Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / Jan. 31, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
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r - " testis 3gns oESJTflBono patriot,- ixkclmr 81. lfgfPACP a. A- : no a a - 1 J . - : . fr... . . X"S ' ' . : - .-. - w . .J II ? ' . -" s J C WHY NOT BUY J AND v ELASTIC , Ciiildlrefii. AND TRUSES At HOWARD GARDNER v Opposite Postoffice GREENSBORO, N. C. WOOD'S Prosperity Seeds, With bright prospects a head for goodprices oh Veg etable and all Farm products, our farmers should feel en couraged to; ilaht improved varieties of seeds, so as to in crease their crops, 9 r., , (? WOOD'S VEGETABLE SEEDS, long Unown for their supe rior quality and productive ness, have greatly increased in demand and popularity VOOD'S GRASS, CLOVp-jana rnination and superior Quali ties. Write f 6t tribes. : r WOOD'S D'fcsCttlPtty &TA$G fves valuable information about all Seeds for the Farm and Garden. Mailed free on request. u v - RichocadV va. mn. it- CSOOSOr . . , .., . ;. O. Ju BAPP a. clay wnxiAMa Drcc!io, Gapp i IVHIIarno . . Attorseyi-At-ljaw UUIX1N SBOBO, N. C. ta Dixie Insurance Building pr. Oaolel Dees Dr. Ralph pees Dr. Rigdon Dees. DOCTORS DEES j Ueaerml Surgery and Diseases of ' Women. OcAdoo Office Building Next to Postoffice. GREENSBORO, N. C. (SHenn (Brown Attorncy-at-Law 10 BANNER BTJIliDlNO. Groan Hides LVanted Urtag me rpur Green Hides. I m paying 14 . cents per pound. : : 3' c OLIVE, ( Phone 713 city. Market CHARLES A. HINES ATTO R N EY-AT-LAW " Of3e In Wright BuiidlnaV MORTGAGE SALE, By virtue of the power of sale Vested In the undersigned in a certain deed of trust recorded in book 215, page 660, in the office of the register of deeds, of Guilford county, N. C, executed by John A. Hodgin and his wile, to secure the sum of $2,500 and interest thereon, and default having been made in the pay ment of the principal and interest, the undersigned will on .s Monday, February 21, 1916, at 12 o'clock noon, at the court house door in the city of Greensboro. N. C. sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following describ ed tracts of land in Guilford county, N. C, in Morehead township, and more particularly described as follows: First Tract.. Beginning at a stake on the east side of Silver Run avenue. 250 feet south of the intersection of Silver Run avenue and Union street, and run ning nearly south alons the eact side of Silver Run avenue 100 feet to a stake; thence nearly east 150 feet to a take on an alley; thence nearly north along the west side of the alley 100 feet to a stake; thence nearly west 150 feet to the beginning; the same being lots No. 6 and 7 in Section 12 of the Sil ver Run Park Plot as made by F. A. Pierce, C. E. Second Tract. Beginning at a stake at the intersection of Dillard street and Union street (on the south side of Union street) and running nearly west along the south side of Union street 160 feet to a stake on an alley; thence nearly south along the east side of al ley 100 feet to a stake; thence nearly east 150 feet to a stake in the west - margin of Dillard street; thence nearly north along the west side of Dillard street 100 feet to the beginning; the - same being lots No. 23 and 24 of the Sil ver Run Park Plot as made by F. A Pierce C E Third Tract. Beginning at a stake on the east side of Silver Run avenue and C. G. Hampton's southwest corner and running nearly east along C. G Hampton's line 150 feet to a stake on an.al;?y: thencft-. nearly, south along said alley 50. feet to A. W. Rieves' cor ?,er; t,encl nearl3r westj along -Rieves line 150 feet to Bfxke ;i the. east mar- gin of Silver nun avenue, the same be fne v A-WS 4Ue&sy awtfaweiBtt; corner thence nearly north along the east side of Silver Run avenue 50 feet trr the be ginning; the same being lot No. 11 in Section 12 in 8ilver Run Park Plof.-4 -This January 20. 1916. . ,CL1F'UKD FRAZIER, Trustee.1 ' ADULT always an advocate AND LIBERTY OF COUNTKX SHUULU HOLD FIRST PLACE. : ' In two addresses delivered in New York: Thursday President -Wilson opened his persdnal appeal to the country for national defense. He gave warning that plans for the readjust ment of the army must be formulated and carried out without delay and i solemnly declared he could not pre dict that the outlook for the United States would be as bright tomorrow as today. Speaking at banquets, of the Railway Business Association and the Motion Picture Board of Trade, he sounded the keynote of ad dresses that he will deliver during the next 10 days in the middle .West. Mr. Wilson was in a fighting mood throughout his adress. In a speech delivered early in the day he declared he always accepted an in vitation to fight. In his address at night he told the railroad men he was an advocate of peace and had struggled to keep the United States at peace, but he considered the lib erty and honor of the nation even more than peace. "Woe to any man who plays mar plot or who seeks to make party politics or personal ambition take precedence over candor, honor and unselfish, unpartisan service," said the president in speaking of his de fense plan before the railroad men. He declared that the country expects action; this is a year of accounting and the accounting must be definite on the part of parties and on the part of every individual who wishes to enjoy the public confidence. For my part, I hope every man iff public life will get what's comirig to him," said Mr. Wilson amid laughter and applause. Mr. Wilson spoke of men of high character who were clouding the pre paredness issue. He declared they were provincial and that the United , States could no longer cut herself off from the rest of the world. ' The president vigorously defended his Mexican policy. He asserted that to invade Mexico would mean the losing of the confidence of the rest of the western hemisphere. He cited the freeing of Cuba as an instance of Rood done by the United States. If" we are drawn into the mael strom which now surges in Europe," the president declared, "we shall not be permitted to do the high things we would prefer." ! The president defended the con tinental army plan dnawn up by Sec- reary Garrison and said that he did not care about details of any plan as long as 500,000 trained men 'were provided as reserves under the fed eral government. He advocated strengthening the national guard, but said, the constitution itself nut the guard under the state. He added that the United States will not turn in the direction of militarism. Outlining why the United States should prepare, Mr. Wilson said we must protect our rights as a nation and the rights of . our citizens in . America and outside of it as the con- ' sensus of civilized Deonles haj Hp- nned them; must ensure the unem barrassed realization of our political development within our own borders and must protect the peace and political autonomy of the Americas. inaustriai preparedness, with the military training of students in indus- 1 trial schools, was proposed by the president. He left consideration of navy plans for later addresses. I Business men who formerly relied on protective measures in their deal ings with foreign powers were criti cised by Mr. Wilson. He said Amer ican business men should be able to hold their own against the world. The President's Speech. In the course of his speech at the banquet of the Railway Business As sociation President Wilson said: "I consider it is a privilege to be permitted to lay before you some of the things to which we ought to give our most careful and deliberate con sideration. "I say that it stands in need of clarification because, siiigularly enough, it has been deeply clouded by passion and prejudice. It is very sin gular that a question, the elements of which are so simple and so ob vious, should have been so beclouded by the discussion of men pf high mo tive, men of purpose as handsome as any of us may claim and yet appar ently incapable of divesting them selves of that sort of provincialism which consists in thinking the con tents of their own minds to be the contents of the mind of the world. For, gentlemen, while America is a very great nation, America does not constitute the major part of the world. It would be'a tidpeless pice 6f provincialism to suppose - that' ber cause we think differently from1 the rest of the world, we are at liberty to assume that the rest of the world I i ALifAluli of peace, but honor will permit us to enjoy that thought without disturbance. - ."It is a surprising circumstance al so that men should allow partisan feeling or personal ambition to creep into the discussion of this fundamen tal thing. "And, I for my part, am ambitious that Americans should do a greater and more difficult thing than the great nations on the other side of the water have done. In all the billiger ent countries men, without distinction of party, have drawn together to ac complish a successful prosecution of the war. Is it not a more difficult and a more desirable thing that all Americans should put partisan pre possession aside and draw together for the successful prosecution Vof peace? I covet' that distinctiog America and I believe that America is going to enjoy the distinction. "Only the other day the leader of the Republican minority in the house of representatives delivered a speech that showed that he was ready, and I take it for granted that the men behind him were ready, to forget party lines in order that all men may act with a common mind and impulse for the service of the country. And I want, upon this first ! public occasion, to pay my tribute of respect and obligation to him. "America is young still, she is not even in the heydey of her develop- menc ana power i nmK or me great treasure of youth and energy and j ideal purpose stiU to be.drawn from 11 l-i-V. iUi- lUB oura.iroiu wmcu. uw na- Here the president urged his hear ore tr fhlnlr nf tho ajrvino xxrYttnYi th fnr Mn .nH rt mAa frt the rest of the world He Ar.rA . this country would be forced in the decades immediately to come to fur-1 nish the world its chief economic guidance and assistance. He added I that if America is drawn into the maelstrom in Europe it would not be, permitted to keep a free hand to "do the high things that we intend , to do." Our Passion For Peace. "Let no man, dare to say, if he would speak the truth, that the question of preparation for national defense is a question of war or of peace. "If there is one passion more deep seated in the hearts of our fellow countrymen than another, it is the passion for peace. No nation in the world ever more instinctively turned away from the thought of war than this nation to which we belong. There is no spirit of aggrandizement in America. And I myself share to the bottom of my heart that pro- tound Iove tor peace. I have sought to maintain peace against very great. and sometimes very unfair odds and I am ready, at any time, to use every power that is in me to prevent such a catastroplke as war coming upon inis countfy-; ao inal 11 18 not permissible for any man to say with anxiety that the defense pf the nation has the least tingo in Jt of desire for power which can be used to hring on war. But, enilemen- there is something that tne "Anier,can people love better than J ycs. iney iove tne prin- ciPIes uPn which their political life s'rounded. They are ready at any lime to nsht for the vindication of their character and of their honor. TIiey wiU not at any time seek a con- test, but they will at no time cravenly avoid it. Because, if there is one thing that the country ought to fight for and. that every nation ought to fight for it is the integrity of its own convictions. We cannot surrender our convinctions. I would rather sur render territory than surrender those ideals which are the staff of life for the soul itself. And because we hold certain ideals, we have thought it was right we should hold them for others as well as for ourselves. "America has more than once giv en evidence of the generosity and dis interestedness of its love1 for liberty. It has been willing to fight for the liberty of others as well for its own liberty. The world sneered when we set out for the deliberation of Cuba, but the world does not sneer any longer. It well knows now what it was then loathe to believe, that a na tion can sacrifice its own interests and its own blood for the sake of the liberty and happiness of another peo ple. Champions of Free Government. "And whether by one process or another, we have made ourselves in some sort the chdmpibns of free' government and national soVerefgnty In both continents of nhis 'hemis- Phere: So that there are certafnr 6b-r Hgatfons which 'evefy-AlmeTicaninws' that we have undertaken. The first and primary obligation is the main- sovereigntw4ichs:as bfiCQUe. t. the iantehancflur liberty to dejelour p)Iilcal lnUt tutions NrifEoui hindrattceriaiifest ; of all, there . is , etermmatioApu I he obligation to stand as the strong brother of all -4hos - in -tola Jhemisi phere veho wili maintain the same principles Und. follow the-same ideals of liberty. "May I venture' to insert here a parenthesis? Have . any of ..you thought of this? We have slowly, very slowly, indeed, begun to win the confidence of the other states of the American hemisphere If we should go into Mexico do you know, what would happen? All the sympathy pf the rest of . America would look across the water and not northward to the great republic which we pror fess to represent. . "And do you seethe consequences that Would ensue in every, interna tional relationship to have -the gentle-" men who - have rushed down to Washington to insist that we should go into Mexico reflected upon the politics of the world? Nobody seri ously supposes, gentlemen, that the United States needs to fear an inva sion of its own territory. What America has to fear, if she has any thing to fear, are indirect, round about, flank movements upon her j regnant position in the western ; hemisphere". Are we going to open those gates, or are we going to close them? For they are the gates to the hearts of our American friends to the south of us and not the gates to the ports. Win their spirits and you have won the only-sort of lead ership and the only sort of safety that America covets. We must all of jus think from this time.. out, gen tle- mn, in terms of the world, and mtfgt , . whftt AzneHca gefc Qut tQ maIntaIli. a d ard-bearer for all those who love 1Wtv nnr1 innt,M ftTi1 tho ritrhfQ : " " vw- negs of Dolltlcal actioilf .i4. j means to gentlemen, we must find do this thing WhlchJ! are suitable to the time and suitabUr to our own ideals. Suitable to time! (Does anybody understand the time?' Circumstances Chanjring. "But the circumstances of the pres- ent time are these: There is eoine on in the world, -under our. eyes, an economic revolution. No man under- stands that revolution, no man has the elements of it clearly in his mind, no part of the business of legislation Continued, in Page Three. GET Are You Prepared to PrdjjSHy do Ydur Spring Here are '-' L and one South Sixty Tddtt! Which we jbimm will SafQril If you have never looked Plow proposition we believe it would pay you so. an 11 j 0 II n (i n mm OLD W3 rati B : : Tqis is a 3uty of sufficient importance to demand your vigilance; Part of this duty is to be" sure you get unceasing vi oilry thfepures drjig store is doubly valuable Mehighest quality, and at mit iWit-H-.-- &x.?&-i-j-m wa-- very reasonable. . " Cor. Elm and Washington Streets McAddo Hotel Bldg, 1 z (sgDHUFuan, How about that engine that is ,. giving you trouble? - We rebore cylinders, make pis tons and generally overhaul these engines, and guarantee satisfaction. ; V If the engine is too large to move notify us. v We have- a 25 HP. Case Engine WBbiler in excel lent condition for sale. 513-517 S. Eugene CLYFIER'S OLD STAND At refent we h&vcf mote tifdii ' 40 fatths;? rtthMier him is irnpxgyyag in eyet nc; pxieeipn-inee will surely be. higher next yedr. Det know your wants otid we will make it to advantage price. Co. Lti lOS East Market Street. IT AT ODELL'S -QUALITY m R.F. DallCnmn any wfflsliw mmm: fartns of the rise in Estate I I r1 m ill tiSlti 'Uii,; shown twd ilk W U U U UULiLZl ill of II "f 1,1 Iff I- I ' lorn r inn rsr: i b tojyqii. VJJig of the same , -' - : v. y., :r',.:, -; IStS Valuable Farm For Rent NEAR SPIiENDID SCHOOL. As attorpey . in , fact, for the heirs at law of W. 6.; Donnell, deceased, I will lease for, the year 1916 a part of the old home-place, lying along the macadam road between Sumrer fleld and Oak Ridge and within from three-quarters to a mile pf the cele brated Oak Ridge school. Will lease to proper party the whole or any part of three hundred and. nine acres and more, if desired.. The neighborhood Is .healthy, the farm well watered, with a., seven.; room," two-story resl- ence , for -the Jessee r and good out buddings.. s. adapted to. the raising of . corn, wheat and ' tobacco and has good curing, barns. Will prefer to tease, for jnonjey rwit. . : ntf rste partiet may apply o the undersigned byr lerorjn person at the office, of King & Kimball, at Greensboro, N C. Attornevln act. . - - J v. ' J i i c. D FRAZIER LAWYER illdenc PhoAtt 111 Phoo lf . Court Sqaare. 0. V; Tayi o JI. Scales vToylor & SctJei ATTOitiarra Aot cotJircia ' IiOft3 A7t? LAW .. ... :. . . ... i ELHER E. LULL, FL D. VETKRIWART SUIIGEOW it Coble & 1 Starr's Stables, 63 Soota Elm Street, Greensboro, N. C. , Office Phone 678. Residence Phone 1809 HRHKUMATISM KIUNKT3AN U BtAOBI FIRST id) urugg CLIFFOn Plowing? IflW J- ' . : .r- ' i - HlSrfttw fill trt bill. into the South lib Li .rvr-'"ir; '
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 31, 1916, edition 1
2
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