Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / Sept. 22, 1882, edition 1 / Page 1
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I TN 1825. GREENSBORO, N. 0., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 NE VV SEllIlis NiOr823l ' 1 f I : ' . N I I is . - , . 1882. i-1-' ;tv- T FwvEii.;: j 1 4 A 1 w J out jtriot V i f -r . PATI arf nru r - ttt "..STREET, 21 E'.'IIC 3 h one ia- d .... . . r t 1 I " ,.WT ... f 4 Ort' " rTi'' 23 ?XNSi:0KfTEV' -IX 22 iSSa - i , 7 ji;ca ia a doi lm ;-1;f . that no J0 r.u rc. llVIr ("Mr J Ml kct itfcrl y l - - c - you'd just 1 J't to f. I.. f f . i I ... r . -If; - . ; ;. f ;anvil!e , n .tneihiog and ...i. .r j! t t her and , . v. i J s dil o she It the waiting cirC and mhlrK .t to a country ; : :.c"! t f a mangy , ;:.,:! .in. n East street L .-.- f'n --, 16 feet hijh, ,. .1 ;. v-lec Kfounds. i - ' chng of frost in hrli-J U- ui in1 ...3 Ke- t- " th- Ta lU 1 hi. ! Tfce . arc t! ntin the nqu? -.4 hi air is filled with ( v nrr reports that the .r 1 ru bridge that spans .J. :..r the Warm springs .a jjiij : a-.v uy me late storm. i r true. The Asheville :: ;-. .zl r true. I u-, i t:.- s uninjured. The r.i'i.I m the fact that tie tres- IVanu s" r, it over Spring Creek. i;al tl .- retk of Maj. Rum- across the creek was swept t.r -.V-rs of the trestle below. TW Ham Maflal HU. r. .ia'.iur.s fof the purchase of Iti'.tJ U'j-m springs that have tr..I.r, ' ibr sometime pat, were :"t. a Cove U$t Tuesday. The -. r arc .Lsrsj Andrew, Uuford, . other of:i rials of the t lbai!le Railroad. It is I t :hr v Durxhased the spriozs 1 s n ) Lv.Ju cntcrptise and not for the i' Tl; frice paid is $-po,ooo. ft hr.c across .. .! ah vS i'ivf way and r 1 !.;: 31. Ci.t A ?" t"'-s r. . a K v'.x-. I -f- ' at on, ou. nas oecn ap- .J r J'nt on the run between Lc; x-.l ;.ldboro, in place of D. ri J. .1 dee'd. Both agents on t $ t k:. it cilottd men. K t'u ..... 1 . irc t,; - jj bills were also senea i lit pc jr.ctors of the show. at 1 circus went to The property iViVrti I'ullman's p itt n i. ;a.lta. b t. ) :!.e show was attached by n L.r $6.tjoo ; local attach- TW llarvvaS Jtm. . . -. r..j moon fulls on the 27th rfu It is the beautiful har it.mj i'.J posses rs special claims : .-.cticn. For, owing to the - a a u ccupiic in rrj;jn t 4 2 this season, the moon rise jw.i cjr.iecutive" nighu with only a ji-r. :t small interval between the t rr rr.Mngs. The short autumnal ,1; I ti thus to be prolonged by the l ucrv moon-light that make 'x r dutiful fts day. The phe- n as easily eipiamcu - -u n of the J earth, liui in me 4 hen man was nearer to nat 1 -. 'v h m ect moon was considered a i -v,;.; of Providence to as- 1 ta,Vinlnun in gathering m u. The wannin moon was in con- ti with Neptune on the 2nd, with -.v. t..n.rr nn the on the ti. 1111 1 Ic It I A t I T il ft tlW im UHnmw" of the lth is m conj rcuryand Mrs on the 13th. ana cnus on the 1 6th. passing a de I a half north of her. Jarr rlar. 1 the jury was called yesterday j. one 01 m p-"v. 1-" .. . . a fine of $10 him. After ne aaa - -r . I wr f ihc bar askeu tnai IV -ino be remitted and giving as an i u.:1,r the juror's absence that he was a -neilv marricl man." and had gone tl:u.tU'prcvKusniihtta ce h,s w,c reach , town in urn i The 1- arned bants- : i h nleaciinr ma ,rini w. c. n a. The passenger receipts of this road for J my, the Asheville Citisrm says, showed an increase of $4,000 over the correspond- rnontn of the last year. This has been generally quoted as showing the in crease tor the whole business, which is erroneous! The freight business most certainly has very greatly increased ; and we suppose the whole aggregate of in crease is cot less than $to,ooo for the month of July ; and the increase was maintained through August. Wh;n lawyers fail to take a fee, And juries never disagree ; When politicians are content, And landlords don't collect their rent; When parties smash all the machines, And folks live on their means ; When naughty children all die young, And girls are born without a tongue ; When ladies don't take time, to hop, And officc-holdcts never flop : When preachers cut their sermons short, And all lolks to the church resort ; When back subscribers all have paid. And editors have fortunes made; Such happenings will sure portend, This world will soon come to an end. --Tho outlook Is for one of the heaviest hog crops ever known Tli p. prospect Is for cheap meat. The Western pork market is al ready haky in anticipation of a tumble in prices. . orth Carolina raises the finest tobacco in the world, bat none of it is on exhibition at . the Boston Industrial Exposition, .Such short-sightedness carries its own comment. Usually about this time of the year the court house officials commence buy ing in their supply of fuel for the winter. Xnis year it will be deferred until after the 7th of November election day. Aw Ibmbm Daali J-.V. Scott St Co., yesterday, bought 15,000 pound of dried fiuit, 5,600 lbs. t ; . . wring purchased irorn one man. it was not a trood dav for dried fruit eitVer. The business of this firm is riqpply im mense nhd is still on the cow. We know of no men mho more fully and richly deserve success than the energetic and cnterprisin-r voun? men who com pose the firm of J. W. Scott & Co. Nlrv ( "EMwralia" "Madison Square company ;... khipp, aftrrwa tm- J the clerk U enter M. -si Ar.l failed to i at the call r rUd tlwit if uc Iuctfd oa i.iri.iL 1 .t .t,d Lt the Holy ruble had something t,v,yalutamn.riman'. dut.es dur ii, fit nuptial, car. Jud.e Shtpp h authority wuw . I tVi fine 1. f iK t . U l Vcn from ...C rcc,-u. -...... io.r leSM 'J h? v,..tJ i,. ana """'V 1 of the nature of i11 u,s f.y rcaKn r ire f btf wouU turn to 1 roan 11 , ,0 waV, neither shall be be 1 o . ' . but he shall . 1 mm.tfr an w - . . a inf 1111 a lir J HI I ? --, for hi !""" anJ 1 ne "Mauison Square company is allied t play "Ksmeralda" at the IJon bow Opera I louse-, Sept, 27th. The play was written oy the gificd Mrs Hodgson Ilennctt, a North Carolinian by birth, while visiting this State two suu.mers ago. e met Mrs. liennett at Warm Springs at the time and subse quently in Washington and was apprised of her purpose to write the story. The scenes are laid in North Carolina and the dramitis frumac are all North Caro- linianst Elbert Rogers, an honest old North Carolina firmer, lived with his wife "Uddy Ann," and his daughter "Esmer alda," on'a poor farm in one of the west ern counties of the State. The young girl was in love with Dave Hardy, a no- bfe specimen of a southern y com an. Dave had secretly built him a little house for Esmeralda, and when the play opens he is just about telling Esmeralda's moth er of his love for her daughter and his prospects in life. Mrs. Rogers a shrewd scheming mother, has reluctantly given consent to their marriage, when a north ern speculator appears upon the scene and proposed, to buy the farm, all the while concealing the fact that it contains a valuable vein of iron ore Mrs. Rogers who "runs things generally," is about to dispose of the barren property at any price, when Dave Hardy, who has seen the speculator and h's friend viewing the land and examining specimens, suddenly thinks that they are after the property for its mineral deposits. He snatches the deed from Mrs Rogers, who is about to deliver it, and exposes the scheme 01 of the speculator. Mrs. Rogers then makes a new bargain, whereby the farm make them millionaires. Her first act is to discard Pjvt, who would never do for the husband of her rich daughter. Esmeralda clings to Dave, who finally eaves her so as not to stand in the way of her education and advancement. In the second act we find the Rogers es n Paris, where they have formed the ac quaintance of a young American painter and his sisters residing there. The Rog ers family are living in luxury, and the mother is planning the marriage of Esme ralda to a French Marquis. The faithful girl clings fondly to her love for Da-e, who has secretly followed her to Paris, j and is living there in poverty. He comes to the studio to sit as a model and there meets a friend of the speculator who tells him that the vein of ore on the Rogers and suddenly gave out and turned up on the farm where Dave had built his little house for Esmeralda, thus making him a very rich man. j In the next act kind hearted old Mr. Rogers tries to get the Marquis to give up his claim to Esmeralda, because she is breaking her he.nt for Davel The Frenchman refuses, when "Esmeralda discovers that Dave is in Paris, poor and hungry. She" rejects the Marquis with scorn, defies her mot hrr and , falls faint ing in her father's arms, i;oing back to North Carolina in spite of them all." In the lat act old Mr. Rogers, wSo has always given up to Lis wife, makes a stand and resolves to bring Esmeralda and Dave together, which he does, when Mrs. Rogers first finds out that hrr mon- J ey was long since .exhaus-d, and that Dave had been secretly furnishing the family funds, she finally ulenis, and the curtain rings down with the un shining on the Irttle house" where Dave and Esmeralda go to pass their honeymoon . ll'iktw AJxnte. I hc preensbor Patriot is the bright est daily that comes to this office. TrlkaM mf Knai. The teachers and students of Summer field High School, hearing to-day wih profound sorrow, of the death of H. P. Lomax, Esq., of Rockingham countv, N C, hereby tender to the surv iving mem bers of his familr, especially to Miss Dettie and Master Albert Lomax, former students of this school, our sincere sym pathy and condolence. , Rep'!, That a copy of this express ion of our interest in those passing through the dark cloud of sad bereavmcnt, and who are thus early in hie left without the care of a loving father, be sent to the family of the deceased and to the Greens boro Patriot for publication. F. S. IJLAIR, Prin. S. H. S. O. . Uellvwv, on behalf of the students. September Uth, iSSl. - A wealthy old English farm er says that he has always selected his farm hands after putting them through a whistling exercise. lie never knew a whistling laborer to find fault with bed or board, com plain of extra work, or bo unkind to children or Cattle. lie is thought ful, light-hearted, economical, and good-natured. -Tostal statistics of the world are curious and interesting. In the number of letter and postal cards dispatched and received , per capita of population, Great Britain leads and the United States follows; Switzerland, the Netherlands, Bel gium, uennruiy ana trance sue ceeding iu tbe order named. In the newspaper circulation the Unit- ed States is far ahead, as it also is in the length ofrailway lines, high roads and water routes . for the transportation of mails. The larg est gross revenue falls to Germany, where, presumablj', the rates are comparatively high. The United States comes next, Great Britain, France, Kussia, Austria, Italy, 8p;iin, Switzerland following; but Great Britain enjoys a most desir able distinction. It lias the largest net revenue from postal transpor tation. If one would like to get an idea of what kind of a body the sun is, let him consider what Dr. Siemens says. lie says that the annual yield of all the coal mines of the earth would not sufllco to keep np the fire of the suu atits present intensity of light and heat, for the forty millionth part of a second. Stephen W. Dorsey was not convicted as a Star-route conspira tor and thief. Neither .was he acquitted. But was he not con victed enoush to bo discharged from service as Secretary of the lk-publican1 National 'Committee T Wo ask in the interest of political decency .hoping the question can be answered without disturbing any existing harmony. The grjiphic reiorts of the storming of Tel-el-Kebir by the British army by the point of the pie." bayonet and the demoralizing night of the Egyptian army leave no longer a doubt that the war is practically at an end. Gen. Wols- lev has taken his own time to act a and the blow when delivered has been crushing. There remains but a single scene before the curtain drops. When Arabi's array left Alexandria it left the Queen of the Mediterranean a plundered and mined citv that must wait for a years before it regains its cominer cial importance. Directly , in"the line of the fugitives from the bat tie fields of to-day lies Cairo, tbe capital, and it would be but natur al if Ibe scenes of Alexandria should be repeated there. There is great excitement at St. Louis over the question wheth er colored children shall be sent to the public schools where 'white children are taught. At the open ing, on Motiday, the colored chil dren applied for admission to the white schools. Tbe principal re fused to admit them and the board ordered the school closed for. the day. Several street fights occurred and yesterday the action was repeated, some teachers leaving the schools. TUB nEXJOETT HEW TEAO. To bo accurate the Jewish new year began yesterday evening, September 14th. . It is the first day of the seventh month to the Hebrew calendar, and is known as Bosh Ilashanah or New Year. .Ten days later the day of atonement, Yomha-Kippur im, is' observed and is followed by the Feast of Tabernacles, the Jew ish Feast of Harvest, which wil bo ushered in on the evening of the 27tb.' Unlike the Christian calen dar, these days and years are not the result of an imperial edict, by which days are blotted out and months added, but are accorded to Divine command. The origin of . j the festival is given in Leviticus xxiii, 23: I "And the Lord spake unto Moses,' say ine. speak utto the children of Israel, saying in the seventh month In the first of the month shall ye have a baoDath, a memorial of blowing of trumpets, an ho ly convocation. Ye shall do no work therein." - There has been considerable dis cussion about the season in which the creation of the world took place, and although some of the early Hebrew authorities were of the opinion that it was created in the spring, they universally agreed to dating the year from Tishri or the autumnal equinox, agreeable to the rule In the sacred Scriptures for all 11 computations of time. The festi val of the new year is held as a day of Judgment to all flesh, which is to indicate their fate for tbe coming ! ! m a m year.' rue mowing 01 trumpers which is commanded in connection with the feast, is a rite, observed to tliis day, and the hearing of it is )bligatory on all Jews. It pro claims the King and his day ot udgment. I With the festival be gins also the annual era called the ten days of rctteutence.- -C. LJ Cook, the independent Repnblican candidate for Congress in tbe 7th district, has been a still house keeper for the last 10 years. le has followed the business of lSonget3t nud he has a thorough nowledge of the internal revenue system He publishes an addresss to 4the voters in the 7th Congres sional district in which ho says: "Jam infavorof an immediate and unconditional repeal of the IN TEIiNAL KEVENUE LAWS. To accomplish this, I shall talk and: labor, in season and out of season, j dav! and night. If I fail, which I do not believe will be the case should there be a Republican ma jonty in the House, 1 win never, so help mo God, vote to appropn ate one dollar to pay raiding rere iiiial officers! who go through, the eountrv. takinsr and ruthlessly de stroying the property of the peo ening of freights has followed uni fication as far as that has gone; Moreover, the best thing for the railways and the people will - never be reached by the . two until they come face to face with each other, each with. their rights and a plain understanding of them on both sides. It is a popular fallacy that the public profits by the wrangles TIIK DBItTEB EXPOSITION, j. , j A Ortctr lUr FnaaTar IT. eel Vic i .'. alerer.': . .. .- - ; j i Correspondence Patriot. " j Denver!, Colorido, Sept. 1. j Denver is iiot much older than I am, but it js a "tarnal sigbtf7 more! lively.: The spirit of business peri . j j vades the atmosphere. Everybody is bound to make or break, and the! the coin value is $2,104.14; also a J But in our own time this monster more; hideous content - tHth ans of govern- proportions. !;Not chunk of horn silver C40 pounds j his grown; to yet in weight, assay volue $7,240.12, ton value $22,025.63. The follow mg is a copy of telegram sent tp George: II. Haskell, commissioner from Jfutt, Aug. 20, 1882:. ; jut a piece of h sapping the foundati ment at its center, sit has reached oijt through 1 innumerable .radii to I LA .nawt Aa lmV a n1auA J ww a1iA1 A TV nf rival roads. Far from beinff Uiw:KPcu rtM trueexperience has demonstrated altitude in prices which makes the the reverse. It is as false as the idea of competition, regulating freights. It is now well establish-; ed that instead of competition the tendency is against it, because it is impossible and only, when it par tially exists, injurious to the roads and in the end to the public Cut ting rates injures the . roads 'and then the public, and the benefits; conferred upon the one by cheaper freights and upon the other by the increased rates, which succeed up on compromise ; of differences, are respiratiouj of the man who has 'to pay the bill as difficult as climbing Pikes Peak, and which their Niag. ara brothers can never hope with all the advantage of their experi ence to excel. . You seldom meet a Teal dead man on, the streets here; when you do he is in a long, nar row-minded box, abound for De unctville. Denver: is building a court house, where the inhabitants can tar their divorce suits. " The next; thingjj the city wants is a post office. . When one enters the pres ent building he is reminded that the mail list must be" of fearfully small dimensions, part ment must cramped for room. or else the, de- be pretty well Denver has where you can go arid. dinner and pay for it hhore than offset by instability and various injuries dpne to both the public and the roads by the unsta ble system and j the variations in rates. I i - I Such aclnb, wisely and carefully guarded and directed to the j best interests of the roads and to secur ing and diffusing information; and to solving problems which i are as dark to railway men as to the pub- Opefa house, built by the lieuten lic. will further the' interests of ant governor of Colorado, has only 0 i club houses get a good It is; said to bo one of the "" most I .1 i . sttraptuously furnished club houses in tliis country The Tabor Grand both. - In the end the interests, of both are the same. Both must at last reach a basis wh$re the rights of the roads shall not be the wrongs of the public and where the rights of the public s to the roads. one rival on. the continent, and that is the , Madison Square , theatf e, New! Yorfc tions have the drop brilliant. The i interior decora au oriental richness, and i curtain is particularly Denver ir more metrop- lall do no injustice olitan than Omaha, because she paves her streets aud plays lawn Keogh's ; paper says i that Prohibition will figure conspicuous y in the National Bepublican plat brm in 1S84 aud that such -'pap- suckers(asBall ct id omue gatheiitni) who were Prohibitionists last year and antis year, will be the first to endorse it.n But why does Keogh speak of his late friends as ("pap suckers" f . Has there been an tennis instead of base ball. But Omaha has the advantage of a wa tering place the. Missouri river, although the water contains more mud than mineral and looks in1 a tumbler like 'weak chocolate. Ieo pie in Omaha drink it with impuni ty. You are reminded, when you you go to the room assigned you at the iiotel and perform your normal abolutions in' a howl of Missouri 1 j ii i - river water, of your childhood days, hour since the war that he has not LHTi.il Uf-OUi.li;i. XVia IVwtoll i ; ; . . . ,i .. 1 "1 I tf lion vrtn want. lnit-ii m tli (l w in bankruptcy i and "boss'l of the .1 L 1L..1. ... I , . . ..i ... : I 111 a l j BWillllL) U11U UII L11U Willi K tepublican machine m this State, f -.1 Rf,rn:1Tir Rlwlnv. if he has not done his share of the U , ' a . ,!. , rotund ap- ;T. j ,tl . wiiiuiig ior puieruai uuii-iiog 10 bob up serenely from below" the circumference,Land ithcircles "W I took out a piece of horn I the whole ; People' ist itd coils It Biivci 1 Lo-uay, weigut over au,vw stretches out-through the chariuels pounds; worth over $00,000. If 1 - j. i. , they beat the pieVaiready Sovmm tojhjit power which there,!! will bring this up. j Took Biiapes anu .qontrois ine uoyern- out to-day, with only eight .men, ment itself. Ut has proceeded from over f 130,000. f D.H JACfsox." the legitimate domain of th !pub- Sanil carbonates, gray aijd red, ijc service, frpm the jfields of legis- bearing C25 ounces to the tn, are lation and oxecutfo and Judicial founduh these: minesJ .Underlying administratiilB into) thev ferum of the rich deposits of chlorides is artisau strife, and tjiere, fmore? antinionial silver. Horn silver is fhan anywhere else it endangers . 75 pqr cent, silver. The Iyanhoe he citadel If the people's power lode is one of the many overstock- ind sapsj aid mines the; public ed properties in New Mexico. Bob welfare. Itfjontroii caucuses and iueiTsuii o v us cuusiuciiiuiu 111 iu 1 couYeiiions it uicuties piationns, The assay amounts to 12,000 oun- ftnd compelsf those 4rho are1 elected ccs in saver, t-,vw iu gow, s me to carry tneni into enect; to itiisje- deptlj mineral 100 feet, the vein p.5 ,feet, gard them i their jilaces of power; C feeti The high grade it bribes mabv witli tlio spoils of bre" confined wholly to1 the office, land It deludes multitudes ores fissure Teins.', mil - Amon g the t iecul iar . formations may be mentioned a petrified cedar stump,four feet in diameter and weighing 1,C3Q pounds. The .own er is (lesirous pt selling it jto some eastern museum.: The sainei gen- tleman has some genuine agatized pine to disppse of. ; . " l ml J- : x; r i ii'J E xuere are inuiciiuous, asu wrue, of a supw storm, and if 1 1 am not snowed! under; I will resume this; narra ue td place like a iye in a day or two. Cont in- send the Patriot to this britil further directed. It is Lsunbeani on the Polar, seiis. X j j'".'.-. Tab IlKivLf'. i .Tn i i sfi n trn i sh h i in fVni n 1 1 Pwl publiau officials in the days when xioriu vtouu:i was ueiiig ui.ouuuii- md plundered; by., the litipublican partyl 1). A! Jenkins, of Gaston," StatejTreasurer; was ..called 'Hon est Pave Jenkins." Ilis moral 1 !oJ- " 1. L' 1 . ' cu;iiauLer smircueu i with false hopes of 'public place; it corrupts i melelectivjo franchise, and it is fast undernjinlng ikipular confidence ii electidns by thej ?peo- r)le; it levies coutributious Jupon 'fit a 11 nAAnla'iJ f tnocJitJr ! lir! nccAca. nents upon tne salaries; joijmeir mblicj servants, aud it converts Iia r 1 "I m n Yjrd lriVa J ffiv i ItllllllA tjfficialji to tjie natfiori Into political bonds to factions, cabals; hnd po litical bossel; it 'makes:; ppiiiinon dause with I olitidal black-legs to carry elections, and i$ shields them from punishment porruptit)n in he public service; it brings; oblo- uy an4 reptbach, upon honest and fiithful puic meii andj itjtoo Often prosti tiites the public press o basj iiartisan ushs', and corrupts be public omnioii Lf the land; ! If, as Mri! Emerson says, f'Thc has since been pap-sucking his jolly, pearance belies itself. -The Danville justices have concluded that in killing Hatcher, Mayor Johnson acted in self-de fense. and have admitted him to bail. The evidence was conflicting, but at this distance It looked like a plain case of murder. Tile peace officer of tho town walks the streets with a loaded pistol in his pocket, meets an adversary and shoots him down like a dog. It looks like ruffianism. I ccording to the September report of the Department of Agri culture on the condition of cotton, the general average of August was 03; of September 92, which is the same as in September of 1SS0, and higher than in any other season for ten years. Tho corn crop in all the region south of Pennsylvania and of the Ohio river, is in high condi tion except iu West Virginia. In many districts of the south the crop is reported to bo the best iu twenty years. In the New England States there has been a very sharp decline, except in Vermont. A de eline of eight points in New York and New Jersey, and of four in Pennsylvania is indicated. In the States of the Ohio co. n growing Valley the prospects average very Henry -Ward Beecher has aii3wercdthe question, "Ia it wrong for a Christian to dance H "It is wicked,' he says, "when it is wick ed, and it is not wicked when it is noi wiraieti. - in useii ii nas no more moral character thau walking, wrestling or rowing. Bad compa ny, untimely hours, evil dances may make the exercise evil; good company, wholesome hours and home influences may make it a very great liencfit." New York city has COO poli cy shops, 300 gambling dens, 500 pawn shops and 70 variety dives, and yet ieop!e are surprise! that a country incrchaut. unacquainted with the city is sure to get, into some such place Isn't he liable to ran into one "by accident! A quarrel between a French soldier and an Italian tradesman in Tunis has ot both Franco and Italy again by the cars. - Some months ago a like trivial incident in Marseilles led to an outbreak in that city which for a time threaten cdo provoke a rupture of diplom atic intercourse between them. French domination in Africa is a thorn in tho side of Italj and each Hide has tshowu itself -jealous and quick to take offense. nearly as at the last report The general average of condition is 83, the same as in August. The oats crop when harvested was iu uu usu ally high condition, yielding heavi ly in threshing. The general aver age is 100," very few of the States falling below that figure. The rye crop is also above average in near ly all the States, and was harvest ed iu good condition. The general avecago for tobacco is 89. . i : nAILBOAUH AXDTIIB PUBLIC, It is' 'proposed to organize a "Bail way Club' in New York. The project originated with the .editor of the New York Hauler d Jiroler, who sends us an outline of its plans and objects. The first object is stated to be to harmonize the trans poitation interests, and to prevent, by fall and fair counsel, vicious legislation against those interests. The general scope and direction of such organization is toward unity and system of interest. While this would affright those who de claim agaiust railway monopolies, as a matter of fact, whatever may be the evils incident to the rapid growth of railways and the small understanding - of the subject by railway men, statesmen and the public generally, including tho bus iness patrons of the roads, cheap- Democrats Marsh and The Chatham nominated Daniel II. William A. Law ranee for the House, J. George nanuer for; clerk, Stephen W. Beaver for sheriff, aud L. B. Exline for register-' The Record says they arc all excellent nominations, and figures up a Dem ocratic majority of five hundred. has i cess. THE EXPOSITION. The Denver, exposition, thus far not proved a gratifying -sue There are! two obvious frea sons one being tbe'dearth of vis itors, the other the failure of .the var vthe. ous railroad companies, with exception of the Union Pacific, MAM UK I J. TfliDEV. . It is reported from New: York to contribute any tangible euCour asrement. I They refuse to make any reduction in fares and cquse -4 this would bean imposition instead jan exj exiosition." There i of least a snggestiveness to the mark. The ores are the at re- only that Samuel J. Tilden has been at- quently many people stay at home. tacked by ataxy, in other words, a f A crentleman said to me yester- disorder of the nerves, which Will day:- "If t were not for the ores result iu softeuiug of the. brain, and that bis physiciairs say his re covery is impossible. The ; report lacks confirmation, and we sincere ly hope that it has no foundation iu fact- A physical disease, in the nature ot paralysis,' has for sever yean caused Mr. Tilden great in convenience and at times suffering. It has been confined, as we under stand, to one arm, until recently it attacked the other. His brain has never been affected, aud unless the new complication referred to : has set in It is yet as bright and active as it was 30 years ago. So many false reports concerning Mr. Tildeffs mental and physical condition, as well as his political plans jam! as pirations, have been sent ; abroad that we prefer to have something feature of iabsorbing interest to an eastern man, he he a scientist: ar a i r i i j ! capitalist. ColoradoTs mining in dustries arc well represented and the! rich ores show how vast! are her, resources. ! j San Juan county, for instance, which lies iu the extreme west portipu of the State, furnishes specimens! of lead ore, built in the forin of aWratiiid, carrying $ilver and gold! varying from $30 to $1 JooO to the ton. These mines are A.I. ! 'a- 1 - iTLI jusb oenig opencu up, stuu i yieiu of iron, copper, zinc and spars is i I v-.-'l r Ji ii.. proimseu.j iey luc&ico scnu iuo brilliant mineral display. Los Cor like official confirmation ;of this I rilles (littfe hills,) Santa Fe counly, latest report before giving it crej dence, In any event Mr.' Tihleu's of silver am nr ric of the county represents, accprding to the com missioner o0 mines iu one. district hbunda life caunot be prolonged many years, anu wiieu ne snau iiav passed away those who have ad-; mired, him as a stateslnan will re vere his memory, while those . who have iuipan.ed his motives 'and misrepresented his character; will,' 8how the we 'trnst, Jiave time for repentanco known and the disposition to repent. ;IIe. has justly ranked as one of the grandest men this century has pro duced and though never . parading his grievances before.;' the- public, Hanover he has been oin? of the best abused. Sal en a, carrying some sulphur, is found nee. i J uuge bioan nas a l cabinet containing specimens; !the territory! at large, embracJ ing all the native metals. He can 13 varieties of cpppeif science, includinig the! Iowa ia a strong liepublicah State, and hence one 'might sup pose that the color line would be obliterated and the equality of, the races assured! But a recent ! de spatch from Dubuque, IoWa, (ells of a remarkable occurrence at the jail at that place, which shows that intense pnjudicc exists against the colored race. J It seems that 'two negroes had been lodged iu jail for tho crime of theft, and the ; white irisoners took offence because they were to lie compelled to associate with black. men, and a lively jow ensued. The negroes were pound ed unmercifully Vith broken chairs and table legs, .and all the; offi cials about the court house had to be called toquell the riot. This jkvas certainly decidedly rough oil the colored men, since they didn't j in- rude themselves upon the. other convicts and hail no violent ' anxie-' ty to remain in tlio jail. ; j to oxides, native copper in the leaf, eta, besides in all forms, hard and soft. We noticed one specimen of the soft metal takes from the old :i mine, worked by the Spaniards long ago. The follow ing is a meagre list of the metals that inay be ; seen: Bed pxidd, cry!stalizd,,found 100 feet ibelow thct surface at Santa Bita; sulphide of jimeiii the hirsute rock; (black 8ulphnrettes of silver, , rdnnbig $G0,000 jto- the ton sulphate of 'baryta, containing chloride iof sil- ver; ana; suipnuie uaus, running from $300 np to $22,000 to the ton; t silver in jleaf or slate; horn (silver iu tsile, also with 'yellow chloride!; - i f silver in form with led and copper iu cube and ; filagree: Mexicans not) knowing the art of treating copper, place 'of. the raw material on harcoal and concentrated the metal by heat. Tho cabiuet. con tains some fine bits of carbonized wood with copper, etc. Lake Val ley! Dono Ana county, has on made from ore exhibition a brick taken out of a 50 foot shaft, weigh ing 241 pounds, and making 1,904 ounces 6f silver. It is 990 fine, somewhat bv a srame of o" in Washington, out he is a man for all that. Recently he has published a leitter iu which he saj-s: "My views are that the Republi can party owes it to itself aud the country to call a convention assert its mimhood and break the chains with (which the "revenue king" has endeavored to: bind it, jiud overr throw the tables of these money chancers and driye theni.froni its temple.! Jn prevent support this disgraceful .cdalition-whiskey-ring, revenue, ; urpken-down Democratic party. Mn. Jenkins will find in Novem ber tba; therd: are thousands of Republican, of both colors, in full accord with! him. Unlcsjsthe signs of the times out lie the "Liberal" speakers a! crushing defeat, annihilation, awaits the tickejt. tt only remains ocrats to do their duty. Are you in line f liistoryi of .the state ; sketches, in file progress of eoarso outili ie, houglit, arid folloWs ata distance hcurtelicacVfaf cultjire ahdpfjaspi- i ation," rwlti4 wilbtthe next ago say f our!'dejucacy .of wdture and of pirationJ'pn regfirilt ptir;;polit- anu their application to u one service i bought cal melho ppointmeiiis in Ihb i . - I i - IT. ii:- ( distinguished senator said, to ljio ne uay, "uivii service : reioruv-is : low to get the othjer fellow's man ut and your s in," j Marcyihas the listiuctiosi jof bridiiiating-iif) : our politics the expression, 'to-the vie ! 1 W i - Si I .'Mi al - i ors belong Ihc s!bils'': but: that tile fiitlstf short of the Uicessi- ies and demands dtj a genuine po- itical boss! Under t If il - -, the vartu was the victor yes, 'coalition" for-Dem- I X - 3 a i- a, nil to the f ruitrf of its Iriumnh ballot-boxLunder this new atioujlthfc political boss is conquer system entitled at the dispen- r, entmeu.Hiy riguc oi. conquest, absolute jiiominipn over estate, to this Keogh has just received his 3 terms and J conditions o litical j piblet J ana I brasj. medal, j labeled "30G," and now defies kidnapper McLiudsay N1 'l .'- . I ip Another heavy failure is re ported in Richmond. The whole-; sale shoo house of Baldwin & Jen- kins havc made an assignment. I .. I , i T ;-.;f yhich j h I partisan ie nc u me ii, uixm; of pc- . I. k s he may jhoV) the e ; may helots I such service to jiihpose. as po matter ljW bse the gejrvices r requirqdtltljlls feinlai system In our . L .iSi'iTi. - i j ' vi. - - jipolitic? bjtelds multitudes of juimp followers aijd political tranip, who are willing to takd ihc oath of feal ty to ami political boss fori an of- POMTICAI. BOWSES. 1 'i I fice, op a boptra,ct,f Or for i a jixromise Wl,pn! ! .Tfniraniv oMorotl fhtOt OllC tortllCOmWlg XUCT6 IS IUUS V aUV' ; W vaivv w -a-r : u I I T I' 3 k ; deUml chair;' he bomplained traised;u reign of boss most!of the offices1 were filled ism, as the emergencies; Of the pres; that by his opponents.' ; However, Jef-f bosses require,' crop fof minor fersbn declared that he would not' I bosses aiui juotessionaij omce-seeK-make iHpnjdyai'011 account of adcrs, offito-Lrokert.,: pUtical versb pbfitical r opinions: but he coutractdrsft 'or.evtery political bail heUli active ; electioneering agains his narl vto bo sufficient cause for a "revolution and ' he esteemed actite support of Ids party i recoinmendation for apointmeut equiyaterit to service in the war for independence. He did not cut t J ': i . ' ! i . t -I to the quick; :and slaughter with a i or ; regiihlj tbe L'ei broaxe,asjacksondd,tofill tli Piuty 'Tuf public service with personal devcjl to conve)it I tees and partisan bushwackers, but i he; implanted the! disease of office-givingU and office-seeking; 1,10 opinion whichlndw threatens the soul and i wick. I they are) ! expected, and under i)ctiidtr of iosiiiir l the 'favor 4 .1 , . ,f.t ;4 . .. of the jbdsses, are required "man age" tliepofcal politics Of ttiej coun try. They must j see j that party caucuses are confyollel ill jobedi- will bfi tho bosses', with to the public i'nterests enil' i udgment jj'of the v niuslt seii'd delegates- ous wlio will vote for the ptatBorlii and the candidates of the bosses, withoat regard egard I . al L '-! H or toe wisnes 501 uic .1 ence to thei i.i out rega t a i. . , a .1. 1 body of our I administration of j ,urc t( public j affairs with the mortal 1 1 gangrene ot ; nefarious ! "spoils the and For .1 infamous 8ystem.wr more 1 than two generations this monster has ; been clawing at the vitals of the republic. No admin istration, bywhatevei President, in the name of whatsoever party. has had the patriotism and courage 1 communities in whose behalf they act: If a citizen aspires to be nouiiiiated for any oflicof at a l4 Tnfast see1tht? boss or 11 j oi ne v rfck iliisl carpetfbag and home oil the next J train. to attorit to convention antretl'shi as wen .To "8( thefbosd is I to grapple: with it and thrust it otit date who will! do so; xAa iirw. Snm hatA rcoiivCnUdn hnderithis seen the neces3ity of doingjt, -and him as rfolitichl hfrd and plaster, or - - ait m' 1 a 1. .. .1: . to indulge in tue. innocent fpasuuie of being ; political system mere- r 11 . lv registers the edict have j had the; patriotic desire to accomplish it; but their wisdom, lute political dictator; aud when at? 1 , of an 7 abxo- their courage, or their strength, 1 as been inadequate to tho tatek; and it seems at the present hour to be as! rampant as ii .was under last the honest in party bavcidaced in power by theut a oftei fiil t litical task en 01 a political their 'camiidA vote.f,j4hey a l ! 1 . : I i. - aC iem u ue siaves l,i v lnasttfis, 1 .nln I 'nf Tn.l'4ftti lnmclf Lf lipir nTrfiryiitmns to tliC 1) No PreidentJ ;no party, not evenja Such k system hiatiirally jidid fn inioindfraf 't s people. V J.11V; .i..'i..t vrTT single1 generation of tie people js evitaiblM leiids ti iijalaiiiiiiisti a- alone respoi!sible for its existence, tion bf bubpC Jiffiir. jit 8ubsti- or chargeable Iwith its continuance.' tutei the will of the bosses lor thej If my views of its origin are cor-' reet: its cerm lies imbedded in the selfish nature of mankind, and H Was jplantcd among usi as a jieople, before we had existeaics as a na- will of (be pep)U not ohlV in thej selectiofi of their . public agents, but in the directjbu !f't iublici affairs, tocracy It thercre; leads to! aris j andiends toward an f auto politics, ivhicbft if allowed tionj The people themselves share1 cracy ni wit IU their rulers, tne iniamy ot its I to prevail, win w www j"; " 1 ' 1 . -.1 Lrt I t I ' 1 ' ' si A t-mr iniouitous -life; and doings, arid solute luonarcim nawr y n Aoath. l MitchelCtn,nortk WViencqn i'r hey alone can put it 4. t ii- I
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1882, edition 1
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