Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / Feb. 15, 1899, edition 1 / Page 2
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. i ' ( . : ' ' ' '- i 1, ' i Si 'I' 1 ! f i s si j t f w n t . I s S 1 I ! I! J it Ii .J f THE DAILY TRIALS. TALMAQE TELLS HOW HOUSEHOLD PERPLEXITIES BRING BLESSINGS. Tie Manifold Duties of the Wife Mid Bother Are Wot Fwllr Appreciated. Reward That Come From Patient and Unselfish Service. (Copyright, 1KB. by American Pres Aaso clation. , WAsnnraTON. Feb. 12. This dis course of Dr. Talmage seems to open all the doors of home life and rouses appre ciation of work not ordinarily reoog nized : text, Lnke x. 40 : 'Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? Bid her therefore . that she help me " Yonder is a beautiful village home stead. The man of the house is dead and his widow has charge of the prem ises! It is Widow Martha of Bethany. Yes.! I will show you also the pet of the household. It is Mary, the younger sis ter, with a book under her arm, and in her -face no sign of care or anxiety about anything. Company has come. Christ appearing at the outside of the door makes some excitement in side the door. The sisters set back " the j disarranged furniture, arrange their hair, and in a f flash prepare to open the door. They do not keep Christ waiting outside until they have newly appareled themselves or elabo rately arranged their tresses, and then with affected surprise come out and, pretend ing not to have heard the two or three previous knockings, say, "Why, ii that you?" No, they were ladies, and always presentable, although perhaps they had not on their best None of us always have on our best. Otherwise very soon our best would not be worth having on. They throw open the door and j greet Christ They say: -'Good morning, Master! Come in and be seated I" Christ brought a company of friends with him, and the influx of so many city visitors, you do not won der, threw the country home into some perturbation. I suppose the walk from the city had been a keen appetizer. The kitchen department that day was a very " important department, and I think as soon as Martha had greeted her guests she went to that room. Mary had no anxiety about the dinner. She had full confidence that her sister Martha could get up the best dinner in Bethany, and she practically said: 'Now, let us have a division of labor. Martha, you cook and I'll sit down and learn." . The same difference you now some times see between sisters. There is Martha, industrious, painstaking, a good manager, ever inventive of jsome new ; pastry, discovering something in household affairs. Here is Mary, fond of conversation, literary, so full of questions of ethics she has no time to discuss questions of household welfare It is noon. Mary is in the parlor. Mar tha is in the kitchen, jit would have been better for them to have divided the toil, and then they could have di vided the opportunity of listening to Christ But Mary monopolizes Christ, i while Martha swelters before' thefire. It was very important that they have a i good dinner that day, for Christ was iungry, and he did not often have lux urious entertainment. Alas, me, if all the responsibility of that entertainment had rested with Mary I What a repast they would have had I But something went wrong in the kitchen. Either the "fire would not burn or the bread would not bake or something was turned r". black that ought to have been only tn rned brown, or Martha scalded her self, and, forgetting all the proprieties of the occasion, with besweated brow she rushed out of the, kitchen into the parlor, perhaps i with tongs in one hand and pitcher in" the other, 'and she cried out : Lord, dost thou not care that xny sister has left me to serve alone? Bid her therefore that she help me. " Christ 6coldod not a word. . If it were scolding, I would rather have him scold me than anybody else bless me. There was nothing acerb in the Saviour's re ply. He knew that Martha had been working herself -almost to death to get him something to eat, and he appre ciated her kindness, and he practically said: 4 'My dear woman, do not worry. Xet the dinner go. Sit down here on this couch beside your younger sister, Mary. Let us talk about something else. Martha, Martha, thou art careful ' and troubled about many things, but one thing is needful" As Martha throws . open the door I look in today, and I see a great many household anxieties, perplexities, fa tigues and trials, and about them I am goingto speak if the Lord of Mary and Martha and Lazarus will help me by his grace. Household Perplexities and Trials. As I look ito that door, in the first place, I see the trial of nonappreciation. That was what made Martha so vexed at Mary. Mary, the younger sister, had no :proper estimate of the elder sister's fatigue. Just as now men haying an noyances of store and factory and shop, or at the Stock Exchange, come home at night and hear of some household an noyance, and they say: "Oh, that's nothing! You ought to be in a factory a day and have 10 or 15 'or 20 or 100 subordinates.. Then you would know something about annoyance and trou ble. " j Oh. man, let me tell you that a "wife and a mother has to"' conduct at the same time a university, a clothing establishment a restaurant, a laundry, a library, and has tQ be health officer, police and president of the whole realm 1 She has to do a thousand thingsand jto do them well, in order to make things go smoothly, and that is what puts theawfnl tax on a woman's nerves and a woman's brain. I know there are exceptions to the rule. Sometimes you will find a woman who can sit in the armchair of the library all day without any anxiety, or -tarry on the belated pillow and all the cares of the house hold are .thrown upon servants who - have large wages and great experience ; but that is the exception. I speak of the great masses of housekeepers, to whom Ufa is a struggle, and who at Z9 years of age look as though they were 40. The fallen at . Chalons and Auster lits and Gettysburg and jWaterloo are a small number in comparison with those who have , gone down under the Armageddon of the kitchen. Go out to the country and look over the epitaphs on the tombstones. .They are all beauti ful and poetic but if the fombstones could tell the truth thousands of them would say, was killed 1 'Here lies a woman . who by too much mendimr and sewing and baking and j scouring and scrubbing, and the weapon with which the was killed was a broom or a sewing machine or a ladle. '::r;;-:'. ; ! The i housewife rises in the morning half rested. At an irrevocable hour she must have the morning repast ready. What if the fire will not burn, what if the clock stop, what if the marketing has not been sent in? No matter that; it must be ready at the irrevocable hour. Then the children must be got ready for schooL But what if the gar ments be torn ? What if they do not known their lessons ? ! What if the hat or sash is lost? They must be ready. Then you have the duty of the day, or perhaps several days, to plan out But what if the butcher sends meat un masticable? What if the grocer fur nishes your articles of food adulterated? What if the piece of silver be lost, or a favorite chalice be broken, or the roof leak or the plumbing fail, or any one of a jthousand things occur? No mat ter. Everything must be ready.-. The spring is coming, and there must be revolution in the family wardrobe, or the autumn is at hand, and you must shut out the northern blast But how if the moth has preceded you to the chest ? How if the garments of "the last year do not fit the children now? What if all the fashions have changed? z Relief For Aliments. The house must be an extemporized apothecary's shop or dispensary; there must be relief for all styles of ailments; something to loosen the croup, some thing to cool the burn, something to poultice the inflammation,1 something to silence the jumping tooth, something to soothe the earache.' Oh, man of busi ness, if you had as many cares as that you would be a fit candidate for an in sane asylum V If Martha! make under such circumstances an impatient rush on the library or the drawing room, be patient, be lenient Oh, my sister, though my words may not arouse in many souls any appreciation of your toil, let me assure you from the kindliness with which Jesus Christ met j Martha that he appreciates alt your trials, from gar ret to cellar and the God of Deborah, and Miriam, and Abigail' is the God of the housekeepers 1 Christ? never mar ried, that he might be the especial friend and confident of a whole world of troubled womanhood. 1 1 blundered. Christ was married. The Bible says the church is "the Bride, the Lamb's wife," and that makes me know that a woman has a right to go to Christ with all her annoyances and perplexities and fa tigues, for by his oath of conjugal fidel ity he hath sworn to sympathize, thought in Geoge Herbert put the three or four verses, quaint and pecul iar, but strong, and in one verse saying: The servant by this clause makes drudgery -'divine; ;: -.j - - Who sweeps a room as for thy laws makes this and the action fine. j , A young woman of brilliant education and prosperous surroundings was called down stairs to help in the absence of the servant and there was a ring at the bell, and she went to! the door and an admirer entered. He said:- "I thought I heard music in the house. Was it on the piano or the harp?" She said: "Neither ; it was a frying pan ac companiment to a j gridiron ! In other words, I was called down stairs to help. I suppose some time I shall have to learn, and I have begun now." When will the world learn that very kind of work that is right is honorable? As Martha opens the door I look in and I also see the trial of severe econ omy. Nine hundred and ninety-nine households out of a thousand are sub jected to it either under the greater or less stress of circumstances. It is espe cially so when a man smokes expensive cigars and dines at costly restaurants. He will be very apt to enjoin; severe economy at home. That j is what kills thousands of women the attempt to make $5 do the work of $7. It is amaz ing how some men dole out money to the household. If you have not got the money, say so. If you have, be cheer ful in the expenditure. Ypur wife will be reasonable. "How long does the honeymoon last?" said a young woman about to enter the married state to her mother. The mother answered, "The honeymoon lasts until you ask your husband for money." "How much! do you want?" "A dollar." "A dollar! Can't you get along with 50 cents? You are! always wanting a dollar." This 80 years' war against high prices, this everlasting attempt to bring the outgo within the income, has exhausted multitudes of housekeepers. Let me say to such, it is a part of the divine dis cipline. If it were best for you, all you would have to do would be just to open the front windows " and the ravens would fly in with food, and after you had baked 50 times from the barrel in the pantry, like the barrel of Zarephath, the barrel would be f ulL and the chil dren's shoes would last as long as the shoes of the Israelites in the wilderness 40 years.1'.;'.-..'' '. r ;:" . Will Slake the Contrast Brighter. Oh. my friends, all these trials and fatigues of home life are to prepare you fcr heaven, for they will make that the brighter in the contrast! 1 A dying sol dier was asked by a friend, "Have you any message to send to your father?" "Yes," said he; "tell him I have gone home." "Well," said the friend, "have you any message to send to your wife?"! 44 Yes; tell her I have gone home." "You have other friends. Would you like to send a message to them ? 'Yes ; give j them the same message. They will understand it Tell them I have gone home." And that heavenly home will compensate, will fully atone, for all the hsrd&ips and the trials and the an noyances and the vexations of the earth ly home. In that land they never hun ger, and consequently there will be no nuisance of catering for appetite. . In that land of the white robes they have no mending to do, and the air of that hilly country makes them all welL No rent to pay there. Every man owns his own house, and a mansion at that It will not be so great a change to step into the chariot of the skies if on earth you rode. It will not be so great a change if on earth you had all luxuries and satisfactions. It will not be so great a change for you to sit down on the banks of the river of life if on earth you had a country seat j But oh, the . joy for the weary feet when they step into the celestial equi page, and, oh, the joy of those to whom home was a martyrdom on earth when they go into that home where they will never have to do anything they do not want to do! What a change from the time she put down the rolling pin to the time she took up the scepter ! If Chatsworth Park and the Vanderbilt mansion were lifted into the celestial city, they would be looked at as unin habitable rookeries, and Lazarus him self would be ashamed to be seen going in or out of them, so great are the pal aces awaiting all God's dear children, and so much grander the heavenly ar chitecture than the earthly. It is often not only the toil of the housekeeping, but it is the sickness and the sorrow that go along. It is a simple fact that one-half of the women of the land are invalids. The mountain !ass who has never had an ache or a pr.in may con sider household work of no very great weariness, and at the eventide may skip out to the fields and drive the cat tle home, and until 10 o'clock at night may fill the cabin with laughing racket ; but, oh, to do the hard work of the household with a shattered constitu tionafter six weeks' whooping cough has raged in the household, making the nights as sleepless as the days then it is not so easy I And then this work of the house has often to be undertaken when the nerves are shattered with some bereavement that has put desola tion in every room of the house and sent the crib into the garret because its occupant has been hushed into a slum ber that needs no mother's lullaby. Oh, it was a great deal easier for her to brood the whole flock than to brood a part of them now that the rest have gone! You may tell her that her departed children are in the bosom of a loving God, but motherlike, she will brood both flocks, putting one wing of care over the flock in the house, putting the other wing of care over the flock in the grava Noth ing but the old fashioned religion of Jesus Christ can take a woman happily through home trials. All these modern religions amount to nothing. They do not help. - They do not comfort when there is a dead babe in the house. Away with them and give us the old fashioned religion of Jesus Christ, that has com forted so many in the days of sorrow and trouble! j Romance Will Not Suffice. Romance and novelty may for a lit tle while seem to be a substitute. The marriage day has only gone by, just gone by, and all household cares are atoned for by the joy of being together and by the fact that when it is late at night it is not necessary to discuss whether It is time to go. All the mis haps of the newly married couple in the way of household " affairs are not matters of anxiety or reprehension, but merriment The loaf of bread turned into a geological specimen, the slushy custards and jaundiced and measly bis cuits. Oh, it is a very bright sunlight that falls upon the cutlery and mantel ornaments of a new home ! Romance and novelty will do for a little while, but after awhile the romance is all gone and there is a loaf to be made, a loaf that cannot be sweetened by any earthly condiments and cannot be fla vored with any earthly flavors and can not be baked in any ordinary oven. It is the loaf of domestic happiness. All the ingredients from heaven. Fruit from the tree of life and sweetened with the new wine of the kingdom and baked in the oven of home triai God only can make that loaf. You can cut it but it takes God to make it Solomon wrote out of his own miser able experience he had a wretched home ; no man can .be happy with two wives, much less with 700, and out of his wretched experience he wrote "Bet ter is a dinner of herbs where love is than a stalled ox and hatred there with." Oh, the responsibilities of house keepers! Kings by their indigestion have lost empires and generals through indigestion have loet battles. One of the great statisticians says that out of 1,000 unmarried men 30 were crimi nals, and out of 1,000 married men only 18 were criminals, showing the power of home. And, oh, the responsibility resting upon housekeepers! By the food they provide, by the couch they spread, by the books they introduce, by the in fluence they bring around the home, they are helping to decide the physical, the intellectual, the moral, the eternal welfare of the human race. Oh, the re sponsibility! That woman sits in the house of God today perhaps entirely unappreciated. She is the banker of her home, the pres ident, the cashier, the teller, tfcs dis count clerk, and ever and anon there is j panic. God knows the anxieties and the cares, and he knows that this is not a useless sermon, but that there are multitudes of hearts waiting tor the distillation of the divine mercy and solace in their hour of trials and their home duties and their own fatigues. The world hears nothing about them. They never speak about them. You could not with, the agonies of an inquisition bring the truth out of them. They keep it still They say nothing. They endure and will until God and the judgment right their wrongs. Oh, but says some sister, "Are you not trying to show that all a woman's life at home is one of self sacrifice ?" Yes, my sister, and that is the only kind of life worth lir U You receive an urgsit message calling you away from home for several dajys. You haven't been away for a Uug time, consequently you are not prepared to travel. However, you start with a rush to get your things together, when you stum- Die up against an astouodlnj; reality: You have neither Trunk or Valise belongings. WHAT xnp aeiayea. xou go out among Daa nx as you. men youjrusu to you get oaianced you discover that it - fo)n np "vr JVJ 9 fin mm JVI Successors Salesmen : J. W. Crawford, W. Hj Bees, Haxry 8. Donnell, Will. B. Bankin, John T. Bees. ing. That has been the life of Florence Nightingale j that was the life of Ed ward Pay son; that was the life of the Lord Jesus Christ ; that is the life of every man or woman that is happy a life of self sacrifice. Those people living for themselves are they happy? Find me one. I will give yon all the nations of the earth to find me one. Not happy no, not happy. ; Self Sacrifice Brings Ilapplnesa. It is the self sacrificing people that are happy, for God pays so largely, so gloriously, so magnificently, in (the deep and eternal satisfactions of the souL Self sacrifice! We all admire it in others. How little we exercise of it ! How much would wa endure? How much would we risk for others? !a very rough schoolmaster had a poor lad that had offended the laws of the school, and he ordered him to come jup. "Now," he said, "you take off your coat instantly and receive this Whip." The boy declined, and more vehement ly the teacher said; "I tell you, now, take off your coat Take it off instant ly." The boy again declined. It jwas not because he was afraid of the lash; he was used to that in his cruel home. But it was for shame. He had no under garments, and when at last he removed his coat there went up a sob of emotion all through the school as they saw why he did not wish to remove his coat, and as they saw the shoulder blades almost cutting through the skin. As the pcnool master lifted his whip to strike a rose ate, healthy boy leaped up and said: "Stop, schoolmaster; whip ma He is only a poor chap; he can't stand it Whip me." "Oh," said the teacher, "it's going to be a very severe scourg ing! But if you want to take the posi tion of a substitute, you can doit." The boy said: VI don't care; whipjma I'll take it; he's only a poor chap. Don't you sea the bones almost come through the flesh ? Whip me. " jAnd when the blows came down on the boy's shoulders, this healthy, robust lad made no outcry ; he endured it all uncom plainingly. We all say "Bravo 1") fcr that lad. Bravo! That is the spirit of Christ! Splendid! How much scourg ing, how much chastisement how much anguish will you and I take for others? Oh, that we might have something of that boy's spirit! Aye, that we might have something of the spirit of Jesus Christ; for in ail our occupations and trades and businesses, and all our life- home life, foreism life we are to re member that the will soon be over. sacrifice for Jo thers "She Talked Too Much." Call at Gardner's and get a free copy. Ex-Superintendent John McCul-j lough, of New York, has virtually completed the organization of a most excellent police service! forj Havana. Of 3,400 applicants, 2,700 were examined and 1,000 admitted Trasses and Cratches at cor. opp. po4tofllce. Gardner's Andrew Carnegie has oifered to give Atlanta, Ga., a 1100,000 bub lie library if the city will furnish the site and an annual appropriai tion. Fresh Garden Seed at Gardner's: cor. opp. postoffice. Richmond. Vs.. Jone 10, ism. Goose Grease Ljmment Co-GbeessboiioN.C. Dear Sis Some time ajro roa tent me one dozen bottles of Gooe Grease Liniment; to be used in oar stable amongst our hones, an l we beg to state that we bate u?el this exrlntirelj ince receiving it, and would state frankly that we hare never had anything that gave us aa good satisfaction. Vfe have used it on iCnts, Bruises, Sore Necks, Scratches and nearly ever disease a hore can have and it has worked charms. We need more at once. Please let me know tt yea have it pat up in any Urrer bottles or any larger packages than the ones sent ns uu miwv prices. 1 uuxs iruir. i 8T.A2iDA.EI OIL COMPANY. i By J.C. West. dii Tin i n which to pack your IS THE CONSEQUENCE ? ypur neighbors, appeal to them to toe store, buy the first thing you you have something almost worthless.. Avoid all the unpleasant features and make a selection from Our Full Stocli ! Where you can find anything that you want in TRAVELING EQUIP MENT. nrso to Matthews, Chisholm, Stroud & Rankin. WASHINGTON CONQUERED. Grip Takes the City in Its lion Grasp Government Machinery Almost ; at a Standstill Enormous Per centage of Employes Stricken With LaGrippe -Capitol at the Mercy of the Plague. The Grip epidemic is raging in the Capital City, and fully one. third of the government employees are sick or suffering from the dread disease.j Violent headaches, fever and chills, sneezing and running at the eyes and nose together with the bone-racking aches and pains and a general exhaustion are the rule rather than the exception. The best way to flghVthe Grip is to strengthen the nerves and build up the resistive powers so as to throw off the deadly diiease germs, and nothing will do this so quickly and surely as Dr. Miles' Nervine, It has restored health to thousands of Grip sufferers after every other remedy had failed. 7 "When the Grip left me I was a broken down wreck, both mental and physical. My; nerves were completely unstrung, my appetite failed, could not sleep and became so despondent that I despaired of ever getting well. I began to im prove with the first bottle of Dr. Miles' Nervine and: when I had taken seven bottles I was complete' ly cured. Have been strong and ii . . . wen ever since anu weizn more than I -ever did before." Saecel F. Pilson, Staunton, Va. All druggists are authorized to sell Dr. Miles' Nervine on a guar antee that first bottle benefits or money refunded. Be sure and get Dr. Miles' Nervine. Booklet on heart and nerves sent free. Address Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Landreth & Sons' reliable Garden Seed fresh at Gardner's, corner oppo site postomce. ' The Widow's Way. "Your troubre," said the lively widow to the young heiress, "is that you don't (understand, even slightly, this animal we call man. You wanted to marry Cokeley, and, as your friend, I left the field open until you admitted that your chance was hopeless. Now he and I are engaged.?' "He's a horrid wretch." "Thanks. But a month aco vou thought him the dearest man on earth. He is, and he belongs to the 'strong oak' type. You didn't know enough to be the clinging vine. You failed to lean on him and flatter his distinguishing qual ity, j You were always trying to do something for him. I reversed the order and delighted him by having him do things for me. I uiadebim realize how much he could be to me, and delighted him with my gratitude for the advice I was con stantly getting about my affairs. To use the atrocious slang of the day, I swelled his head, and if you know how to use it the recipe will win the affections of nine men out of ten. It is the true love potion prepared by the cunning alchemy of nature. Positively, my dear, you young girls weary me. thev are ia. find, pay! whatever they k, and f v l help you out Ponibly I !' i - j I in viiJ r f 300 South Elm St., Grceiisbore 1 Thousands Have Kidnty Trri and Don't Know it. There Is a dltesie nreraillnr in h couotry most dangerous became Ht A cspwve. aiany sudden deatbi i caused by It, heart dlssais, pneunc: i heart failure or apoplsxy are oltea P result of kidney dlaeais. If v.iu trouble is allowed to aetance tbt t.c ney poison In the blood is liable to tl taok the vital organs, or the kidem themselves break down and wgytettp cell by cell. Then the richntis of & bloodthe albumen leaks out ted i sufferer has Bright' Disease.theW. form of kidney trouble.1 Kidney trout j can be detected although it betloi: deceptive. First, bv janaljsii of ttf urine;' second, by ths simple ter t sitting the urine aside is a e!ti t bottle for twenty-four hours wbsn i cloudy or brick dustjsettliog indicate it. . j h . It was for just such troubles that ! His infinite Dower and coodnesi tl Great Physician cauted Swimp-ro(tl growfor the benefit of, suiTeriLZ "mit Ulnrl loa.lni. I til fi. Kilmer, the ereat kldner tod bladle: it known to the world. Its wooderft efUcacy In promptly iirlnr the mo distressing cases Is: truly m&rvelot: You mir hiva 1 imsis bottle of D Kilmer's Swamp-Roottht greit li!tr liver and bladder remedy, by kU ffc Address Dr. Kilmer; CoUirftnj ton, N. Y. - When writing mectics:; paper. . ' . ',r' V: Druggists, In fifty-cent or dollar i - cory bight ii$D8-ir. k. to. I Southern Raihvai Ix Er rxcT DtciMBia i. im This condensed schedule le pubi:t w -formation, and le subject) to t-b&fit . notice to the public. - ( . I Trains leave Oreeneboro. N C . J 7.06 a. m. No. S7 dally. Watlcjr 1 Southwettejo Limited, for charlutte. Blrmlnsham Memphis, Montoaitry. ; New Orleans, end all points soota r. west Connects at Charlotte lor to.:--Anfrosta. Harannah, JackionTlt: lr; Through Pullman Sleeperf New Yort w Orleans; New York to Memphis; ?: Tsmpa. Dining car and VetStu;e4 t l Washington to Atlanta. I 7J&7 a. m. No. 11. dallr. forth ;t ta and all points South, (jonntct -t !; rlllei and t:t-"pi York irtSaihH J illy, for VtuvAt.i Through sleeper New 8.10 a. mw-No. 8. dallr 12.04 p. m- No 80, dally. '.UniWd f Tat Mall, fcr Washington. Kkhmoril ' wi rr A mrA 1 m fttsatf Art points Konn. uarriss mroun" u,,t . ?, In. Rnnm MnfTat Ulnr Saw Or!et- York: JacksonTille to New loft. T-... .1 . u 1 . n c. on lU,,nr!r Orleans and southern rscjcc.o- ; I 721 p. m-No. 15 dally. I United r Mall fnv f'hsvlnrrs. AlfatiT. lT Birmingham; ChMrlotte to auk";'-, ir; I Tourist 81eper (Weduesdavi) --' j San rranciaco. L. S'1 10 47 p. m. NQ. 58. dailT. Southwestern Limited, for VSth.r-'r-, ; j points North, hullman e!stprt t i t- nuuinftou ana new ion- 6.45 xm cal points. -No, 7, daily, for Cb'r:.-' 8.10 a. m. No. 8 dallr. for boroand local nolnta. Conn' t s vr u - tram for Tarboro; Norfolk cd ;"5 Goldiboro lor Newbern aud Mort..-- , Mo. IS learss Greensboro U ii ?!t' for aalelgh. lioldsboro and lot. i'K tt 10.50 p. m.-No. 13,-dallrJ lor K -'jr folk sad points east. Pullman boro to Norfolk; f 1 a. t.- . 8.1S a . m .-No. 105, for Wi a t on. and local points. Daily to Daily except Sunday to w J ,t, 11.20 p. m-No. 1C7. dally eicept Wlnston-tialeia. . i ! ' .': i.-No. 109. daily, for vicrfJJ ctionof all scbeduledf'ti 7.S3 p. m Viral section carry passengers between poit , Art.. MhiM , . i hrlott. - t L. are scheauiea to iwp. i TrtflBHR. ra tit mir flmn Piai. Art v i v.n t. P. A cbarlott. J'-. 7:qam am. Ticket AgeoKOr..- r. " t, - RAuth and Southwest. C'onnectt i ' ,s for Columbia, Augusta. bavtu.k.. Tllle. and local suUons.1 -u..ea j Koom, Buffet Sleeper Ns Vor't "rJi leans: Mew York to Jaeksonvll.c : - r s - , -
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 15, 1899, edition 1
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