Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / Oct. 30, 1913, edition 1 / Page 1
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TWELVE PAGES VOL. 92 GREENSBORO, N. C THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1S13 NO. 44 pgOh.MAin coLumi Advertisements - "nder this Reading at the rate ot - - a word to"- each Insertion. Pers .id firms wo do not have advertising contracts wtzh the paper will be required to pay rash in advance. v'e have a lot of ode's and ends in iu-ins, women's and children's shoes, ix.:li heavy and light, that we are 'closing out at cost not below cost, !c- at just what the shoes cost us r.o more, no less. Hera's your Mnce to shoe your family for the u inter at a small cost. Johnson, Hinkla & Co. Virginia seed wheat Leap's prolif ic and the Stone. One peck to the :.. . G. Scott & Co. Ve have counted out 25 boys' suits worth resularly from $3 to f 5 1.hat we will close 6ut at 2, $2:50 and $3. .:::xg the little fellows to see us. Johnson, Hinkle & Co. -"'out ladies' Ions black coats, siz , 44 to 50. Price3 can't be beaU S4.0 to $13.50. G. F. tlackmon, 522 . irh Elm street. MILLINERY, MILLINERY We e the incest up.-to-date line of la .it s", misses' and children s hats t;::t can be found at the prices. Ee M.re to come and see. G. F. Black .: n. 522 South El'm street. New crop red and sapling clover. ( ".overs are feoing to be higher Jn The spring. You had better buy now. r. Scott & Co. TOR SALE Grape wine, our own i;UAe. Can't sell less than two and 0. v-lialff gallons to one person. $2.50 per gallon. W. W. Giles, right at 1. 's chapel, 2 miles north of White Oil-:. 44-2L Pon t forget that Johnson, Hinkle i: Co. are prepared to care for your vants in the winter underwear line. Dr. J. E. Wyche's dental office is no?.' located on the second floor ot Lie Fisher building.. 42-tf. A big -line of heavy work gloves, jus- the th ng to keep your hands wv.-in in cold, rough, weather. John-sor..- Hinkle & Co. Virginia seed rye and barley and Co. . ' " : : :-)- TOBACCO LAND As good -as there is in Guilford county. -1 have about twelve or fifteen farms of from ten to one hundred acres each, all. fronting big road, six miles from Greensboro," one mile from Battle Ground. Terms, ' one-fourth down, balance one. two, three and four years. Write or call to see me. J4 T. Morehead, Jr., Greensboro, N. C. EDEN WHEAT One bushel on acres, sown on good ground any time in November, will yield 40 bushels per acre. $2.50 per bushel, or will, take one-eighth of crop. W. w. Giles, at Lee's chapel, or call on J. F. Fulton, Greensboro. - 44-2t Some More of Them In Need of Bank Sense .. . From the Salisbury Post Lincoln Beachy, the birdman, lost 56,000 while he was sailing around up in the air the other day. He left the money in his room at the hotel and some one who needeoit and did not care for nice distinctions took the mon ey while Beachy flew his machine. A few days before this a Rowan coun ty farmer lost his pocket book, more than $200 in money and several notes. Pockets are all right for carrying 25-cent Barlow knives in, but when it comes to money and val uable papers they ore out of place 1 Beachy and the Rowan county farmer ought to esch establish; more cordial and friendly relations with some good bank. Your money will be safe in our vaults and will earn you 4 per cent interest. GREENSBORO L0!U1 & TRUST CO. Tho Dcnk Witt .tb "Kfc: LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF FORM. Matters of Interest to Readers of The Patriot1 Far and Near. Mrs. E. C. Sykes is ssriously ill of, typhoid fever at her home in Fisher park. . : " ' ': Mrs. R. G. Vaughn and children have returned from a vis -t to rela tives, in Madison. Postmaster Will Ragan, of High Point; spent yesterday afternoon in the city on business. Mr. I. M. Thomas, of Altamahaw, was among the callers at The Pa triot office yesterday. Mr. Sam -Parrish, of Summerfield, was among the callers at The' Pa triot office during the past week. Mr. WV Tvv.Wyrick, one of Tbe. Fa riot's Frown Summit friends, was on the tobacco market Tues day. . Mr. W. A. Clapp and daughter, of rhitsett Route 1, called at The Pa T riot . office ' while in the city a few days ago. Mr. V. C. Lewis is preparing to erect a brick store building on the corner of Spring Garden and -'Men - denhall streets. Messrs. T. L. Holt and F. Fv. Smith, well known farmers of east 4ern Guilford, gave The Fatriot of fice a pleasant call Tuesday. Mr. P. H. Simpson, Jr., a prosper ous Rockingham farmer, was in the oity Tuesday with a load of tobacco I and gave The Patriot a call. Rev. Shuford Peeler, psstor of the Reformed church in this city, is in Frederick, Md., attending the annual meeting of the Po'omac Synod- The new steel bridge erected by the city across North Buffalo creek, near Greene Hill cemetery, has been completed and thrown open to the ! public. Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Frazier, of Ran dolph county, came up Friday on a J visit to their daughter, Mrs. Robert Edwards, in the Muirs chapel neigh tortcod. Mrs, S. L. Alderman is re:oyer ing very "satisfactorily from the ef fects of an operation she under went at St. Leo's hospital a few ' days ago. M. A. Fpglemah forfeited a bond of $100 by faiHng to appear in Mu nicipal court Friday to answer a charge of retailing. A capias was issued for him. Mr. P. A. Jenkins, of Stanly Creek, has been appointed assistant "ticket aient of the Southern Rail j way in this city and will takee up his new work Saturaay. After spending a few weeks with his family here, Mr. E. G. Sherrill has returned to Washington to take up h's work in the office of the en rolling clerk of the house of repre sentatives. A revival meeting is in progress ,at Grace Methodist Protestant chur.h this week, services being held at 3.30 in the afternoon and 7.45 in the evening. Rev. J. D. Williams is assisting the pastor. Rev. J. Frank Gorrell, a native of Greensboro, who has been serving the Presbyterian church at Lumber ton as stated supply for some time, has-been called to the regular pas torate of the church. Messrs. Garland Daniel, C. M, Vanstory, James E. Tomlinson, E. E. Bain and J. T. B. Shaw went to Fayetteville yesterday to attend tbe Cumberland count fair, making the trip in an automobile. V Banishing catarrh with Hyomei is a plQEisant task; no nauseating drugs to swallow just breathe it. Fariss Klutz Drug Company and the Greens boro Drug Company guarantee it. Outfit $1. Separae bottles 50 cents. Breaks up a cold over night. ad.v Johnson, Hinkle & Co., tne popular Southside clothiers, are taking lots of orders fbr tailor-made Jloth.es. There is eatisfaction in wearing a t m a a a, AsnAcially f or you. If you 1. X XX ttfc ... - . wait to hare a suit made to your jneasure.: you can get a at isfacuon from vnr xijxs w Ladies' long black coats, regular Sizes,. $4.50 to $13.50. A nice line jrf gray mixed, full length and taroe-. quarter length, cheaper than any where ee. Styles up to the jnin ute. G. F. vBlactonon, 522 . South Elm street Who said overcoat? Johnson, Hin kle & Co. have the very coat you are looking for. - r Misses and children's : lonsr coaU, all aizeV latest styles, All -colors, i ca . Wa - sruarantee to isave you money. G. F. Blackmpn 622 souin mupa. street. , ; . - Johnson, Hinkle & Go. are. the peo ple whn it comes to hats and caps for men ai boys. , . 1 i . 5 Hon. E. J. Just'ce made an ad dress on ihe recent freight rate leg' islation in this state at a banquet given by the Western Norih Caro lina Lumber and Timber "Association in Asheville Saturday n'ght. -". M. D. Stout, who has been engag ed in the wholesale produce business in High Point, filed a voluntary pe tition in bankruptcy in the Untied States court here last Thursday. His liabilities are about $5,900, with as sets amounting to about $2,700. The train from Greensboro to Mad ison was derailed at Summerfield Saturday afternoon, the combination baggage car and an empty gondola leaving the track. No one was in jured The accident caused the train for : Mt. Airy to be detoured by Winston-Salem. The retail furniture dealers of the city have organized an association for their mutual interest and pro tection. Following are the officers : J. W. Bloxton, president; W. A Wilson, vice president; George L. Stansbury' secretary; W. F. Me dearis, treasurer. The C. C, McLean Company, a cor poration formed liere to engage in the wholesale grocery business, as noted in The Patriot last week, will be located at 307 South Davie s treat. Mr. C. C. McLean is at the head of the company and his father, Mr. T. G. McLean, will be associated with him. . If yoi ve eaten too much, drank top mu h or smoked ' too much dur ing he evening, take two Mi-o-na Stomach Tablets before retiring and awake with a smile, in the morning. Fariss-Klutz Drug Company : and the Greens'jcro Drug bempany guarantee them for all stomach troubles. 50 cents. - adv Mrs. John H. Yow, who resides a few miles southwest of the city; presented The Patriot a few days ago with 10 fine, sweet potatoes that grew in one hill, the combined weight of them being 16 pounds. They canie from a patch of one-quar ter of an acre that produced a yield of about 125 bushels. It is the famous Crossett shoe that I. Isaacson handles and not the "Corssett," as a typographical error caused his ad vert's e-ment o read Is st week. Mr. Isaacson is proud of the splendid line of shoes he carries and quite naturally does, not relish the idea of the printer misspelling the word Crossett. Rev. R. M. Andrews, pastor of Grace Methodist Protestant church, preached the dedicatory sermon of the new Methodist Frotetant church a Siler City Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. The pulpit at Grace church was occupied at that hour by Rev. Dr. S. B. Turrentine, president of Greensboro College for Women. Parisian Sage turns dull, lifeless, faded hair into bright, lustrous hair, and for that purpose is used by wpmen and men who take pride - in beautiful and luxuriant hair. Guar nteed by Fariss-Klutz Drug Company and the Greensboro Drug Company for dandruff, falling and splitting hair. 50 cents. adv. ,The members of the MinVers' As sociation of Greensboro have agreed to observe next Sunday a "commun ity Sunday' in their churches. They will preach to their congregations on such phases of community con cern as the employment of women and children, child welfare, home life and the health of the commun ity. : i Rev. Dr. Egbert w. Smith, general secretary of i the foreign mission board -of the Southern Presbyterian church, with i headquarters in Nash ville. Tenn., i spent Saturday and Sunday - in tixe city with relatives and friends. ! His visit was cut short by the. receipt of a telegram .call- ing hm homo on account of . nmess in his family. ' Mr. J. H. iphine, whoso left l wa cut off lst winter by a shift ing engine on the Southern' s ; yards in this city, ha' entered suit against the railroad" company for $25,00' damages. He 1st represented by Ool. John A. Barringler. Mr. Shine had entered 'he emplby of the Southern Railway a short tibne before the ac cident occurred. .The .last of Vthe Tejal estate alof vhe late Robert L. Chi?ntt consistbig of a lot in Brown Sunmit, was sold at auction at the court house door in Greensboro Monday byS. G. Lo max, mmissloner. ; The bidding' started at $231, the upset prce, and the lot was knocked down W Mr. W. R. 'McKinney-for $290. ;,-Th the third sale of the lot, 10 - sper cent bids having been put on te prices it brought at' tn two pr vious . sales. - u ( j .; , A I Southbound looal passanger train No. 7 struck and instantly" killed a horse owned by Mr. E. D. Laridreth and? hitched to a .delivery wagon at the Summ .t avenue cross "ng- Monday shortly after noon. The driver was uninjured, but the horse's .head was severed completely and one of the front wheels and the shaf.s of the wagon were completely crushed. An order has been made, by Judge James E. Boyd directing the trus tee of the bankrupt firm of Robert Harris & Bro., ; of Reidsille, to pur chase from time to timg a sufficient amount of bright leaf tobacco- for blending purposes .to manufacture smoking tobacco. He is to report weekly to the " referee, giving an itemized account of -the operations. The Patriot received too late for insertion in last week' paper a notice of a "shadow social" to be given at the Brown Summit school, by the teacher and pupils, Saturday night. Hallowe'en festivities will be the order of the night and all who attend- may rest assured of spending a pleasant evening. A postscript to the notice says that every girl is expected to "bring a box-with supper for two." The teachers of the colored pub lic schools cf Guilford county Id a meeting in the court house .'an nex, Saturday and elected officers for the ' ensuing year as follows: Presi dent, S. T. Wauah, of Poplar Grove; vice president, F. L. Eekle, cf Gos hen; secretary, Lavinia waugh, of Bass' Chapel; ass's tan t scvelary, Dora Nichols, of Jacksonville; treas urer, W! H. Foust, of WhitseU. At the meeting plans Vere discusred for the year's work. "Work is to be started soon on the large add'tion to th!$ Dixie building, at the corner of South Elm and East Sycamore streets. Already one of the largest and handsomest of ice buildings in the state, the Dixie building is to have an add't'on front -ing !50 i'eet on East Sycamore street, exndingv the w idth c f the building, 42"., feet, and being s!x stories high. The new structure will be a contin uation of the architectural design cf the Dixie building. The appeal of John E. Fogleman, who was convicted recent'y in Gu'l ford Superior court of second de gree murder for killing W. H. Tuck er and sentenced to the penitent'ary for 30 years, was argued before the Supreme court Tuesday. Col. John A. Barringer and Judge W. P. By num appeared for Fogleman and the state was represented by Attorney General Bickett. Fogleman is at liberty under a bond of $7,500 pend ing the result of his appeal. Effective Sunday, November 16, it has been announced by the Southern Railway Company that a new train, to be known as the "Atlanta spe cial ' wil be placed in service in con nection with the Pennsylvania Rail road, and will be operated between New York and Atlanta. The new train will run on the present schedule of trains 37 and 38, leaving Atlanta at ii a. M., central time, and arriv ing at New York at 12.16, eastern time; leaving New York at 4.35 eastern time and arriving at At lanta at 5 P. M. central time. Mr. J. G. Kellum, a member of the board of control of. Florida's ed ucational institutions, was in Greens boro last week to inspect the build ings, equipment and management of the State Normal and Industrial Col lege with a view of applying the methods of the institution to he schools of Florida. The board of control, of which he is secretary, has entire control of the higher educational institutions of his state. Mr. KeUum has visited a number of other schools in states of the Atlan tic seaboard. He said that the dem ocratic spirit of the State Normal College impressed him above every thing else. Other things were grat ifying and) he found nothing to "Us pleasie, but this one thing stood out apart from the others in North Car olina's college for women. Greensboro's Lew Death Rate. ' The Washington correspondent of the Greensboro Daily New sends his paper the following interesting news item: ' Mortality statistics for Greensboro K in , 1910 ; were the lowest of any town in North Carolina with a population of 10,000 or more, ac cording to a report issued by the census (bureau -today. .There were only 305 deaths in the Gate City for that period against 605 for Charlotte, which was the highest rate for the state. Winston-Salem was next to Greensboro, with a total of 352; Asheville. 370 ; Durham,-- 368; Ral- eigh, 537, ana Wirmingwu, PRACTICAL WORK IN SCHOOLS. Interesting Subjects Discussed by Grammar Grade Teachers. A very interesting and helpful meeting of the grammar grade di vision of the Guilford County Teach ers' "Association wes held at the : Pomona graded school Saturday ! morning, beginning at 10.30 o'clock. I Miss Millis, -president of the divi sion, presided and talks were made by Prof.' E. E. Balcomt, of the No mal College; Mr. E. H. Anderson, commissioner of agriculture or Gu.l- ; ford county; Mrs. T. N. Sellars, of the Lbngview school, and others. Prof. BaJcomb proposed more prac tical work in the schools. He sug gested that the teachers attempt cooking school lunches In the cook ing classes in the schools where domestic science is being taught. He also spoke of agriculture and its teaching in the schools as the development of- a science, that if done, in the right way jit will de velop into a science. For demon stration work,- window plants, flower, pits, boxes packed with straw, etc., were suggested; for gardening, rad ishes, lettuce, turnips, onions, ets.:, were suggested to be grown on the school grounds. -- ; In Mr. Anderson's talk he brought out the fact that drudgery of coun try life could be. eliminated by the teaching of that subject in the schools. He said that the teaching of plant life, the. germination of seeds, would be something interest ing to start with. The study pf soils, organic and inorganic, should. be studied. He spoke of the county agricultural ; work and its relation to the farm, and expressed himself as hoping to do much work in aiding the teacheris'and asked the co-operation of them in his work. Mrs.. Sellars spoke of the work in the one-teacher schools. She told of how; she encourages the little ones to iunt Indian 1 relics' and mount them, teaching- thereby geology and history r! as., well a-s soils., She told of the chickens she is raising, and also of the care of the I horses that the children drive to school; of how the boys ask for butterflies cn the agricultural subjects. She works from the home basis rather than from the text theory. She teaches the girls to study, foods, prices and prepara tion. ! Miss Huldah Marshall, of the Po mona school, told, of her work there. She takes her classes, to a farm for test work, and uses books, papers, bulletins, etc.. in her class work, 9 . using the debating contest to get the pupils to do a great deal of reading. She also uses greenhouses as observation work. At one time she took her classes to the terra cotta factory to get object lessons in drainage -, and then applied the knowledge. She said that gardening was the mosf interesting part of her work. She told of how she sur veyed the plots, drained the ground by trenches, and each child chose his own vegetable he wanted to cul tivate. They .tested seeds in this garden, sending to Washington for seeds. The meeting closed with much en thusiasm for practical work in the schools. A delightful course of re freshments was served by the cook ing class of the school. Merthodist Protestants Union. to Vote on The North Carolina Conference of the Methodist Protestant church will convene in High Point Wednesday, November 19, for its annual session. The question ,of most interest. o be considered by the conference is the proposition to unite the Meth odist - Protestant and United Breth ren ; denominations. The United Brethren General Conference nas voted unanimously in favor, of union and 14 of the 25 Methodist Protes tant annual conferences have, voted favorably on the proposition. The other conferences . will vote between now and December 1, and if at that time it is shown that two-thirds of the "annual conferences favor the proposition the. General Conference, which does not meet in regular ses sesipn i until 1906, will be called in special session to "ratify this action, after which, at a joint conference of the; two bodies, the union will be consummated ; ' With thirteen . wounds in his intes tines. Earl - Barber; colored, died . at the Twin-City hospital, in Winston Salem, Saturday night, after living for quite a little while after bejng shot by an unknown j negro. Gam bling was the cause of the trouble. DISTRIBUTION OF SEED. Tc Make Guilford a Great Grain) Growing Courv'y. A notice in The Patr'ot last week stated that Mr:.Garlacd Daniel, sec retary of the Central Carolina Fair iAssociation, had a quantity of seed wheat, oats, etc., that was exhibited at the recent fair for distribution among farmers of s Guilford county who would agree to plant the seed and make an exhibit of the yield at the fair next fall. The efforts of the management of the f a'r to en courage in this way - the raising of more and better grain in Guilford are bearing fruit, and quite a num ber of the county's best farmers have applied to Mr. Daniel for an allotment of the seed. The follow ing are among those who have 'shared in the distribution: Arthur O'Connor, Greensboro Route l, red wheat; J. Ed Hodgin, Greenscoro Rou-e 1, white and black peas, white and winter oats ; J. B. Cobb, r Greensboro Route 3, white and. rgd wheat? Joseph G. Hodgin, Greens- boro Rout 1, black peas; J. R. Cog- gins, Guilford College Route 1, white peas; G! A. Grimsley, Greensboro, red and white wheat; C. P. Love, Greensboro Route '5, white wheat; George Wakefield, Greensboro Route 1, red wheat; L. B. Coltrane, Greens boro Route 1, white wheat and win ter oats; W. J. Whiteley, ' Greens toro Route 6, winter oats and red jwheat; jule H. Sharpe, Greensboro Route 6; wheat end oats; E. A. Ben nett, Liberty Route 1, white and red wheat; John E. Hodgin, Greens boro Route 1, winter oats and red Wheat; H. L. Hanner. Pleasant Gar den Route 1, white oats and red wheat; C. J. Moser, , Greensboro Route j 6, winter oats and white wheat; C. C. Parker, Greensboro Route 6, white wheat; L. C. Scott, jGreenstoro Route 6, red wheat and rust proof oats;y Mrs. N. E. Rankin, (Greensboro Roue 4, white and black peas, red wheat and rye, black pats; C. ;$harpf r - Greensboro Route 6, ack-iand rust , proof oats,rye, and jwhite I pgas; J. D. Gorrell, Greens boro Route 6, black oats and white wheat J. C. Anderson, Greensboro, winter! oats; W. G. Shipps, Gibson- ville, red wheat; M. E. Futrell, Greensboro Route 3, white wheat; N. M. Knight, Guilford College, red Wheat. Charles N. Vance, of Black Moun tain, a son of the late Senator Zeo Vance! is seeking an appointment in the diplomatic service of the gov ernment. . IE On one farm where one certain crop was grown for a number of years, X there were grown during 1913, seventeen different crops. Thi3 farmer vhas been learning the secret of rotation. In deciding what to grow, we believe the far mers of this community would! find much inter estinsr information in ths condsnced Monthly Rc port iccued by this bash, which is sent free to thece 9 who request i t Wc have i i U tWs reMjrt prepared fcr I 5 the Dsnentot our cucicm 4 ers end: friends, end no g charge is mode for tho I ( ) t 4 1 t I 4 t 4 t 4 4 ) 4 4 I 4 I 4 i 4 ) 4 4 ) w 4 4 V 4 J I S service rendered. 8 g flmcrican EKchcnc: Iletioncl -Dr.!! MM irons Y -
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1913, edition 1
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