. fx . - -. - .1 . ! . -;'!: f i r-. x 7 -,..x-XXx- : .-1 x -i . - , ' :j : . - X ' ' xVvNk . :j ; : the ; j ; , . . t : t 7 VOL.. 70. PROFESSION AL CARDS. Dr. ',T J. RICHATJJSON, ;- , ,". -it IU-i!xiw lloii-o. H K'N-SBOUO; N. - i Vr J-te in MJicii6 and Surrery it , -n irrrondine country. Br. J. E. WYCHE, DI.NTIST,. ,. p s ivir.jr- Itnnk Building, H.niti lm ftrrc?, CJrocnboro, N . C. Dr. X H. j WHEELER, K: Onl-.War.l's Drug Store. Dr. W. H. BROOKS, B"dild.ing, : rrj r..tww imcsr. "t;i:Ki:Ni:vrti - - N.C. Dr. W. H: Wakefield, i -1 "... t - ... t a-- n - I I I kil I II la rMPHRa r,. lav" Jufv I 1 1 I U.VTK k f.IMJTEP TO i;3,., i:ar, Xo-e ii rum. CIIAS. E. STEDMAN, - ATTORNEY AT I AW, V.n-Kfiht.irr.uii.linj:, . - X. C. A. M, SCALES. r. j. -11 .w. SllXWk SCALES, JttOXXL05T55 fit -L.aA7- i :nfiil Jitttofiiiou given to nil usi--tv'-.-. Olli oiu U'hrlon JIuildiiijr, Xo. 117, 'ourt Squ.tre. . II. liEACIIAM, Architect iand Builder. ,in c in O.lil Fellows HullTling, t GUKNSIKJRO, - - - N. C: 'When in Need Apply to IlllAlMJUAltTEHS ' ink ALL K1NIS OF BUILDERS' SUPPLIES : Lime . . ."Carson's Eiverton." . . .Rosendale. ...... : .Portland. "Cement Cedent. I Euiidin? Brick EuildinR Brick. Fire Brick. . .1 . . Common. . . . .Repressed. Superior. f niv n' maU' Irv thorn.) -Fire Clay . Plaster " Plasterers' Hair. Roofing Paper. : Glazed Sewer Pipis. Excellent. : Calcined. Steel Roofing. Steel Siaingv Clay Flue Pipe. :ui'l ntail. Thos. Woodroffe, i it i:i:nsiiou, rv. o. f0x.lv Aiflnl firTie Amorican Injector' ! ana " I lu t.j man fctliausl lU-ait." - -tf POMONA HILL ; NUBSBRIBS, f ' loiii6iia, X.C. Two ami one-half miles west of Greens . horo, X. C. The oriiri line of the K. & I II. passes through the grounds nriJ uithin 1(K) feet oi the othce ana v reSlencp. Saleni trains make regular ' stops twice daily each way. TIIOSK.INTERESTELVIN FRUIT OR F.LOWHHS Are cordially ;lnyited to Inspect our .stock. if - - YOU CAN FINP . Over One Million Fruit Trees-, Vines Evergreens, Sii.-uhs" Trees, 'Xiita, Roses -etc. In fart, everything usually kept , in a nrst-class' N urscry. i Three Grceiu Houses yFull.hf a grvat variety of; Flowers and FoTinge Plants. IS t Roses for Spring planting a spccalty. - Catalogue No. 1 f FruitTrces, Vines etc., and 1'atalogua Xo. 2, Green IIous t!atalogue,furnishcil free to applicants. I t-orreso'ndence ftliritd. ' J. VAX LIXPLKY, Prop'r, ' ! 1 I Pomona, X. C. LE BRUM'S tm for r.iTiir.K srx m rmrdr bcinc in- Jerted Ulrrrtly to the neat or thM ainrnnrf of the Cicnito-l rinary Orennn, rrqalres ir fbanfe of diet. Cnrr a-aarintrcd la 1 to 3 daj- Hmall plain nark axe. by mail, Sl.OO Mold ooJj by Richardson & Fariss, Greensboro, K. C. . (PERRY OAVIS'J A Sure and Safe Remedy la every cae and every kind of Bowel Complaint I This g a true statement and - It can't te made too strong or too emphatic It is 0 simple, j safe and quick cure for - ; 1 'jOrszEps, CouA, Rheumatism, ' Colio, ; I Oolis Keuralgia, DiarrlicBa, ; Croup, . Toothacte. Two sizes, 23c and SOc Keep it by you,. Beware of Imitations j Buy only the Genuine- Perry Davis. Mold Jnfwri 1 rt h vrt auvr nerre tu9i - a t 1 THE GKEEN L ANES OF THE PAST. I care not to gaze at the years coming on, i. Thick-mantled In mist and; with doubts overcast, j Rut w oil Id rather stray .back to the days that are gone, i Along the green lanes of the, past Across the cool meadows of memory; where , j The birds ever sing, and ,the wild waters fall, " ' fr. And the laughter of children Is i borne on the air, . - i And love shineth over it all. j The painter may picture the future in dyes 4 - That rival the rose and the rainbow, and still i It may leave him at last but a gecrdon or sighs, - - A nd a hone that it failed to fulfill : The poet may king of the splenders su preme - r Of the opulent ages, far-coming and vat i I question him not, yet I ask. but to dream . : On the old quiet hills of the past. The past is my own there is nothing uncertain - " ! In all its wide range, and my title is cif ar ! . While the future, at best, is a iace on the curtain, V That fades as my feet draweth near; Then give me the blossoms, the birds and the bowers. . And every loved scene where my soul clingeth fast. Like ah evergreen ivy that mantles the towers '- - And feeds on the dews of the past. James Newton Mattiikws, In La dies Home Journal for July. TO END CUBA'S WAR; Marat Halstead Tells of a Plan for the Porchase of the Island'a Freedom. -I . New York, June 24 I feel au thorized to eay not from official communications, but by the; force of eurrent facts that before the close of the present rainy season in Cuba, ana that 10 to say, bud stantialljwithout further military operations, the Cubans will; nave gained their liberties; that the Spaniards, without the loss of the honor of their arms or the fall of the d nnsty,. will withdraw; their arniv and fleet from the island, sur- reiidcriug the rights of Spain for compensation to the (Jubangov- eminent, and further, that the de cisive act of peace-making will be that of the United States through an enabling act by Congress for the exercise of, extraordinary au thority by the President. - . There will not be the purchase of the island by the Sugar ,Trust or any other trust or combination, but, as is usual in making war or peaces the proceedings will Ibe on business principles, and there will be another illustration of the power of money in the affairs of natipns. sfain's money siu;tfk Much has been said of the crisis in Cuba. There is equally a, crisis in Spain, and the explanation of it is that the French Rothchilda. have notified the Spanish government that no more money will be lent to Spain after July 1. " j This is of the utmost importance, because the loans of tSpafn, have been almost exclusively placed in Paris. Spanish credit has not been good in England or Germany.--The money has been found in France, and to a fid all extent in Belgium, to carry on the war in- Cuba, and the French-bankers' notice that there is no more money to be had is the secret of the commotion in Madrid' that presently attracted the world's attention. f .The reason given by the French banks representing the Rothchilds for stopping the money for the Cu ban war is that chere has been no result, and the possibility of get ting money out of tho island by Spain is now too remote to consider. Hence the, cabinet crisis in Madrid - the call for Campos the anxiety about "autonomy" in Cuba.' . THE PRESIDENT WILL ACT. President McKinley has not lost any time or opportunity in gather ing information as to Cuba and Spain. The wholetruth, "with The exception of a few details that do not change its. general character as to the peninsula and the islands, is in his possession. The old-question, .What will he do with the facts in the case? arises, and that means executive action within a short time. The sharp pressure i as to time and the perfect knowledgejin ofll fial quarters of that which has just been declared here naturally hastens the "administration; I do not pretend to speak from! official information, but am satisfied that there is room for hope that 'the un happy Cuban war will soon end. and that the policy of the ; admin Istration vrhich will promote peace is formulated with the exception of a few points that cannot be cared for with certainty until there are further developments in Madrid and Havana that concern Cuba as well as the Spanish government. HELl OF CONGBESS WILL BE NEEDED. Now, with all the reserve becom ing in diplomacy, let us set forth what seems to be the only way open to the administration to reach con clusions swiftly to do the essen tial thing without firing ai gun or assuming a dollar in money obliga tion and before there are -frosts here and the rainy period is over in Cuba. j It seems to be reasonable to con clude that, cautious as Congress is sometimes, if there was a policy candidly and conclusively present ed to that body which would in a few weeks yield peace in Cuba, with the liberty of the people with out bloodshed or any expense to us, and without even committing us to ultimate annexation,! and by a grand stroke for the commerce and all the rear interests of this country, Congress would take it up and pass the enabling act for the administration. There is under serious consideration this project: 1. Cuban independence. 2. Spanish evacuation of the Is land of Cuba. ; 3. Indemnity to Spain for sur render of sovereignty, to be paid in Cuban bonds, secured by cus toms revenues, the . collection of which shall be supervised and ap plied by; representatives of the United States. j CUBA IS ABLE TO PAT. . , As this is the first authentic statement of the policy of the peacemakers, something further in the nature of elucidation would seem' to be proper. It will -be ob served that the bonds to be issued are not those of the United States or guaranteed by us. In regard to Cuban bonds, I am informed in this connection that only a ; very small number have been sold. There may be an op tion out, but it is not a big one. Cuba has not acquired a large na tional debt. The limitations of the sum of the face of the bonds has been fixed at $150,000,000. At 4 per cent, the rate understood to be preferred, the interest would be $6,000,000 . annually, and as Cuba stands today her revenue would at once, under our management, far exceed that sum. - Once in recent times the amount of Cuban revenue was $32,000,000 annually, and it is as well known as anything that the customs ser vice oi Spain in Cuba has been ex tremely inefficient and corrupt, so that a large share of the interest money for the purchase of freedom for the island could be added to the ordinary revenue of Cuba by the sun pie process of honest ad ministration. It is believed with Cuban ' independence established and an American supervision of the custom houses the revenue of Cuba; might soon go beyoird the great figures of the reciprocity era. f 1 - A MAR UN TO SETTLE CLAIMS. The business plan is to pay Spain $100,000,000 and to have a margin to settle claims against trial coun try held by American citizens. Then it is possible the bonds might not sell at par, as it is -the European method to market them without the par condition held in this rfimtry to be indispensable. and it has been thougnt that tne Cubans might need a little money to start their homo rule with just a ittlo golden oil on' the wheels. Therefore the turn of the face of the bonds s to be $150,000,000 in;4 per cent.1 . INDUCEMENTS ON BOTH BIDES. J What are the inducement to the Cubans?! - First Liberty. Second Independence.. - ''h Third Peace. . Fourth Prosperity sure to come ike a flood under their indigo iky and soil of red and black. What, are the inducements for the Spaniards? First Peace. The end of hor rible anil hopeless war. ' Second The re-establishment of the credit of Spain through the gold she is to get. Third The seunty of the domes tic peace of Spain, for which 4ier 150,000 troops sent home from Cuba and her $100,000,000 in the treas ury, those responsible for her gov ernment might laugh at the agita tion of the anarchists and the con spiracies of the Carlists. ' - 1 -I -'. i . as to Spain's consent. Would Spain consent? Yes; she has to do something to try some thing else than that which she has been attempting to do. : Cuba is absolutely lost to her. It would be statesmanship to recog nize the loss. Spain would find her relief in parting with Cuba as great as that which Cuba would enjoy In freedom. The colonial system of Spain has been the curse of the home cuontry. GAIN FOR THE. UNITED STATES. : What would be the advantages in this connection for the United States? j First The blessing of the peace maker, j ' Second The recompense for end ing a war that is unchristian, un civilized "and utterly hideous. Third The gain . of our com merce would be enermouB not less than $100,000,000 a year, and the opening of vast opportunities for the future. j B ANKERS WOULD CONSENT. Would the French bankers who have shut down on Spain, fixing the date of the financial crisis of that country as July 1, accept the Cuban 4 per cents if the interest were to be paid from customs col lected and applied by officers of the United States? The Rothschilds would jump for such bonds. It would have great recommendations. ' If the French did not want the bonds they could be sold in New York in ten days. TIME AN IMPORTANT ELEMENT. . It will be seen that the element of time in this matter is extremely important. That if this thing is done it must be now. The Cuban government would not consider it if there were postponement, for the island is more and more desolated, and the cane fields that yielded 1,000,000 tons of sugar a year must have labor speedily or they will be a wilderness. This is the last year of grace for them. i I venture the observation that all this will not be in the nature of news to the President of- the United States and his cabinet or to. the Cuban authorities. This clear bus iness policy baa had an existence In official circles, if not in the news- GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE - papers until now. ; The nation may go forward confidently and benefi cently manage a difficult and dan gerous matter on these lines. 4 M U RAT HaLSTEAO ; THE 'AMERICAN HEN. She, Collectively Speaking Earns More in a Year Than the Entire j i Wheat Crop. 1 ; .Mrs American Business Hen is one! of opr most useful citizens. She is af shrinking, unassuming creature, too modest at limes even to cackle over the birth of her own egg, leaving that celebration to her husband ;J and yet Mrs. American Hen has ,been quietly paying off mortgages, driving wolves from the door and t hatching out nest eggs for thousands of featherless bipeds. In 1890' there were in this coun try 258,871,125 chickens and 26, 738,315 other fowls. In that year the American hens laid 9,836,674, 992 eggs. J There are now 350,000, 000 chickens, which will lay this year 13.750,000.000 eggs. These eggs are worth $105,000,000, and the poultry meat sold during the year will bring $125,000,000, which giyee $290,000,000 as a very low estimate of the earnings of Mrs. American Hen 'for one year ' of the great depression. The; 350,000,000 hens are worth $105,000,000 of any man's money. but we will not consider that, but take simply the earnings j of the hen. The! average length 1 of an egg is two and a half inches. The 13,750,000.000 eggs will, therefore, make I a chain 542,218 miles in length, while the total weight of this production of hen fruit is at least 853,125 tons. Does any reader realize what this immense production of eggs and meat-means to the country? Here are a; few figures for compari son: u : . x - i- Value of sil ver production. .$ 72,510,000 Wool clip. j. 38,146.459 65,1G7,735 Sheep. LU.i : Hwine : . . . i.... 186,529,745 Mules, j.. ; Horses,,. . . J Petroleum products... .. 103 204,457 600,140. J8fi C2 383,403 78,934 901 Potato crop. . . . t obacco crop. 35)74,220 Cotton crop Oat crop. 4 . . ........... 259,t4 640 163 655.008 237)38,998 84 793,124 12,704 440 139.280 078 178 215.556 70,728,077 .90,626,290 323.196,454 SJ.375,774 Wheat crop. Imports coffee one year. . . . I m ports tea one year ...... Pensions. A.. School expenditures. ... Interest on mortgages Cost of P. p. Department. . Net earnings 01 railroads.. Dividends on R. R. stocks. . The value of all gold produced n American mines in 1895 was $46,610,000 and of all silver $72,- 510,000. fThe value of all minerals. including, iron, gold and Bilver, taken ' out, of American mines in 1894 was $208,168,768. Americans are given to bragging about our mmense mineral resources, and yet you will notice that the hens paid for it all. in one year and had enough left to just about pay the interest on all mortgages I Mrs. Hen will earn enough this year to pay the entire state and county; tax (which in 1890 was $143,186,007), and have enough eft for every cent of pensions that are paid to old soldiers. The average cow weighs 130 times as much as the average hen, and yet all the milch cows in the country have a total value of but $263,955,545, Mrs. lien in one year will (Barn enough to buy every cow, and put the entire tobacco crop in. her pocket as well. She could pay outYof her year's earn ings for all the tea and coffee im ported) in one year and all the pe troleum products, and have enough eft to buy all the tobacco grown n 1890.x The total assessed valua tion of the following states fall be low the hen's, yearly earnings: Ne braska, New Hampshire, Vermont, Delaware, Alabama, Mississippi, Arizona,; West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Utah, Florida, North Dakota, South Da kota, Nevada, Idaho Louisiana, Arkansas, Montana, Oregon, Wy oming, Colorado, New Mexico. In other words, Mrs. American Hen could buy any of these states from one year's egg and chicken money. She could buy in this way New Mexico Arizona, Wyoming, North Dakota, Idaho and Montana all put together. j ' The total cost of conducting the Post Office department last year was $90,626,296 84. We can pick out . 50,000,000 of our best hens that will cover every dollar of this outlay in one year, i The net earnings of the railroads in 1895 were $323,196,454. The railroad dividends paid amounted to $81,375,774. The American Hen : paid nearly twice the profits earned by American railroads. The total cost of conducting the Postoffice amounted to $261,640, 598, or less than that of the hens. It cost in 1895 slightly over two cents to carry one passenger one mile, .0184 of a cent to carry one ton of freight one mile, and 91 cents to run the average train one mile. One single hen, laying 150 eggs per year, could have 215 days of vacation, and would still be able to pay for carrying one passenger 1Q0 miles, or for hauling ten tons of freight 10,000 miles, or for run ning an ordinary train two miles. One hundred and forty such hens would pay the salary of the average teacher employed in the public schools, while seventy-five hens would pay the average pension to old soldiers. II. W. Collingwood, of the Rural New Yorker, in the New York World. The President has nominated Albert O. Thompson, of Ohio, David B. Qulber aon, ofTexas, and Alexander G. Botkin, of Montana, commissioners to revise and codify the criminal laws of the United States. BBBBBjBjBajBajpaajpBpjssjejaasBaj Mill .1 n nn ' x fv7 VIJ 1 1 U 1 1 U Mi l III UU i 11 JH !. ' , . . j ........ . I" . . - , I ' f-:- - . j ' . IiXSTSST Double Swunk before making up, made by Tailors, with every re- gard for NOW IS THE TIME FOR ....Summer Underwear. .. We have a- large and amine our goods jfOWe handle ttfe Shawknit Druid Hill Unlaundere.l Sliirt. Only IfflWS, (111 nun - HALEHMEN 1 John W. Crawford, Will. H. Rees, Mr. Debs' New Folly. Eugene Debs' plan for a co opera tive commonwealth in the State of Washington, although' Utopian, seemed to be harmless as originally outlined by him. Mr. Debs now proposes to colonize enough repre sentatives of his new "social democ racy" in that State to secure politi cal control. Then the constitution is to be destroyed or so amended that it will permit the co-operative commonwealth to maintain a gov ernment in harmony with the ideas of xthe "social ' democracv.'f Of course, if Mr. Debs and bis follow ers did nothing to violate the spirit and letter of the Federal constitu tion they would not be interfered with. Other extremists have se cured control of a State before Mr. Debs announced his plans and have done absurd! things before they learned wisdom. Tin was notably the case in Kansas, where for a time the Populitds threatened to subvert the established order and to wreck the State by ridiculous legislation' directed at capital and labor. But even the Kansas ex tremists realized in time the sacred rights of property and the inviola bility of contracts, and the Su preme Court oi tnat Mate,; com posed of Populists, recently handed down a decision which could hardly have been improved upon by the jurists of the conservative East. Mr. Debs and hit associate agita tors are already talking about the employment of force, if neccessary, to set up and maintain their "social democratic" form of government in Washington. "1 do not know," says Mr. Debs, "whether this great question can be settled peacefully. From the botton of my heart! hope it can. But if it cannot, then 1 am one of those who believe in getting ready to solve it otherwise. I If, in defiance of the federal constitution, they send federal troops to suppress us in the exercise of our constitu tional rights, they will be kepi busy in their march across the country, and when they reach' the State line they will find 3Q0.OOO patriotsj ready to receive them." Mr. Debs has not abandoned his old habit of reckless speech, it is plain, jtmt if the "Social democracy; is to be or ganized upon a basis of armed re sistance to authority its existence rill be brief and inglornusj The 300,000 "patriots" will dwindle into nothingness long before the time for the supreme test comes, i James Creelman, who attends the convention of the Debs Social De mocracy in Chicago, in a dispatch to the New York Journalstates that he did not see in the conven tion a man "who looked as if he had the ability to be the foreman of an ordinary workshop. There were abstract anarchists, -single-taxers, communists, new-fledged and illit erate, socialists, but. the average face was either dull and unintelli gent or was plainly fanatical." "I have seen no sign," adds air. weei- man, "that the farmers or agrarian class were attracted to the move ment " Mr. Debs cannot hope to revolutionize existing condirions with such forces as these. They would never be able to combine for any good purpose, .even if their motives were patriotic. The Debs movement is Utopian in its first stages and it may prove to be an archy in its last. But at any stage and in any form it is sheer folly. No good can come out oi sucu combination, while on the joiner hand great harm may be done oe fore its absurdity is completely demonstrated to those who mu9t suffer the consequences. A favorite remedy for muny of the ii. rr this life la Simmons Liver Reg ulator, the most popular medicine yet discovered. It ia a searching cleanser, and by its action frees tne system oi all Impurities, producing a sound, health v liver.. It is the. standard household remedy for,liver and stomach troubles, and has the unqualified en-. dorsement of thousands of our best cit izens throughout tne country. Having been before the people for many years, its long and honorable career Is a suf flcent guarantee of purity and reliabil ity. Simmons Liver Regulator is man nfiAtnred bv J. II. Zelin A Go.. Phila delphia, and Is readily distinguished by the red z. on eacn pacaage. : 30, 1897. CRASH, arid perfect fit. thorough line. Ex before purchasing. Socks, Tbest on earth), and the 65 cents. Sells when no other will. Will. II. MatthewsFrank Brooks. Armed or Unarmed Peace. The reason why the true friends or peace are opposed to the" build ing of a big navy is a very simple one. we do not need such a navy ior me maintenance oi peace be tween the United States and for eign nations. Since the war of 1812, when this republic I Was so small and feeble that other powers thought they could kick and cuff it with impunity, we have not bad another foreign war save that with Mexico, which was a war of aggres sion and jconquest on our j-part. With that exception we have lived at peace with the world. jDuring that long period we never had a navy worth speaking of in com parison with those of the! great naval powers, except during. our civil war, when we had ourj hand full at home. And yet; in spite of our having no navy, our j rights were respected and our interests never lacked protection ; and when ever we had any j tret cause of com plaint we never found it difficult to obtain our dues by peaceable meth ods. In fact, we have been per mitted to do some things which Would not have been tolerated if done by ; other nations, j Why? Not because the great powers are particularly fond of us, jbut be cause there is not one of them that can venture upon a serious quarrel with us without exposing itself to the gravest ' peril in its relations with other powers that might take advantage of its embarrassments. The very first axiom in the cate chism of British statesmanship is that peace must be kept with; the United States. And the reasons which makes this self-evident to British statesman ' have the same force with the other great powers too. Theymay sometimes growl at us or try to gain a little diplo matic advantage of us, but every one of them will gp to the utmost verge of concession to avoid a se rious embroilment i with us. The Jingo talk we hear so often about the dangers threatening us, and of the encroachments and insults we may expect at the hands j of Euro pean powers, is therefore the ver iest balderdash. Not one of those powers will vtfnture to iijiyade any rights or to deny any jiist claims of ours to the extent of risking a warlike conflict with this repiiblic, although we are unarmed, j We can have no, war with them unless we wantwar, and drive them intor it iwmnbincr it to them a matter of plain self-xespect. Harper s. ! : i ir i. It's troniterfnl how much liealtW has tolo with ichcr b loT;i an.l mora of it. Ymf. bloo.l-..ak.ng o Khniiee.ttolKsv.talize.t by lif. fierce's O.J den Medical Ihscovery. It impart- new Ipower to irodo. e an abun.lance of the healthy, retl rn."c' nl Kive-you a fresh supply j of jnim, rich bl. It's a blood-cw aur;J it is for t very-u-i..w i.ino.1 iinuuru or m a poor,rrun 1.1..1 is n.tunir iHWr. iion neei. lown" iwnilitkm. It prevenM te gfttn 1 eane from netting a hold on yotul system. I Kven aimr disefcte is settied on you, it Is lriven out by the Wood -creating prolan.- 01 It is a pcrfe;t eure for general and nerroM ? bihtv, catairh, malaria. eczma, erysiila. serlV. la and every form of bloodf lise !e. 1 1 in't cXl a consumption-cure, htmP; tion-cure.-whi.-h has its aV O.very" mnit mMiirsi wiivc" ' r Right Prices You can pay more jmoney for a bicycle, but you cax oot secure a machine of higher grade thantb cm, or unc that will plea yow better. WESTERN WHEEL WORKS Cmcaoo NbW Yoca Aftmt ryyn LM i mm. mftrriea hspuinexs. aicitness neci me mmy . You can't bo happy nor make rthera lilly voa're ailinir. Wheu you flu.l yourir irritable, tr -runt-down" H aaBBBBBWBBaaaBBBaaaawaBBw.BsBBs- irQ(S0lil l!x ! yy ' :i; it.' 1 - x ' i t - I X - .1. L A V m V - J WE SELL THE KEYSTONE CLEVELAND & WH1TEHILL CO. Neibnrgb, H.Y. B - . v -x L 1 No 2.50 LOOK FOR THIS KEYSTONE '-;;ON THE I TICKET. '. v m Keystone Corduroy Trousers. Outwear Three pairs of the common kind. WORKING PANTS. 1 .22 to 2.22 1 - AND Celebrated Newburgh Apron and Sold by Elatlhews, GflBTLAClD SPRIN - G - ' For Made-to-Order Suits. Showing the latest styles in Cutaways,1 Single and Double-Breasted Hacks, Prince Alberts, Tuxedos and Full Dress. Shirts, Collars and Cuffa. Ws will have shirts made to order if desired. H. H. 106 South. Elm Street, 4 You bad better neglect any other parr of your system than ' your MOUTH and TEETH. Unless these important organs are kept in a healthy condition you cannot expect good re sults in he other parts otthe system. With an experience of twenty years in active practice, -we invite you to call and let us give your Teeth the attention necessary to put them : in this healthy condition, and at prices that are in the reach ; of all and in keeping with the times. AVhy pay higher prices t x for notbing better? Yodrs, ; , . - JDTl. GRIFFITH, Dontiat, flCT'K. of P. Building, South Elm St., Greensboro. for Infants CMtorlLmoiren aJajiU'il tocliiMo-n tli.it 1 rpc.miiien.1 it aSKiir-riortaiiy iTiirfi4.ti kuowutoiuu." 1L A. Ahc:iiek, M. 1., Ill So. Oxford St., UrooUyu, N. Y. "The u of Castoria U so nnlrcrwil and Itt morits no wHI known that lti.-rii( wrt k of miperHTogation to endorso'lU fVwam th. int. llii't faniili.l who do not ken-p Ca!lori wlUuu eus reach,1 ftBTv JIirtts, P. P., : : 1 Kew York Oily. ' Tiiic (Vmm Greensboro NORTH & WATSON, PltOPRIETOnS- , -1 !V f ! OUB BEA1TDS:, m sa m Ann PURITY :1 HIGH GRIDE PATEKT.. CHARM OF GREEKSBORO: y These brands have lK;en put on the eiven universal satisfaction and are familes or Greensboro ana surrounuing coujr. " -formitv in each erade. Ask your'mercbants for, NORTH A AThON b formity in eacl FLOUR. - - .. ... ' Remember-we handle ail kinds . beside the best MKAL ever made in oreensDoro. v Mill at Walker Avenue and C. F. A Y. V. R. R. DO YOII VALUE YOUR DOLLARS? If von intend to build or enlarge your bouse, come to us for an estimate on Material. We will surprise you on prices. We make a specialty of SASS, BOOKS Now don't think for a minute we can do business on that basis. Our we can show you the largest stock in the South. Guilford Lumber Company, Grconsboro, N. C. CELEBRATED - TROUSERS it they rip in ; wear, You get a new pair. stronger guarantee can be given. V - 3.00 All Wool Trousers. 3.50 J - ... ; . - Our. Great ;SpecialtyI Fit, Finish and Fetching Style. THE Keystone Overall Working Coat, .75 to 1.00 Chisholm & Stroud. Merchant Tailor pLOTHS! Pants and Faucy Vests. Canes, Umbrellas and I urnlsEtnjrs. . CARTLAND, oreensboro, n. 0. D LRJ and Children. anl.irU.-iir.-HO.li.-, Onljn.tlon, j Ni.r Ii, li.nTlti-i, KnuiHli-m, Kills W..r:nti, fclv.-s hl" is al liiictW dl iP-Mi-m, Without lujurlous mlM-at Son. j F"r wrornl y-nr I hum prorowwl"! C.st..ria,' and fhuN alay crfillni t-t do t., 11 it I114M invtrial.ly mIii-1 U-wA W nasuIU." rnwm T. rait, M. P, jrih Htrwi. and Tlh An., S-w York Off. fv.upjixr, rr Mi'rrsv HrmrrT, Krr Ymm Qrr. Roller Mills. STAR ; h ran MliLi rwu. THE POOR J AITS FRIEBD. market on their merits and have. pronounced exceueni ny niu...B t. ,wri oi tne iresuesi imior.oi rr.. ABTD are selling. below cost, a no one .motto : Large sales, small protlts. ; ) l! it i I i 1 ' ' : . 1