v i he (ureensboro Patriot; : 1 - . 1 i - i - I - 1 i " - ' ' 1 I . t i. i . i! i i : .!... . i . - : . - ' - ' ' I : A I VOL. GREENSBORO, N. C. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8. 1897. ESPIOUAL CAlRDS. t,r RICHARDSON. (l If I1K N 3 BO It O, N. O.1 1 iurr-Ti f illc country 1 : Tinrnrrn lillNTIHT, i! ;,vinj: I'-aok KuiMing, ; i i s ' th Kim street, Greensboro, N. C. Dr. W HJ iWHEELER, THE LIFE OF MAN. it a little Isle, this life of man: ; . v. m 1 113 n uimiiuwii expjinge appears 4 J- 3 1 tYVV H: r'rs Prug store Dr. W. H.i BROOKS, Op'ning the map of : God's extensive pim. Wc t n.l T . . . r.ieriiui h unknown pjnan Circling around and limiting hi VMM, The busy race examine and explore Each creek and cavern of the dang'rous snore, 1 , With care collect what in their eyes excels, t -- Some shining pebbles, and some weeds and shells; i I Thus laden, dream that thev are rich and great, ' - - H " happiest he that groans beneath his weight. ! . waves o'ertake thorn in their se rious play, j ev'ry hour sweeps multitudes away : . ' ' - - shriek and sinll survivors start and weep, i Pursue their sport, and follow to the , deep. - 1 . William Cowier, And The And The with -more appropriate designa tions. Yet. it might well be fan I Arl 1 1. C! ft. i m . v.vu nisi oanu oiu iouna mis a favorite spot for hatching means 01 evn ana destruction. New Zea 1-1 W . iana ana Iceland were noted for geysers when the Yellowstone reservation- was undreamed of by the civilized world.' The greatest of them have ' hissed and . boiled out their expiring remnants. When in their heyday none were so power ful as the giants of hot water and steam which rear their heads here, and which have moaned and groan ed and spouted for ages for all we I-. . L . i ' i now. hoi were mey nearly so numerous, j - C0CNTLKS8 DOT SPRINGS. I WONDERFUL GEYSERS. ,;i:Nlvfri;,K.;i - - - N. C. Dr. W ?' 1 1 II. Wakefield, f.ftp,;vill be in Greens on Wed hloAiloo 1IOU30 LIMITED TO ai' and Throat. CHASJ T3. STEDHAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, .Mvii.Ti nliitil Building, cuv. .siv.ftiuli - - " i i M - - X. c. A. M. 8CAI.KH SlLVWi SCALES, r.KKKNSIiORO, N. i'c. i::.r-f!'! Attention given toi all busi- !.:l t.. li... I..tt.Iin -' - re-.-. DLIff 111 1 liarnui ituiniiii, ' t i ,4-- Xo.;117, (Jourt Square. W. 15. iJKACIIAM, Arehitecf land Builder. QIIKKX-S 11 "..!! Fellows Bui ding, N. C. - 1 . j: T. JOHNSON, ,1 i - I ri II K liKtf.A fVE SPECIALIST, -KMK Pi Bl ILDINii. Exitnriimtioii Free. i.in. to IJ.J50 i.m.((2 to 6 p. 111. : f : -if' When in Need Apply to ! t 'HEADQUARTERS i Is inujM.i. mns ok j ; BUILDERS' SUPPLIES : ! ' -. i - i "Carson's Riyerton." . .Rbsendale. . .IPprtland. . . . . Common. . .Repressed. Stperior. Lime,, j . Cemen.v . Cemfnt: . Enildinlg Brick.. Building Brick.. ire Brick, i . .1 I ' f niy t 11 niaki "iry tin-In.) Tire Clay. .11.: . .Excellent. Plaster. ... i . . .Calcined. Plastejers llair. Steel Rogfing. Roofing Paperl Steel'Siaing. Glazed Sewer Pipe. Clay Flue Pipe; ine isouing, Hissing xaonstera Yellowstone Park Other Features So much has tnis marvel amon Hons, eo much of i thrilling elo quence and vivid description,: bo glowing is the imagination which it has inspired, so' sublime the thoughts which have been conceiv ed under its influence, that it seems no less vthaa sheer folly and pre sumption for any who come now to 'The geysers which have been discovered in the park are so num erous they can scarcely be counted and it i common belief that more and greater exist in the section . 1 hi 111 11 npTnifirpn n a r rr nv.n .... - : . oil-- r . . "w fij0 rouuu an auuuae. it embraces an are practically numperless -and are area about 1K0 on,,or moa t f. .. , , . , .... . .1 "I n naDie 10 loose tneir bonds und a mi L nnH . d.tr 1,1,.. .u i.. altimore. it is sickening in, the extreme to sight and smell: You feel and in eunciive prompting to turn away at once, yet you cannot, and when at last you do go you- cannot resist me impulses totum and look back at tbe uncanny thing. Sulphur mountain and j the large boiling spring at its base are said tq con tain pure sulphur bnouglKJto sud- ply the home j market at any rate,! ' but I dr onir it). miU Ka o lnrTrV ; 7 " ' . a aj time, if ever, before it is available. It would not be possible to recapit ulate, the pools and springs and miniature lakes in which are re flected all the brilliant and deli cate colorsemerald, sapphire turquoise, pearl,-J&D., &c. -The shades are exquieltej, the changes are dazzling, j j j J ! YELLOWSTONE LAKE. Yellowstone i lake is the largest Doay or water in North America at . : . . r 1, ( j. - 1 - . .. . , NO. -30. Sixty days ago In our ad. we ich he stated as his opinion that cent. Xeadahis : quoted A part of under protective been written ' of bUr8t Ut ?nf timo in the most sea than j is the ciiyjofB g 1 nature's crea. u,.BCM,uj ?,w ."in long Here it .lies in a i pocket of tbe ,f i,iit.nW BireinuBB oi iae nignways it Has mountains, whose deth h ghways 1 . . ... ueen ascertainea iQat ooiling wa ter is Just Ibelow the" surface! I am told there is scarcely any spot where, by boring a few feet, either hottr cold water may not be reach ed iNot more than a year or two since a boiling hot'spring rose up rigntxin the middle undertake to nicture it in ita crlorv V". """" u,,lue Biage . , I " O J I marl "l'hAi auu no nuuuci. xuriciuiv A cuaii f ij . . , . puueu iu a very reepeciiiuiy sizea !. I.owrrl t.nrivri Wtaolosalo ami K'tail.l Thos. Woodfoffe, 1 1 far 1:1 vj;-ii HIK)ltO, 3V. C t ! r I! 1 Jor "Tlio Anu-rirjiu Injoctoi Hi- S.m.i(i li.uit lloait.' j -tf POMONA IIILIV NURSE BIBS, 1 . I'oiiioua, X. CJ.!; i mil one-half miles west of Oreens- N. K Theinain line, of the R. A . Two iniri, I. ii. " )li fiassbs: tlirough the 1 grounds k1 within KM) ifeet of the ibfliee and ro-iii;f:-c. ; Salem traiiis.tnaK regular ! n ire daily ich way. jj TJ IQS rC INTERESTED IN FRUIT OR FLOWERS i r-j out oopliallyjinvited to inspect h : , liYqUijCAN FIND I. .'HT Onjo Million Fruit Trees, 'Vines ; l,rrj;rctn.-, .Shade Trees. Nuts, Hoses i cr.. In.fuc'everything naually kept ;fi ajilnt-olass Nursery. ' rTluvo 6 r do 11 Houses I. full f "a great vartetv of Flowers and '"ii .ire J'laifts.; Tot Koscs for Spring ,r I":.fi' mij H stioc'altv. ? ;?:, logtieXot 1 f Fruit Trees, Vines S iu'i Catalogue No. 2, Ofeen House . -H U- iie, furnished free toappneants, "rrLj.nn.lence solicited. !l f '. VAN LlXDLKYj Prop'r, : i if Pomona. N. C. r I Cramps, A I Cfjlic, I 1 . 1 Colds 1 I CroupJ Tooth- ' ache, it nd all Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Bowel Complaints. not attempt so hopeless a task. Bui all the flowers of rhetoric strewn by tbe mobt gifted of pens fail to convey a realization which can come only "by actual vision The literature of the . park comprises two hundred books, and pamphlets. headed by the comprehensive work of Captain Chittenden, of the United States Army, which covers four hundred pages and is profusa- y . illustrated. thousands ana thousands of photographs purport to reproduce scenes and ' objects. The pencil and brush of the artist have been busier than in any other spot, on the world's surface, and yet you do not know the lellow- stone Park until you see it yourself. F . i iKA'D CANON OF TOE YELLOWSTONE. Multitudes have j lingered long over M or an s tamous painting or the Grand Canon of the Yellow stone, which hangs in the Capitol at Washington, fascinated and be wildered by its flaming, gorgeous coloring. Incredulity rises to the ips, but disbelief ; sinks out of sight when the rugged walls burst upon the view aecued in hues which" no man can fully imitate, armed in shapes grotesque and graceful, in' column and spire, cathedral and battlement, precipi tous, yawning, bottomless almost, while the great river, whiter than an angel's wings, takes its many; flying leap?,' ranging from ten feer upward, until the. Great Falls i reached, when the plunge is more than double that of Niagara. From 1 one noiui 01 iew MU Ku lu BUUlu er, each more entrancing than the other, until- the rush of emotions is almost too strong to be borne. The drop at the upper falls is 140 feet, very nearly ashigh as that of Niagara. It is not possible to in-, stitute comparisons between the falls of the Yellowstone" and Niag ara. Tbe volume of water at the latter is immensely greater, of course, but that is all. It has nothing'of the wild and picturesque grandeur which abounds in such profusion at the Yellowstone river ARTISTS CAKNOT PAINT- THE SCENERT. What the brush of Moran has failed to do for the Grand Canon of the Yellowstone! so have the ef forts of all others at reproduction on canvas and paper met with the same want of success. Before coming here I had inspected, I suppose, a 'ery considerable pro portion of the photographs and of the oil and' water colors of the park. Not one of them'gives one any more than the faintest concep tion of the reality.! It makes one tremble to think of the great and solemn obligation resting- upon the national, government to preserve the countless and untold treasures of this "wonderland," as it is aptly styled and how feeble and inade quate are the means at present em ployed in the fulfillment of this sacred trust. Grand mountain scenery ne"ver tires the eye or fails to stimulate the senses.. Flowing, winding rivers, cascades and som ersaults, over rocky obstructions are. a joy forever. It is not for these we need fear. They are se cure in their mightiness. the sides of mountains. Genera tions come and go, and still the river glides . on in its ceaseless monotone. . The band of the, van dal, the act of the reckless or the stupid are comparatively powerless. Not so with the forest, the animals and ' those mysterious creations, the olTspring of tbe terrible and ir resistible forces husbanded by na ture in the bosom of tbe earth. . luuuuiains, wnose aeptu has never been measured.; It seems like a vast reservoir, in the mountains, and one which canlnever give out. You sail over the fifteen or twenty miles of jits length in a little gem pf a steamer, which! jwas wagoned up the mountain in sections and then put together, lit is rather ex pensive traveling fori water, as the tariff for leach person is three dol. 7 pool and enveloping in its mist and lars. . There is a deal of grumbling vapor the coaches which drive at this, but those who are rpnnnnn. closely to itsx outer crust. Now ble conclude that sunder the 'eir- you Know wnne the venturesome cumstances it is not. after all. so ana me tearless may not be averse excessive.! What gives more sub to taking some risks, it is rather stance for just remonstrance is the provocative or a creepy feeling exorbitant charges for boats and when treading a thin and treacher-j fishing tackle to the! amateurs who oua crust liable to fail from under have the ambition to nnalA in tha MA TTJIE WSt CIITSnOLM Jb STJIO VD, Gentlemen : -liefer inq torfamkers 3GA6 ami dozen, we lash to say that future '047. rr.. . , . . . v Huericear ri,rh ...i j. .... ih to gau the nriatnnl nr.1?irUi:1 .7 lLL.L... .. ' .f J''""'"' Jr j a , ... . . : " ''"i,e'Tr 1 Yftswrer are tilled, and orders tath which -you way favor usifhesejeg tefl cost you $30 per. loz Your J. S. rcjec(jMly vv c uuugiu our enure siock ot staple goods before it .waseffe and will sell you goods this fall and ko : . - - ! - - H . ii i n. in a position to sell. you Worsteds cheaper now on, the President s inaugural address in - tariff woolens would advance 35 per &ew.rorl2r. rj Ajut 3, 1SV7. V dt lireru at tier1 iney hate todranced the riVeo en, lu truer t t o. ED which down prices, but will give you we will 'not SUBSTANTIATE. Matthews 1 - a nnce that Respect fii cted by tariff legisla- ' as it there was no high tariff. We are than ever before ' Wc n.wn'f nnw fAri. will convince you iy; Salesmen: 5 John W. Crawford, Will. H. Been. 'W ill. H. Matthews, !. Harry B. Donnrll and Tho Mascot. wz make no claims & Stroud !5. 300 South Elm St, 'Greensboro. thick in for him re. Safe. Qalck Cure for tnesa troubles is mwauucii 9 r i ' V t V Mechanic, Farmer,' Planter, S : ;-Sal,fr. aad.ia fact all tlksses. I i Vs?vl' Internally or externally. ...y- ?cware of Imitations, Tale t W1S Soldevery where. A - 1 ; Mi- - T r,f qtii KOi vai y I ! I l'i-vinruii at any moment. ' FE1.I. INTO A BOILING POOL. I met a gentleman yesterday vitb a snriveiea, aouoica-up leg ana an arm swathed six inches bandages. It was lucky that he had fallen sidewavs through tue rim or a ooiung pool, ana was for I instantly pulled out by the active and alert guide. I did not feel very comfortable myself upon one occasion when, in a thick cluster of geysers and boiling springs, the guide was lost sight of and every step had to be taken with doubt and .shudders. Possibly' a dozen or so geysers have become extinct, but more have taken their places, and the hot springs are undoubted lv on the increase. The brains of scientists and geologists are much agitated over the problem of - what is to be the end of these convul sions within the earth, and whether these internal fires which generate enough power to drive every ocean steamer that lloats and run every manufactory in the land will grad ually die out or . rage with acceler ated energy.! The most 'noted pro fessors of 'America and Europe have come and studied- and puz zled over it and without satisfac torv result. Some advance the theory that nature will - ultimately spend itself, and where formerly jets of boiling sprav mounted high in the air will be disclosed dead and blackened apertures. tremendous; consumption of fuel.' The tremendous consumption it must take to feed such furnacesJ lake and the Yellowstone river into which it empties. For an hour or two 8 6port of i this character the angler paya some fwe dollars land more in proportion for the time oc cupied. Tbe fish are still plentiful, or at least the salmon trout, which seem to be tbe only denizens f the waters of the locality. Some make enormous catches.) and this is where, the abuse comes in. Tour ists will land a string of twenty, thirty, forty or fifty -and then throw them away, asi they do not know what to doXwith them. I j saw great ouncn or trout, averaging a foot in Iength, thrown out on the road near to theLake Hotel. (They would have rotted, where they lay had not a boy picked them up and fed them to a group of captive peli cans. 1 me lake, Dy.tne way, lairly swarms, with pelicans, flying swift ly over the water nnddfl,rtng un der its surface ito seize an unwary u u .. . 1 ; 1 PELICANS I1UKTED WITH A STICK. .1 : s. . " i On1 some of thel islands! of the lake the pelicans are so thick that the boatmen walk around knocking them over with sticks. In the winter the pelican and the other water fowl migrate to a warmer climate. Omitting the water fowl, - ; ' 1 there appears tp beno great num ber of birds iin the park. The only large birds I have seen are eagles and hawks; mere is no scarcity of these, but not a buz zard. I have eeen ho song1 birds or bird Of plumage. They say it is too high forx'them: There is no lack ot' ice in the reservation, but it is and where can nature replenish its not so good. ItisJ in fact, more supplies continuously? Perhaps snow than icei There is so much there may be no difficulty in this, and instead of abating fresh Juel may be" heaped, on until, as som conjecture, the whole surface here abnuts may sway and rock over the cauldron arid the fire and the water take complete possession, vomiting their eruptions from thirty to two hundred. and fifty feet," and one or the other almost in constant ac tion. With ,a sound at times like that of a colossal engine, again like the labored 'breathing and struggles of some imprisoned . evil genius, while ' the scalding tears rueh like a torrent all over tbe sur rounding ground, it really requires no greaMtretch of the imagination to fancy you are on the brink of the infernal regions and the devil himself will emerge with spread wings. The demoniac rumbling, the fumes of sulphur, the leaves, the trees Jthe plants'5 in the' vicinity which have gone to their death un der the withering blast help much to conjure up the idea. Fearful and impervious to outside influ ences as . they appear, the geysers are in some respects quite vulnera ble, and the watchful care of the Ages government officials is imperatively own- strength and I necessary to protect them from in- cannot crumble I terferenceJ A small piece of soap thrown in a geysers; whose gaping mouth would easily engulf a coach and four, jhas been,. known to im pair its action mest seriously. Sticks and stones are productive of much harm. There ire plenty of persons who if not prevented would like the chance of spoiling a gey ser for the temporary pleasure of seeing it worked up to unusual fury by the simple devices above allud ed to, which strange to eay, have 6uch effect. It is said the power is not lost, however, but finds an outlet in some other direction, ; - THE MUD VOLCANO. I The mud geysers, the .paint pots and sulphur mountain have been told of equally with all the other wonders. ;I do not recall a more I in20 lnlriulsh Dr. MiW "One cvut & Uot," At druKJflsU. TUE FAPC4NATING GEYSERS. To many these boiling, bubbling, seething, hissing monsters possess a fascination wierd and uncon trollable and excite a sensation not comparable to that produced from any other cause.; The earlier ex plorers of this region, mostly un lettered and 'unlearned men, domi nated by a superstition which even horribly repulsive and yet fascinat the intelligent cannot always shake ling object than the mud volcano on off, conjectured them to be of de- the road between the Lake and the non origin and bestowed titles ac- Grand Canon hotels. The mud 19 c irdingly. Hence . we have the ejected through a cavernous mouth, devil's kitchin, the devil's punch literally belched out with, sounds bowl, the devil's frying-pan,-the almost human. Never for a mo devil's this and jthe devil's that, mentis there rest. It is soft, and I More latterly the i government ofll- j frequently splatters over you at a Icials have done some rechrlstening distance of thirty or forty leet. Baow in the winter that at the tirst little! freeze it settles on the thin coating of the streams and accum ulates steadily so that it is the fro- zea snow whicih, must be j cut, not the frozen water. j There is only one postofiice in the park, that at the Mammoth Hot Springs, j Thej hotel (syndicate BupplieBxthe deficiency by a mail system of jits own, pot soj rapid in delivery as thai ofUncIe Sam, but still it gets there. -The four hotels of the association, according to a railroad time-table, would beabout an hour apart,! but by. the stage schedule it requires a day to travel from one to i the-other. So it re quires some three or four days for a paper, or a! letter to traverse the circuitof 170 (miles of j coaching. As the tourists go no faster, they are very grateful to the hotel asso ciation for carrying their mail in the same time. woman's courage and endurance. You would j be highly surprised to see the endurance and the cour age of some of the young women from the EastJ A party ofbem a day or two since took the horse back ride toj Mount Washburn. No one of-these girls had ever be fore sat on iaj horse. The ride to the foot of the mountain is ten miles, and then there is the trail to These girls came bank as i they went, and felt fully repaid for the trip. The view from the top of Mount Wash burn is one of; the grandest in the world. At some points the eye can the' top laughing, penetrate a distance of Most tourists do the days.v Six weeks would to do it as I should like. 150 miles, park in six not suffice F. AJ B. in Baltimore Sun Not His Landlord. 1 The seashore boarder , was ac costed inithe darkjan leading to the hotel by a man with a gleaming revolver. H". j . . . . i "Hands up!" shouted the :thug. Ob, I say, landlord," replied the boarder, 'you're not going to col lect till my week's upare you?" Philadelphia North American. 1 1 y all tlrncrie TASTKLKS8 CllILLTOMU for I hills and Ms laria. It is nimbly Iron and tjuinine in a taste iew romi. cniiaien tore it I bittr nauseating tjnics. Price, 5uc HALF A BILLION DOLLARS. said, They hard have they. lg. re The Estimated Increase of Value of FarnTProducts Over That of 1 j Last YeaK - , Washington, Sept. 3 Assistant Secretary Brigham, of the agricul tural department, today expressed the opinion that the American farmers this year would receive in the aggregate from four to five hundred million dollars in excess of that received last year for their farm products. "This," he "means much to the farmers. have learned in the eeaeon of times through which they passed to economize where could and to be careful in buy in They will use this money thev ceive for their crops to pay off their dobts, cancel mortgages and in making improvements on the farm and the farm buildings. This seems like a vast sum, but statistics su ain the claim." Colonel Brigham also predicted that the increasein the price of farm, products would benefit the IfcViriig element. , VThe price of labor,", he said, did not decline with the price of farm products and for some time the farmer was forced to pay as much for the services of those who did this work as ever, while his receipts were cut in two. Inasmuch as wages did not decline, see no reason why they should be expected to rise to correspond jwith the advance .of fartut products, which are now bringing only fair prices. - Still, the laboring man will be benefited by this advance in price. The farmer will, discharge his indebtedness and make improve ments which will require labor. He will purchase more of the products of labor, nutting a vast amount of money in circulation and this will create a demand for labor in all ines and men who have been with out employment, or only partially emnloved. will work full time at fair wages." 7, of the UNCLE SAM'S STitOKf BOX. Cash Balance of $218,561,206 in theJ Treasury. ; , Tbe AuiiM-i statement public debt, iLud ak the Treasury! department, snows the debt less cash in the treasury ito be! $1,008, 335,121, which is an increase for the month of $14,888,174. This in crease is accounted for bv a cor responding decrease in the amount of cash on hand. The debt is re capitulated as follows: . Interest bearing! debt, $847,365,- 540. x . -1 i ! Debt upon which; interest has ceased since maturhv. $1 330. 280. Debt bearing no I interest, $378,- 194 507. ' i Total, $1,22G,89G;327 This amount, however, does not include $593,961,953 Jin" certificates and treasury notes outstanding. which are offset by an equal amount of cash in the treasury. The cash in the treasury is classified as fol lows, . . . . - I .'r ': T ' s Gold, $181,234,165. j Silver, $519,368,486. j Paper. $139,427,064. ' Bonds, disbursing officer's bal-l ances, etc., $18,115,651. Total, $858,145,367. Against this there are demand liabilities outstanding amounting to $639,584,160, which leaves a cash balance in the treasury of $218, 561,206. y : ..j A Blessing to the Western Farmerj iMerchant.:. Tailor T ants and Fancy Vests. I . It I . I kl ' I III I 111! ' un' 1 n 11 ii 1 1. 1 ihi I i I ' ' ' ' - EBXTElVTnr) TTTH . A t 1 I ' I 1 ! f or mde-tn4lrdr Knifa P 3 'i)j?sAiSN ITne hands 1.1-.:-;- H ' aWW 1 r , g iTimes that the rise in the price ol The Washington Railway; Commissioners Wilson An swer Qov- Russell's Charges Raleigh, Sept. 1. A hearing was he d this aiternoon in xne matter of the answers of Railway Commissioners James W. Uson and Otho-Wilson to Gov.! Russell's charges against them, which,! he says, were based upon information. These charges are thatM. W. - son, jointly with Vice President Andrews, of the Southern Railway, owTns, ! the hotel at Round Knob, which ia a railway eating house, and that Otba Wilson leases .and operates it. Boththe wnsons 10- dhy filed absolute denials. lhse were i reaa- 10 ijrovemor pausoon. John D. Shaw, counsel for the Sea board Air Line, represented J. W. Wilson, and argued that section 1 of the act creating ,the commission, under which section the Governor had acted in citing the commis sioners to snow cause ,-whj "j' should not be suspended, was un constitutional, because a later act made the commission a court. He lso said that the commissioners had property right in their offices. He said the commission had been charged with corruption, and could not be removed eave-ns judges -may be removed,, that ment. -Governor Russell took the an swers and said he .would consider hem and arguments of counsel, t is the expressed belief of many persons that ne nau mauo uP mind to remove. xToday s proceru- ngs put him in an extremely awa- ward position.. His Reason. . U- 18, by impeacu- "What makes Bumply so down 1 1 r . Avttmn a ?" ' on tne long uisvaucc icupu"-- - "lie called up a man in ioieao that owes him $2.50. They wran gled till it cost Bumply $13.' Detriot Free Press. ; Twokindaof women need Ir. Pierce's Favorite TrMM-intioii tnose wnu . ndtlioe who wnnt to w made welU It bflil.w So inviorate. regulates, and core. It's to' ?ounggirteju3t entering woanhoo.1 ot .ran Who iivc reached the critical ThanRe ot life f n'p women ex icct i n g to ijccome uioi nem, m fivw easy anil a"iuoet painless; for mothers "? . . i..li-te. or orerwoiked. growers, "will not bo that the conditions of1897 will elieves wheat will prove a special blessing to .the Western farmerbecausejzwill sup; ply him with enough -feady , money to make a home for himself in the South, where conditions are more favorable. Shrewd farmers in Kansas, Nebraska ' and Minnesota, says the Times, a few years ago took the money, ot Eaisteru mort gage companies, ! abandoned their farms and went to the South: the present siuation -will tuper-induce a much larger movement in! the same direction. "Sensible wheat- deluded by the ideaJ be permanent, but they are liable to make farm property salable. Noth ing better could have happened lo the sturdy American man who owns a We'stern farmland wants to get. rid of it for the purpose of rein.' vestment in a land of, less '-hopeless competition and restriction."' : j The South will welcome immigra tion from the West, and can offer the farmers of that section more substantial inducements than la genial climate and whole-souled hospitality. The resources of tbe South are of a varied character, r f a indnntriai develonment is ca At v a v - ! at presentorily in its infancy when contrasted withtbe. magnitude of those resources, j This is a profit able field for small enterprises in the Soikth, while the farming inter est ehouIdxexpand wMh the indus trial growth of this favored section. The Western farmer whose money crop is now limited to the great fltaple, .wheat, will find a more in- iting field in t,ne ooutn, volution, although recently begun, has already proaucea marTeiuuo results. As the Western farmer, therefore.has been fortunate enough to make a big grain crop this year, he would do well 10 looK.ai ouufu- ern lanns uetorts uc iiiicdh plus cash. Baltimore Sun e rings. Furnishings, Eto , ever brought to Greenaboro. . j 106; South 2Tlm 'Street, CABTLAND; GEKCNSEOnO. if. O. DHi J. W. GHZFFSTS, MANAGER NORTH STATE DENTAL ASSOCIATION. 1 Our success in business is and has been rhe giving to our patients 1 value .for their money, and putting prices in their reach for all kinds v M 1 - a. . -a 1 .a. . a W tT & 1. ,1 1JKJN 1 AL. iUUliK.. everybody snouia aitena 10 ineir xeeui, inu fu of reader, we dare say yours need attention at once. we will treat you right. .CCX-Office in K. of P. Building, So. Elm St., Come to tee us and Greensboro, N. p. AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. 7 WE ARE ASSERTING IN.TI1E COURTS OUR! RIGHT TO TH EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WDRI) " CASTORIA;" ANI , " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK. ,'DRi' SAMUEL1 PlTCHErj, of Hyannt's, MassachtseiUA the or cr nator ot PITCH c H o UAolUMIA' me I,-was that has borne and does now bear the facsimile signature of same on lever wrapper. Her Object. 1 In Lexington, Ky. a negro girl was arrested for carrying a razor in ber hair. - . "i ' "What' were you doing with tnat razor?" asked the recorder. i ; warn't doin' n uth in' wid 11 dey kotchedme," she said ; "I wuz jestVlookin' ifer a lady dat I didn't like!" Atlanta uubhwu tion. - This is the origins "PITCHER'S CASTORIA'. which he been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over, thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY a't the wrapper and see thai it is the kind you have always bought, j-r-'w - and has the signature Vf CajfcU wrap per. No one has authority from me cept The Centaur Company of which President y March 8. 1897. to use my name ex- : Chas. H. Fletcher is THt CtWTAUH COMMNf, TT MuSMAr IllllCt, NIW TKII SITT. G-reensboro RoUor Mills. NORTH & WATSON, PROPRIETORS. 34 STAR: A FIKE-f AIILT FLOUB. PDRITY : A HIGH GRADE PATEHT. j ! ; CHARM OF JJREEKSBORO: THE POOR HATS FRIEKD. i ThAQ hrinda have been but on the market on their merits and have iven universal satisfaction and are pronounced excellent by the leading familes of Greensboro and surrounaing couniry, ic gu.n fbrmity ineach grade. Ask your merchants for NORTH & WATSON'S FLOUR. ... . . .! i . I..' r' Remember we handle all kinds 01 the iresnesi anu dmi r.4 beside the best MEAL ever made In Greensboro, j NOETH iB-W-AT30jjr, ' , Mill at Walker; Avenue and C. F. A Y. y. R. R. I wnen Adult, prefer it to t t . icription" i. specific. I Hcmors is the BLOob, boil9, p!mF'Ie8. ecroruia sores, arc r'-i'"-. True bv Hood's Sarsap'irill4t" 0n,e. rr"5 Blood Purifier, nerve tonic and health builder. ' - j "- j' . -. 'if : TT,.i PiK f. sire easv to take, easy to operate. Cure indigestion, biliousness. D E . . t..i tn. Knitri nr onUrA Tour house, come to ut for an estimate XI (uu iutvuu v - r -t ' ... i tt. nn'MdtriAl. We w 11 aarDriae vou on prices, we uiv RDOLLMS? iiow don't think for a minute we are jelling below cot, ai no on can do business on that basis. Our tnotto : Large sales, small profit. . I' we can show you tha largjest stock in the South. Guilford Lumber Company, Greensboro, N. C, - n 1 1 - 1 f