Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Dec. 8, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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r A BUSINESS Be Sore If Yoi Wtnt You are right by fir6t writing an ADVERTISING THAT IS To reach the people of lien derson and sur rounding coun try, let them you hold out to get their trade by a well displayed adrer tisement in I advertisement Worth Having IS TBE FOUXDATIOX or SUCCESS 1UV DllCIMCCC 1 getting forth the bargains yon of- f fer, and insert it J Worth Advertising in the GOLD I LEAF. Thus prepare for bus iness, you can KVKUY UAV 1M THE YEAR. Then Go Ahead. 6 THAD R. MANNING, Publisher. OHOLIZSTA., BCETElSr's BlSSINGS -AT TEND HER." SUBSCRIPTION $uo tvX VOL. XXIX. HENDERSON, N. C., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1910. NO. 51. MONEY BACK. W. W. Parker Guarantees Mi-o-na to Surely Cure Indigestion and Stomach Sickness. MI-O-NA in guaranteed to cure indi tftioii r any stomach trouble, or inomy back. It is not a makeshift rem edv. but iH a stomach tonic and upbuild ir th.it taken regularly, will make the ctoinuch strong and healthy. It builds i.ji th- nrrves, uts rich blood in the vein-, iirid slops headaches and all UiTVn!l.-!!fi-rt Why should any reader of the Gold I.i :. y JicMttte to try this great stomach j nfcri;tioii when it doesnt cost a cent milt- it cures. In five minutes it will banish after dinner distress, nervousness, gas eruc tations or heartburn. Women who desire a lovely complexion, r-parkling eyes, and perfect health should try MI-O-NA stomach tablets. They cause the stomach to properly digest food, keep the liver, stomach and bowels in order and furnish nutritious matter that makes pure rich red blood. If you have any sickness caused by the stomach, such as sick headache, bilous ness, dizziness, constipation, sleepless neas. nightmare or nervousness, M I-O-N A stomach tablets will surely bring you hack to health. Sold by W. V. Parker and druggists everywhere, and guaranteed to do just as advertised. Free trial treatment on ropiest from I'.ooth's Mi-o-na. I'uffalo, V. Y. NOTICE. Application for Pardon. T,,T,f I: bS HKHKIiY GIVEN THAT ii on the 24th of December, 15)10, ap plication will be made to the Governor for pardon of Willie Townes, sentenced to l." years in the penitentiary on Feb. 21, l'.to."), for murder in the second de- gree. II. L. PERRY, Attorney. TRUSTEE'S SALE. IYVIU'1TK OK A DKKI) OF TRUST V cxci-ntcd by Vhns Jones and Lorena .linn s his wife on the 30th day of April, l!tl, niul recorded in hook 45. ptige HtiH. ir the Kenister's offwe in Vance County, I ohiill sell for cash by public auction to the highest bid'ler at the Court House door iu llcnd'THiin, N C., on Monday, December 19th, 1910, at 12 o'clock, t he following described renles t m t : I it-gin at Moses ( 'rocker's rorner on street or rniid li-niling from Moses Crocker's to niMin road leading to Harriet Cotton Mill; t hence alongCrocker's line 150 feet to a stake; thence parrallel with road 5!) feet to a stake; thence parallel with first line 150 feet on road and street; thence along said xtrevt r0 feet to the place of beginning'. R. S. McCOIN. Trustee. King of Externals Is (he Original in the I held ot external rem edies for all forms of 1 inflammation such as pneumonia, croup and colds. Nothing can approach Gowans. It stands supreme. He have been selling Gowans Preparation for Pneumonia and Colds ever since it was put on the market, anil have found it one of our most satisfactory sellers. CARP ESTER BROS., Wholesale and Retail Druggists, ('reenwille, S. C, July U, 1U10. BUY TO-DAY! HAVE IT IN THE HOME All DrugaUta. SI. 50o. 25c. COWAN MEDICAL CO.. DURHAM. N. C. Gj.vanlceii. and money refunded if your Orugjlst " l r "" i im IIIW MM II I INSURANCE! We Represent a Strong Line of the Best Companies Carrying Risks On Fire, Tornado, Marine, Plate Glass, Casualty, Accident, Surety, Boiler, Life, Health. Insurance Department Citizens Bank. T. B. BULLOCK, Manager. Foley's Pill What They Will Do for You They will cure your backache, Btrengthen your kidneys, cor, rect urinary irregularities, build op the worn out tissues, and eliminate the excess uric acid hat causes rheumatism. Pre vent Brighfs Disease and Dia oates, and restore health and "length. Refuse substitutes. For Sale by all Druggists. The date on your address label in dlcates the time to which your sub scription fa paid. K d. FALSIFYING HISTORY. A Sounder and Broader Judgment Ob taining In the North Against the Theory That the Constitution Was Violated by the States Which With, drew Their Alligance and the Citi zen Who Followed Their States Were Guilty of Treason. Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. Among the educated classes of the North little countenance isnowpiven to the view of peoesnion which was almost universally held by the polit ical polnmists of that section during the thirty ynare following on the col lapse of the Confederate cause. The theory that the Constitution was violated by the States,, which with drew thir allegiance to the Federal trovernment. and the citizens who fol lowed their States were euilty of trea ron has never had competent judicial sanction, and of late a sounder and broader judgment has been voiced by a Hchool of writers whoneopinions both as jurists and as historians carry with them the weight of au thority. Thene teachings have per meated and influenced the public mind beyond the Potomac to the ex tent, that only bigrotry and ignor ance continue to contest the truth against such masters of Constitu tional lore as Blaine, Adams and Lodgre, and the day is notfnrdistant when general acceptance will be given to the fact so tersely and forcibly set forth by General Grosvenor. at Chau tauqua the other day that the framers of the Constitution left it an open question, and therefore one to be settled by each State for itself, whether the original ratification of the Federal compact bound each member in perpetuity or reserved its rights to assume its sovereignty when so disposed. In the original instru ment all rights were saved to the States which were not expressly irranted to the central agency, and he implication is all in favor of the grantor. Certainly in such a con struction there was neither violence to reasnn, political crime, or moral perfidv. The next generation of Americans will place the ban of os tractism on any book whi:h writes down the secession of irginia as treason or applies to Lee or Jackson the foul name traitor. The concess is not, and perhaps will never be, that we put into practice an absolute rigrht; but it will be allowed that we Hcted on a well buttressed "claim of right," which has never been adverse ly passed upon except in that forum of arms where Law is silent. When the United States government failed to prosecute the case it had against the President of the Confederated States the first step was taken in ex punging from the pages of history the accusation that the South broke my valid obligation of law or politi cal morals in essaying to set up a trovernment of, by, and for her own people. On another material point, how ever, the Northern view has been with out correcting guidance and is still fur astray. It was a clever device of Seward and his coadjutors to stimu late enlistments for the armies of coersion with the cry that the war on the part of South was one of ag gression with the purpose of "destroy -ing the Union." This wa9 the shib boleth which influenced the populace, particularly that portion of it lately foreign which regarded the Washing ton government as the one ark of safety for the oppressed of all na tions. The seceding States had no desire save to be let alone in renounc ing a government which had grown distasteful to them and the establish ment of separate institutions reflec tive of their sentiments and interests. The cherished dream of the Confed erate statesmen was of two friendly republics, each working out its des tiny along lines in accord with the genius of its people and its special needs. Exercising what they believed to be their own prerogative, they had no thought but that every State pos sessed an equal right to determine its own alliances and the idea of ques tioning thejurisdictibnof the Federal agency over those States which elect ed to remain in the Union never en tered the brain of the most ardent champion of Southern independence. The first act of the Southern Con gress at Montgomery was to send an embassy to Washington to enter into a treaty of peace with the United States, based upon agreed terms of separation; and the military policy of the Confederacy was strictly defen sive from the outset of hostilities and continued so until the end; for the two campaigns North of the Poto mac were only desperate strategic expedients, undertaken in the forlorn hope of impressing foreign powers with the policy of intervention; ana if these incursions had been success ful. even if Washington had been captured, the use to be made of vic- torv was no more tnan to compel a cessation of hostilities and to extort recognition of the Confederacy as a sovereign Dolitical entity. Yet the school-texts, as well as the more ambitious treatises on that period of convulsion still present the struggle as one in which the effort on one side was to annihilate the Federal government and on the other to "save the Union." And to such an extent has the poison of error work ed that, even among the Southern vouth of todav a very small fraction is left with a clear perception of the verietiesof the case, that the South ern States, the wayward sisters of Horace Greeley s famous npostopnre, Lever sought more than to depart in T.nmn hack comes on suddenly and i ex rium.lv nninfnl. It is caused by rheumatism of the muscles Quick relief is afforded by applying Chamberlain s lammem. oia oy all dealers. Ends Winter's Troubles. of trouble j J uiauj -w - i.Af K.ftAn toM ami fincprs. ChaDXXHl X 11C 1 & UD i UH"" - CJ- ' hands and lips, chilblains, cold sores, red and roufch skins, prove this. But such troubles fly before Bucklen 8 Arnica oaive. a ii niiw rionlor nf Rnrns. Boils. Piles, Cuti, Sores, Eciema and Sprains. Only peace from all association which no longpr commanded their confidence or affection. The fiction has survived by nearly half a century the astute brain that conceived it. the exigency men it fanned into flame. In one Important particular the vindication of the South is in satisfactory pro gress of achievement. In another her defenders must bestir themselves or the perversion will soon be planted so deeply as to be practically ine radicable. Some Don'ts For Boyi. Exchange. Home Circle Department. Don't fororefc that vou are to bo men and husbands. Don t smoke in flia nrosence of adies. It Don t measure vonr resnect to a person by the clothes he weqrs. LJOO t trv to mnlro mnp fnrKnna hr easier means than hard work. UOn t sneak earelesslv of a ladv's character. It is her onlv anchor. Don't forget that the hefc and greatest man that ever walked the earth was a bor. Don't haunt the ladv of vour choice at a ball, nartv or picnic She has certain civilties to pav elsewhere. Don t fix your stare on the fair ones who pass along the streets. To stare at anv one is not manlv at all. Don t neglect vour business. Take pains to do your work well. Good workmen are always in demand. Don t sneer at the opinions of thers. You ma v learn wisdom from those far less pretentious than your- neir. Don't swear. It is not necessary nd does no good. It is neither wise. manly nor polite, nor agreeable to orners. Don't grow up to be a soured old bachelor, when thpre are so many true and lovelv girls that will make uch excellent wives. Don't flirt with a voung ladv to whom you are a, perfect stranger. It looks most ridiculous: and vou mav get thrashed for it some dav. Don't tmnecessarilv make enemies. The good will of a dog is better than his ill will. But don't, crinnle vour ndependence and vour individuality to please friends. JOHN PHILIP S0USA: The "March Kin 2" and His Great Band to Appear at the Academy of Music In Kalefitli Next Saturday Night, Dec. 10th. John Philip Sousa the grpatcomposer- condurter. in a recent interview said: I am a great admirer of the South. I was born in Washington and feel that I am a Southerner. I have always loved th Southern people, the balmv South ern air and the great Southern cotton fields, and in speaking of cotton fields said the greatest of all composers, "I got my inspiration for my greatest march right down in this country; in fact it was during a hunting trip. I was out for a brace of quail, we were up early and out by the rise of the sun. our dogs were good scouts and we had bagged a plentiful number when my friends whom I was accompanying asserted their in tention of returning to their homes. On our ride back to the town (it was near Asheville, some years ago) we passed a snowy field of cotton, the darkies were whistling and shouting coon songs and a happier, careless lot of people I have never seen. I made known my wish to stop and listen to the real harmony that came from the untrained voices of those darkies. I drew a distinct mind picture and when we were back to our starting point and were washed up I took notes of everything I had seen and heard. borne weeks later in my studio in Washington I called mv wife in and hummed the most delightful 'air' that man ever invented, and that great com position was christened right then and there 'The Cotton King March.' I have written many others and equally as great as that one but it was one of my first great triumphs and to this day I love it and its great Southland where it was Dora. Mr. Bousa said further that it was a great pleasure to fill the few dates which Leases Schloss of the Schloss chain of theatres had offered and he always look ed on a visit into the "Tar Heel" State with keen delight for the pleasure he knows is coming. After the short Southern tour which includes the Schloss Theatres Sousa will go to Washington for two concerts, from where he goes to the New York Hippo drome for a limited number sailing on Peeembar 19th for an extended tour of the continent opening in London Jan urarv 2nd. which will mark the first con cert on this great around-the-world trip. Before returnine to the United btates in ths early fall of 1911 Sousa will have played before all the crowned heaas 01 Europe. The appearance at the Academy of Music in Raleigh next Saturday night, December 10th, will introduce two new soloists to muBic lovers of the capital city Miss Virginia Root, Soprano, and Miss Nicoline Zedeler, Violiniste. BotJi these young women have won great praise and their appearance should bring more honors to them. Ths advance sale of seats will open Thursday at Tucker Building Pharmacy. Out of town orders should be sent to MarxS. Nathan, Mana ger Academy of Music, Raleigh, accom panied by post office money order or express order. Prices range from $1.50 to 50 cents. The conviction and hanging of Crippen are being made the text for many newspaper sermons contrast ing British and American adminstra tion of justice. Among other things, it is pointed out that in proportion to population, the United States has five homicides to every one in Great Britian. That the case is one of cause and effect is an altogether ra tional conclusion. The surest way to minimize murder is for the law to make short shrift of murderers. Wilson Times. Saved From Awful Death. How an appalling calamity in his family was prevented is told by A. D. McDonald, of Fayetteville, N. C. R. F. D. No. 8. "My sis ter had consumption," he writes, "she was very thin and pale, had no appetite and seemed to grow weaker every day, as all remedies failed, till Dr. King's New Discovery was tried, and so completely cured her, that she has not ben troubled with a cough since. It's the best medicine I ever saw or heard of." For coughs, colds, lagrippe, asthma, croup, hemorrhage, all bronchial troubles, it bas no equal. 60c. f 1.00. Trial tntttefrOT. fluarantwd by MriTills Dorter. That $350 Piano ? Many Want It, But Who Will Get it? That's the Question. it) X .-.-yffll;. The popularity contest for the poesession of the fine $350 Krause Piano, now going on under the joint auspices of the GEO RUE A. RO.SE COMPANY, N. D. WELLS' JEWELRY STORE, CITY GROCERY COMPANY and the GOLD LEAF is creating no end of interest among the ladies. The hustling for new subscribers and renewals for the GOLD LEAF, in order to secure 500 votes at one crack, and the selling of Jewelry and General Merchandise Due Rills on the above named stores is taking the young women out into the email towns and everywhere it might be possible to secure votes for the prize. The balloting this week discloses some surprising jumps and recalls the old ad age, "The battle is not to the swift and strong, but he who endures to the end." Who will be the winner is a question no one can at present answer, for as it often occurs in these contests, the candidate who lags behind for weeks suddenly forges to the front and finally carries off the prize when some other is supposed to have alead that can not be overcome. It is all a question of get-up and-get-there. The lady who gets out and sells Jewelry and General Merchandise Due Bills, or. goes out after newspaper subscriptions, putting in the spare moments in getting her friends to vote for her by subscribing for the paper, is the one who comes in victorious at the end of the race. This contest is strictly on fair basis, and it must be understood that neither the GEORGE A. ROSE COMPANY, N. D. WELLS JEW ELRY STORE, the CITY GRO CERY COM PANY or the GOLD LEAF is biased in favor of any candidate, nor will they ask any one to vote for a certain candidate. Get busy, and go to the surrounding towns and country districts. You may be surprised agreeably over the votes that are waiting for you. Coupon "B" good for 1,000 votes in nomination is printed below. You will not have another opportunity of nominating a new candidate. Nominations close December 15th. If you have a lady friend in mind who you think would ap preciate a Standard $350.00 piano now is your chance. lSee the score printed elsewhere for comparative standing of the candidates. till "" "4" T COUPON "B" Jood For 1,000 votes When Used to Nominate a NEW CANDIDATE. I Vote For. Krause Piano Contest. :r COME TO OUR STORE AND BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. AND THEN YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS WILL BE GLAD TO GET THEM. DON'T THROW MONEY AWAY ON NO-'COUNT TRASH. BUY SOMETHING THAT IS COMMON SENSE. OF COURSE, WE HAVE PRETTY THINGS THAT WILL PLEASE THE WIFE "HIM" AND THE CHILDREN. W ATKINS HARDWARE CO. lis Phone No. 30 TTTTTT" X we have: THlHGSiRYTHINQ VERYBODY IN Keep The House Warm Wouldn't it be mighty foolish to try and heat your house from the outside? It would be a shameful waste of coal. Yet some folks try and heat their houses with poor quality coal. Why not pay a fair price and get coal that burns hotly and economically? Our coal is clean hot and even burning. Deliver ed at summer prices now. j 5 POYTHRESS Twas a Famous Victory." News and Observer. The whole State that is concerned about the gridiron contests will re joice in the victory in hard-fought game by the A. and M. College boys over the Virginia Polytechnics. These teams have had many encoun ters and both are regarded as among the best and as well matched. Last year the Aggies returned sad from Norfolk because the Pollys had won the game. This year they return joyfully and victoriously with the calp of Polly hanging triumphantly at the belt. You had better beware of the North Carolina farmer. He is the twentieth century reincarnation of Anteus and derives strength when ever he touches the ground. Other things being equal, there is no phys ical training to be compared to get ting up cold mornings, feeding the stock, milking the cow. cutting wood, and plowing and reaping in the field, with hunting and fishing thrown in. The natural training makes self-reliance, muscle, physical vigor and endurance. Gymnasiums and ath letics are of great value to college students, but the fellow who comes to college from the hard work on a farm has a bottom in physical power that is the basis for the best athletic training. He has not kept late hours, he has not idled, he has not dissipated, and he has not be come soft. His muscles are hard and with the stuff out of which such boys are made the conch can make him a terror to his opponents on the grid iron. It is this, in a large port, that counts so much in the many victories of the A. and M. boys. It, is a lesson to youths in town and country in a day when too many boys lack the physical effort and home duties that develop strength in a man, fitting him for athletics and for hard work on the gridiron of life, for life, for no man makes the goal who has not conquered self-indulgence and ease. Worse than an alarm of fire at niprht is the metallic ooutrh of croup, bringing dread to the household. Careful mothers keep Foley's Honey and Tar in the house and give it at the first sign of danger. It contains no opiates. Sold by all druggists. JUST THINK 0FTHIS. Enormous Bill People of the United States Paid For Liquor and Tobacco LastfYear The Record for "Drinks?' and "Smokes"gBrokenin ioio. Washington, D. C, Nov. 29. The United States has ju-t passed through a banner year for drinks and smoke and oleomargarine. Here is the na tion's record for the twelve months ended on June 30tb, as it shows in the figures of the internal revenue bureau: 163,000.000 gallons of distilled spirits 30,000,000 gallons more than the year before. 59,485,117 barrels of fermented liquors an increase of 3,000,000 t)Lrr&l9 7,600,000,000 cigars 160,000, 000 more than 1909. 6,830,000,000 cigarettes an in crease of a solid 1,000,000,000. 402,000,000 pounds of plug, fine cut, cube cut, granulated or sliced smoking or chewing tobacco or snuff 4,000,000 pounds more than the year before. 141,862.282 pounds of oleomarga rine 50,000.000 increase. Illicit distilling and other manufac turing of moonshine whiskey on the increase, "especially," the bureau says, "where there are . Statewide prohibition laws." The internal revenue receipts on all those things and certain other things, such as playing cards and mixed flour, amounted to more than S286.000.000. and Commissioner Cabell's organizations collected it all at a cost of about $5,000,000. It cost a penny and a little more than 7 mills to collect each dollar. When the present fiscal year is end ed next June 30th, Commissioner Cabell estimates his men will have collected at least $308,000,000 at practically the same cost. Only three other vears nave sur passed tho year 1910 as an internal revenue producer since the bureau was established in 1863. In 1866, while the civil war taxes were still heavv, receipts mounted up to $ 310, 000,000, and following the Spanish war in 1900 and 1901 thev were $295,000,000 and 306,000,000, re spectively. But lor times or peace and normal prosperity, 1910 heads the roll with the prospect of being eclipsed by 1911. HAIRHEALTH. If You Have Sca.lp or Hair Trouble, Take Advant age of This Offer. We could not afford to so stronarly endorse Rexall "93" Hair Tonic and continue to sell it as we do, if it did not do all we claim it will. Should our enthusiasm carry us away, and Rexall "93" Hair Tonic not give en tire satisfaction to the users, they would lose faith in us and our state ments, and in consequence our busi ness prestige would suffer. We assure you that if your hair is beginning to unnatuarlly fall out or if you have any scalp trouble, Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will promptly eradicate dandruff, stimulate hair growth and prevent premature bald ness. Our faith in Rexall "93" Hair Tonic is so strong that we ask yon to try it on our positive guarantee that your money will be cheerfully refunded if it does not doafi we claim. Two 6iees,50c. and $1 00. Sold only at our store The Rexall Store. W. W. Parker. Croup is most prevalent during the dry cold weather of the rariy winter months. Parents of young children shnld be pre pared for it. AU that is needed is a bottle of Chamblerlain's Cough Remedy. Many mothers are never without it in tkeir homes and it has sever disappointed them. Bold by all dealer. W00DR0W WILSON. The Governor-Elect of New Jersey Man of Letters Who Has "Mixed With Men and Prospered" T h Foremost American Codes Presi dent, Whose Books on Government Are Authorities In This Country and Abroad. Raleigh News and Observer The country is turning away from the charlatans, like Roosevelt, no matter how brilliant; the smooth-it-aways like Taft, no matter how per sonally amiable; the barterers in leg islation. like Aldrich, no matter how able. They are looking for men to lead who will serve the true welfare of all the people, owe no obligations to special interests, and whose ability and character fit them for leadership. Machine politicians and noisy dema gogues have palled on the public They wish sincere and capable men who will make war on monopoly while conserving all business, large and small. New Jersey has sounded all the depths of machine politics subservi ence to trusts, obedience to railroad dictation, the making merchandise of office and of lejrislation. Its sena tors are email editions of Aldrich and Cannon. One is the quick and zeal ous tool of all trusts, the other has used his high office to try to secure favorahle legislation for his own busi ness. There has not been a congress man of the first order of ability from New Jersey in twenty-live years. The men who have led both parties have been trusted friends of the trusts, and the people have had no representa tives. This was the set year for New Jer sey to repudiate bossism and trust favoritism. The Democrats turned to Princeton and selected Woodrow Wilson as their candidate. He is the foremost American college president and his books on government are au thorities in this country and abroad. He is a man of letters who has "mixed with men and prospered." Heknows books, but he knows men also and the vital problems that must be solved for men of every class and condition. He is a speaker of un common ability and was as popular with the "boys in the shops as the scholars in the universities. Business men saw he was no dreamer, but a practical man ot affairs. He made few promises, but impressed men of all parties that he would regard pub lic office as a public trust. And that, together with the trend against Re publicanism assured his election. Of his election and what It means, the New York Times says: "Two years ago New Jersey gave to the Republican ticket a round majority of 83,000. This year the Democratic candidate for governor has a majority of some 30,000 to40, 000. In part, this striking change is due to the general movement of pub lic sentiment away from the extreme and vexatious policies to which the party is power is committed, and to the revolt against the manifest treachery and hypocrisy of that party in its treatment of the tariff. But it could not have reached its actual proportions without the candi dacy of Dr. Wilson, who represents the vital strength of the popular movement and is fitted to promote, to guide, and to lead it. "A student of law and history and politics; an earnest and capable thinker on the problems of the present and the future; courageous, at once, and conservative; untainted by old or recent heresies, keenly alive to the immense changes in our national life which demand adequate considera tion, but with no delusions as to the efficacy of political nostrums; a sound party man, to whom parties are in struments for the application of prin ciples, and not for truck and barter; a believer in responsible leadership, made for his task such is the governor-elect of New Jersey. It is obvious that his impressive victory, doe in great part to bis candid canvass, to, the sympathy he has shown with the j current of opinion, and to the grasp and command he bas also shown of the essential elements of the national situation, must put him in the front rank of the new leaders and in the line of promotion to the highest na tional honors." The people of North Carolina take deep interest in Mr. Wilson and his career. When bis father was pastor of the First Presbyterian church at Wilmington, Mr. Wilson was for a time a resident of this State. His nephew ia professor of Latin in the University of North Carolina, and last year he charmed the State by his oration on Lee at the University of North Carolina. The whole Legisla ture went to Chapel Hill to hear him and never did an orator bo complete ly captivate an audience. vV hen Mr. ilson was nominated for governor of New Jersey, all who heard him at ChapelUill felt like congratulating the voters of that state upon the treat In store for them. His campaign was a revelation to those who expected learned and dry scholastic essays. His success is a matter for national congratulation. It is not a question whether prohi bition prohibits but a question why so many drunken brawls and murders in prohibition communities in communities where it ia claimed no hkker is sold. Murder Is more rampant in North Carolina than ever before according to testimony of Superior court judges and surely, they ought to know Fairbrotber's Everything. Wants to Help Some One. For thirtv rears J. F. Bover. of Fertile, Mo., needed helD and couldn't find it. That's wbv he wanrs to be Id some one now. Suf fering so long himself be feels for all distress from Backache, Nervousness, Loss of Ap petite, Lassitude and Kidney disorders. He shows that Qectrie Bitters work wonders for snch troubles. "Fire bottles." he writes, "whnll mmi me and now I am well and hearty." It's also positivelyguaranteed for Liver Trouble. Dyspepsia, Biooa uisaraers, Femalft Complaints and Malaria. Try them OeMlMtilleDerttj's Royal is the only baking powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar m Abooluiciy Puro Highest in Leavening Efficiency Makes Hot Breads H. L. PERRY, Attorney at Law, Henderson, N. C. Office 137 Main Street. 5 SEEDS BUCKBEE'S SEEDS SUCCEED I SPECIAL OFFER: BUJ tail K.w BmImm,' A trial Will make tou oar permanent euuror. Prize Collection ''5!! - mi " ' 12 1 (SUSI tl ths fine x Trt. 7 tp.txUd : Out, bMft van. Write toJay; Mention this Ptper. SEND 10 CENTS M W ne'-fc.. 1U0"MK miT, P. H. Montgomery & Co., OXFORD, N. C. Sanitaru Plumbers, Steam Fitters and Electricians. Supplies, Fixtures and Repairs. Wiring and Electrics! Work ia all its branches. Let us furnish you estimates on anything in our line. All Work Guaranteed. A. G. Daniel, WkolcsaUand Retail DUr la . . Shingles, Laths, Lum ber. Brick, Sash, Doors and Blinds. Full stock at Lowest Prices. Opposite South ern Oroeery Company. Hndrsorv,N. C. Rtrt ant cdvtrtlst In Qeld Lstf. ism It p m
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 8, 1910, edition 1
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