ill- . ' i '--.. . ' . . , - ' - --- ..- '.- : ' i A.- : - ' ' " - - . . .- - - : ;, 7 ;THE ;MEMSBQio J ;Sf lQi,;:.:l: ) ; ! : V 1 N r r GREENSBORO, N. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1897. ' ' wT ! 1 iuaouuVDWOI. - I I f T" y . , ij ' ' . , i -1 3- i ' -- a - i ! - aV aY xY M n li -mrvi ii v r-i i ill i i r- i ii r- r v? ESSION ALCARDS. Dr.V j. RICHARDSON, NSHOKO, N. 0. ', in Mcdin and Sarerr in Dr j. S. WYCHE, t :TIMT. I Dr. J. Ur. 1. , Kim -tit-t. ircenl)oro, N. C. H. WHEELER, ' ' ' ' " - i - i. Wnrd'rt Drug Store. W; H, BROOKS, l "ICTK IN ; J I i.MlilW HOl"3K The flories of oar birth mod state. . Are shadows, rot substantial things: ucr is iiu armor agamsi rate: Death lays its icy band on kings Sceptre and crown Must tumble down, -And in the dust be equal made -With the poor crooked scjtbe and spade. tend church. All collections taken are iTen for mission work. There is no pretentions display, but pure harmonious gospel simplicity. The name or the church is not Vender bilt's, but h'All Souls Cb'urch.' Upon three 'arches that span, the main room are 'the inscriptions: to the left,.Tbj Round World and They That Dwell Therein;" in front, "Praise the Lord O My Soul and All;" to' the right, "That is within Me Praise His Holv Name." All this awakens a train of pleas ant thoughts of the young benefac tor, George Washington Vender- ij It is to be regretted that the re cent final conference between the committee representing the coal operators of the Pittsburg district and national representatives of the miners organization was without the desired result of an agreement upon terms that would end the pro tracted strike in the Western coal field. - As adjournment was had without naming a date for another meeting, there is cause to fear that the disagreement marks the close of conciliatory efforts and thatendnr bi!t, who is making so many useful ance is the test to which the powers Some men with swords may reap the neia, , And plant with laurels where they kill; ... But their strong nerves at last must yield, They tame but one another still; Early or late, i ney atooo to rate. brth LUKir -urmVr,n improvements in this beautiful of both sidesjwill now be subjected. When they, pale caDtivesI creeo to French Broad ralley, not the least The differences underlvinir the deth- . which ia that the honest mil-1 strike are indicated in the proposals The garlands wither on your brow; nonaire religion is mat or the made by both sides at the abortive men ooasc no more your mighty Knrui, wno taught nearly nineteen conference.! The representatives of uuuuicu jpro gu in vue qui coun- me miners oil e red to start the mines try of Judea, and which is no less J at a wage rate of 60 cents a ton and sacred, nor has lost none of its accept a reduction from that figure . 9 . 1 . I m , . : f O BweeiueBB or grauaeurin mis oeau tifui mountain, valley- of North Carolina, v Next week I will sive a brief de X. C. J Glimpses from the Land of the 8ky. "cription of Asheville and the , Van Sixty days ago in our ad. wc quoted a part of the President's inaugural addr ess in which he stated as his opinion that under protective tariff woolens would advance. per cent. Read this : V . deeds': Upon death's purple altar, now. ee where the victor victim bleeds ! All heads must come , To the cold tomb, Only the actions of the just Smell sweet and bloasom in the dust. Jamks Shiblky. laier snouia aroitrators say it is too high, provided a call be issued for a conference, of operators and miners of all the mines in the com petitive area "in all the competi- Dr. v. H. Wakefield, r',?t. will be In Greens .Im House on Wed i r !h. ; "j .. True and False Prosperity. and Throat. i V ! ATTC.1NEY AT LAW. , yj-i iii,:iit Building, :KI- Edit b Patbiot: weaving ureensooro 1 saw no j scenery of special interest except the unbroken views of cultivated field g, interspersed now and t then with bodies reached Stat gan to catch glimpses of the beau u. uuDHi.i, wmcn in vne ais- fluctuation in the quotation of a v-u 1WB u.uc.. iu ucbiu wyB.1few 8tock8 eenerally mean specula derbilw'e estate, if it has not been tive States.,' The wage rate named given oerpre. , D. was for the Pittsburg district, but the arbitration was to cover the whole region in which the strike kn. i ; . . u , rr! i . ... uao uccu iu uiukicsb, luc cjiuotm I hA mn w nn tnha tliA nmiroA I 0 1 r impereeu now ma , men ftf nri, W,M c,,..,. LMBa UOiU(; u . ccatr !t.t..lla. There I bo-Lf tn, gei.r.l drift of fl-.nci.l L", bn Ld'..a.,..rr.0,p0r".,,.lt general movement. The sudden rise and X. C. A. M. SCALES. 4 1 sir IW "k SCALES, lyVttoxCLOSrS Q.t Xja,-WUon gives that place notoriety. ' ci'4l .SliORO, N; C. I t ... are Duying or selling, for somei. . K1 VAata inis tPAioas h a a haan rrr t v I r . on, and Wall Street has been flat and uninteresting. The outside vT- ution given to all busl 1 i in Wharton Building? 117, Court tiquare. W. 15. IJKACIIAM, Arciiitect and Builder. f ( In in Od.l Fclliws Ituildingr- l;trri:NsJkmo, - -f - n! c.j 1 . li. T. JOHNSON,! TIIK CUEKNSHORO VE SPECIALIST, K f r. m iLDiNo: FixnmiiKilion Free. . .i - .. i . ii:s.i. iii.toli.:p. m.,2 totip. m. A I , a nearer ajiuroacn reveaie me wnne ,nn RrlrrB .nrl tliAir 1iani vnjjur ui me ciouua eeiuing uown on the mountains, which saused them to have the appearance of immense volcanoes with the steam bursting from all their sides. The insane asylum situated at Morgan It is a handsome structure, situated on the left side of the railroad about one mile from town. At Round Knob the altitude isI,840. From there to the top of the Blue Ridge the scenery is grand beyond. description.- The highest point crossed by the road is the Swan nanoa Tunnel, which is 2,85U feet above the sea level and 500 feet above Aeheville. There are seven i . .sa m tunnels on me roaa, tne longest or other featl 0f the ffeneral which is the Swannanoa, it being om 0f tne COuntry may be studied. 1,800 feet. The combined length There mav be an unusuallv irood m t i : 'j I nr e rr I I oi me lunneis ia ieet. me crop of the cereals, or an increas east enq oi tne owannanoa xunnei ntJ H.mni. for tn). imn: onttnn prices. The; representatives of the miners are confident that they can convince a fair board of arbitrators that the rate named is "not more tkati llvitiv i mtt n svAa" a n 1 ia 1 a are bidding against one another, - ,.Ui 'tk.-uA will buy or sell on a rumor, aL..-; surmise, or merely because others The miJQe!owoer9, on the other MATTHEWS CJ11SIIOLM & STROUD, uenllemen .-Jlefertng to n timbers Stiff .and Stiff: 1 i t . i: i . ..... - i i - v . i i i ; : ----J- vv e oqugni our enur stocK pt staple goods before it was ;effected by tariff lccisla- tion, and will sell you goods this fall and now! New York, JV. r., J J, .9i7. rfozcw,; fre o the original order, placed ivith the Mafactnrer are tilled C , ''r 7 that future orders with which von mau fikr i:U W, lJ. : VC" " r"1 c '-iccl Me rire o . i j. f . j : . ."w-v. ii y ,i,'ff vi"1 y" f er o;rw, ; i i ours respectfully, , j . ,Ai Q .jp f. in a position to sell you Worsteds cheaper now than ever b ed down prices but will' give you a price jthaljilwill cohvi Respect which we will not substantiate. ilatth ews, Salesmen: eh 1 i 1- as if there was no high tariff. before. We haven't i i . . you vve make nee John W. Crawford, Will. H. Bees, Will, H. Matthews, Harry B. DonnHl and The Mascot. I ully, isliolm & ' -hi : any no e are MARK- claims Stroud. N : i :-i J 300 South Elm St., Greensboro. made the following offers: Thev would start toe mines at 54 cents a tr w lavltK t ha iindararonlitiv vKakf nfiKHli bAnf o wrotr a nn tha nnarn. I ' D K 'V I thev wnuld dav ner tnn f mm th tions of the Street In every crty of ' rtf uZ Ju -u M t t ' t .. I waauv va DvamiuK'nuanvivi a c w a,aa ine iana nave oniy. inaicaiea me prevailing atmosphere , of depres sion. - t or. m Need Apply to ! ; JIliADQUARTERS la .a is cut inrougn soiia rocs, tne re mainder is walled with bricfe. It took,, nearly seven years to, com plete this tunnel at.a cost of near ly one million dollars. Royal Gorge is seen after passing through the third tunnel going east. At this point the mountains can be seen ror ninety miles in tne ais- tance, the farthest peak rtinir whatever rate the arbitrators should determine to be fair. Or they would pay from the If in such a period of dullness thA .Un rr iiihn one stocK auer anotner Degins 10 namintr R I(l(r Pat. thiv wnni rise in price, and in place of inac- nlteyet rate arbitrators might en ve"menlB.i8ecuru,e" to oeDougnt they would arbitrate first, with the and laid away as "gilt edged " then uniier8tanding that a decision be 01 other features, of the general econ- : .. . uj auv iu ivvaa wa aaa iuii va d wmn the miners imisht prefer. These terms seem reasonable enough on the face of them, as arbitrators are given a free hand, but they apply only to the j Pittsburg district. A deep device to introduce discord in the councils ;of the strikers is sus pected by the representatives of the or wool, pointing to a new-start in industry. If these conditions are found to exist, the earnings of the railroads will reflect the greater movement 01 ireigni, a aemanu wr ,, it -mild be unfair for the capital is excited, ana so tne ris- Pitt8burg Miners! to accept favor ing uue goes on 1111 n nas anecieu i . . tarmm tnr thl,milt,Vfm .nl laa every spnere oi tne economic ac- jn the iurch the miners of other tivitv of the countrv. and pros-1 tm. . . toeing perity is !at hand. Periodically, . . it mugt b the contend. Kings Mountain, which is thirty about once in ten years , this phase j :iH ALL KINDS OV BfllLDERS' SUPPLIES : Lime !- Cement I ... . .'. .Cemeijt.f . tuilding; Brick. Building Brick. Fire Brick." . . . Carsoa's Riverton."; . Rosendale. . . . . . . .Portland. . . j . . J Common.; ."; .Repressed. Superior. Of 111 y nw ii ni.-ilLf-Mry Ikii(.)' Fire Clay Plaster n.vsterers Hair. Kocfing Paper. UUzd Sewer Pipe Excellent. i 5: j . Calcined. Steel Roofing. Steel Siding. : Clay Flue Pipe. Wholesale HiKlrt-tAiC Thos. Woodrofie, iiti:i:rs"j-i8ito, r.o. lflT-..kk AKtu fr "Tht'i liinrirai Injtftor' I ' i Pomona uiLl ! NURSERIES, I'umoua,' -HT. C. j I w rtrni'l one-half miles west of Greens-v-T.i.. 0. TIjo main line of j the K. A Ik II. K. is.c8 throiifjh i the.' grounds mi i It Win lix) feet rof the oHice ! and r si, it ni-o: Salem trains make regular -' j's Twice t'aily oaeli way.' j iniosK intkrestp:d in i-'UIT OK F. LOWERS Are cor'.lially invited to inspect our '".- ! i -TQU- CAN FIND j "i rUtie Million Fruit Trees, Vines !rrns, shade Trees, Xiits.'Kosea In fai-t, everything usually; kept in i lir-t-class Nursery. j Tlirec Green Houses f a great variety of Flowers and ; 'Tlants. Pot Koscs for Spring f i' a ppee'alty. ! . i ti ii'JoNo. 1 of Fruit Trees, Vines i mi. I Catalogue No. 2, Green House "iie, furnished free to applicants. rr s.itiileice solicited, i : - .'.A' AN L1NDLEY, Prop'r, . Pomona, X. C. , Crnmps, Colds, ''IKRJICEA. DrSE.VTEflF. J t .-.11 HO H'JZ, i COMPLA ISTS. 3 - A re, 8af e. Quick Cora (or thco ?H 1 truuuaau j . - (piui tuna'.) i - J ' "f Internally mad Externmlljr. -S wu. iwv. UVVUE - Ui . . NORTH CAROLINA College, of Agriculture and Mechanic Aits, ivy n ;l't n Kcjit, "Olli, 1mi7. t n a l. iiu.-, iu-i-ntilii- atiJ tP' Imn-al : - K)h r-nocl siisimiits in nx.-i j- 4fiai'titK'itt. I '-. us itsaios, iKU'Msii boabu: 123.00 ' !-' t-u'i :itsiliiiic f ? j . ' ;- t T M t ij. IHil UIUY, LL P., LlJ'j; -r ' i'KVpinpsT, UjilcitlNN'. C. IlAV),'." V""' n20 nlnuuby Dr. Mllfrf : . ' . ,uf ? ui a Uumj." At druggist miles south of Charlotte. - This . . a a gives an unbroken view tnrougn paxt of North and South Carolina and Georgia. The-dietance from the foot of the mountain to the top in an air line is three miles, by rail 11 miles. The grade is 1G0 feet to the mile. At Mud Cut the road can be seen at five different points, the lower track being 900 feet below. Just above Kound Knob the road can be seen at sev enteen different points, and a view of the track , also 150 feet below; the distance being only If miles by rail from the hotel. In passing over this track, which makes per fect horseshoes, one gets four dif ferent views of the hotel. The fountain at Round Knob is said to be one of the highest in the world. When turned on in full force it , will-throw water to the height of 262 feet, twice the height of. the hotel. It usually plays from 150 to 175 feet. The water is brought from a tank 1,000 feet above in a 0 inch pipe. A rainbo in the spray Jof the fountain was exceedingly leautiful. rThe trav eler seeking rustic recreation can surelv find it at Round Knob. An eastern rusticus viewing the moun tains for the Gr6t time said that the Lird had so much land that he had to stack it out. Such does seem to be the case here, tor no where around Round Knob from the car windows can you see a semblance bf a road. The Catawba has its source on the east side of the mountain. It is there known as Mill Creek just a tiny thread trickling down the mountain side. Biltmore, as Vanderbilt's station. gives it celebrity. Near it on Beau mont Mountain is Kennilworth Inn, a winter resort for pleasure seek ers, owned in part by Vanderbilt. This inn is open during the winter months at the rates of $10 per day. The church is the most interesting building at Biltmore. It is an ele gant cross-shaped structure, not showy but grand.. It is Episcopal in denomination, and is said to be model of Trinity-church. in New York. A square open dome about 30 feet wide and 50 feet high runs up from the floor bf the auditorium. The upper part is slighted by win dows from the main center. Each of the four wings of the building adds about 30 feet square to the main auditorium,-and from each of these wings are doors opening into four rooms. The pews are cush ioned with green plush and have hassocks of the same. On each side of the southern wing, which is elevated about two feet higher than the other wings, are two gilt or gans in front of which stand two groups of white-robed singers, who file into their positions -from the rooms, responding to' the splendid music -of the organs. The choir dress in black with white robes and small black caps. The audience takes part in the services. Van derbilt pays the rectors and the choir, also furnishes carriages twice a week for the choir to at- sets in, and each time seems to gather force with the. growth of the industry and commerce of the people. j There are false as well as true explanations of this phenome non. When it is asserted that a higher tariff, more protective and restrictive on commerce than the last, brings prosperity, the asser tion is false. No taxation of one a comprehensive ; one and include their allies in other fields. Hence their rejection of the operators proposals. Tbe strikers will go to work in the Pittsburg district at a 69-cent rate,' but only on condition that a conference be called to settle rates throughout:, the competitive area. ; i I i . . I . The consequences are not yet clearly apparent- The operators Ti'va It mitiin anm n nimrtnra that iuuuohj aw. , " , they will have no; further negotia- ever creaiea aaaiuonai capital or tiog with tjie Btriker8 or their rep called into existence a new profit, re8entative8j but will put other men for taxation destroys and does not create. Yet the making of new capital, employed for profit, is an essential to real prosperity. An to work in their mines. : This they will, perhapp, be able to do to some extent, as there are many idle per sons who would be glad to take the 9 . 1 industry must yieiq sometning oe- 8triker(J, piaeeB. The- latter will yond its xpenses or it will not be doubtIefl8 ,eBk t0 deter "scabs" from long continued. If the state steps obtainillgempioyment. The tactics in and guarantees that profit, it CU8tomary jio 8ucb cases will be can only do so at the expense of UBed withnuch effect. The result, other andreallyprofitableventures. hnwftvRr fttr be unfavorable to may their causejif the struggle be great ly prolonged, or if the injunctions obtained from) various courts are fully enforced. 1 That the outlook is not encouraging from his point of view is shown in the manifesto issued from iTerre Haute, Ind., by Mr. Eugene V. Debs. "The state ment," he sajps, f'that eight thous and families . are literally starving to death in the Indiana coal fields is not overdrawn. It is the hag gard truth IThe miners have! been What is the Klondike what are steadily grouhd until the starvation So every new tax is so much taken from the strong for the weaker, and the weak industry is in pre cisely the position of, the pauper who receives out-door relief it' consumes the earnings bf others. On the, other hand, large crops, an active market, a heavy trans portation movement, and a. large export of, our products these mean real prosperity. Harper's Weekly. A Greater Than the Klondike. a score of Klondikes-to the 'pro ductive foil of a country like this? Here are some sample statistics of this year's crop: Wheat, 550,000,000 bushels at $l.si Corn. 2,000,000,000 bushels at 3G cents . . Oats, 800,000,000 bushels at 25 cents.. Barley, 90,000,000 bushels at 60 cents.. 1 . Rye, 30,000,000 bushels at 67 cents.:.. Cotton, 8,000,000 bales at 8 cents or $40 a bale. ..... Total for six prod acts Nearly two billions of dollars for six staple crops! What. would the total be if we could add all the Doint has been reached. This con dition prevails over the entire min ing region; The President, of the United States can act. Let him is sue a proclamation calling upon the $560,000,000 operators ,to meet and allow the miners living wages within forty eight hours, under penalty of hav- 200,000,000 ing their mines seized oy tne gov ernment and 'operated in the inter- 54,000,000 e8t of the people. That would set tle the matter in an instant, dome thing has got to be done, and done 320,000,000 quickly, j If J Indiana allows, the I f.miliaa rf ntoht thnllfland luckleSS 'WOO.OOO Uborer8 t0 he tortured by starva tion Bhe will toot escape the penalty, and thej same ;is true of all other States and the country at large." Mr. Debs makes the socialistic pro 720,000,000 other crops 1 The watermelon crop alone, or - the turnip crop, or the, , th t th mines be nationalized nay crop, or the product of eggs, l ft--k-j mftrft the benefit cucumbers, tomatoes, or fruits, or f miner; j That would icost a any one of a dozen- other : things, would put the Klondike or any other gold field to shame. y The surest way to get gold out of the earth is to cultivate the soil. New York World. big sum of j money. It would be cheaper to pension the miners at once. Baltimore Sun. To Put on Judee Goff. of the Federal court, decides that the city of Richmond, Va.. has no power or authority to needed flesh, no matter how you're lt it take prevent iub jibh icw-. Dr. Ficrce's Golden Medical Diacoverr. It I nanv runnincr ittf lines On the work wonders. Br reetorinjr the normal ac- f""J i . .. .i tion of the deranged organa and function, it streets 01 that City, wai iius avi build the fleth up u a safe and healthy standard . p.,-,i.. ftf Tulv 1886 IS Dara--proniptlv, pleasantly and naturally. Theweak, Of Congress OI JUiy. xopo, is emaciated, thin, pale and puny are made strong, I mount tO any State law Or City Or ulnmt). round and rosy. a atrength restorer and fleah maker is medica science; this puts on healthy flesh not wouung so enective as iL known to ainanoe i wuiv the fat of cod liver oil. It rouses every organ of the body to activity, purities, enriches andvita- I WlSS MtN KKOW It 18 folly . to 0UUO axes me wooa so mat tne uouy reels rerrettneu . noor foundation. KOIier-ODtamea and strengthened. If you are too thin, too weak, " STTj mvmntnmm 1. .hnrfL too nerrous.it may be tht the food aasimiianon i uy ucmuoomft, " , isatfauit. A certain amount of bile is nee rjr I Hood's Sarsaparilla cures and gives lor th rmvtiliim nl th fat farala in the l)loOI. I , . , n I . v. i . Too orten the lirer holds back this element which 1MUJ5 UBfuj. , would help digestion. Dr. Fierce' Golden Med- . ., . mcV leal Discovery stimulates, tones up and inrigor- HOOD'S PlLU Cares nausea, SICK ates the liver, unnriahx. th iilood.and the Diu- haHaiha 1nHip.atlon.biliouinMa. All cie, siomacn ana nerves get me I druggists. 25c, FREAKS OF FIGURES. Mathematical Puzzles for Old Folks as Well as the Young Ones. Who has not, at some period of bis existence, been asked, ''If goose weighs ten pounds and half its own weight, what is the weight of the goose? , And who has not been tempted to reply on the in stant, nrteen poandsr Tne cor rect answer being,' of course, t wen ty pounds, says the San Francisco Chronicle. Indeed, it is astonish ing what a very simple query will sometimes catch a wise man nap ping-. Even the following have been known to succeed : How in a by days would it take to cut up a piece of cloth fifty yards Jong.f one yard being cut off every day f" " Or, again: "A snail, climbing up a post twenty feet high ascends five feet every day, and slips down four feet every night, how long will the snail take tar reach tbe top of the post?" J : r - j Or, again: 'A wise man, having a window one yard high and one yard wide, and? requiring more light, enlarged hid window to twice ts former size, yet the window was still only one yard high and one yard wide. How; was this done?' This is a catch question in geome try, as tbe preceeding were catch questions in arithmetic the win dow being diamond shape at first and afterward made square. : As. to the two former, it is scarce ly necessary to point' out that the answer to the iirst is not fifty days, but forty-nine, and to the second, not twenty days, but sixteen since tbe snail who gains one foot eacn day for fifteen days climbs on the sixteenth day to the top of the pole and there remains. A very curious number is 142 857, which, multiplied by 1, 2, 3, 4, or G, gives the same figures in the same order, beginning at a dif ferent point, but if multiplied by 7 it gives all" nines ;. multiplied by 1 t equals 142,857; multiplied by 2, equals 285,714; multiplied by) 3, multiplied by 4, multiplied byj 5, multiplied by 6, multiplied by) 7, multiply 142,857 zzs i nis would be the precise number of figures used if the pro duct of the left-hand figure in each muiiipucana Dy eacn ugure oi tne multiplier was always a' single fig ure, but as is most frequent and yet not always two. figures, the method employed to obtain the foregoing result cannot he accu rately applied. Assuming that the! cipher is used on ah average once in ten times, 475,000,000,000 ap proximates the actual number. ! "BURIAL OF SATAN." equals 428,751; equals 571,428; equals 714,285; equals 857,142; equals 999,909; bv 8 and vou have 1,142,856; then add the first figure to the last and you have 142,857, the original num ber, the figures exactly tne same as at the start. -1 The number 37 has this strange peculiarity: Multiply by 3 or any multiple of 3 up to 27, it gives three figures all alike. Thus, three 37 will be 111; twice three times six times) 37 will be 222; three times three times (nine times) 37 gives tnree as; iour time iui times (twelve times) 37, three 4s, and so on. The' wonderfully procreative nnr nf Moiires. or., rather, their accumulative growth, has been ex emplified in that familiar story of the farmer who, undertaking-to pay his farrier one grain of wheat for the first nail, two for the sec ond, and so on, found that hej had bargained to give the farrier more wheat than was grown in all Eng-( and. . . - ! . '! tTora ia nnnthwr ATflDl Die '. laKe M-M, s i w Muuv-- a Colored People Aroused to a Hig I Pitch of Religious Excitement. A dispatch from Mnuntville, S. C, says over 5,000 j colored people in that vicinity have quit (work In answer to a call to assemble for the "burial of Satan,"L.who, they say, has just been convicted by a" jury of twelve angels and sentenced o everlasting burial in this place. To se people have been holding a revival meeting in the town, and -a. m i it . t as a result or a collection tney bought a bell to adorn their church. It was upon the' first ringing of this bell that some of them said they;! detected the! announcement that!; the burial of Satan was at hand and that the ringing must be kept up continuously. The ringing has since been kept up and the col ored people have been thrown into high pitch of ; fervor, in which they forget all things of earth and rave like lunatics, j I Every day the number of the de votees is being added to from the surrounding country, and the result is that the cottonj is standing ii -picked in the fields' while this wild demonstration is in progress. The attending colored ministers saj they have attended the court of heaven n person, where God, the judge, after Satan had been convictedby a jiiryJof twelve representative'jan-o-els. Dassed sentence on him. turn ing him over to the colored people oi Mountville to bury once ana lor ever. ; , j'" .' j. . -' .' " Ten minutes are: now allowed he i 'X'jlxu i J i . Merchant.-. Tailor BBX3KIVED XZZB tween the intervals of ringing the bell, during which the attending crowd--sings vociferously and de clares all manner of revelations. An Unfaithful Guard. For JMade-to-Order Suits, Pants and Fancy Vests. i r. c I Showing the -latest stinean -Cutaways, .Single and Double-Breastcd Sarka. l'fince Alberts, Tuxeuos and Full fivi-.,, bhtrts. Collars and Cult's. We will have shirts made to order if desired. Canes, Umbrellas and KurnUhings. H. H. OARTLAND; 1 - 106 j South Elm Street, GREENSBORO, V. O. DR. J. W. GRIFFITH, ful MANAGER NORTH STATE DENTAL AStOCIATION. Our success in business is and has been the giving to onr patients; !,!... fn. --.I n.,tn n.i... in Ih.i'p r.axh for all t I nil a i of DENTAL WORK. Everybody should attend to their jTeeth, and reader, we dare say yours need attention at once. Come to see us and nil i real you ngni. - . ! . ; j ; j Jt3"Onice in K. of P. Huilding, So. Elm St., Greensboro, N. C. the number 15, we will say (mul tiply that by itself and you get 225; now multiply 225 by itself and so on until fifteen , products have been multiplied by themselves in turn. : :.J J You don't think that a dimcuu problem I Well, you may j De clever mathematician, out u wouiu takeyou about a quarter or axen- . . i : ..:nlA IiMIa tury to worK out iui """i"", V sum. The final product called for contains 38,589. figures, the first of which are 1442. Allowing three figures to an inch, the answer would be over 1,070 leet long. form the operation would require about 500,000,000 figures. H they can bemade at the rate of one a minute, a person working ten pours a day for 300 days in each year would be twenty-eight years about it. II in muinpiyiug .. .i, 4tnra th number of fig- which they could not give ures would be more than 53,939,-1 lington News. tp tbe ' A few days ago a notoriou9'white convict escaped; from the peniten tiary farm on Roanoke riv r. , It now tums out that he connived with a State guaid for his freedom The convict was known as John J)oe, alias Forest M. Rivers, i The guard was J. E Kinney, a white roan,, and a Republican, who! became. a guard under the new. regime.. !; Doe; promised Kinney $500 to al low him to escape, which amount he was to send the guard as soqn as he reached hie home in Leaven worth Kansas, j The guard not Wnly 'allowed Doe to escape, but I am in formed that he also loaned him money. When Doe reached Hand some, a small station on the Sea board Air Line, be wrote bac Kinney, and the letter fell intd handi of the Superintendent. In that letter the statements com? promised the guard, and he then admitted the truth of it, and was at once dismissed from the service of the! State f .. J ' I ' j- When last heard jfrom he was in Richmond. It is stated that he has been naking efforts to join thej reg ular army. Doe made his way to Norfolk, and probably left there on some outgoing steamer. Bound Over. T .of' woetr thA usual ouiet of our town was broken by the burning of: a whiskev warehouse and the sub . .. " . ! n i Dmiint arrest oi a. uiawson lor beingmplicated in ithe same. Later. however the climax was reapneu when he was re-arrested and Hj Sullivan also, one of the partners in the business to which the ware house belonged. The defendants wanted time to procure more cpun- eel and were placed; under a $5,000 bond until Saturday. .Saturday the K....-ner was had iand they were placed under $10,000 bonds each. i,-k k niild not give. Bur PAN OPEN LETTER ; To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN , THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE ' EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "CASTORIA," AND " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK. ! I , DR. SAMUEL PITCHER,I of HyannU, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA" tha tamo that haa dgrne and does now srj? Sftf?- J-" on rerf ' lear ihe facsimile signature of CjZajCx ec&Ufo wrapper. This is the original "PITCHER'S CASTORIA" which fias been used in the homes of the mothers of America forotrer thirty lears., LOOK CAREFULLY at thewrapper and see that it it (he kind yoll have a f ways bought; ,,r !'" on nd has the signature of C&ZMuc&U wrap- r. No one has authority frem me to use my name .-; sepU The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Ffotcher is President . s March 8, 1897. - tiii cihtm ceNm. if miiM itdiit, rM m. reensboro Roller" Mills. . v - ! - - t ; i NORTH & WATSON, PK0PKIET0KS. OTJB B'A TTJ33; PURITY: A HIGH GRADE PATEKT. I: STAR: A.FIIE FAULT FLOOR.! CHARM OF GREE8SB0R0: THE POOR MAJTS FRIEKD. These brands have leen put on the market on their merits and havej ven universal satisfaction and are pronounced excellent by jthe leading! i T. . i i.,. an.rminiliiifr rn n t rtr W cruarantAA li n i. fortuity in each grade. Ask your merchants or NORTH & WATSON'S j bv riiTD' ! I i "1 . i " i ! Retoember we handle all kinds of the freshest and BEST FEFT j beside the best MEAL everj made in Greensboro. ! Mill atf Walker Avenue and cj V. & yv. R. R Ml DO YOU VALUE YOUR DO if you Intend to build or enlarge your house, come to ua for an titlmate '. j on Material. We will surprise you on prices. We make a ipctialtx of iJaSS, SOOE3 AUD SIUIlTvDS. Now don't think for a minute we are celling hjclow cost, as ao one can do business on tkat basis. Our motto : Large sales, small proQta. l . we can show you the largest stock in the South Guilford Lumber Company, Greensboro, N.CJ ... ! . if t- t 4- r t t i -