Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / Sept. 6, 1899, edition 1 / Page 3
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XV7A.S EVER THUS a young white county was ar of, ihfantfcide. npoKminnrv hear- f aced (a Jail to await the .,f Forsvth Superior Ua-elU be tried; for In repprtnK lH w"ovt,," t!i:i nartinpntlv icrt 'ifr- ' IrCecbiS.lbajHfatherandupon ife , G a resDonBibil- plvVa word Has been beard in i "to hue, u Ron i :rdft e. streets or Th e mother yjV ctrr all the, pnysicai, i! ! . t . mental hurt! and he le foscbt free. If this is V; piti us and the laws ffLbiv attlmpt to adminieter. jf.ian iuiltyt bastardy lr fV.ticiN i the father to u:cJ'.rti;'natejpjirt. ftX ::aUv of this kind is needed, j I gate to the It is a 6 ad 11 .Jlo 4 nv f-f: wbrld's atanda i ile a t-count, a woma man rear com rd of n is may and path of i Virtue in society thut, ri-' I.,., his .T)OSlllUU u buvivt, hold! the respect ot his may and hand ar. l ulthoUg r- woman's feet from her ;6rn, 1 uL L-U HUD lO uioi wjr stares. h she repent nh kindlv l 0f ; , 'iLnt.tretched tL he p her ovttne th placeg-df life; IUd doors- and stony iijie may prajy for her forgiveness, 4 ghe is told to look to heaven jl mercy and comfort. While the :ea woman is scon ed, not a i3 heard jagainst the moral nlished her. ruin. ijperchatice f.yofi', should intimate at he had- forfaited his claim to HineetalitJ you would probably 4 trd that Hhei was ohly sowing : a wild oatsjand a man is always Utter for- having had his dayl This is not! as it should be. j It is i crime of society against itself t eriual pi nishment is notjneted lit to the man and woman in ssuch 1 niH WUU1U UC fill v,vw- . 1 - - - -- I i lice with the highest sense of jus ire ae taught by the Great Teacher. While the! names of a number of teil known ana aoie men naye ueea ijentioned iri connection with the Democratic nomination for govern- t, but little has been said as to the I epubttcan standard-bearer, lit is nrrttr apnprftllr conceded that next r, r.'v . r -ir war will not be favorable to Re publican candjdates, and for this rnon there! is no scramble among tie leaders of the ticket. that pary i for places :2ed. as pro Republican irvernor-are two Ami those men one I i 1 bable cahdidates for nomination for citizens off this tv eWudgi Spencer B. Aidams ex-CongressmanThomas Settle. fj'promineitj Raleigh Republican Ifpregges the Was s i i ft the Judge opinion! that Judge ams is sure to be the nominee, for. has had; enough of otLice and expresses -self as ib6in2 satisfied to let Republicans Mr. Settle is the frst avuilaple man for! the nomina J-;bjt hip recent , declaration on i-Fp;itn politics in North Caro he announced his in i.e. f-loa ot suunortini? the constitu 1 i - .-- T amemluient, removes the pos ':.v of j hls becoming a candi In t$is connection it might :"5S: 4 th!at; hi8 utterance on the .IUCiPn ft AiAnMinontail VT llio ftf-M the methods pur ? ty V4h Caroljna Republi l surpriseiT many people,thougl . l patiefaction of knowing "4'. has ti e support of the best of party in the state. - - ' ( .7 -of tfiViworst evils indulged ho somehow lat thel for- makes them whether indulged in by old or young, it aoes no one any good, but on the other hand it does a great amount of harm in its effect upon society It is in plain-disre gard of the third commandment, "Thou shalt not take the name of he Lord thy God in Ain, for the Lord will not hold him guiltless hat taketh His name in vain." What is said to be the beginning of a gigantic farmers' trust has just been organized at Topeka, Kan. It is called the Farmers' Federation of the Mississippi Valley, and it is proposed to make every farmer in that territory who raises corn and wheat a member. Debenture bonds are to be issued, and the member- ship will be one dollar. .Ware houses and. elevators are to be built in Chicago, St. Lous, Cincinnati, Omaha' and Kansas Citv. and the selling will be done by agents of the trust. Prices will be controlled by the amount of supplies placed on the market. This plan is said A. to have the sympathy and support of many prominent farmers, but it remains to be seen whether the or ganization will be a success. T. K. Bruneb, eecretary to the State Board of Agriculture, has been traveling through the tobacco section selecting specimens and se curing photographs for exhibition next year at the Paris exposition. He says the crop this year is ex ceedingly fine and that the curings so far made are very satisfactory. The president of the Board of Ag riculture, Col. John S. Cunning ham, of Person county, has 3,000,- 000 hills of tobacco under cultiva tion. He is probably the most ex tensive tobacco farmer in the world. CONSTITUTION ' ABROGATED. ! I -1 ! vThe copper mining industry ot this state, has received an impetus through the organization, at Ral eigh a few days ago, of the Cop perville Mining Company. Gen. Julian S. Carr Is Resident of the corporation, which starts out with a capital- stock of $25,000. The property is located twelve miles south of Raleigh and is said to be very rich in copper ore. The work of developing the property will pro ceed at once. "GREEN GOODS" FOB CUBANS. r aanv I hnva xc 1 Ui era . ll . ; i fe'-s me iaea t, f jtbe- habit MUo j ; iai, js swearing. It is one . r ors possible habits a ,'-., ' iji -begets an lrrevei h f ted " '"w&tif, Jit boy rreverence and and holt things in the boy will! find eventually 'ca.U8e the other habits that will the criminal among s rule4s so well rec f ?8. v aui0Q? moral And rAlicrinns ; --e-a tk i-- i r Miv" swearing is regarded l theifirstr-etepin the dQwn- lY " If the child. Swearing rr nuUgiy conaemnea, Senor Roderisue? Wants to Do Bus iness With Them. , : Washington, Sept. 4. The oper ations of the "green goods" men are no longer confined to the Unit ed States. Bucolic visitors from interior points have been educated to such an extent that it requires extraordinary skill to sell them bundles of newspaper clippings for counterfeit . notes. Consequently the enterprising "bunco man" has reached out for new fields. He has invaded Cuba, and, as might have been expected his plans speedily became known to the secret service men. Havana, San tiago and even towns in the inte rior have lately been flooded .with circulars advertising the wares of the green goods" men. With characteristic - enterprise the "green goods"- men printed their circulars in Spanish'and em ployed a Spanish name, J. Rode riguez. Senor Rdderiguez, unfor tunately for him, writes abomina ble Spanish and the. translator had difflculty in putting his phrases into English. His head quarters are alleged to be at Allen town, Pa., where the unwary Cu bans reach him by cable: Allen town,, by the way, is a favorite town with "green goods" men as a base of operations.- "Your name was sent to me by my representa tive traveler," says the circular, "who was recently in your section of the country. He tells me that you are ingenious, learned, very faithful, a man who can be trusted and in whom confidence can be placed." What descendant of a grandee or hidalgo could resist such an appeal to his confidence? A Word to Mothers. Mothers of children affected with croup or a severe cold need not hesitate to administer Chamber lain's Cough Remedy. It .contains no opiate nor narcotic in any form and may be given as confidently to the babe as to an adult. The great success that has attended its use in the treatment of colds and croup has won .for it the approval and praise it has received throughout the United States and in many for eign lands. For sale by C. E. Hol ton, Druggist. - ' A movement is on foot in South Carolina to have the dispensary constables retired. Slavery and Polygamy in theSulu Archipelago Recognized by the United States. I The agreement made by General Bates with, the Sultan of Sulu, by which the latter recognizes the sovereignty of the United States, contains a stipulation to the effect that the "domestic institutions" of the Sultan's subjects are not to be disturbed. As slavery is one of the most prominent "Institutions" of the Moros, it seems clear that the Administration, in its anxietyl to obtain dominion in the far east, is ready to violate the Thirteenth ! Amendment to the Federal Consti tution. That amendment says1 ex plicitly that slavery shall not "exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction." Our "sovereignty" is to be estab lished over the Sulu Archipelago, but we have bargained not to use it for the suppression of slavery. We are- to bring freedom only to the ma8ters"traffickers in - human flesh." to borrow the abolitionist phrase -but the "pining siave'f is still under our flag to wear his "shackles." In his speech last Fri day at Long Branch President Mc Kinley said, referring to the Stars and Stripes: "Wherever that flag is raised, it stands, not for despot ism and oppressionrbut for liberty, opportunity and humanity. And what that flag has done for us we want it to do for all peoples and all lands which by the forunes of war have come within its jurisdiction. That 'Sag does not mean one thing in the United States and another thing in Porto Rico and the Phil ippines." In the United States it meant four years of war and the destruction of a species of property recognized by the Constitution, and held by all the States when the Union was formed, but if General Bates' bargain with the Sultan of Sulu is not a dishonest trick it will mean something very different! for our fellow-citizens in the far east. That slavery is among the insti tutions General Bates has guaran teed is beyond question In his book on the Philippine Islands Mr. John Foreman says : "The Mussulmans (called by the Spaniards Moros) now extend over the whole of Mindanao Island land the Sultanate of Sulu, which com prises Sulu Island and about 1 140 others, 80 to 90 of which are unin habited. Slavery exists in a most ample sense. There are slaves by birth and others-by conquest, such as prisoners of war, insolvent deb tors, and those seized by piratical expeditions to other islands." This is confirmed by Prof. Dean C. Wor cester, now a member of the Phil ippine Commission, in his book on the Philippine Islands. Mr. Mc Kinley's Commissioner says: "We soon found that the slave business still flourished inTawi Tawi. Girls of fifteen years were valued at three cabans (about five bushels) of rice. One waa offered to us at Tataan for three dollars in cash. The proposition was a secret one,! for while Don Felipe, the Spanish com mander, could - not control the Moros on the south coast, he would have no slave cathing or selling about his corner of the island. He told us that the slave-dealers had no difficulty in selling all the able bodied men they could capture jto the Dutch planters in Borneb-j-a fact which affords one more illus tration of the benefits that civili zation sometimes brings to a be nighted land !" j Polygamy is.also one of the do mestic institutions of the Moros which we have bound ourselves jto perpetuatev According to an arti cle in the ew York World,; the Sultan of .Siilu is a much-married man. "A whole harem of Sul tanas," it is stated, "go with the Sultan, like chromos with a pound of tea," and the subsidy we engage to pay Hadji Mohammed Momolol Kiram will enable him to add to his present establishment of 12 wives. ' . . I.t may ; be contended by strict constructionists that the treaty made by General Bates to secure the neutrality of the formidable Moros is void and of no effect, as being in violation of the Thirteenth Amendment. Opposition to slavery was formerly the one principle upon which all Republicans were agreed, and till recently the construction of that amendment could not have been in doubt. But circumstances alter cases'. Experience since 1S61 has show us how not only the amendments but the original arti cles of the Constitution may be set aside by willful politicians. Sla very itself was set aside by a proc lamation, for which the Constitu tion supplied no warrant, and it may, no doubt, with equal legality be established in the Philippines by proclamation. The issue of such paper money as greenbacks was expressly ;forbidden by the Constitution, but greenbacks exist and continue to imperil our fin ances. Hawaii was annexed re gardless of the Constitutional diffi culties involved. "Destiny" and "humanity" are cited by .our ex! pansionists as a "higher law" than the Constitution. It is the mark!, we are told, of a narrow and un progressive spirit to be continually harking back to an antiquated Constitution (and amendments) formed for a different set of cirl cumstames. The United States is a living organism which must adapt itself by timely changes of policy to present circumstances. In this view,, doctrines that were good enough in 1789, or even in 1865, may not suit the conditions of 1899 ana must oe aoanaonea. At pres ent, it will facilitate our acauisition of sovereignty over the Philippines to permit within our jurisdiction both slavery and polygamy, and they must be tolerated. These in stitutions violate, it is implied, no permanent principle of right or policy and may be destroyed, ig nored or upheld according as the exigencies of the party require. Such is the imperialist idea. But the masses will hardly assent to such trifling. Baltimore Sun. A Sententious Speaker. Less than a year ago Hon. John Young Brown, who is now one of the opponents of Hon. William Goebel, the regular Democratic nominee for Governor of Kentucky, remarked to ex-Congressman Car uth, of Louisville, that Mr. Goebel "had a wonderful gift of terse ex pressions. He is an able lawyer, and he can say more in a brief ok a few lines than almost any other lawyer can put into a page or two of foolscap." A speech made by Mr. Goebel at Bowling Green a few days ago. to a great gathering , of people seems to verify Mr. Brown's opinion of him. In this speech he referred personally to Theodore Hallam, Harvey Myers, W.J C. Owens and W. C. P. Breckinridge, striking back at them for their per sonal attacks on him. He dismiss ed Hallam and Myers by declaring "that while in the legislature they were partners in drawing a monthly stipend from the lotteries. I passed the bill that took from them that stipend." Referring to Mr. Owens he said : JWhile at Frankfort, I did what I could to make it a felony to run a faro bank or roulette table and other gambling devices, and thereby I interfered with Owens' regular business." Continuing, Mr. Goebel said: ."And another purifactionist is Col. W. C. Pol lard Breckinridge. I need only to mention bis name. And these are the men who are trying to purify politics in Kentucky." Referring to the charges that he had not been loyal in bis support of Mr. Bryan in 1896. Mr. Goebel said he de livered over sixty speeches Jand made a personal contribution of $700 for campaign expenses, "which was more than Hon. John Young Brown bad done." rniJTi Txr-rrr-r AUfl f If XlJJlj When a mother thinks she is eoingr to die and rather wishes she could, what happens to the child? Where else shall the get the love, kindness and care that ripen it into useful, happy maturity ? Where is the husband to turn for the fort of home i child is to coni- the sympathy of wifely affec tion the sup port that oniy a strong-, cheer ful, he a 1 1 h y help-mate can irive ? pitied most? '& Aiotner iain er child? Whose fault is it? Nobody' s maybe cer tainly not the child's. Either the mother or father can write to Dr. Pierce and receive medical advice free. Thousands have done it. Thousands of homes have been made happy by it. Thousands of weak women suffering with the pains and debilitating drains of a diseased condition of the dis tinctly feminine organism have followed Dr. Pierce's advice and become again bloom ing, vigorouSj loving, cheerful and oved. Dr. R. V. Pierce is chief consulting phy sician at the world-famous Invalids' jHotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. V., and during his thirty years' practic here 'developed his great family medicines Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi cal Discovery. Mrs. Claus Nelson, of Pico Heights. Los An geles, Cal.. Box 31. writes: " I seed you my pic ture taken with my little boy. I do not look so sad now as I do in the picture; I was sick-then and I thought my days would not be long, but your kindness and medicine would not let me die. You have my heart-felt thanks for your kindly advice to me in my sickness; also for your book which I received two years ago, and which I could not do without. It is all the Doc tor I have had since I got it. I had female trouble, and Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, together with the -advice given in his cured me of five years sickness." The book Mrs. Nelson mentions Pierce's 1,000 pasre " Medical Adviser! most useful "doctor book" published. A copy in stiff paper-covers sent on receipt of ix one-cent stamps to pay expense of mailing only; in cloth-binding ten stamps extra. Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. KNOWN AND POPULAR ISO Id) ira CI Hilt BUttY Can be seen at our store - IET ALL STYLES, And these Buggies are among THE BEST. rtll anH coa 'hom o 4- ; uucim anu get pi iutJ5, Mo (Bo IT wdl & (Dcd tjook, s Dr. Easily, Quickly j Permanently Restored MAGNETIC ljERVIIESMh. antee to Cure Insomnia. Jh its. Dizziness, Hvstena, Nervous Debility, Lost Vitality. Seminal Losses, Failing Memory the result of Over-work. Worry, Sickness, Errors ot Youth or Over-indulgence. Price 50c. and $1 : 6 boxes $5. T For quick, positive and lasting results in Sexual Weakness, Impotency, Nervous Debility and Lost. Vitality, use BLUE LABEL SPECIAL double strength will give strength and tone to every part and effect a permanent cure. Cheapest and best. 100 Pills $2; by mail. CRE A bottle of the famous Japanese Liver Pellets will be given with a $i box or more of Mag netic Nervine, tree. Sold only by Howard Gardner, Cor. Opp. Postofflce THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. Term Begins Wednesday, September 6th. Gives an extraordinary course of instruction at an extraordinarily low cost to the student. 'f ' It not only educates but prepares its students to become intelli gent directors of agricultural and mechanical enterprises. There are complete special and short courses in the various Agri cultural, Industrial, Mechanical, Textile and Civic Arts. One hundred and twenty scholarships carrying free tuition and lodging are open to needy boys. - . ; ; Students will be allowed to stand the entrance examination at the county-seats of the counties in which they reside, thus saving the ex pense of a trip to Raleigh. Entrance examinations will be held on the 19th of August, in the court house, under the supervision of County Superintendent. For further information, catalogue, etc., apply to PRESIDENTJGEO. T. WINSTON, WEST rtA.L.EIII, N. C. Hold On! Don't Despair! VICE'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS 25c. Vial, has cured others and will cure you of Constipation and its attendant evils. This pill is a Vegetable Tonic Laxative, the purest prescription known to medical science. Never gripes child or adult. Trial vial 25c. Sold by drug gists and merchants, pr sent on receipt of price. - THE L. RICHARDSON DRUG CO., WHOLESALE AND MANUFACTURING DRUGGISTS, Fill nnn Insure your property against fire and see us before placing it, and get OUR RATES. We have strong companies, and all business en trusted to us will have prompt and careful attention. BOYD & GLENN, Roo3i No. 6 Katz Building. OPPOSITE BENBOWHOTJSE. .i i E DO uun.i DM 1 II If I I 1 l If you intend to build or enlarge your house, come to us lor an estimate on Material. We will surprise you on prices. We make a specialty of sobs t&XfT sEiirss, Now don't think for a can do business on tha minute we are selling below cost, as no one basis. Our motto : Large sales, small profits. we can show you the largest stock in the South. Guilford Lumber Company, Greensboro, N. C. W0 iare It-all IsLzl-JTzclixi! press send. Tnntper aa.d sawed Iine Sh'.ngle3. Sash, Doors and Blinds in stock. Door and Window Frames, Mantels, Stair work and all kinds of house flnlsb made to order. , ' If you are going to build anything lrom a hen house to a mansion com to see us. We can fix you up and the price will be right. Af Cur country friends will find they can reach our yards from the center of town by crossing fewer railroads than any other. Come to see us. Cape Peai kdZaxLTJLfact-CLxirn. Co. JOHtf A. EOMItf. -Secretary aai TmxirevGmastoro, V .C.
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 6, 1899, edition 1
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