Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / May 17, 1899, edition 1 / Page 9
Part of The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
r - s - j i--- '. A.. ;i - I-.- : " : . : i :b '. . 1 if '" ; ' T .! . I . 1 I ! 1 - ' : i . . 1' j Iliil JP.U knpij that. ' .; , " - i r - . ; : - n J arm- cfnlrl rnc ' , I in y - 74 , i mz., i a f.i IT ro? t is just as as good bread S?"ftV' 28 V if ice t. and eell . , -. .now th am ever. f,0 Cents per ,1 nowder orl the market. PoundJ i no. . - i NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS. ers o Corp? of Corrjesikondents ies, Interest iReported by Our if!.... a !f Liberty Store Items. new summer hate are bloom ill tfaf knting 18 nearly over and anting 18 now the 18 order ., t-,pMnnin IQ . . Corn p hacco pf ! the day The recent refreshing rains haye Med to the appearance oi tne r;eat cro ). J. I -'A Asaw mill man: hjeta been! prbs- jjtiji'g in! this neighborhood lor; a LW to locate. , jr, P. M. Apple, the (jovial ::iir at 'Company Mills, caught :eiebtee'ni pound turtle one day rtit reek-1 lie Kinaiy qiviaeu wun j neighbors.: ' I J The health of the neighborhood ; 6od at preeentJ except. Mr. J. Ucne?, an aged person.who has y in feeble health for twelve morei h g party and picnic was the ypuog people pod at Company A small number :02 th 8 o'r. 1 Cshin roVe J b' l;e:gbbprh Ihursday. d a limited terecaught. nu ruber of okesdale Items. as oar ot tne Mills of fish beaux road at The Southern m - Capt. W, D. ane spent a few hours in town Mpnday. . - it . P. E. Parker went to Greens ro. lueeaav morning Mr. CharTb. McMichael. rif Mad- K2, wag in town I'aet Saturday. ; Min Minnie Dwiggins went to ensborp Monday shopping, j We are "glad to see Master Eddie 5r'tn iT sKJ ' - f -.lit " vuu ogam mter a xuug -iii- 4 Willie and Mies Carrie Cum. ppi, accompanied ( by A$Jss Os- Jlf oi ureensnoro, spent Sunday Wat Mr. M. J Parrieh'8. Muses bora and Mollie Gant trto Greensbofo last Week, as II j AA Tiocaa t!;J-;-. np--.T- -1a ...iccci IW,0 jinyiur nuu "V.Hoore. Tnerwfint nhhnnincr. ; Alamance Items. - i it' te -hi tie v Most 0 , -v. ';UUV. WA A4U AVI are playing . i lave ps are leat cro '?ia? ehihlvlwell. bntrint npar , . - i , , . seen. havoc Tls'Mba Murri- who him hn 2 tvK- i i i v . - . ----- r ae;lr (,,n C0.d , at r1 ; t:()Uhis week. et V y -1 fcnett and Miss W. h'Yuxi visited ! Misses f nt May ( )ble -last week.? i:h.. v Yi Uie very uau put 44 Hjery small crowd ine rJHhiDg party at r; - ie?!. inursaay, dui a ve.ry pleasant. time. r la n.i, jeS1 happjrv newVr,; keep Hir:H!. the bodv iviorous !fi r? ittle Ear r Risers, l Lt k rl for constipation - - HOIJ i t I. Pi 'J-vies.l Howard Gardner. - ----- " ' " ! - ' : ;-' H " ' ' v r j a . : j I ' MoLeansville Items. Mr. William Gray, of this neigh- borhood, is quite sick. He is about eighty-five years old. ' Rev. Rieinger, of your city, will preach at the Academy of this place next Sunday afternoon at 4 oTclock. - Rev. E. P. Parker, of the Luth eran church, preached at the Jefr f erson Academy last Sunday to a large congregation. Mrs. David Forbis, of this place, who -has been quite ill for some time does not improve any. She is very much advanced in years. J Cards are out for the marriage ofMr. William Grady, "of . your city, and Miss Lizzie Nichols, 'of this place, on Wednesday, May 24th. r Mr. James Terrell, of this place, who has been on the county for a support, was sent to the county home about two weeks ago. He has a family living here, but was not able to support them. He is an old-Confederate soldier and we think some action ought to be made to transfer him to the soldier's home at Raleigh. He is not able to perform manual labor. Mrs. R. L..Davi8, of this place, has in her possession a pea-fowl which is over- twenty years old. She has plucked. a large amount of feathers from him and made them into fly brooms, and has eold them, realizing a snug little sum. She has a few brooms on band which she will dispose of at reasonable figures. They are nicely gotten up. Any one dersiring any of the above, will address as above. She would like to know through your columns, if there is any older pea-fowl in this countryr Prof. Chas. D. Cobb, of Jeffer son Academy, has been quite sick with tonsilitis. H is gradually improving, and hopes to attend to the duties of his school soon. He went fishing last week and captured a carp weighing four pounds, which was thought to be very large, but Messrs. Montgomery and Scroggins took th rag off thebush, they captured . one weighing - nine pounds. We think the high waters overflowed the fish ponds. We do not want the Greensboro fisher men to get excited about this, but come on and try their luck in South Buffalo. 1 Gibsonville Items. Mr. Ned Branock, of Eloa Col lege, was in our town Saturday. Prof. A. M. Garwood, made -a flying visit to Winston Saturday. Mrs. Milber, of Staunton, Va., is visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. A. Davidson. Our town is still growing, quite a number of buildings are in the course of erection. ' . Rev. and Mrs. E. P. Parker at tended: the Lutheran Synod at Salisbury last week. We have been having fine sea sons for the . past week and the farmers are very busy. A number of our people attended the commencement sermon at Whitsett Institute Sunday. Child's Death Causes Hiot. Pittsbdrg, May 15. Penn ave nue today was the scene of ' a riot which threatened for a time to re sult seriously. A Consolidated Traction car struck and horribly mangled Katie Three, a Polish child, three years of age, ' : While the dead body was being taken from under the car a crowd of seyeral hundred, ' principally Poles, gathered and became so in censed at the sight that tbey ' at tacked the motorman and condnc tor, with the intention of lynching them. The patrol wagon arrived and an officer jumped into the cab with the motorman and succeeded in getting the car and occupants out of danger. - , Michael Biggs, the only police man left with the mob, was then pounced upon and badly beaten. He succeeded, however, in holding on to one of the ringleaders until a squad of reserves came to his re lief. When the officers attempted to put the arrested man into the wagon the mob made a dash to res cue him, and a desperate battle followed, lasting half an -hour, by which time police reinforcements arrived and the rioters were dis persed, m any of: them being much the worse for the rough usage the policemen were compelled to resort to. Five of the ringleaders were arrested. R. I. m DMONT KATZ, Vice-Pres.. C. N. McADOO, Sec. A Treas. REALTY L GUARANTY CO., fil'OKATED. CAPI' TAL STOCK, 823,000.00. Estate, Loans and Investments HjOOM N0..7, KATZ BUILDING, Gomez Qives np the Contract Havana, May 15. General Max imo Gomez today informed General Brooke that he could no longer act as representative of the Cuban ar my in the distribution of the $3,- 000,000 appropriated for the pay ment of the Cuban troops. Gener al Gomez added that he had ar rived at this decision with great reluctance, and with the most friendly feeling toward General Brooke personally and officially, but he felt he could no longer rep resent the Cuban army because a cabal, composed of many rubordi. nate commanders, existed to op pose, and if possible, defeat the plans for the partitioning of the money. He explained that former members of the Cuban Military As sembly, led by May ia Rodriguez, Manuel Sanguilly, Juan Gualberto and other malcontents, who had or ganized a majority of the officers against him, apparently,and though he (General Gomez) might persist and possibly carry the payment to a successful conclusion, he was disgusted and wished to wash his hands of the whole - business. Therefore,"he thought best to leave General Brooke free as the latter could act with equal effectiveness. THE 8 ITU ATI ON SERIOUS. Washington, May 15. High of ficials in the War Department were reluctant to discuss the Cuban sit uation -this afternoon. The dis patch' of the Associated Press was read with interest, but did not cause much surprise among army officials who are well informed about the Cubans, especially those who are known as soldiers of for tune," and who have been bitterly disappointed because the island was not turned over to them imme diately after the Spanish surren der. There is an impression, also, that the intention of General Brooke to see that the $3,000,000 are distributed among the Cuban troops has caused disappointment among the many ''generals" and other high officers who were evi dently expecting to secure a large share of the money. Belief was ex pressed that the situation in Cuba is serious, and that careiui and dip lomatic management will be needed. It was stated that no orders would be issued to. General Brooke, as he had ample authority to deal with any situation wmcn mignt arise. There seems to be a belief that General Gomez has contributed to the delay in the payment of the money. Fell Dead While Speaking. Philadelphia, May 14. Aaron M. Powell,' noted anti-slavery agi tator, temperance worker and writer, dropped dead from heart disease at the opening session of the yearly meeting of the Society of Friends yesterday afternoon, f The meeting was nearly at an end when Mr. Powell rose to speak. He was apparently in good health, and had spoken for a few moments with much earnestness, when sud denly the aged speaker fell for ward. Aid was promptly given, but in a few minutes he was dead. His wife, Anna M. Powell, and his sister, Elizabeth Bond Powell, dean of Swarthmore College, were at his side when he passed away. He was about seventy years old. -STATE NEWS. William Tolbert, a Rowan eounty young man, was drowned in tne Yadkin river Saturday. Salisbury is making efforts to secure the North Carolina College, which is to be removed from Mt. Pleasant. Coli W. H. Fitzgerald, a promi nent citizen of Monroe, died Sat urday. He was an ex-Confederate soldier and a man of means. The Railway Telegraph Super intendents' Association is in ses sion at Wilmington this- week. Thomas A. Edison is attending. ' At the recent municipal election in Lincolntpn a proposition to. es tablish graded schools was defeated, while the matter of licensing bar rooms was carried. A Montgomery county teacher is reported as having asked the coun ty commissioners to make an order requiring all the people "in the county to attend his commence ment. The corporation commission has made the telegraph rates 25 cents on a ten-word day message any where in the state, just as it was fixed by the now defunct railroad commission. The engagement of-Miss Frances Carter, daughter of the late Hon. David M. Carter, of this state, and Lieutenant Schaefer, of the Ger man army, is announced. The marriage wil take place in the early autumn. The county commissioners of Wake county have discovered that the ex-sheriff of that county f is short in his accounts to the amount of nearly $5,000. The shortage is thought to be mainly due to inef Dry Goods, Motions, Hosiery, JBHi rniture, NOW OPEN AND FOR SALE AT i Oarp ets, &c, &c sample m mm, m ;. The goods have been boueht in the northern markets and fmm mnnf.t.i.... - .u i - . - r -""i-vkuicm k iur very oonom notch for money, and we desire now to turn that back into money at the smallest possible profit Quality and material considered, we do hereby guarantee, over our own signature, to sell vou anything in our line for less money than von can buy the same elsewhere. j ; " & ' ON THE FIRST FLOOR we carry Dress goods, from 10c. to $3.00 per yard: Calico and Lawns from 2c. up; Corsets, Shirt Waists, Beady.Made Press, Silks (faney and blacks), 25c. to $2 00 per yard Sheeings, 4 4, 5 4, 8-4, 9-4, 10-4 ; Ready Made Sheets, 48c. to 75c. each. Towels Gloves, Umbrellas and Parasols, and a thousand other things. . i M ' j . ! ON THE SECOND FLOOR we carry a complete line of Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Mattings, Lace Curtains, Curtain Poles, Window Sbkdee, Crockery, Lamps, Clocks, Knives, Forks, Spoons, Silver Ware Stoves, &c. On third floor we carry our duplicate stock. Come to see us and we will prove to you we are T vl pXCp&CLt hKJ KA J Oil Tf O OCkJ iUUlO LlUiyp 234 SOUTH ELM STREET. ! i inc'aiilile Co 3 Nineteen colored men left Win ston last week for Galveston, Tex., to take service in the regular army. Two others who intended to depart were arrested one being under bond for appearance at court and the other having failed to pay a fine. v. Governor-General Brooke basis- sued a decree giving the civil courts of Cuba exclusive jurisdiction as to divorces. - x La Grippe is again epidemic. Every precaution should be taken to avoid it. Its specific cure Is One Minute Cough Cure. A. J. Shepherd, Publisher Agri cultural Journal and Advertiser, Elden, Mo says : No one will be dis appointed in using one Minute Cough Cure for La Grippe." Pleasant t take, quick to act. Howard Gardner. Ladies Keep Cool There's no reason why you can't, for we have made all necessary provisions for you in the way of attire, and our attractive "under selling prices" on really dependable high grade goods will be great money-savers lor you. itead tne list of bargains for this week : 40piece8 Embroidered Dotted Swiss, blue, pink, and red dots on white ground, a real 25c value at 12c. Infants Bleached Ribbed Vests, lace edged, assorted sizes, the 10c sort at 5c. - ? Children's Ribbed Vests, full bleached, sizes 16 to 28, the 15c kind at 10c. Ladies fancy Ribbed Vests, all zes, a real 15c worth at 9c. Ladies gauzy Summer Corsets, airy and cool, all sizes worth 75c, at 49c. New corded White Madras in single or cluster cords and fancy cord stripes a new 18c effect here at 12i. Fine white French Organdies, nearly 2 yards wide, pure white wiry flat thread, firm and graceful, 49c value at 25c. Great White Pique values. Heavy English rope welt effect, real 15c worth of pure whiteness for only 10c. Children's gauze vests, long sleeves or snort sleeves, 12c, 10c, 19c, 25c, for sizes 16, 18, 20, 22. Belt Buckles, great variety at 9c, 15c, 19c, 25c, 29c up. New Kid Gloves White pearl, tan, new blue and black. Our fourth shipment of heavy blistered Black Crepons just ar rived, prices lower than before. ; Wool Chalhes with silk stripes and figures at 29c. Full 40 inch India Linens at 6c, 10c, 12, 15c, 18c. Every one a bargain. 45 inch solid colored Organdies in light bluered, lavendar, nile, canary and black. A regular 30c worth at 19th. 1 Ladies Linen Collars, all the new shapes, at 10 and 12c. I 25 dozen ladies washable Shirt Waists worth 49c, at 29c. B.11BII -S SIS, FOLEY'S HONEY TAR THROAT IS THE CREfr and LUNG REMEDY. .j. John H. Farlse, jDrucalst. Greensboro. I IS II Was there ever a jtime when so little time was equal to so much money to the farmer as it is at this present time? To make the most of this valuable time, you need to take advantage of all the time saving machinery which this progressive age offers. To be specific HORN 11 IdOTTfll PIMTERS. CJOU you want to learn all about CORN PLANTERS and COTTON PLANTERS write to Odell Hardware Company, GBEE1TSBOIIO. IfcT. C. 1 - l- i. . - The 322 SOUTH ELM STREET, UII Is now ready with a full stock of Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes, Hafs, Ac. No sharp tricks to deceive yoii will 1MEEMIT, be used but the very lowest prices shall be made on every dollar's worth that goes over the counters. We are bidding for your trade andexpect to have it if RIGHT PRICES count for anything. We want you to mate our store your headquarters when you come ------ to Greensboro. Messrs. Joe Climer will be pleased to have their friends ThB Cash, Basket and H. C. Bowman are with us and call on them.- Store SUBSOI3IBE EOZS THE PATRIOT '.' ..... j . . P SElm St. GREENSBORO, H. C. ficient deputies. 230 SOUTH ELM ST. r- . .
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 17, 1899, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75