapor and sa freezing when the vapor passes iuto solid it gives off a thousand de- Igrws of heat, consequently it greatly m HI I lien me leuiperttiurc iu oyimis. and fall, and tnds to make certain frttlt conditions. It is the sudden changes, both spring and fall, that are injurious to the fruit crop." (Continued on fourth page.) CHICHESTER S PILLS 1 lrl Aak rar Pruftat lb . M hm WumT bmjA inil la U4 u4 t.U imiucV bm. n wtta Btua RlMx. V Tmhm m qr. Kar ufrmtr V ti . Ak(HI4 I(V:h.TFB blAMtf.ND MKX PILXa, SOLD BY DRtJGGtSTS EVUrYVVKERE Sloan's Liniment is the bc.t remedy for sprains and bruises. It quiets the pain at once, and can be applied to the tenderest part without hurting because it doesn't need to be rubbed all you have to do is to lay it on lightly. It is a powerful prepa ration and penetrates instantly relieves any inflammation and con gestion, and reduces the swelling. Here's the Proof, Mr. L. Roland, Bishop of Scian ton. Pa. says: "On the 7th of this present month, as I was leaving the building at noon for lunch, I slipped and fell, spraining my wrist. I returned in the afternoon, and at four o'clock I could not hold a pen cil in my hand. I returnftl home later anil purchased a bottle of Sloan's Liniment and used it five or six times before I went to bed, and the next day I was able to to work and use my hand as Uiiial." Sloan's Liniment is an excellent anti septic and g e r m killer heals c;3, burns, wounds and contusions, and w'li draw the poison from sting of poi sonous insects. 25c, 60c. and $1.00 Moan's Ixak ta hrm, rattl. ahrrp tt poultry t Vr. AMrw Dr. Earl 8. Sloan, Boiton, Mui., TJJ.A- Choosing Silver Aftatic deknu. correct ttyle, brilliant finish, combined with honnt value, maka 184 DAICDC DDAC XS ivcrw sre the choice of ducrintiDau'ngpuichaAeri. 1 hi mine to-dajr ttandt lut the h-aviet grade of plttte aud exquutte beauty of patterns, assuring long -years of service ana sat- . ufacuon. Its leraarkaLU durability hat won k the popular title "Silprr flate that Wtart." Sold br leadfof dealrts efy wbcre. Scad rsulocw "C L"hown all turns. MtrWM IrfjMt) Ct.. mmwz mm m WELDON, N. C. Manufacturers of BRICK OF ALL KINDS FIRERRICK A SPECIALTY, Prompt attention given orders. J. J. BETSCH. Henderson, N. C. Local Agent. Publication of Summons. The 8tate of Sorth Carolina to the Kberifl of Van County, Grating:- TOlT ARE HEREBY (OMMANDKI) TO 1 euminorjii A. J. Davis, O. W. flavin, Tlie Ci(al Hbo Company, Geo. D. Witt Kho f'n., Woolon KpiM Co., E. M. Travis & Co., National Biscuit Co.. The J. I) lr(ren Co., Beasley Shoe Co., Outing fcboe Co., W. D. Hcbmidt k Co.. Kidtr-ley Walker Co , liober son Neck ear Co.. Virginia Trunk and Bajr Co., It. T. Wood k Co., Inc., Uore k Holers, United Bbirt and foliar Co., Tbo. D Mur phy Co., 8. L. Wbb-ston,Kmith-Bricoe rthoe Co., Kingan k Co., National Sboe Co., (and all other creditors of the Uendersoa Khoe Co., and Henderson Shoo Company, incorpo rated, are hereby notind and summoned to and for the same intent, effect au4 purpose,! to be and appear at the utit ensuing term of the Superior Conrtof VaDceConnty, North Carolina, at the Court House in Henderson 00 the second Monday bef ore the first Moa dtij in March. 1010. to answer the complaint of the Hendersou Kboe Company, incorpor ated, and C. H Little and U. L Little which has been deposited in said Court asking for a receivership and the adjustment and wind ing op it affairs; and eiu:h of said creditors are requested -to file their complaints and claims duly itemited and verified within said term and otherwise to plead, answer or de mor to the complaint therein as they may be advised And let said defendants take notice that if tbey fail to answer the com plaint aforesaid and file thei- claims within said term plaintiff will pray tbeCourtfor the relief demanded in the Complaint. This publication of Summons made pur suant to decree executed by Hon.C. M. Cooke, Judge of said Court on December 2irlWJ. Seal. Witness my hand nd the seal of said Conrt at office in Henderson. N. C Jan. 4th, 1610. HENRY PERKY. Clerk of the Superior Coort of Vance County, N. C. Read ana advrti In Gold Laaf. Sprains w JL i I -2 f
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 20, 1910, edition 1
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