Newspapers / The Daily Evening Patriot … / Sept. 17, 1888, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Daily Evening 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
v( '' ' - - " GREENSBORO, .ST. C., SEPaER 1 7, 1S88, KQ.101 i i i f o. Spring Goods h.Uv become I'xliausti ..L .....t it is InuSosai- '4?:;:n:i rs:o g.;t what they ..iif.1 u l f ' . ' j I i : E!i!t!v B' Stock of Ws, ; V !o?!it;!' Summer and Tall jun.Mi sdl r my Yrailo f 1 I ! hklm ,of Dress Goods, Ln)nrnit's to match. 1 1 -An-! .til that? my department! ii I v:m s;:r j lit -I .than ever before t'ii all kind.- ami pricc-3 of Cash tnin-s silk vpirp Henrietta Cloths, Jrihita Clojli, Flannel, Black Niks, al aji'nl! line of the latest Trintmiis ti match. . I nmrt? UUP TLo Clijtliin Department is bet- 1: v c!oM Out most of 1 my' old Tie (nnlo compelled nio to LI in ahead of the season, so! I bvii tmwjin- stock the larpest and sleHid assortment of (yloth- ,n - I iuih" oi,t'r enez eti. ami at jiri crs iiweritlihii ever before. iAlT I iK a trial bclon; yon purchase. fci' hoc Dcnartnientf ts now 'fut H:si,K tc, and all I have to ! just c iil in iiiul yqii will be iu .vtvlc and iricc.'r i Straw II at to y.itv.Mit the season', come; in and y?' mm p ,)5i0 very reasonable, lil! net say at cost, for you would ti. . i i i . : . as mac is an ioiu many merchfints "-ana ; not " ;,uyeeo,etl in selliuc- on such nr. Voo anil still" Hats' to tuit '' o-rlpltu. in a fe hi rav fall s t w Cays, as tock is now t:ii!!s aval will be tilled in a 1 -i i - ! supply the dcmhnd with lpr(l,,!!ir? i" the line off Carpets -tlii?, lings and Curtains. Xm Sot, jor yourselves. ; u-n doing husiuess too-long n;jthe old song of "Uoek Hot- .... ji'low every one else." ,,, ' !:Uu many other such straws; :"itM;j,e niel see and yon will be n ii'olitely and business like. - .i - v ILL AKMl'IhUJ. 11 ! ! I i ( HATSl I GREENSBORO, N. O.: MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1S83. TAHIFF REFORM How Leading Republicans In the Patt llaye Advocated the Democratic Meas ure of Today Literal Quotations from Republlcau "Hlg" Guiis." Eugene IIalb. Salt. I believe this article should go upon the iree list; that the monopoly which has obtained heretofore for the Onondaga Salt Works ought to cease. take of tbe friends of a sound tariff to insist upon the extreme rates imposed during tbe war 1870. William I). Kelley. Let the raw material (wool) come in. Let us make blankets that will drive out English blankets. July 22, C. Wakner Miller. The sooner we have that (tariff) revision, : the better it will bo for all industries. 18S2. William McKinlev. The free list might bo enlarged without af fecting injuriously a single Amor ican interest. 1882. Benjamin Harrison. The- crea tion of the Tariff Commission was a confession . that the tariff needs revision If the, report comes in, it should be promptly acted upon. govern uer o, iooj. Charles J. Folcer, Secretary of the Treasury. Taxes upon spirits ana looacco, oemg upon tilings not needful, should be retained rather than those upon the common ne cessaries of life. Annual Iteport, 1SS3. Henry hr Dawes. The duty must bo levied on the raw material or on the manufactured article. If you levy it on tae raw material, you discriminate. against-Amencan labor. William B. Allison. I will say with regard to the 3uty on wool and woolens, that I regard it not as an intentional fraud, but as operating as though it were a fraud upon the great body of the people of the U. S. March 24, 1870. Gener.il John A. Logan. When a gentleman stands upon this floor and tells mo that this high, this extraordinarily high tariff is for the protection of the laboring man, I tell him that I do not understand how he can possibly substantiate such a theory. April 18, 1870. Oliver P. Morton. The country expects a largo reduction, the coun try knows that it can be made, the ftfinntpv Ii.ir liAo.n nrnmisfid this re- w I ilnntinn. And Hi ft dominant nartv J . I hero is responsible to the country for this reduction, anl will be held responsible if it is not made. John Sherman. buch excessive protection not only ceases to diver- 6ify protection, but forces labor in to protected employments. 18 2. The4ariff ought to bo carefully re vised with a view to correct any in equalities or incongruities that have grown out of change of values since tho passage of the act of 1S83. January, 18SS. President Grant Many duties now collected micht be re- mitted. I would mention thoso articles which e.uter into manufactures of all sorts. These duties not only come from tho consumers at homo, but act as a protection to foreign manufacture cs. Annual Message, December, 1S75. Jomnc a Oarfi..i t .m f.r it protection which leads to ultimate Free Trade, April 1, 1870. For nearly two years the wholesale price of American salt in Toronto, Canada, was a dollar lower per barrel than the same salt was sell ing for on the New York side of the lake. Certainly, gentlemen will not want a duty continued that enables that thing to be done. May IS, 1872. , President Arthur. A total aboli- inevitably prove a serious, if not an insurmountable obstacle to a tion of excise taxes would almost thorough revision of the tariff and to any considerable reduction in import duties. The present tariff system is, in many respects, un just. It makes unequal distribu tions, both of its burdens and its benefits. Annual Message, 1882. James G. Blaine. During the entire' war, when we were seeking everything on the earth, out of which taxation could be wrung, it never entered into the conception of Con sress to tax bread s tuffs never. . Neither breadstuff's nor lumber became the subject of v t i or? a TT donbtedly the ineqaahties in tthe wages ot Ebghsh and Amencaa operatives are more than equalized by the great efficiency of the latter and their longer hours of labor. 1881. - John J. Ingalls. We are on the verge of an impending revolution. fin nn a airin in 'irkitfil. ' enriched by domestic levy and other is labor, asking for employ ment, striving to develop domestic industries, battling with the forces of Nature, resolutely deter mined to overthrow a system under which the rich are growing richer and the poor are growing poorer. Ilugh McCulloch, Secretary of the Treasury under Presidents Lin coin and Arthur. The existing dutieg raw materials OT.tt tn t nam, in mann which ufacturo should be removed. Annual lie- T)ort. 1884. Mr. Cleveland has marked out a course which can safely bo followed. Dep., 1887. LATEST NEWS. BY TELEGRAPH. Breach of Promise. Few York, Sept. 15. Something of a sensation has been created in theatrical circles in this city, by the announcement that Miss Leila Farrel,the actress, is about to bring suit against the comedian Goodwin for the sum of 810,000 for an alleg ed- breach of promise. It is said that Mr. Goodwin was engaged to the you nor ladv. but had been in- duced to break it by his father, who wished him to marry a wealthy society lady of Buffalo. Sullivan ta Fight Kilralu. Boston, Mass., Sept. 15. John Sullivan, with Mahoney MclSlroy and Dan Murphy, will leave this city on - Jklonday for New York, where they will meet Charley Johnson, of Brooklyn, and post 81,000 in the Clipper office, as a forfeit for Sullivan to fight Jake Kilrain. - The fight will bo according to Loudon prize ring rules, to take place within 100 miles of New Or- i . p . an"' fr a. Ai a rr , : l leans ior to 9iy,uw bmc, i ii.. t : i.: e a Cleveland Deules it. Philadelphia, Sept. 15. Presid pnf. fllfivftlanfl haft written a lp.ttnr in rp.nl v to ono receivAd from Geo whiteley, of this city, making in- quiry into certain statements that are said to have appeared in a reo ent article iu the North "American Review. The letter, which explains itself, is as loiiows: Executive Mansion, WASHINGTON, Sept. 13, 18S8. George Whiteley, Esq.: Dear Sir Your letter of the 8th instant has iust been presented to mv attention; audit affords the first intimation I have had that., in an article published in tho North Am erican, I am charged with the de claration that r "I believed in free trade as I believed iu thojProtos taut religion."; ! j , In answer to vour enouirv to the truth of this allegation, I have to . . V f aV 1 A. sav tnat l never maae use 01 tnai expression or anything like it I rr f av a a. a. Z The statement you quote is A TUBE, UNADULTERATED FABR1 CATION. While it would be in vain to at tempt to meet or refute every, false statement coined or forged to serve the purpose of misrepresentation in the heat ot the political canvass, the friendly spirit of your inquiry has led to me to make this emphatic denial. Yours very truly, Grover Cleveland. jTlje Yellow Fcter." 13 Jacksonville, Fla f Sent. 15 During tho past twenty-four hours enaing ac noon to day fourteen new cases of yellow fever have been reported, making a total i of 814 cases reported to date.-- Four ueatns from the disease , were re ported, since noon yesterday, mak the .total number of deaths from " the disease to data 120i. i There are 508 person 8 now on sick beds, arid iniriy six cases nave been pro nbunced cured d urine i : the. l nas t twenty-four hours. u j ; j News from McClenny: v8tates that there have been sixty-fcixj caa es ot. yellow fever there and twelve deaths from, the disease. The" physicians, nurses and ! sup plies which arrived ;yesterday are of great assistance, the I local phy- sicians ana nurses .being sick ana ino supplies exnanstea.i xne place is almost depopulated, no more than 240 people remaining, j : Washington, D. C, September 15 -Miss Clara Barton today re ceived tho following dispatclf from Col. Southmayd at Jacksonville, dated yesterday: "Express me as soon as possible Your as- arm badges for nurses. spciate societies can help largely by sending clothing, shoes and blankets The fever : has about destroyed all business, and there is, and there will be, much dis tress.. ; ' -; .i ; "McClenny is well in hand.1 Our. nurses . there 'have - acted with promptness and g6odhjadgment. Two cases and one death there since yesterday. About thirty sick in handr Sent out doctor with car supplies, medicines and blankets, this afternoon." : New York. Sept. 15. Subscrip tions received today at the Mayor's oflQce for the relief of yellow fever sufferers amounted to! $1,023,75. - The bookmaker8, allianoe.this af ternoon contributed 5ouo to tne relief of the sufferers by the yellow fever at Jacksonville. TELEGRAPHIC SUMMARY. The new silver vault of the trea sury now contains 240 tons of sil -ver dollars. . ? . : U . - i . - The greater portion of Florence, Wis., was wiped out by fire Satur day morning. PrinceHenri D'Orleans started from !Newi York for f home I yester day in the French steamer, LaNor- mandie. The Detroit Opera I House, Lea- gue's'drug store," BopnelPs restaur ant, and the Pioneer store were burned Friday night. Loss $du,uuu. j : : ! i Hon. Roger Q. Mills, of Texas, addressed a large audience at the Academy of Mnsic in Petersburg, Va., Saturday, on the subject of tariff reform. The President has hust granted pardon to Frank P. and Kobert Hemper, convicted of illict distill iner I in the Eastern District of North Carolina. About seven hundred members of the Irish American" Republican Club, of Chicago, went to Indiana- Ol J L. Al i opoilS oaiuruay iu pay tueii io spects to Gen. Ben -Harrison I L - i I i The large grain, elevator and warehouse of M. B.CIark & Son, Cleveland, Ohio, ws blown up bat nrdav moraine. Two men were killed. The mill is a total loss, probably $125,000j J. Roberts, and XL Dockery, two St. !Loui8 society men, were arrest ed in Denver, Col.j and returned to St. Louis Friday on the charge of from Taafe & embezzling $lo,000 Co., a firm of real estate dealers. Ilcrr 3Ipst is circulating a procla mation inviting his associates to celebrate the 11th of November, "the Anniversary of the murder of five of the truest friends j of the workingman, the, day of the' legal stragulation of Spies, Parsons, Fis cher, Engle and Lingg." The special House committee in vestigating tho charges of alleged corruption and undue influence preferred by Architect Smith Myer agaiust Congressman Stahlnecker, of New York, in - connection with the letting of contracts for the new library building,;resumed consider tion of the case, yesterday. Ar chitect Smith Myer was the pnn cipal witness. - two rL WITH BUT A SINGLE THOUGHT.",, "I want to see the day come i "when placing my right hand on "the head of a little white child, "and my left hand on the head of a "little colored child, I can pass "them into Sunday School togeth er.n Oliver II. Dockery, Republic an candidate for Governor of N. C. "Down with the White Man's "party7 "That the right of suf frage rests on no mere circumst ance of race, color, sex or nation "ality." 7th plank of the National Prohibition platform and slogan of the organ of the Prohibition party in North Carolina. Whiteior black it matters.not i - where do you standT i POMONA HILL WMl POMONA, N. C Two and a half miles best of Greensboro, N. C. The main line of tho Richmond and Danville Railroad passes through the grounds and within 100 feet of the office. Salem trains make regular stops twice daily each way. I Those interested in fruit and fruit growing sre cordially invited to inspect this, tho largest nursery in the State and one of tho largest in the South. Stock consists of Apples, Peaches, Pears, Cherries ' Plums, Japanese Persimmons, Apricot8,Nectarnes,Figsi Mulberries, Quinces, Grapes, Pecans, Strawberries, Raspberries, Currants, Gooseberries, Pie Plant, Eng luh Walnuts, Chest nuts, Roses, Ever green,8hade Trees, &c, dc, &c. All the new and rare varieties, as well as the old ones, which my new catalogue for 1888 will show. Give your order to iriy authorized agent or order direct from the nursery. Correspondence solicited. Descriptive catalogue free to ap plicants. Address J. VAN LINDLEY, Pomona, iv2G-tf Guilford Co., N. C. Clement G. Wright, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW J GREENSBORO. N-C. Practices in State and Federal Court, opposite coart house. (iffice F. T. BALDWIN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, HIGH POINT, N. C. Practices in the State and Federal VhutU. I Special attontion given to the collection of claims an6 : i - i &reenslro Feis&ls College, ; j GREENSBORO, N. C. fTlHE sixty seventh session op tii is X prosperous Institution oegins on the or AngiiNt, 188S. At. i 1 Superior advantages offered in .all the depart mentTof learning usually taught in Female Col leges of high grade- .... , Ct ' Instruction given in Type-writing and Stono- ervhy. Terms moderate. ) , i For Catalogue apply to , i Ji.jli f. M.JON E. President.; The D alton Hotel, DALTON, N.C, j IS now opon for theTeception-of guests. A 'Bus will meet the trairw-a livery etable is kept in connection with the ""tel to carry drummers and othe across the country. D. N. f J soPt9-ly Propnetor? PEACE INSTITUTE, j RALEIGH, N. C. j For Girls and Young Ladies.: Fall session orns first Wednesday in SptembW Jth dav). and closes first Wednesday m June lavj Thorough instruction by accomplishod and ex Mrieneedteachers in all branches usually taught in first class Seminaries for young la. Building one of the largest and be equipped in tho bout Steamboat. as and electric light. p Terming low as any Institution offering eol advantages. , r -i i Deduction for two or more from same family t Correspondence solicited . V."' logue address REV. K. BURWLLL SON. iul5-2m Kaleigh.Ii.C. n -a xiunooqpw y 14 V uarou ! iixmok v -: . r - V ALL ABOARD FOR DANBURYA Piedmont Sirlnr8 j . . . . r. . i f XI uaiu points uia ounuw ox cvokos, carrj , I hereby cire notice to the trarclinz public thai I keep on hand at my Livery and ale Stable at Walnut Cove, l Horses and Buggies to, Hire Parties going through the cob n try from Walnut Cove should see me. My hvk makes daily trip to Danbury; leavei ATalnut t-ove at 5 p iu.. arrive. atDanbury 7)4 p. m- Fare $1.25. Uarairo carriol free. Ko?poctIolly, j f A. J. FAIR, aug3 tf Walnut Cove', N. C. Dr. J. W. Griffith, STTUGKEOlSr 3D1NJ EXIST GREENSBORO, N. C. Tekth Extbactkd without pain by theuaoof Nitrous Oxide (lauKhintr iraa ) L . , Office opposit Ucxbow llorSK.ovor Saving Bank. June IQ-nly Cape Fear and People :5 STEAMER A. P. HURT Tiiesdavs and Fridays. Leavc3 B'ayottov iixo MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS i of each week For information and Freight, apply to WOODY & CURRIE I ) Agents at Wilmington. W. S. COOIC, Agent at Faypttevillo. N.C E. A. POE, r !, aMANUIwCTI'IIKIH)! iirick, FAYETTE VI LLE, N. C. I have tho largest and most com plete Brick "WoztOsls in North Carolina and make tho best brick South of Philadelphia, Orders by -mail solicited and will have prompt and careful attention. Address, J E.A-POE. Au2S 3m ' Desirable Farm for Sals, Only Two and a Half Miles From Tohd. I Lave for sale on c.iv term? a rot doiirallo farm only two and half miles from the city, with good dwellings and out hou., foul try yrd Ac., including a tine straw berry . ld and 2"i acroa in fruit trees of tbe most seloct kin 1. 'Ih e Urai con tain about 150 acrod nioro or lc an I in a he'iltby neighborhoi, prlucos fine corn, wild it and t Also one jmall farm adioimns the ab ve ontam ing about 100 acres mro or lees oho; bill undwr cultivation and the balance well timbered. -Too land is especially adaptodjo the growth of corn. V bacco, wheat, and crn with cplen lit b-ntom landd for the growth ofliay- Call on or addreft Z. W. Whitkhkal, Roil t:vin Agnt. June27dJkwtf lroer.r. I. w. To Capitalists Dei?irin?f to parch.aso good jay. ing city property, in ;a prosperom and rapidly growing town in V'M mont North Carolina, with fine railroad facilities ; also han-Uoirtf and well arranged dwelling- nlronU call on or addrbS.- z. v. vhitj:ui:ai), Hetl Estate Agent, jan27 (ireennboro, . C T hk Central Hotel, t - 3iTrAiuvN. c; tTAS been remodeIl?UnJ newly f-rnHhl . I A is now tne leaain -.;"; ' 'i " cltse. polite wsrvanw ai ,1U" ''-"' J ' I firJtl uauiDle ro-m for drutnm?MJ S sept2-tf - VI ITP I 1. I T Kt-itft O . V. AVaAA U( a -I- - t m SIEAMBOAJCQ. i - I i ' 4 I i
The Daily Evening Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 17, 1888, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75