Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / Aug. 2, 1899, edition 1 / Page 3
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fo Soldier. &aTLi Commander of 'Ali CSV 'Ad General W. W'TLve laid that had Uf'Slitary f education th' greatest flfciire :j; fAfter reading ke cn Li f !th celebrated Vavalrfr leader, which itten M UT' Joau f' i,,vh is to ue puo- ( beli so esteemed py T ' .J'LlSa1 tr 111 do A. rrecl was keenly1 ap- ttpntf on to the mai- nnccld witli hiamiii- war not content to D frnm even his most - - t c nijerai': i'ei n'J i '.-is kent a .' He and rn 1 J? a i ,5': need fin L. 1 0 ai th flit subordinates, the Harness, and the 3 . 1 11' the aainiala as wen aa i d tfjd his omcers Untaflefor keeping ? e-unplied with am- ufagej and rations. eeeJieH ;! escape his care- Wife n on the marpn, lo h:is blace by the observe regiment af ter they passed before luld.lthen mount ; lis e' through the column ro front. "If it were L;:f aad xe sal? a cartridge-box ..',4d-t" expet no mercy from d. if in crossing a lix Moliier permitted hie am- hitiOD to ei we,-" ""6"" himself fortunate 10 escape iiiandi His. quick cjye detec ted J lame or tender- tfbe wellffed or properly A veteran of Forrest's -.land iDf-orml the writer tbat occasion tpe general ordered h'tojlease the ianks, remarking: hy dci yoli let your horse's pack tcre? Take your sa.au le pn : let me etee wat s-tne niaiier. tiposing k iavs la ?j the the lanimal's back it found Ito be chafed. Forrest riaandet him! and .dismounted jTshim a practical lesson in Uianer k rolling the blanket ::at the p ; the a f away. reesfie would be taken braded surface; As he the general remarked ,uffius.t teveriagain let me see ridtDff a - horse with a sore is no need of it." jA er -tjie general recOg-; same i'trooper, ana aisoi if e; iced tha I he Had not fixed ih :ket as tie hall been instructed,' aarratii'ng trooper easily :e:me . n f nev; :fort an jappre :-e.8tron! eea ihi :ier. the circumstance,' taid f"I did not getbff ral that time. The gene r:Ult.tht,mo ctenifit 6 had Mi l im 1 dfl!H'4 alt h1 8 were the ni I -v - 2r,hen ptrjon f4- P H for 1.; ell, but it taught md er forgot. utioHs he look for the safer v of his men were lateen ana iorme led one! sou hen tver hat sted reliab rt s of attachment rers and tneir co rt hful and 1 .r- pt fisht; bat; n re sui roue OJJt nto 1 ' 'i some WV0, leeinj t :.com ma rid m. they bivouackjed I proximity to the rested until he saw the pickets were and that expei-ij e men were de ant duties. Ills implicit reliarjce care of themselves. the escort said ; confidence in him the Old Guard had pi one occasion! pposed to be in pbsition, with the us, we were orderr amp for the nightL new recruits with he-older members preparing to lie go to sleep, said : 'You 1 to lie down and go! to !he enenvr nil nrnnnH nn The answer was .eL; General Forrest 0 'In it ; - :? or five Amer Mr la be diet companies, Euro can. are said th hp Of old ; dfn th ? riroposed teaming ,V:ih GFeai Wall of China, vr ee Y)rld sun: The Wall -S th ha in U .L J t ictfe that are most 1 1 f . bt uilding stone from orth fortunas to may 1 secure the conces ar It down. There! are llv 4.000 mill inn as()nry in the; gteat n "as'a total length miles, innliwlirw and the double and all that are con- i eorie p . 1 pe-l an 6thak ei- nr, oric n ile td aces. 1 fort . ft American com- nnv of idlei)lack y who, although ion and work in phosphate mines. recfcimus existence cmain livelihood ko i I c mcir, casi peitsthemltocon denrl8 lat have pauper eprfed them." I 1 The case Ingersoll'f EloQUonco. , One of the moat remarkable products of Ingersoll'f pen was bis essay on Life, a piece of prote poetry, in which he follows human life from the cradle to 'the grave. It is as follows: v: "Born of lpTe and hope, of ecsta cy and pain,' of agony and fear, of' tears and joys dowered with the wealth of two united hearts- held in happy arms, with lips upon life's drifted font, blue-veined and fair, where perfect peace finds perfect form rocked by willing feet and wooed to shadowy shores of sleep by siren mother singing soft and low fooking with wonders wide and startled eyes at common things of light and day taught by want and wish and contact with the things that touch the dimpled flesh of babes lured by light and flame and charmed by color's' wondrous robeg learning the use of hands and feet, and by the love of mimi cry beguiled to utter speech re leasing prisoned thoughts from crabbeb and curious marks on soiled and tattered leaves puz zling the brain with crooked num bers and their changing, tangled worth- and so throughyears of altering day and night, until the captive grows familiar with the chains and walls and limitations of a life.; :.; . .; ' 1 . "Ad4 time runs on in sun "and shade, until the one of all the world is wooed and won, and all the lore of love is taught and learned again. Again a home is built with the fair chamber wherein faint dreams, like cool and shadowy vales, divide the billowed hours of love! Again the miracle of .birth the pain and joy, the kisi of welcome and the cradle-song drowning the drowsy prattle of a babe. "And then the sense of obliga tion and of wrong pity for those who toil and weep tears for the imprisoned and despised love for the generous dead, and in the heart the capture of a high resolve. "And then ambition, with its lust of pelf and place and power, longing to put upon its breast dis tinction's worthless badge. Then keener thoughts of men, and eyes that Bee behind the smiling mask of craft flattered no more by the obsequious cringe of gain and creed knowing the uselessness of hoarded gold of fionor' bought from those who charge the usury of self-respect of power that only bends a coward's knees and forces from the lips of fear, the lies of praise. Knowing, at last the un studied gesture of esteem, the rev erent eyes made rich with honest thought, and holding high above all other things high as hope's great throbbing star above the darkness of the dead the love of wife and child and friend. "Then locks of gray and grow ing love of other days and half-remembered things then holding withered hands of those" who first held his, while ovor dim and loving eyes death softly-pressed down the lids of rest. 1 "And so, looking in marriage vows his children's bands and crossing others on the breasts' of peace, with daughters' babes upon his knees, the white hair mingling with the gold, he journeys on from day to day to that horizon where the dusk is waiting for the night. At last, sitting by the holy hearth of home as evening's embers change from red to gray,- he falje asleep within the-arms of her he wor shipped and adoredr feeling upon his palid lips love's last and holiest kiss. Outlet for Overproduction. International trade in the final balance is barter of goods J for goods, and it cannot by any possi bility be made a continuous sale of goods for gold and would be of no advantage in the end if it could be. Our commercial expansion into China will necessarily be met by China's commercial expansion into the" United ; States. If the Chinese market be used to relieve manufacturing overproduction in the United States it must be at the expense of. American agriculture, which also complains of overpro duction, and if it be used to relieve agricultural overproduction in the United States, as in the case of Secretary Wilson's butter in tin cans, it will be at the expense of the American manufacturers. A more fallacious idea has never ob tained currency than that a gen eral overproduction, such as the western commercial world now complains of, can be relieved by setting new markets at work and bringing them into the general competition and crush. The prob lem is a far deeper one than that. Springfield Republican. For Over Fifty Tears. Mrs. Vinslm' Soothing 8 yrutvhaa ben used for ove fifty jears by millions of mother for their children while teething, with perfect suc cess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, aUays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. 4 It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. 1 Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sureand ask for "Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup," .and late no other kind. ThoIToblest Conception of God. A correspondent asks us to tell him what is our highest conception of God. Every period of history has had a different conception of Deity, simply because men, from neces sity, create God in their own image, and in every period they attribute to him the very noblest character of which they can con ceive. - The early Greeks made their deitie precisely like themselves that is, endowed them with the same passions, and the same at tributes, but in power greatly su perior to themselves. The Hebrews conceived Jehovah as their national tutelary God, who (all the time in their national ca pacity) rewarded them when they obeyed him and punished them when they neglected to do bis will. During the Miudle Ages Chris tendom actually put God the Father entirely into the back ground, and made Christ, the lov ing, eelf-8acrificing God-man, com pletely overshadow him. At this time, the need of the nineteenth century, it is possible to have' the highest conception of God that men ever have had. It is due to this fact that hitherto men looked upon history as a record of man's errors, but now, and for the last fifty years we have discovered that it is quite other wise that history is nothing less than the record or man's regular and orderly evolution. Hence it seems to us that the noblest conception of God at pres ent is that he has acted through out history as man's guiding spirit. Whatever else God is and may be, he has been and is the Providence of human affairs the spirit In humanity that has been leading mankind by the hand toward its destiny, until now we are able our selves consciously to pursue our destiny. "We men are truly the bodies of the living God. ' , At the same time we have learn ed that humanity, past, .present and to come, forms a living, social organism. Who, then, but God can be the soul, the animatiug spirit of this social body? , And man's destiny? If we are an organism, a broth erhood here on earth, we neces sarily shall pass through other worlds equally as an organism, a brotherhood. New York Journal. Southern to Absorb the N. & W. A special to the Washington Post from Chattanooga, Tenn., says that the Norfolk'& Western Rail way will be absorbed by the South ern during the next few weeks. President Samuel Spencer, of the Southern, has been in London ne gotiating with the heavy foreign stockholders of the road. Several days ago it was an nounced that 4,000 shares of Nor folk stock had changed hands, but the name of the purchaser was not made public. This stock was scooped up by the Southern, and a further sale is. about completed. Up to the past few months the Norfolk and the Southern have been bitter enemies, but they now have a close traffic agreement and are working in harmony. The Southern will be greatly strength ened by acquiring this line, for the reason that it will form with the Southern the shortest possible route to the East. The Southern now operates over its tracks from Bristol to Roanoke on its Eastern service. The main lines of the Norfolk k Western extend from Columbus,, Ohio, to Hagerstown, Md.via Roanoke, and-from Nor folk to Bristol. Going Back to A B O. There is a class of Republicans which believes that an act of con gress can ."permanently" establish the gold standard,' and they are calling lustily for the new congress to pass such an act as soon as ever it meet8. It seems like going back to the a b c of our government to be compelled to say that an act of congress has nothing permanent about it. Those who sigh for per manence in this matter will look for it in vain in any power that congress can exercise. One con gress eannot pass any act whatever that another congress cannot undo. There is not an act of congress that is permanent. There is' a de gree of permanency in the consti tution, but even that instrument can be changed by the will and de sire of the people. Atlanta Con stitution. During the civil war, as well as in our late war with Spain, diar rhoea was one of the most trouble some diseases the army had to con tend with. In many instances it became chronic and the old soldiers still suffer from it. Air. David Taylor, of Wind Ridge, Greene county, Pa., is one of these. He uses Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and -Diarrhoea Remedy and says he never found anything that would give bimlsuch quick relief. Ic is for ealby C. E. Holton, Druggist. G losin " I !'":'. Sale, Desiring to close out mv business at on re T nffr t?m TIRE STOCK at prices that will astound you. I have a big line of Drv CooHs. TitWc norlc QkXoc tj . . furnishings Etc., that' were, removed from the Benbow House fire, and it is my purpose to close them1 out within the next two weeks. In order to do this I have! mar Iced A.t and the goods down : I - ! Below - -. I : Cost It is a great sacrifice on my part, tiut it will be an immense saying to my customers. - : j I Don't let this opportunity to reap a rich harvest escape you. yne price to everyoody. Lroods marked in plain figures. "I 3E3E. McADOO BUILDING, CORNER EAST .MARKET AND DAVIE STS., OPPOSITE W. S. MOORE. I Esq. Shade Brown, of Hall's Mills, has an invention peculiarly his own. Opposite his house is a considerable cliff over which runs a little branch. He has "har nessed" this branch and with ma chinery of his own invention he operates the fly broom at the table and also at the room where he rests. The churning is. also done by the same power. He can sit in bis house and start or stop the machin- see cle. at bis will. It is a curiosity to it work. Wilkesboro Chroni- Modest Women i ! .. Modesty in women is no less; a charm than beauty and wit. Is it any wonder that wo men afflicted with physical disorders pecu liar to their sex shrink from per sonal examina tions by - male physicians? The weaknesses and irregularities of women may be recognized by certain unfailing symptoms. Backache, headache, bearing down pains, irritability and extreme nerv ousness indicate derangement of the delicate female organism Bradfield's Fe male Regulator is the standard remedy for characteristic diseases of women. Sold by druggists at $1.00 per bottle. THE BRAOFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. G Ptotnfmphed trom life HINDIPO RESTORES VITALITY Made a Well Man the - irsr. of Me. t- vu I FRENCH REMEDY produces the abovVresult in 30 days. Cures Nervous Debility t Impotency. Varicocele ; failing Memory. Stops all drains and losses caused by errors of youth. It 'wards off In sanity and ConsumpUon. Young Men regain Man hood and "Old Men recover Youthful Vigor. It gives vigor and size to shrunken organs, and fits a man for business or marriage. Easily carried in the vest pocket. Price Cft PTC 6 Boxes $2.50 Dy mail, in piain pacic- ju j it age, witn K. JtAJI O HARRA. P THE WELL KNOWN AND POPULAR ! I . - ' OC MILL P GfiY Can be seen at our store IET AL3L And these Buggies are among THE BEST. Call and see them and get prices. Mo (Ho Ml wcbDII & (DdD The Great Anti-Expansion Book REPUBLIC or EMPIRE? written guarantee. DR. arit Howard Gardner, Gor. Opp. Postoffice Executor's Sale. "PURSUANT to a decree of the Superior jl uourc ot uuniora county lu the case 01 t. E. Balsley, executor of J B. Balsley, deceased, vs. cnas. G.'dalsiey, Wm.6. Balsley. Jacob A. Balsley, et al, the undersigned as executor, will on ' j Monday, August 28th, 1899, Fell on the premises to the last and hlguest bidder, by public auction, the following de scribed lot In the city of Greeosboro, N. lu Morehead township, to-wit: Bounded o" the east by Ashe street, on the north by Walker Avenue, ou th south by the North Car Una Rtilrotd, and on the we.t by the let of D. w. C. Benbow, containing about even acres. " Situated convenient to the railroad, with advantage of side-track, this property offers excellent sites for the location of manufactur ing plants of all kinds There is also on the property two very good dwellings, outbuildings and garden. - TERMd OF SALE One-fourth cash, one fourth in six. aad balance in 18 months, with interest ou deferred payments. Title retained till purchase money Is fully paid I T. E. BaLS XY, Executor. . T. B. Balsler. deceased. For further Information) apply to T. E. Bals ley, Reidsville. N. C or W. Greensboro, N. C. j G. Balsley. Desirable Farm for Sale. 175 acres of highly improved land well adapt ed to the growth of Wheat, Oats, Corn. Tobacco, and especially Clover and Grasses 30 to 40 acres now in Clover and Grass. The farm is well wa tered by springs and small streams running through it. Good well of water, 7-room dwell ing, large grain and feed barn, and all necessary outbuildings. Fine early Peach Orchard; alM an Apple Orchard of selected variety of apples: Pears, Plums, also tine selection of Grapes, aU just conung into bearing. The farm Is located conveniently to School Churches. Mills. Mar kets and Railroad, and in one of the healthiest localities in the state, family of 11 having re sided on the farm ten years and not having re quired the services of physician during the time. An adjoining 50-acre tract can t-e obtained. Terms to suit purchaser. Apply at Patriot office . - . 1 tf THE PHILIPPINE BT QUESTION HON WM. J, BRYAN 'p TOGETHEB TTlTn c . rr.. Gorman. Bacon, 'A .r-i?aJ Pars. RajTl Ooxrras. Am. Federation of Labor. Hon. Andrew CarnegUi Vest. Allen. White. G Manon, Daniel, Chlltoo, Sutler, McLaarln. , Tillman, Money, Tamer. Teller, Ed-' a . ti u n t v tt. Ex-Secretary Carlisle, Rev. Dr. Van Dyke, Hon. Chaa. Francia Adama, ProL Darid Starr Jordan. Gen' I Weaver, Hon. Carl bchnrx, Sam'l Gompera, Freat. Am. Fed. of Labor, and other a. toe SEDATION or CEfxrRY IMPERIALISM AND ABSOLUTISM DENOUNCED. The greatest men of to-day give sound logical reasons why the Philippines should not be anneied. and to do so would not only be moot harmful to the interests of oar conn try, bat would be opposed to the Constitution of the United States, the Declaration of Independence, and all the most sacred doctrines of oar Republic as handed down to ns by joar Fathers. THE GOSPEL OF A HIGHER CIVILIZATION AND BROADER LIBERTY. THE OXLT BOOK OX THE SUBJECT. ! , AGENTS WANTED. It Is profusely Illustrated, girl.? beautiful half-tone portraits of Mr. Bryan and the other con tributors; also scenes of thrilling interest, showing the eiact conditions and customs in the Philippines. Nothing like it before attempted in book-publishing'. A very bonanza for amenta. It cannot be bought at bookstores i it cannot be f arnuhed by any .other house. We are the sole Official Publishers. i The first Edition, 100,000 copies. A large octavo book, beautiful new type. TFE PAY FltEIGIIT on each order amounting to 60 books at one time, wheacash accompanies order. . j I I j THE OUTFIT IS FJtKE. We make no 'charge for the elegant, complete Proepectoe Outfit, with blanks, etc., bat as each Outfit coats aa a I lot of money, in order to protect oarselTee against many who would impose apon as by sending for Outfit with no intention of working, bet merely oat of idle cariosity, we require the applicant, m gsmraatee f ge4 faith on his part, to send us 25c to cover postage and wrapping, tale anaewat te a rcfeaded te agent area receipt er first order for 10 seeka. j Best Cloth Binding .................... ....... ...-.-.- Best Half Russia Binding, with marbled edges .... Beet Full Russia Binding, with gold edges ; s.vo Write fer ear Unparalleled Terms te Agents. Address THE INDEPENDENCE COMPANY. Publlohoro, FRANKLIN BUILDING, CHICACO. ADULTERATIONS Royal Patent Floor. We sell it on its merits. Try it and you will use no other. J.II.6WORTZEL, Feed and Hay, 531 South Elm Street. AGENTS WANTED FORTHE LIFE AND Achievement of Admiral Dewey," the world's f reatei-t naval hero. Br JIurat IIaIteal. the ife-long friend and admirer of the nations ilol. Biggest and best book; over 5 pages, ?xl0 inches: nearlv 100 pages halftone illustration. Only fl.SO. Enormous demand. Big commis sions. Outfit free. Chance ol a lifetime,! Write quick. The Dominion Company, 3rd Floor C'ax -ton B:dg Chicago. 2?16t nn Pigs I have the finest herd of REGISTERED HOGS! In. the South. Pigs for sale at reasonable prices. John A. Young;. 1 Pr.Miles'Jntjfw Pill ar guaranteed tof Zleadache la minutes. "One cent a dW --.I 1 i ; T; - t r
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 2, 1899, edition 1
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