Newspapers / Greensboro Telegram (Greensboro, N.C.) / June 8, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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V - ' t. V J ft ... 7 . f V . II - . I JB l 1IMI ,MJMIII)I v " 32JjyjT I VOLIVIIIIHW106I I hfi I fX3RETSBtBOi N.FJO.SSUBDAY: JUNE 8, 1901. - Prici iv OitsN" v:,rytg1fr? i-'tttiv - ; feWT .t, .r ....... l'..f 1$ ' " '"'"'" ' " '' -' " --ZJ - - : , ! . S - ,- ? " i ' i .r37 : - -,. : : ' : 1 mmmtmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmmm mmmtm SMOKE D 3GLEY,s ni RELIABLE VALUE. UNION MADE. SPECIAL .All advertisements under h4 bea 5 cents per line; no advertisement inserted yr less tban 15 cents. . z :.avana leaf is i he onuy-t lA- ft vorins used on the Dooley's Best 1 1. 5 Cent Cigar. FOR SALE A LOT OF SHAFTING, belts, pulleys, , and hange, . sligh Ab used and in good condition. s Addrfis Pox 87,-City. - " - K ' ' .:. " -- RANGES AND STOVES. GREENS BORO BARGAIN HuUSE. j7-2t UPHOLSTERING AND J REPAIRING neatly and promptly done; -Mattress- 4 es renovated or refilled. Workgnarf anteeed. Best city references. J. 5 Cent) Gigor.! NDTOES J.- NICHOLS, 112 iWA'Etriefc.-lmT? QJSTpE SEE THE GREENSBORO BARGAIN, House for housekeeping 10 x;ent: ar ticles. . ..... 7t FOR SALE FOUR HRESH MrLCH i cows, two Jersey and and. two half 1 Jersey. Address 'J.- Av GR50M?3,: City, .'1 ! '1 IF SATISFACTION d$ WUAT jpQ are after, this is the store for you. No matter what you buy, everything is guaranteed to give, you satisfac- tion.or your money back. M'CLAM-;'RObH-Brt6S.',rrne Wtisf actory1 man- tel and fire-place people. Phone 161. li ., is CARTLAND HASTV.Of OR THREE nice suits you can get at a bargain, 36 to 40 breast measure, or would like to make you a nice Alpaca coati m31-eod lw TASTE AND ABILITY MAKE OUR work the best. The -economy in our garments is their wearing qualities. HARRY POEZOLT, Merchant Tai lor. 67-lmo TURKISH BATHS MAY BE HAD every Saturday afternoon or even ing at 407 Llthia streetl Price 60 cents. m23-tf IF MONEY SAVING IS WHAT YOU are after, this is the place for you. Low prices is our banner. We dp our own work, bookkeeping, steno graphy, travelling, tile setting, -shipping and in fact there is one for -,all "within this firm. Talk about com petition, we don't know him: M'CLAMROCH BROS.,the low priced mantel and nre-place people; . 217 South Elm street. Phone 161. FOR SALE STEAM ENGINE A"D boiler,2-horse power gasoline fuel also 1 gasoline tar.k; used but a short time and as good as new. Ad dress "B", Care of Telegram. ARE YOU FOR A HOME Head The Telegram for bargains in real estate. - - ' : '" - ' . Tell the public what you . want through the Telegram want columns. cornrpH what ha wanted by advertising in -tbeeoH4 ns, whether it was to buy, sell or rent real eatA.t-VEr-r.fl kce,-ftixl nota u Tn rr FLAMMING. 7 I l-v. I y f- results " iVJT'Ki-i ss:f ftvfedCe The cost W sl""" "ickleXdtni MEN'S TENNIS, OUTING AND Bi cycle shoes in leather an canvas, fromntio"$2 iliekpSlr; boys Tennis Shoes, with rubber soles, 30 cents at THACKER & BROCK MANN'S. g W. C. T. XJ. S B DEI?WTMENTP.n The Lojral Temperancje Union of South Greensboro fia it s a I flourishiii ef condition. It meets every two weeks at 4 p. m. on Friday. There are about 40 .member aoad the meetings ae well attended! The children aW-iyen tem perance lessons, both from a moral and a scientific standpoint, also scripture Uesscpis. ;i Special strtifSfe !stp3Saced-upon th-' "dread cigarette habit arid profani ty. The children are well trained and iseer much interested in the work. P. church and the dues are 10 cents per year. All children desiring to join are requeste to be present at the next meeting, Friday afternoon, June lVh, at 4 o'clock. f PROHI&KTjHI QWBEi2R.O t...Recently vpuInnSs, he great "bee "baron," of Dublin, erected some model tenements for the use of working peo ple, prohibited all intoxicating liquors, to be -c1 b--btifttoxicant6- in evepy- torji aje hut put,.. 2 Plenty, of, bais but no bars. Very significant. At, the annual ,ban Alih'S Sumniiti, M. quet of the Y. M. J., of Feb. 23rd, Gen. Wheeler, wjio was the iipnored tpV? WBsch, refeS 4o the army canteen in the following words: "A .great deal .has been jsajdatojut the canteeri in'lie aririy which has now. jbeen aboltshed, by Gonress.i JPqt Wany years the argument 5 advanced , in its favor ' was'" iirkt 'itr wa '-necessary ' be cause of the character of the men who enlisted in the army; that these men had been accustomed to associate in bar roo3 where br n; g$qtfor were sold and that it would be better to -.sell them beer in the army rather thah have them go outside and become intoxicated. That may Jiave been true in years gone by. It is not true today ah I do not be- rieve that I am ill1 error lit Claiming that one-half ti' eSistmnts in the army in 1 he . war " With" Spaii-were of the very best character i of men from the ; farm dnd Tact6iy, wilii;la larg3 sprinkling of college graduates and bu- smess men. SHARKS GOT FISHERMEN. Arm of a Negro In tbe Belly of a Fish IVear Where Fifteen men Went Down. Charleston, 5. C, June 5. In the belly of a ten foot.shark captured last night by the crew of the lightship off Charleston bar there was found today the left, ajml of a ngro. :'sTnce the drojvjolvg jpf Afteen sjermcnear the lightship on Friday last a school of sharks has been skirting the water and several fishing boats have gone out for the purpose of Jnaking captures.; Late last night a big shark which swam near the lightship nibbled at a hook attached to a rope and by a good strong pull he was landed. There was a des perate strnggle lasting for nearly ten minutes, but the shark was finally ov erpowered and dragged on deck. Other sharks ran near , the ship, , al though they-kept away from the hooks. When the shark had been killedit was decided to cut open the belly to see if he had been feasting , on .the fisher men. The arm of a negro was found. thboDe had been snapped jpff, above the elbow. There was notning oy which it could be dentified. "No trace of the fifteen lost fishermen can be found, and it is thought that the sharks devoured the bodies. Old salts here think that the sharks were of the man-eating kind, and it is said that the condition of the arm shows that it was torn off in a struggle. , Sharks are numerous pffthe coast, but they are not known" txxiiave eaten people alive. The -discovery of the arm has excited the "fishermen to such ail wai l,iJ-sJ v - 4ure far from. land. 'J ings that can al- woman rpolitics, even his own beer is not allowed -3jnaaaritf mineral- Jtjjxeeth ation. AN ABLE ADDRESS ON THE 3 J;- DELIVERED BY DR. PARKHURST TELLS ms coiSiaiEGATiON ABfQuT HIS SOUTHERN TRIP. Tlie Meeting atJVTini'tff-Saleia is Spoken Of One of the Reults of the Meetlas: is that the Northerner Learned to Xfrok JJpoa Matters More in the Way a North Carolinian.' or a Georgian Does The.In spiring Motiyes Patriotic and Not iar tizan. The following .address yas delivered rr.l by Rev. Charles H. Parkhurst, D.JJ., a member of the "Ogden ifarty 'jbe ; fole ihfe Madisoif Square congregation, New York Cityr the Sabbath after;his leturn from the South: "It requires but observation todis- cover thatGod, inHis construction of injsuch a vth4 14? $ha11 nobe able to stands quite-iiioile but shaljfbe obliged to some extent to surJfert themselves upon each other. We sl&te this by saying that the best things- are come complete oniy tnrougn tneir memFerirHp in eaeh other. In he hu man body, for example, the finger is hot a .finger really without; the hand . - . that it rs attached to; so of the hand, the arm, and all the rest, they become complete only through combination with associate members. "So close is this membership in any thoroughly organized body that when anything happens to one part it, to some degree, happens to arj the rest. One member cannot sicken without more :or less of malady being in flicted upon other members; one mem ber cannot be exuberantly well with out reinforcing the health or at least relieving the invalidism of every, oth er? member.. i ;-- -i "This is a shrewd way God has of promoting among, individuals, a mu tual interest in each other. He has constructed us in such a way that we have to give some attention to others' interests in order to the best promotion ? of our own interests. When historv started out each man thought of him self as a thing by itself. That was as far as sociology had gone in Cain's day. As he looked upon it, Cain was Cain, and Abel was Abel, and that was all there was to it. He thought naturally enough that he was as com plete a thing without Abel as with $lm anilk'heVknbeTed-iiim out. Tjiis; knocking down was a blunder, but a .valuable, blunder, for It gave God the opportunity to put in some valuable sociological work and to teach that each is a member of all and all a part of each. "Now the seriousness of this mem bership relation lies m this, that we are. not shut up to our own individual -Interests ;,, deficiencies and responsibili ties, but are participant in all the-interests, defects ;, and responsibilities pertaining to. the particular organiza tibn, moral, social or civic, in which our membership inheres. Thus, for ex ample, our Own State of North Caro liua, Georgia or New York may not be polygamous,, but Utah is, polygamy, as it exists in Utah, does not stop with Utah, but is a pervasive infection, cor rupting every state in the Unions antL putting a taint upon domestic life in the entire country. I do not mean that as an actual practice it extends to every State,but that the presence anywhere in "birr country of the unholy abomina tions, vitiates the sentiments, lowers the moral tone and tends to blemish the purity of domestic life throughout the nation. All that is intended, by the , foregoing example is simply to'lllus trate the principle, sufficiently evident andabundantly recognized,that wherev er elements of whatever sort are .cpin bined: together to form an organized whole, the whole is saddled wth Jthe : responsibity t of. h,,,part,andch get into Bri a a KVUMWIU "u - uu"&w.- i . ... . ' - V - f r Now: want ? to : go .on t roin;' tht pulse of just such cxnsideationthafc : company df Nbrtherirt pjedpld-itf e"q-e SOUTH cently made a somewhat extended tour in the South. The members of that party did not go because of their inter est id the South as such iff the South as Si distinct section of territory but JiecajiaeconscLousness. oLthe . unity which makes North and South mem bers Q-each ; Qtitff rf and whhh tihere t or,Qnvert& -jahyl j?mblemtj&rtaining to Either tf -the tw6 into: a problem lae- mfillnr totai- the twtr - "And" "that "feature of "th situation thern entertainers. The conferences held at Winston-Salem, in North Carolina, were conducted in utmost frankness by the representatives of both sections, and yet., from-r first to iMLfewajninibU spoen sofa apojilde dteted sthm wbiffeticestaka Srthei' at ftltbjen rttmipleTby the iiNorih-pMnrihe gnorllby kose have tbmn. used than was-employed by ione the laegrading carpetFbagging -policy I .v,fhichL;y.the ort.jajtjted of after the warf but 'the wlahguae"' used was . T.as i 3nee'kly' submitted"' toTas: it'"was rfdfhlv rdeserved, and had; the effect to ,!fict. ' estrange the : conferees but to draw them only tfcearecjfsely togethefe te "And that was rather tne more pr amount feature of ,the.:v occasion. - fits intentions were national 6t sectibifal. The inspiring motives were patriotic not partisini'JfftlrS impulses-, were r'eligiousrf'The whole enterprise- wl01irstla;working? along lines of secular poliyvhetheT. the- discussions concerned Jtfernelves 5$ftfc racial problems or wilfi:rSStters Ibf ediication&dtrttion Indtital or education aeaenfc - the whqj&ilenor ;ot: thougjit-and speech wsrdctly Christian, as wast Consistent 1;3lth the fact that "the audi tor iuntSere the. conference cbnvened wasvthibf an old. Morayian'5 church. . .--v - "A targe variety of Sbutherittates : was-represented as weltas bf Northern, but, speakfni-i6r-anyself( Icafisay that I came upon tffe traCk of not a single individual wfio" seemed to have any other feel ingi than tha-t w-e who came from the Northern' States Were not meddling with what was not at all our business, but that the questions involved were so broad in th,eir ap plication and so national in their pres sure as to demand the consideration and co-operation of all who were. na tionally concerned. A contradictory ut-. terance from" the South has,:it is true, found gubernatorial "expression since the conference concluded, but of a tone and temper so out of consonance with the animus -of the conference , that its publiction'4.ioui;:;.-taYe tw&en impossi-" bl had the Governor of Georgia' as did the Governor bf North Carolina, come in direct touch with the'person nel of the conference or for five min utes respired t.he; atmosphere which the conference exhaled. One of ther esults yielded b ythis tour of Southern visitation is that we we learn to look upon matters more in the way in which the Southern mind regards them. Southern problems such as those of race and illiteracy, came to take upon them more the as pect with which they present them -selves to the eye of a Carolinian br a Georgian. We never can aid" a man except in the degree in which we are able to put ourselves in the position of the man to be aided as well as stand in the position of the : one who is to render the aid. We cannot in the pres ent exigency help a Georgian except in the degree in which we are able to put ourselves under the limitations of a Georgian, or, I should rather say, in the environmentof a Georgian. r - - - - 'All just discussion of those , ques tions of race and of education nov agitating the South must proceeed in the light of the fact that the South erner does not like the Negro and i3 fearful of what may be the eventual consequence of having so large a ne- s grp element in the population. He does not like the negro any better than therstarerage- Noi4heTOer-4 rw0 : the"Vte. .man jpf- the North and the5 1 ifeiemanbthe Suth-carry. helftle towaihe negro; with just abbur t8 sammount at: Christian J oqns4erati)n; ohr , tiie trc the Soun 'tUrri" white manias perhaps this ad-rl (Continued on sixth Rage.) Iassed ' byf the5 Sonth-upojir the- North fHarjiiy tfoule severer: language 4 Yoiir Good ing up, oi quality and J keeping down of prices JL VU OCb V O UUlH blUltJ aiiu. money: here: There is 4 no persuading to .buy what you don want for you know b est. W e J simply suggest. At this' tim e jet us suggest a; N. Corset. I?or sale-t y hy Hvgdc!(re "bWmgloM Vhealth, to retire 'fromSie "'dfug business, I 3hac. sold - my enjtire.pCj A pf .: 4rgS, fixtures, etc.,., to, tkDrug-JCMn-PGyi and in doing; so-take this; method .of: thanking my friends and the public generally for the knidness and liberal patronage which I have enjoyed in the past, and would ask for my successors a contiuanee ;of' the same. Mr; A. J. Syl es, who will assume charge of the business in the future, is a skilled and experienced pharmacist, whom, I can heartily recommend. The new firm is in every way vrorthy of ayour con fidence, and I bespeak -for them your support and encouragement. ? Very respectfully, GASTON W, WARD. Having bbught the stock bf drugs, fixtures, etc., of G. Ward, we hope by polite and prompt attention to busi ness to merit acontinuance of your fa vors., Neither, time nor pains will be considered, in, pleasing you. We ask only a trial to convince you. t Very respectfully, SVICES DRUG CO :.- i .. .:- .: : n All accounts due Ward's Dru& Stof e are j payable to me? and I would ask those owing acounts to ; call j and settle as promptly as possible. I will be found with my books -at the Sykes Drug Co. ; GASTON.W. WARDJ ; In the Mayor's Court. Several cases came, before the mayor at the sitting of his court yesterday, and a few-dollars were added', -to - the ity - -treasury. Kile Jones, colored, "was fined 7 for belhg 'drunk and disorderly; a white- man named McMaste.rs was " fined a similar amountf ordisorderly conduct; Dick Causey, white, was fined" $5 and cost for being drunk and down. Upon, promise to do better he was let off with the costs, and the fine left stand ing over his head to insure his future good behavior. Will Cohen, a street carriage driver paid $3 for leaving his team standing in tlje street . WEATHER. Virginia Fair tonight. Sunday in- creasing cloudiness, fresh north-westerly winds, becoming variable. North Carolina Pair tonight Sun day increasing cloudiness . probably showers. Variable winds, mostly light westerly. Greensbbro Highest temperature past twenty-four hours ending eight o'clock this morning 80, lowest 60. DON'T SUFFER The languishing tortures of Dys pepsia, you cant stand it. Take "Cole man's Guarantee', a positive . cure" for aljt forms of dyspepsia and, cpnstipa- li on. i oA inured man. says: "Jb take Gole- mah iGiiarantee;at what I want; and ain fiappy7 Price 50c large ottle, at SvlerBitttf ' khtws hOwto tab at ?iWjts hrdoin't kno-w so,she-won't mm. : Will :i4 V"1 t 3 ...
Greensboro Telegram (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 8, 1901, edition 1
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