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Henderson Gold Leaf from Henderson, North Carolina • Page 1

Location:
Henderson, North Carolina
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1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Leading Paper) I IN THE YELLOW TOBACCO: largest Circulation ADVERTISING MEDIUM. C2T Rates on Application. DIST1UUT. 7i 3S-. O- 2joo a Year; 6 Mot.

$1.00. 7.. i i i I TTTl A. TTN- I ,1 A I OAJtoxjiTA, OAJtoxjisr.A:, TT-r a.vdm's Blessdtgs Attend FTttr." VOL. VI.

HENDERSON, N. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1887. NOtO. i iii. i i i GO IT BOYS.

AWFUL ANARCHISTS. NORTH CAROLINA. rV TOUCHING SCENE. A LOVING MOTHER' AT THE GRAVE OF HER CHILD. A writer says that large ears denote intelligence.

There are people with large cars who might be considered in-telligent if theyt were mutes. the pangs of separation will make the rapture of that blissful leunion sweeter and more thrilling and more ecstatic, for the blessed office of the shadow is to intensify the sunlight. The darker the gloom down here the brighter will be the radiant gleaming Up There, where the sky will glisten with a fadeless brilliancy, and flowers blossom in an enless bloom. Thank God. Amen.

iInots. A TONiiUE IN I contracted malaria In the owimpt of Louisiana wui working; f.r be telegraph ujim! eKey kin-1 of ineoierne I could li rnf without rlef. I at lut uceele I in rekinjr th v-r. but it ost me oyer 0J.00, od tben in eystem ws pr-strted saturated vriib malarial poin and bomirn sl-moat belplw, I fins Jy came here, roy rnoutb so filitad wiib tnat I eoul I scarcely eat, und my tongue raw and tilled with little knots. Various remedies wer reortl to witbout flct.

I Imaicht two botiln of B- li U. mud it ha eurd aud me. All tor a of my raoutb amhald and ray tonga otiry cl-arTr knot and orenea, and 1 feel like a sew man. i A FiBRITTow. Jackann.

Anril ilKSV STIFF JOINTS A 3Iot ltcmnrkabl Vase of Scrofula nntl ltlieuiiiatUm. I bVA a lUtle twelve yetr old hnw kneea bave been diawn almost double and biajoinU are p4rftctly vtff And bas been in Ibla ooodillon lbrte yearv, unable t- walk. During that time tue tnediral board of London eoamy xnmiud blin and pronouiicd tbe din enae Kcrofula and pre-cribed, but no benefit erer derived. .1 then ued a much advertised preparation benefit, three weeks ago be bcanie erfeclly helpless aud auffcred dread fully. A friend who has usad Ki B.

B. ad TUed it use. lie baa used oue bottle and all patu ceased aud ihe can now walk. This ban been a tnot wonderful action, as bis eiinKlaint had baffled every ttiug. I fcha 1 icoutioue to tise it ou biui Mr.

Kxma. GRiFrtiHs. Unit. Tnn Mareb 2 18-. AVEIJ11 CITY, BLOOD.

tiaviiitc totted B. K. u5 foun i it to be all that is calmed to4 it, 1 com mend it to any -Mid tvery one uffjring from blood' ioisen. Jlha dn 'me moreg od for money and. In a bri- paee of time thu any blod purifier Itverued.

1 nwe the cnjr.irt lint to Its ue. for I have ben troublei with. a severe form of bUod poison fur 5 or 6 year aud sound no i el tt-f equal to thai given by tbe use of B. W.t. KoOACHliT.

IVebb City, May 8. ltJ. AM who desire full' Information about tbe cause and cQre of Blood J'oUton, HcrofuU and Hcrofnlou Nwelling UN ver, tre, Rlieuinallm, Kjdney Com plaint, C-ttarrb, etc uau enur by mail free, a or u.r Sitpaice I luiratrrt Itooic ot Wouder, filled with the most wonderful Miid starliioK proof Ver before kuuwu. Andrea-, I LUOD BAtM Aflanla. Ua.

Planting Time LIAS GOME. is the time to j)ant IRISH POTATO Eii, and Sow CABBAGE. LKTTUt E. TOMATOES, RADISH, BEETS, PEAS. MUSTARD, KALE, SALSIFTi CARROT 1 PARSNIP ALSO SI FOR -t PASTURES, MEADOWS aad LOrs, In ORCU A Rp, TIMOTHY, HERDS GRASS, aud RED aud SAMPLING CLOVER SEED." I have a full stock of all seeds and will meet prices with anjpne.

I SHALL. CONTINUE To Improve My DRUG STOCK I until it i second to none South of Rich mond. My stock of CIGARS, CIGARETTES and TOBACCO Is Complete. I heve on hsnd ard ball carry a larger toi-k of Paints and Painters'; good than ever before. First quality groundcolors specialty.

I rarrv at all times a nice line of ROYS TEhS FRESH FRENCH CANDIES. AH Prescriptins and family receipts Intrusted to my care will rveeive my personal attention and otdy pure, lreh drug used in flUing tbetu. -In returning thai.k to my friends and customers I ask for continuance of their patronage, and assure them I will spare no efforts! to deserve It. A good h.use. a long xperiene, and ample capita', I can and will make it to your interest to denl with roe.

Very Bespectfully, Melville Dorsev. s. Harris, DRNTiST HENDERaOX 'Office over E. G. Fe DaL: Store, A DYNAMITE EXPLOSION IN THE CAMP.

An Incendiary Circular Issued by An-. archists in Behalf of Their Condemned Brethren. Columbus, Sept. 19. The following circular, which is dated New York and published both in German and" English was distributed very quietly to-day by the calling on the trorkingmen to prevent the hangingof the condemned Anarchists at Chicago: To the Workvngmen of the United States and North have heard the Supreme Court's decision in the Chicago Anarchists' trial.

It strikes like a thunderbolt in the heart of every free man. The judges who have affirmed the sentences stand on a level with the notorious police bandit, Captain Bon-field," with the barbarous prosecutor, Ebersold, with the monumental per jurer, Schaackj with the corrupt jury, with the tigers of the bar Grin nelj, and with the scoundrel of all scoundrels Gray, the manager of the greatest "judiciary" crime of times. Our comrades, Spies, Parsons, M. Schwab, Fielden, Lingg, Fischer and Engel, are to expire on the gallows, while Neebe must be doomed to death in a dungeon. -And yet no man has the hardihood to claim that any of these eight martyrs threw the famous bomb on May 4,, 1886.

From' a legal point of view not a shadow pf evidence was furnished that any one of our eight persecuted coraf rades were directly or indirectly participants in the affair. then, werethese champions of free speech condemned? Because they exercised 'the rights guaranteed to all men by the constitution of this country Though the trial occupied nearly, two months and perjured witnesses came trooping" into the court in droves, it was impossible to lay any other crime at their, doors. -J- American workers 1 will you suffer this outrage to be flung in your Will you remain silent and allow that so-called justice shall be defiled in so bloody a manner a dastardly deed, alleged to be sanctioned by the will of the people? 7 It must never be 1 Arise in your imposing might and let your righteous wrath -fall in an unmistakable protest upon the heads of those interpreters of the law who have basely betrayed their trust. The aims and purposes of Anarchism have beenblackguarded "arid vilified by the fiends of humanity who feast upon your servitude You will know' how to guard against such slander and assert your manhood. The beasts of capital want blood.

Their hirelings have shown themselves ready to seize the best and noblest from the ranks of the people, and render them up to their senseless rage I Workmen jvill you remain quiet while the strivings of your people, identical with the holiest yearnings of mankind, are sacrificed and trampled under foot in the person of your comrades? You know what is your duty, These condemned men are suffering because they loved mankind better than themselves; because they wrote and preached to you and for you the gospel of the future. 0 K'ri -A Now, you must demonstrate your solidarity the strength of your v. -i-y Gather together, summon our comrades from every side, and proclaim our opinions in such a way that no doubt can remain of their character. The workingmen of America must show; that their sense of justice and their hatred of tyranny in this shameless form has not been destroyed. If you wish to do so.

-you can prevent the consummation of November xi, of this horrible deed to which tbe deeds of Cannibals are as" nothing; We demand that every man docs bis duty, and that you say to this rabble of thieves and murderers which rule you, inus tar ana no runner. Indignation meetings must be called and held as quickly as possible. Above all, it is necessary that tbe interpreters of the constitution at Vashington be spurred this judicial murder to pass upon proposed at L-hicago. The judgment of blood is not yet executed. Let every man do his duty and it never will be.

Long live the solidarity 1 Down with barbarism. Federatiox of Tradxs Union. JA late book written for middle, aged women. It will not 'sell. -'If it had been announced as directed to young and pretty women there would have been females as old as the constitution of the United States out in ambulances burjtins: for it; "THE GARDEN SPOT OF WORLD." Tbe Home for tbe Miner, the Manufac-r turer, tbe Aitisan and the Agri- -V culturist.

Goldsboro Argus. Judge Kelleyl of Pennsylvania, grows enthusiastic when he undertakes to speak of North Carolina. He said 'fMy friend North Carolina is the most beauflKrand Richest portionbf God's earth upon which my vision or feet have ever rested." The late Bishop Atkinson told us that he had never seen any scenery in this country or Europe that equalled what he saw in Western Carolina, and the admirable Bishop was a Virginian. Wilmington Star. And well can those' who visit North Carolina speak thusly of her, for she is indeed a grand old State.

As a traveling correspondent of the New York South has said of her, she offers to-day over fifteen millions of acres of good farming land which can be successfully and profitably cultivated and made to produce nearly every cereal grown. The larger portion of the State en joys a climate distinctively healthy, due both to her location and also to her configuration. Free, for the most part, from malarious swamps, fanned by healthful breezes, occasioned by the diversified contour of the country, her fertile lands are admirably adapted to the support of a large population in wealth and happiness. The diversify of the soil and elevation within the borders of her province, permit a range of products from those of Canada to those of semi-tropical latitudes. The principal agricultural products, such as cotton, wheat, rice, tobacco, rye, Indian corn, oats and barley can be grown in abundance and with profit.

For raising live stock, this section of country with its well-watered, pastoral character, seems to have unrivaled v. Her mining wealth, is inexhaustible, possessing over twenty-one of the useful minerals- for. the elevation and advancement of mankind. The facilities for manufacturing are not surpassed by any other locality in the Union. The aggregate water power is 3,500,000 horse power, and this force is distributed over her entire section.

Gold is found in twenty-three counties. In fact the auriferous area in a general way embraces nearly one-half of her territory the productive area is much less, containing a little more than twelve thousand square, miles. There are ten the precious stones found within her borders, and a number of companies are now being, operated with a capital of several thousands of dollars to push forward and develop this new industry. North; Carolina is rich in ironores of the best grade, while coal abounds in considerable quantity. area of the coal field is given as about three hundred square miles.

It is here the agriculturists reap bountiful harvests of corn, wheat, cotton, rice, potatoes, hay, oats, rye and every variety of field crop. 1 The hor: ticulturist luxuriates in heavy and productive shipment of vegetables, while many large and excellent vineyards are scattered over her rich and fertile lands. She offers special inducements to the new-comer, cheap and "productive lands, healthful climate, educational facilities, and in a jest and good State government. These are but a few facts in argument why this section of the South offers special inducements to the emigrant, the tourist and the prospective settler. And to all such we say come to North Carolina.

Here, from the mountains to the sea, any man cf moderate means but with' plenty of pluck and energy, can find numerous and varied sources from which to accumulate honest wealth. Here he will find rich lands adapted to all kinds of products at small purchase prices; an already well-developed and increasing railroad system a civilized, even polished community to dwell in their friendships to the last, and sincere in a liberal hospitality. Here no sudden wealth will meet him but whether in the fertile fields or the busy, pushing towns, whether in tbe breezy mountains or by the rushing streams or by the deep sounding sea, where everywhere health flourishes, if he be sober and industrious, be can work along at his occupation, -whatever it be, living tolerably well from the first in an everywhere delightful climate, enjoying the society of good neighbors, and laying by a little every year, till in the end ease, plenty-and happiness will crown his constant efforts while all his days will be peace and full of health. Come to North A Dancing; Match Between Zeb Vance Sion H.Rogers. Maxwell Gorman in the Southern Home.

Gen. J. if. Leach spends considerable of his time in Washington with his son, J. M.

Leach, who is a chief of division in the Sixth Auditor's office. The general is as full of "reminiscences" and good stories as ever and one which I heard him relate to a.party of North Carolinians the other evening will bear repeating. Said he, in effect 3 You know that Zeb. Vance used to be a member of the National House before the war, and Sion Rogers rep resented! the Raleigh district in Well, some: friends sent Frank Shober, of Salisbury, and me a case of very fine wine one day. Zeb, and Sion found' it out, "somehow, and they used to come around to see us mighty often.

In they great friends of ours, sticking closer than brothers-i-while the wine lasted, One jnight, after they had relieved us of a half-dozen bottles, more or less, they got to feeling pretty good, after while remarked that he believed he "was just' about the best dancer that North Carolina ever sent to v--- NowL nobody ever heard of Zeb. Vance virtues as a dancer before. Every one knows that he doesn't in the' least resemble a ballet girl. He ain't built right to dance and I didn't believe he had ever had any experience in that direction before that night; but he stuck to his assertion. Well Zeb.

kept repeating the statement until finally Sion says I don't count myself any great shakes as a practical exponent of the terpsicho-rean art, but I allow that I can just dance the hind legs off of you. 7 Sion Rogers was built like a bean-pole; he was over six feet high and as thin as wafer, and no living man ever saw him without a big pair of eye glasses adjusted to his long nose. If it. was funny to think of Zeb. Vance's dancing it was simply ridiculous to consider Sion "Rogers irv that connection But Shober said he be! icved Sion could tlown Zeb.

I asserted to the contrary and Shober bet me $ioo. The room was cleared. Zeb. and Sion peeled off their wearing apparel until nothing Was left but nocturnal habiliments? and the two contestants took their positions on the floor. It was an ill-assorted pair never were two men more unlike.

Shober and I were to do the patting and Zeb. and Sion were told that the man who stayed on the floor longest was to have a half-dozen bottles of our wine. Shober started the old plantation pat the dancers caught step and went at it. Go it, Sion shouted Shober. Buckle down Zeb 1 I exclaimed; and both men began to rattle off a double-shuffle back-step that would have turned any nigger in North Carolina green with envy.

Time passed. Midnight came and. went the clock on the mantle struck one. The dancing still went on. Daylight appeared.

Vance was beginning to double like a hunchback, and he was sweating like a draft horse. Sion seeined to grow taller every minute his head was thrown back, his: arms stood akimbo, only his toes drop of perspiration was visible about him. I The hotel breakfast-bell rang. Shober and I were "nearly aj though we took turns in patting; but the dancing still went Zebs shirt was sricking to him like a huge but Sion looked as cool, as a Christmas snow storm. :Zeb.was bent over until he had nearly ussumed a sitting posture, his bow-legs looking as rond as a barrel Sion continued to grow taller, and his eye-glasses still preserved their equilibrium on the end of his nose." 5 When 12 o'clock came, and Congress assembled, we suggested a recess.

But no Sion wonldn't hear to it. Finally I saw that who now stood only about 2 feet, "2 inches in his socks, was about to and I gave up. The artists then once more regaled themselves with our wine, Zeb. went to bed. But Sion didn't.

After dancing 26 hours without a stop, he went to the House of Representatives and made a' big speech." During these few days of the cele- brat ion of tbe adoption ot the constitution we were going to suggest, that if the girls took off their bustles there 1 vmtrrfit rYinnn fnr. lvcee vrlrtner of the crowds. But probably the girls desire to keep the crowds at a safe dis tance, and for that purpose the bustle answers the purpose ot a barDea wire fence. A lawyer calls it a brief and mikes st 96 pages in length. then Bedewing that Hallowed Mound Witb tbe Bring: Spray that Rises From the Deep Flowing; River of a Ceaseless Grief.

Henry Blount In Wilson Mirror. In our stroll the other evening we came upon a poor, weeping mother, bowed down in anguish upon a little grave, which held in its cold embrace her heart's sunlight, her bosom's sweetest and purest joy her darling little angel child. And our own heart melted, and our eyes filled with tears as we saw her struggle with a grief which she could not conquer, and sink down under the waves which she could not stem or buffet. Her heart was torn into tatters, and the briny messengers of grief, which run to the eye- lids, told of the anguish that was surg ing and writl ng within, and of the hopes that were then shattered and crushed and ruined by the lashing of the billows that sweep er the ocean of bereavement. We did not attempt to soothe her bleeding heart.

Words of consolation cannot calm the stormy beathings of that wild grief, which sweeps through the bosom when a loved one is torn from its fond and tender embrace. The bursting cloud spends its rain, and then, comes bright and beauteous gleams of sparkling sunshine. So grief must dissolve itself in tears, and then the soft, mild, golden sunlight of the christaian religion will lend its chastening and mellowing gleams of resignation to tint with its bright and roseate colorings of comfort and blessed cheer the blackest cerements of earthly gloom and sor-1-row. Yes, there is a bright side to even the darkest shadows, and from the deepest funeral gloom have sprung holy and beautiful gleams of the sweetest and most precious light a light which streams in endless brillian cy from off the great white Throne' of God, and brightens with its lustre even the portals of the tomb. But to that poor mother that bright light, is not now seen.

The briny spray which rises so fast from the deep flowing river of grief, blinds her vision, aud through its glistening mists she 'cannot see the radiant threads of comfort that Heaven is weaving around her in a shining robe of beauteous brightness. That dead child, in that terfr-bathed grave over which she was bending like some faithful weeping-willow, was to her a heaven of joy and In its beaming r.miles she saw all the glories and all the splendors of a blessed elysium of rapture and happiness mirrored beautifully there. In its innocent prattle she heard life's sweetest and purest melody. But now that smile which made the earth so bright is and the voice that made such music to her ears is hushed, and that which made ter life so sweet and so beautiful is now "in a coffin hid, in a grave enstarred by daises." Yes, that little lile-barque could not withstand the storms that beat upon the sea of time, and so, at an early age, it passed away 'from its furious winds and chaffing billows out upon the quiet waters of the waveless ocean of Eternitv, and there amid the precious hush of God's Peace, be still" it rests on the placid bosom pf blissful immortality. No rustling winds a ripple make upon that blessed calm for all is peace and rest and sweet repose the blessed balm for all earth's woes.

So take comfort and find solace in the thought that the little child, which came like a dew drop, went like the mist, for frail as a leaf by the autumn's winds kissed, it faded as sweetly as roses in June, and its last note of pain is an angel's tune. So to that poor mother we say, though you cannot see it now, the rainbow of comfort will soon gleam upon the cloud of bereavement. But then let the tears flow. Let the river of your grief bear your troubles all away. Friends will care for you and for the body from which the spirit of your babe has gone.

Gather up the little dolls, the little shoes, the bits of ihe blessed keepsakes, and put them away to form an island in the desert of your great grief. Think of them cherish them as sacred objects as stepping stones on which you can kneel or stand to reach up for tbe kisses that await you. Death is not a punishment. It is God's greatest blessing to man, next to the life and the loves that are eternal. You will not have long to wait.

Bear your sorrows well and joy will soon come. There is no worse existence than Every move from the initial step is forward to better conditions, alter we have forded-the river. all come! into tbe world and thank God we have to leave it, and to berwtth our lives and our kives i fbrever.C "We will, forget the sorrow of parting in the joy of meeting. Yes, the stin of death apd A CHANCE FOR EACH. Written for tbe Gold Leaf.

Each has his strength alloted, A work, a time, a place To each one on the campus Some chance to win a race. Not all are for one lacon. Not one prize for tbe whole, But various are the luring, And more than oue the goal. Each his rome chance of rising To the level of his thought To reach his soul's aspiring; To gain his haven sought. MiksibC.

Ballard. George Gascoigne. BY MIJTSIK C. BALLARD. Written for the Gold Leaf.

"Sing lullaby, as women do- wherewith they bring their babes to rest," says George Gascoigne, a poet of the time of Queen Elizabeth, and proceeds to tell what these babes may be who keep him waking. First, lullaby my youthful years." He thinks the feelings of youth caged in the body of approaching age are dolorous things and disturb the soul. Then, "lullaby my gazing eyes." He realizes' how life may be frayed torn by too much sight-seeing, or how things sen by the eyes, and unobtainable by the hands or sense may cloud the mind, and par-alize the will. Then, "lullaby my wanton will, Let reason's rule nor reign my thought." This is the most necessary lullaby of alL If one can succeed in this last lullaby he will scarcely need the others. If the most fro ward babe is stilled, the rest will soon follow.

George Gascoigne was born 1530, and was one of ihe founders of the great Engligh Drama. He enjoyed popularity as a satirist, and also as a narrative and -lyric poet. His most important production is a satiric declamation entitled "The Steel Glass," mirrors made of polished steel being in common use in those days, those we now use being first made in Venice at a later date. In this poem Gascoigne inveighs against the follies and vices of his time. It was written in blank verse, and is one of the earliest examples of the use of that kind of Another poem is called The Fruits of War," and is descriptive of incidents in an expedition against the Spaniards, in which the poet himself took part.

The song in praise of Philip; Sparrow is a pretty little conceit, and shows us how each bird seems to have some name most appropriate to itself, as Dick to the canary, Philip to the sparrow and so on. Gascoigne died in 1577. He is one of those poets whose, merits have been eclipsed by the greater genius of Spenser and Shakespeare, so soon following, or contemporary with him. But his works are not unworthy of perusal, and his life also seems to have been in accord with his writings "Men are we, and must grieve when even the shade Of that which once was great, Is passed away." A Reform in Hats. Charlotte Chronicle .1 A reform devoutly wished for' in the fall styles of ladies' hats, we are told, has been inaugurated.

They are to be lower-4-in altitude not price. They are to fit quite snugly to the head. What joyful news this will be to those who sit in the rear of the church who desire to catch a glimpse of the preacher once and awhile during the sermon; Not only this class but those who attend theatres, and pay to witness the play, will be glad to know that they will have an opportunity to see what is going on. In fact it will be a relief to all ho go into large gatherings where these big and high hats are worn. W'e cannot refrain from saying this as much as we admire the ladies and their artistic finery.

In the new styles the 'consideration of the, rights and feelings of others is displayed and shows sense and good judgment. Occasionally a fivetory hat with mansard roof is seen, and here and there one almost the size of a parasol is noted, but it is generally conceded that they are of the left ranety of last spring's stock: We have heard it remarked time and again that the most beautiful and Ioveable girls are those that wear hats and bonnets of modest size. They are generally the favorites. The prettiest woman in Charlotte wears a trim, small hat. Read and a4vertisc in the Gold Leaf, Abcolutely Pure.

This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strenfrth and wbolesomeness. More eoonomlcal than the ordioary klude, and cannot be sold lu coinpetltlon with the multitude of low tss', ahert weiarht alum or pboephate powders. only ti can. Kotau Kakiko Pow dbb Co 103 Wall St.

augv 1 0 PilOFESSIONAL CARDS T. M. PITTM AB ATTO RNBY A.X LAW, 'v HENDERSON, N. C. Prompt attention to all Drofeaalonal Imt.

neaa. 1'racllcea in tbe Btate and federal COOT. Refers by permission to Commercial "National Bank and E. D. Ijttts A Char-rotte, ti.H: Alfred Wiiltama A Halelah, N.

C- I). Y. Cooper and Jaa. II. Lawtiier, Uendernon, N.

C. Office: Over Jaa It. Laaalter A Bou's atore. nov6 1 A DREW J. II Aimi ATTOHNEV AT LAW HENDERSON.

Practices In tbaeonrtsof Vanee.OranvlIlo. Warren and Franklin eoantiea, himI In IU9 Bupreme and Federal eonrta of tbe Htata. Office; In Conner htilMIn nvpr 1. ir MlssIIUef XT" ATTOHNEYAT LAW, Notary Public and Public Administrator for Vance County, HENDERSON, N. C.

Practices In tbe eonrta of Vance. Warren FriDklln, Crjnvllle and Person conn tie, and 'n the Supreme and Federal courts. Office In Uurwell brick building. L. C.

EDWABrm, Oxford. N.C. A. R. WOBTHAM, Henderson, N.

C. EDWAUDS WOltTUAaj, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HENDERSON, N. Offer their services to tbe people of Vanee county. V1. Kd wards will attend alt tbe Court of Vanea county, and will come to Henderson tt any and alt tio.es when bis asslsiance may be needed by Ma partner.

inarch ll a. W. H. 5 A. C.

ZOLLICOrrEB. AYjt ZOtLIOOFFISif, ATTOKNKYH AT LAW, HENDERSON, N. C. Practice tn tbe courts of Vance, Granville, Warren. Halifax and Northampton, and In tbe Knpreme and Federal courts of the Ktete, Office: In Harris' law building next te tbe court tv.9L.

jrjR; C. 8. BOYD, Dental Of ouuJ 2 Surgeon; JJXNDXRsov.ir.o. vStIrAclton guaranteed as to work and ri m. Offlp over Parker A Closs' store.

tain street feb 4 a. Bank of Hnderson 1 VAXCE COUKTY, .71. Ceaerad DAk1s, Cickaap mmdL Celieetleai Daslaess. FtT MosTOtos) LoAsre Negotiated on Kod farms for a term, of yeax, la sums of yoQ man upward, at 8 per cent intarest and moderate e.harjree. App'y to A the liauk of Ilenderaou, M.n.a.BUKGyVTN, ATTOnNEY.

AT LAW, naorncssosr, c. Persons desiring to consult me profes-ilnnally. will find medal at my oQceln Tne Uank of iienderson Boildinaj. CUT YOUR HEAD OFF! AVE HAWKINS, TOE OLDEST barber la Iienderson, has ao enU able reputation in tbe liuslness. His tbopv over Cnrrjn'a biIHrd eaioon, is Uardyomelr and eomfortabiy fltud op, andbeslvesaneav shave and.

a fai-I6hable ba'r cut 1 i re jtr. 25, 1 iald Stroet.

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About Henderson Gold Leaf Archive

Pages Available:
5,441
Years Available:
1882-1911