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*!**■?"***»»■- THE GREENSBORO PATRIOT. M « SIKH*. \«»- 1.183 GREENSBORO, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY '28, 1891. ( Bjr ike P*lrl«l Pabllabloi (infaii;. I TMBIt Sl.so P»r Te«r, la Alnin. Dr. A. R. WILSON, WARIN CHILE.!,^±SSWE S.SltOKO, X. '' ,.„,,. in Medicine nn.i | WHAT A GREENSBORO BOY SEES l„..i|.le nl (irceii.il : j country. Itesl- ■ AND HEARS OFF THE COAST OF CHILE. Dr. Arthur E. Ledbetter, -i i:\ I I.- I" I ■ I.- I'll roumlllltf • In . -. ■-(-:...■ Awful Cruelty of the Insurgents, no Quarters Given to Prisoners—- Women and Children Killed and Maltreated. VALPARAISO, (HIM:, March 31st, 1891. tJT tl U7o1ro4iold Since writing my last letter I OOCtOi' W. i*. WSLKBuBTOi. have been on quite an extended trip I to the northern parts of Chile and only arrived here on the morning of the 29thj We left Valparaiso 'in the !lili of March, anil sailed direct to Iquique, taking advantage of the winds which at 11>i-s time of the year always blow from the South. The distance from Val-paraiso to luuique is about nine hundred miles, and we wen- about si\ days in sailing that distance. When WO arrived at Iquique we found the town entirely in posses-sion of the Opposition, and the i fleet quietly at anchor in (lie harbor. I Only live days before our" arrival an important battle had been fought all iiit 20 miles from the town, and the Government troops were totally defeated. Some of the troops de-serted to the Opposition, some were killed and captured, and the re-mainder took refuge in thfl desert. What they can do tosustajn life in that dreary country I cannot im-agine, and I should say that their ; fall- was a very hard one. The Chilian soldiers are said to light like demons when once they be-come thoroughly aroused, and the mortality in these Dghts has lieen something enormous. Tin y have had four battles in this Province S'SliORO, X. < •■ ■ ■ "i \ : i i \u>. . Wi'-l | ||.i IMll.r • I . . Bar. So*' . I» 12 in., i Dr. W.J.RICHARDSON, llf IS : '.<.f. . s ISO UO, X. c. ■• in try. was going on there. We only re-mained a few hours, as there was no need for US, and then sailed south for Antafagusta. We found that the fleet had tnken Antofagus-ta with pratieally no flgfating and that everything was quiet. After placing ourselves in com- JEFFERSON DAVIS. \rwmA'nSSSm™tttam A STIRRING APPEAL TO THE ' Over a Thousand Representatives of GENERAL NEWS. i U. WHIilliT, (jfilnier & Wright, - AT - LAW, ■ 1 I'otirts, • • O.unlj IJOIIO, X. C SOUTHERN PEOPLE. Every County and Town in the South Should Contribute to this • ^Joble Cause. NASIIVU.I.K. Telili., May 11).— munication with the United States) John A. Childress and Patrick Consul we left AntaBgUBtS Bound Walsh, of this city, and.John Long-for Caldera. Caldera is the sea don Welser, of Charleston, S. CH port of the city of Copiapo and is issued to-day a circular letter, to a small uninteresting place built the Southern people in which they on barren roeks This post of the explain that the fund intended for country is fti possession of the ■ a monument to Jefferson Davis has Government party. A railroad ceased to receive contributions and connects Caldera with Copiapo and call for a general movement the distance to the latter place is throughout the. South, fixing the fifty miles. date at June IS, 1891, when the At the invitation of the authori-1 people of every town and county ties quite n party of us visited'shall meet and take proper steps to Copiapo, in a special train furnish-' forward the enterprise by voluntary ed by the Government. Wo start- contributions or othermetods which ed at seven o'clock in the morningIthey may deem best. Remittances and returned at ten o'clock in theIare to be sent to Mr. Welser at evening. Wo spent quite a pleas- Charleston. ant time and were shown every at- j The letter says: "Among all the tention. We were the guests of the i noble dead there is none whose army officers, and dined at their i name appeals with greater power garrison moss. They gave us a j to the affectionate remembrance of Gne dinner and laid themselves out the Southern people: The cause ROBERT E DOUGLAS, SliOUO, N. •'.. . AT LAW ; CIIAXCKKY ANDEXAMIN'KK ,,f Tarapaco and about dve thou-sand men were engaged, of these I r •■ Ci it* .vivir.ir- ""•INSURANCE FIRE, I . 0NLY1FIRS1-CLASS COMPANIES liKI'KKSENTKD. the National Bank iro Insurance, o. W. « \lllt A ««». Books' Books!Books! i hr i.i ei IKIUHII Hook Store •■ lillOKS in plain llagster Tcaclie r ,-. I'apcr bound . Weekly Papers, Mag- .- :i line line of Kancy ul every variety anil nl prices to MI'I! (all and * at S th Klin Street, ■ I louse, i ircoensboro, N. ''. 1200 have been killed and about 1000 wounded. At the time I was in Iquique thjre were some six hundred wounded men in the hos-pital-, some dt them were in a fear-ful condition*, the wounds made by the Gattling guns were particular-ly serious.**Tlie bones of men's legs would be shattered like glass, and a great many amputations were in pessary. The city of Iquique has beep bombarded by the fleet and a great deal of it has been burnt. The greater part of the business section is in ashes. A great deal of light-ing has taken place inside the city, ami the streets -how many signs of it. The walls of the houses are lit. rally spattered w ith bullet holes. Great holes are torn in some of the building- wheic shells from the guns if the Beet have passed. The damage to properly bus been enor-mous. Iquique H interesting only from a commercial point of view. It»is the principal shipping port for tin to make the visit enjoyable to us. A horse back ride around the city was one of the features of the en-tertainment and we formed quite a regiment of cavalry. You may not believe it but I am considered a very fair horseman, and 1 am sure I am more proficient than most of my brother officers. I forgot to tell you that we couldn't always make ourselves understood but got along very well indeed. Altogether the trip was a great success. Copiapo contains about twenty live thousand inhabitants and was once the center of the silver and copper mining districts. The pro-duct of the mines has greatly de-creased but considerable quantities are still obtained. Although Caldera is situated in a barren, rocky country. Copiapo is a fertile valley which raises fruits andjvegetablcs in abundance. Around you are the desert moun-tains, rocky and sandy and making the city all the more pleasant by contrast. The most magnificent grapes I have ever seen are grown here and all the fruit seem to be a grade liner than it is anywhere else . This valley is a veritable oasis in for which lie fought and suffered has been buried forever, but there is no sentiment of honor or patriot-ism, which requires us to bury the memory of those whose blood was shed for it. Southern people will have lost every honorable senti-ment when they forget him who, for their sakes, wore shackles upon his wasted limbs." GENERAL SUMNERS Remains Removed to the Guilford Battle-Ground. WAKREKTOV, N.C., May 'JO. '91. Editor Xi irs n„,i Observer: The remains (and precious little at that) of Gen. Jethn Revolutionary fame were taken Alliances r.nd Labor Organi-zations in Council- Many States Send Dele-gates. I'lMiNXATl, ()., May 19,—Tiie arrivals today of Delegates to i In- National Convent ion were numer-ous. Between lo0 and 501) came in from Kansas. 100 from Ken-tucky and good-sized contingents from Illinois. Iowa, Wisconsin and Tennessee. Fully 1,000 members of various Alliances a:ui labor or-ganizations arc here, and every train adds its quoto to the throng. Five of the eight representatives in Congress from Kansas, Messrs. Otis, (lover, Simpson, linker and Davis, are here. The Reform Press Association held a meeting at the Emory Hotel for the purpose of forming u na-tional organization and arranging for an interchange of news service. A conference was also held be-tween delegates from New York and Boston and those of Southern States, looking toward the reach-ing of an understanding that will enable the Northern and Southern wings to work harmoniously on the floor of the convention. Those opposed to the formation of a third party, however, detained to carry their point. SOMEWHAT SURPRISED. He Went to Visit Brabham and Re-mained a Prisoner. There was one surprised negro I in town—or rather in jail—yester- I day. Policeman Irvine arrested [one ('has. Alexander, alias Hill Pharr, as one of the leaders in the moli the night of Mecca's murder, and took him to jail. Sunnier ">i"' When they went in the policeman |saw a man talking to Brabham, from their resting place, the coun- "ho. slientl Smith sn.d was a vis try town of "Bute," some six or "or "f Brabham s. "Why that,s the man you have been looking for for two weeks." said the policeman, ••that's Jno. Brown." Sheriff Smith, it seems, did not know .Jno. Brown by sight, but had been trying for two weeks to catch up with him. A word to the wise was sufficient, so the shcritl' walked up and col-lared his man. Brown was one surprised individual. He was al-got out of that jail he bet he would never go to visit anybody anymore. —('<</*. ' 'hronirU . WHISTLING CORSETS. An American Idea That Tickles the Parisian Fancy. btyA Fins tai: teg: Mias:.:-.i's. "t.:;;;::;;;!- OF OHKKNSIJOltO, I able lin«* place. Tin* streets uw broad ami although not paved ure very hard and free from dust. It • ■■..... i ■ i itii-i, . i-n'. |i r I rn-:-T-rity. li.- i ' i IV N'.J. A.OOKLL., Ill '. IXD, ;!.\s. , i. .1. A. • ■..i .i. \v. - n. . DIKE BOOK CO., STATIONARY, FANCY GOODS. : ■ never rains here and the climate is exceptionally fine. The surround-ing country is barren ill the cx-iii and there is not a sign nf vegetation to be sun anywhere. This is a part of the great At.i-eoma Desert and contains more mineral wealth than any Other part of the globe. In fact it has been •ailed the world's natural chemical labratory. On the land side the citv is completely surrounded by J!,nor j high, steep mountains whereon >'.'■'; nothing but u fur cactus grow ' iy="»«»J ,!,„! ;ook like huge sand heaps. Winding lip the lace of these mountains are a few juulo paths and a railroad penetrating about fifty miles into the interior and connecting Pisngua, about forty miles north, with Iquique, can be n zigzagging, twisting and turn-ing but always rising slowly along the face •'! the hills until it disap-pears in a ravine at the top. This ' railroad is said to lie quite a feat o| i nginei ring. You would be surprised to sec lion barren this country is. it is as much a desert as .'the Sahara, and 1 imagine i; would be a much hard-er place to get out of, if one should be losl in it. Chile is to me a very unattractive seven miles from Warrentou, near Jones' Springs, yesterday tile 19th. The late State Legislature, thro' the influence of Judge Schenck, inaMc an appropriation for the pur-pose of having the tomb and what of the remains that could be found of Gen. Sumncr removed to Guil ford Court House Battle-Ground. Yesterday Dr. I). It. Schenck, oi the desert and convinces you that I Greensboro, with Hon. Charles Chile is indeed a land of contrast j Cook, of our town, with several | ■«*.JPeechlcss from.fright. When and surprise. It has more varie- | hands, went to the spot above men- '"' ''"' «*' ties of climate, si.il. vegetation and! tinned and removed the monument mineral wealth than any country land a few soft bones, all that was in the world. There is a district', left mortal of this once honored and in the north where it never rains ' distinguished chieftain to Warren-and a district in the south where it | ton, where the monumentwas placed rains constantly. Its climate ex-1 on the cars and the remains in a tends from the tropical heat of Icasket, all to be forwarded at onee Arica, through the temperate prov- I to Greensboro. Gen Sunnier was I All Paris i- laughing over the inces to the extreme cold of Tierra Iquite a distinguished man in hisl joke about an American inventor del Kuiego. Within these limits it day. Gen, Sunnier was sheriff, asI who is said to have patented a cor-produces in greater or less quanti- | the old record in the Register's of- , set that is to bring about the reign lice of this county shows, of the I of morality al once. If one of these county of Bute, which then embrac-1 articles is pressed by a lover's arm ed Warren county and several coun-! it al once emits a shriek like the ties adjacent, lie was sheriff of j whistle of a railway engine: and Bute sometime between the years! the inventor claims that he has al-of 1788 and "73. ready married three of his daugh- The monument over his grave hitters, owing to the publicity thus quite a heavy massive structure, thrust upon a backward lover. o direct to Valparaiso and this we I which was made and erected no-1 But the wits of Paris, carrying lid arriving there on the ^'.Ith in-t. cording to the plan, model, fcc, set out the joke to its utmost, profess ties nearly evcrv known natural product of the earth. It is truly a remarkable country. We remained at Caldera three days, and again started south os-tensibly for Coquimbo. On the way, however, something 1 don't know what, decided the Admiral t By rail 32,000,000 pounds of fruit were shipped from California Jan-uary 1 to May I. Kuima Riehenburg, of St. Louis, has been locked in her room by her parents for lire years, because she kissed a painter. According to the last census there were twenty-six 15-year-old married women in Paris, and two of them have since been divorced. One of the most notorious des-peradoes in West Virginia, George W. Shirk, has hanged himself in jail in I'endleton. A reign of terror exists at Wood-side, I.. L, where undetected incen-diaries and burglaries have been operated for months. James Gordon Bennett started the first'Sunday edition of a daily paper. The Knglish dailies still have no Sunday edition. Sam Jones has converted a Ten-nessee . editor, and some people think that the mission of the great Georgia evangelist has been accom-plished. A sensation in business circles has been caused in Montreal be-cause the Bank of Montreal paid out 11,200,000 in dividends and ennreifonly $800,000. The French army budget for next year is larger by 78,000,000 francs than in 1891. In accord-with tlio increased amount 1124 offi-cers, 7.100 men and 1,045 horses are to be added to the army. The 'only woman on record who was the wife of a governor, the sis-ter of a governor, the niece of a governor, and the aunt and foster mother of a governor was a South-ern woman. Her name was Mrs. Richard Manning and she came from South Carolina. The Raleigh Observer says all the railroads of the State have generously agreed to transport all Confederate veterans to Raleigh free who are entitled to enter the Soldiers'* Home and who wish to come to Raleigh for that purpose. This is n> very handsome otrcr on the part of the railroads. The proverbial liberality of New Yorkers, says the Sun, has just been illustrated in the Madison Avenue Reformed Church. On Sunday of last week Rev. Dr. Kit-tredgc notified his hearers that he desired to clear o1f the church debt of .120,000, and the whole of this sum was subscribed at once, i or before the close of that day. The boat that bore the body of John Wilkes Booth away from Washington down the Potomac has been sold for $15,000, and will be converted into a Philadelphia coal barge. The boat is the monitor Saugus, and she has lain for sev-enteen years at the Washington navy yard. She hears several huge dents imprinted in her stalwart sides through the force of cannon balls. Her turret also shows sev-eral huge dents, as well as the pilot house. Lovely Women. In this trip I obtained a glimpse of I forth in the will of his daughter, j to fear that soon the parlors will the northern portion of Chile and I Mrs. Blount, of Tarboro. The de- become unbearable owing to the pa—ed from the President's juris-'sign as set Jorth in the will, was diction to that of the revolutionists I such as was in that day erected and vice versa. These people are 1 over members of Congress buried exactly alike, talk alike, think alike! in Washington City. The monu-but are terribly bent on shooting ment is in a good State of preser- ,..,,.|, other. ■ vation, but is very much discolored April 11th, 1891. by the dark and unsightly dies ' ,. , . ,,, [from nature's labratory. It is to Mans arc irregular and so areilet- |whed aml set up j„ qnlte a ters, from seaman. .This arises eon^ieuoua 8pot on t|le Guilford from the nature of things and als- ' r-. » i >r. _• in niir I ,|-i CII.-IMIIM from the disturbed condition of alfairs in this country. There are rumors that the revo-lutionist or rather insurrectionists have taken ('oquimbo and that they will soon attempt the reduction of Valparaiso. I don't believe they "J1 will attack Valparaiso for some'r time to come. However, there is no telling what may happen in such a country where the people always seem to act contrary to the dictates of common sense. The money here is depreciating very much and we now get sixteen Chilian dollars for a live dollar gold piece. The prices of articles the pieuous sp Battle Ground to perpetuate the the memory of this distinguished North Carolinian. He (lied in March, 1786, and must have been buried over one hundred and six years before taken perhaps the only instance on record in the United States of the removal of a body which had been j ^.'j^ ^ ghn buried so long. ! ,ik,' ge,an There is an inscription on one side of th- square base of the tomb A White Man Turned Elack. which reads as follows: "To the; memory of General Jethro Sumncr. XKW-YOKK, May I'.'.—Tin- skin one of'the heroes of "711."—••.l»«.«:0f Henry Welch turned from white /.ex./" in Hull-i'l.'i <Hi*t■rrcr <•/ /"</'/:,'. i j0 vellow, and from yellow to simultaneous and continued whist-ling of all the corsets. Spring Time lias Come, Gentle Annie. The green apple is now seen in the land and the small boy rejoices us a strong man to run a race. For he lias said in his heart, in thee is there no guile, and thy swiftness shall follow me all the days of my life. But he that eateth thereof shall be taken unawares, for it cometh as a thief in the night, and no one knoweth where it listeth. His groaning shall be heard throughout all the day. and in tlrt' night time shall he he cast out. altogether miscra- L. B. TIIKBIIO. .,,.; ntn- on account of the lack of |««« >"" "*™ «.«»«« "* 'V» "» exchange has depreciated, con- THE DIRECT TAX LISTS. Zs0 ' Italian Marble. ■ nl-. Tl :- ■ I "ill'-e. I.re, " . •. ' . GRCESBORO MUSIC venuure. practically North of ('oquimbo it is rreal desert and the coast is almost a desert, even south ■ at. Valparaiso has no grass seqliently we can live quite cheaply. Suppose-eventually prices will go „ ,,,._Arm. up with a jump and put a different Jj £ ^^^.^ thiBeven. i brown, and from brown to a darker i brown, and then to black. Welch I was admitted to the Presbyterian 0apt A. L. De Rosset Arrives in j hospital twelve days ago. lie is an Raleigh With the Last of Them. irishman, about *50 years of age. and until a year ago was in good health. lie died to-night. s f-*\ vallevs are very fertile when water- "" her of errors in the Government were discovered, l'eti- „ere wrongly counted. |and food must be shipped to Iqui-|daye ago. one. tiie There will i,P no trouble in «h- -ZZZT f~\ r~) T. ed and cultivated. Nothing, how- Oncol our now cruisers, the count8 -LTJ-v—» v—/_J—I, Dvcr geows in the Atacoma Desert "Baltimore," arrived here a few , .(,tjes we i i\..„i nmai lie sliiiiupil to loui- clavs ai'o. and another one, the „,, ■Mi •• l: I 11. Ill \i:. river is uow slowly falling. Wants Governor Tillman Put Out. que from other points. , \ " San Francisco" is said to "••■ I u|Bjn. the 126,000 vet duo. lit- i OOK&AASMOiEEBnlI'BIKGi,, SS.. I<''... May 19.— Lying in the harbor with us her way. If this keeps up,, the ghowe|j tn(. fiflh 'Auditor the'National Farmers' Alliance Lee. wen-three or the rebel war-vessels Admiral will have quite a little I. . aJ aec0UnU 0f the Direct Tax turer Ben Terrell i= here today. \L RROCKitlANIt, Principal, and several transports. The trans- lb et before long. . I Commissioner, in which not one | and in his speech advises i d i.nt of VOK K. VIOLIN. &«'. . Commissioner, ports were loaded with troops, and: 1 will note here one instance 01 | wfir(j jg snj,i about penalties. It I Governor 1 illmaii be turn eft with all but one war-vessel two | the cruelty of these people. The | wug n)s(> foun(, th.u n rcgl,inr order [the Alliance on account of his op- The ugly temper of a pretty wo-maiutlways shows through. A widow is the sandwich between a tear and a smile. When women speak kindly of each other Gabriel will blow his horn. Woman is the complement of a perfect kiss. Satan never could have broken into the Garden of Kden with a man on watch. If only women fought battles there would be only wars of ex-termination. Most women are ambitious; they want to be men. No woman is really beautiful until she is old. There would bo no religion if there were no religious women. Sweethearts and wives are en-tirely different women. A woman is seldom prosaic until she is sonic man's mother-in-law. Few Southerners in It. Observers in Cincinnati are struck with the slight attendance of Southern delegates to the Third Party Convention. The reasons for this are not far to seek. The Soiithen farmers sec in this move-ment a menace to the harmony that prevails among them upon vital political questions, especially in regard t" Tariff Reform. They have experienced something of this already iii South Carolina and Georgia. In the South a Third PartV would naturally become a rival*of the Democrats and an ally of the Republicans. The South-ern farmers have no grievance against the Democratic party, and hence they look with distrusts upon anything that threatens to divide it." A divided Democratic party to them would mean obstruction and delay of Tariff Reform in Congress, and danger to the orderly adminis-tration "of their local alfairs.— |/•;,//. ttrrord. A Great Estate. A customer who dropped a silver dollar on I'U- floor remarked as it rolled nw.iv. "A dollar goes ■ long way in thU store." 2000 Yards Figured Lawns same quality and style as merchants have heretofore sold at SEVEN CENTS PER YARD the world over. We have bought this lot at a closing out price and shall give our customers the BENEFIT by dosing the case at 5 centsper yard. GhLV JtlBT _A."W-A_"5T a nice Japanese Fan to every Customer. Wo are also selling a regular (i cent Challie at .'» cents per yard. We have recently received a beautiful new assortment of GINGHAMS, PERCALES, WHITE DRESS GOODS from FIVE CENTS per yard up. Swisses, Black and White Lawns, Alhatros, China Silks, Notions, etc., etc. It will not cost much to come and see how far a Dollar will go. If the goods and prices arc not satisfactory, you are not obliged to buy. ■©-CUT THIS OUT and [.ring with you, and we will allow tin* same discount as last month. Respectfully yours, RAYMOND & POWELL, NATIONAL BANK BUILDING, GREENSBORO, N. C. GEERMANf-'/AW:IERICAN Insurance Gompany of New York. Capital Stock, - - - . $1000,000.00 Net Surplus, - .... $2,393,735.81 Total Assets. - - $.".,5 IS, 174.8(5 S ATVT'XJ L. TROGDOW, -A-S't, Office xxi. Sa-vlngs Ban."!?, GREENSBORO, X. C. IHIE-A-ID QUARTERS FOR PURE DRUGS AND CHEMICALS, 3?a'b©3X,t TMTfWl 1Q1 Tl n. IMIxixex-al Waters LANDRETH'S GARDEN SEEDS, TRUSSES AND BRACKS CAREFULLY FITTED. From our Large Stock we can supply Physicians ami Stores in the ( oiintry at short notice Orders and l'HKSi Il'TlONs by Mail filled and forwarded by next train. PRICEH REASONAULE Richardson & Fariss, Opposite Benbow House, feb. IS, Successors to W. (.'. Porter. GREENSBORO, N. U ARCHITECT'S NOTICE. If you contemplate building, call upon us and we will be pleased togire you any information you may require, in regard to the matter. Plans, Specifications and Details furnishcil at reasonable rates, also Superintendence if desired. Address Epps <fe Hackett, 311 SOUTH ELM ST., GREENSBORO, N. C. OUR LAEGE STOCK OF WALLPAPER .lavs before we did. they were 'commander of the Government . . nt,, fh- Secretary of position to the sub-treasury plan. The Drexel estate no*- amounts sunoosed to lie bound lor Antofa- troops. Gen. Boble, was wounded ■ ' I \ ■ KMANXi ini -- Mum :;';'. all over the world will feel tin ImmenseoQnntitics nf r- children were in many cases killed dark that it was necessary to light leive cigarette reetsofit. Immense o>ntities of or maltreated. The worse peoppliee tthhee s^aass iinn tthhee ssttoorreess aamndi oot.hlleccess., aamnd. wmas|mgrie>at7ly>s»w"ol ' »" ,,,„-,,„,.,„, _:'„„. ;„., used in tie Lnited claim that Bobl« began this kind the electric light companies were He had been t«Id ' Sat"" •'""' "" ■"PP'J ia ,l,i,llv of warfare but in any case it would , ipelled to turn on their circuits, that the poison »,-'■■ ' " "" drawn from tliifCProvinte of Tara- have been worthy of an American Forest tires are to the west and garetles. but be would not ^.vt ',.., ' i Indian. A. S. north. 'them up. e 8 rs. uc, the .utire estate of oW $20,000,- 000 would then,lie divided accord-ing to the will among specific char-hies within the pale of the Roman Catholic Church. is steadilv increasing. < omo and examine evon il you do not wlsn to buy at present. We arc offering splendid bargains in all grade! of paper. anil can furnish you competent workmen to do the hanging. Look up our former advertisements in thi- paper and you may find a chance to save money, we stand to our agreement! whether old or new. Our address is •"•! 1 South Kim Strut. McAdoo Block, GRKENSBORO, N. <'. "We have the new powerful binders, mowers and rakes of the famous 'Walter A. Wood, also the genuine parts and "Wood" brand of twine, all choice. Walter A. Wood is not only an inventor, but a rare mechanic with the inborn faculty of putting bright ideas into common-sense shape. The intensely American style of his machines makes others look clumsy and foreign. He is one of those earnest men who do not say much; but his machines do, in the field. We have pamphlets explaining them in plain words, and would like to have thoughtful, thriity men send for copies and come and see this fine group of machines. T.S. BOWLES & CO., At H. W. DIXON'S Old Stand. The Saw swings over the door feb '2o No. 223 South Elm Street, OreciuMioro, V. C.
Object Description
Title | The Greensboro patriot [May 28, 1891] |
Date | 1891-05-28 |
Editor(s) | Wharton, H.W. |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The May 28, 1891, issue of The Greensboro Patriot, a newspaper published in Greensboro, N.C. by Patriot Publishing Company. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : Patriot Publishing Company |
Language | eng |
Contributing institution | UNCG University Libraries |
Newspaper name | The Greensboro Patriot |
Rights statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Additional rights information | NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material. |
Object ID | patriot-1891-05-28 |
Digital publisher | The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries, PO Box 26170, Greensboro NC 27402-6170, 336.334.5304 |
Digitized by | Creekside Media |
Sponsor | Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation |
OCLC number | 871563531 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
*!**■?"***»»■-
THE GREENSBORO PATRIOT.
M « SIKH*. \«»- 1.183 GREENSBORO, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY '28, 1891. ( Bjr ike P*lrl«l Pabllabloi (infaii;.
I TMBIt Sl.so P»r Te«r, la Alnin.
Dr. A. R. WILSON, WARIN CHILE.!,^±SSWE
S.SltOKO, X. ''
,.„,,. in Medicine nn.i | WHAT A GREENSBORO BOY SEES
l„..i|.le nl (irceii.il
: j country. Itesl-
■
AND HEARS OFF THE COAST
OF CHILE.
Dr. Arthur E. Ledbetter,
-i i:\ I I.- I" I ■ I.- I'll
roumlllltf • In .
-. ■-(-:...■
Awful Cruelty of the Insurgents, no
Quarters Given to Prisoners—-
Women and Children Killed
and Maltreated.
VALPARAISO, (HIM:,
March 31st, 1891.
tJT tl U7o1ro4iold Since writing my last letter I
OOCtOi' W. i*. WSLKBuBTOi. have been on quite an extended trip
I to the northern parts of Chile and
only arrived here on the morning
of the 29thj We left Valparaiso
'in the !lili of March, anil sailed
direct to Iquique, taking advantage
of the winds which at 11>i-s time of
the year always blow from the
South. The distance from Val-paraiso
to luuique is about nine
hundred miles, and we wen- about
si\ days in sailing that distance.
When WO arrived at Iquique we
found the town entirely in posses-sion
of the Opposition, and the
i fleet quietly at anchor in (lie harbor.
I Only live days before our" arrival
an important battle had been fought
all iiit 20 miles from the town, and
the Government troops were totally
defeated. Some of the troops de-serted
to the Opposition, some were
killed and captured, and the re-mainder
took refuge in thfl desert.
What they can do tosustajn life in
that dreary country I cannot im-agine,
and I should say that their
; fall- was a very hard one. The
Chilian soldiers are said to light
like demons when once they be-come
thoroughly aroused, and the
mortality in these Dghts has lieen
something enormous. Tin y have
had four battles in this Province
S'SliORO, X. < •■
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Dr. W.J.RICHARDSON,
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in try.
was going on there. We only re-mained
a few hours, as there was
no need for US, and then sailed
south for Antafagusta. We found
that the fleet had tnken Antofagus-ta
with pratieally no flgfating
and that everything was quiet.
After placing ourselves in com-
JEFFERSON DAVIS. \rwmA'nSSSm™tttam
A STIRRING APPEAL TO THE ' Over a Thousand Representatives of
GENERAL NEWS.
i U. WHIilliT,
(jfilnier & Wright,
- AT - LAW,
■
1 I'otirts,
• • O.unlj
IJOIIO, X. C
SOUTHERN PEOPLE.
Every County and Town in the South
Should Contribute to this •
^Joble Cause.
NASIIVU.I.K. Telili., May 11).—
munication with the United States) John A. Childress and Patrick
Consul we left AntaBgUBtS Bound Walsh, of this city, and.John Long-for
Caldera. Caldera is the sea don Welser, of Charleston, S. CH
port of the city of Copiapo and is issued to-day a circular letter, to
a small uninteresting place built the Southern people in which they
on barren roeks This post of the explain that the fund intended for
country is fti possession of the ■ a monument to Jefferson Davis has
Government party. A railroad ceased to receive contributions and
connects Caldera with Copiapo and call for a general movement
the distance to the latter place is throughout the. South, fixing the
fifty miles. date at June IS, 1891, when the
At the invitation of the authori-1 people of every town and county
ties quite n party of us visited'shall meet and take proper steps to
Copiapo, in a special train furnish-' forward the enterprise by voluntary
ed by the Government. Wo start- contributions or othermetods which
ed at seven o'clock in the morningIthey may deem best. Remittances
and returned at ten o'clock in theIare to be sent to Mr. Welser at
evening. Wo spent quite a pleas- Charleston.
ant time and were shown every at- j The letter says: "Among all the
tention. We were the guests of the i noble dead there is none whose
army officers, and dined at their i name appeals with greater power
garrison moss. They gave us a j to the affectionate remembrance of
Gne dinner and laid themselves out the Southern people: The cause
ROBERT E DOUGLAS,
SliOUO, N. •'..
. AT LAW
; CIIAXCKKY ANDEXAMIN'KK ,,f Tarapaco and about dve thou-sand
men were engaged, of these
I r •■ Ci it* .vivir.ir-
""•INSURANCE FIRE,
I .
0NLY1FIRS1-CLASS COMPANIES
liKI'KKSENTKD.
the National Bank
iro Insurance,
o. W. « \lllt A ««».
Books' Books!Books!
i hr i.i ei IKIUHII Hook Store
•■ lillOKS in plain
llagster Tcaclie r
,-. I'apcr bound
. Weekly Papers, Mag-
.- :i line line of Kancy
ul every variety
anil nl prices to MI'I!
(all and * at
S th Klin Street,
■ I louse, i ircoensboro, N. ''.
1200 have been killed and about
1000 wounded. At the time I was
in Iquique thjre were some six
hundred wounded men in the hos-pital-,
some dt them were in a fear-ful
condition*, the wounds made by
the Gattling guns were particular-ly
serious.**Tlie bones of men's
legs would be shattered like glass,
and a great many amputations were
in pessary.
The city of Iquique has beep
bombarded by the fleet and a great
deal of it has been burnt. The
greater part of the business section
is in ashes. A great deal of light-ing
has taken place inside the city,
ami the streets -how many signs of
it. The walls of the houses are
lit. rally spattered w ith bullet holes.
Great holes are torn in some of the
building- wheic shells from the
guns if the Beet have passed. The
damage to properly bus been enor-mous.
Iquique H interesting only from
a commercial point of view. It»is
the principal shipping port for tin
to make the visit enjoyable to us.
A horse back ride around the city
was one of the features of the en-tertainment
and we formed quite a
regiment of cavalry. You may not
believe it but I am considered a
very fair horseman, and 1 am sure
I am more proficient than most of
my brother officers. I forgot to
tell you that we couldn't always
make ourselves understood but got
along very well indeed. Altogether
the trip was a great success.
Copiapo contains about twenty
live thousand inhabitants and was
once the center of the silver and
copper mining districts. The pro-duct
of the mines has greatly de-creased
but considerable quantities
are still obtained.
Although Caldera is situated in
a barren, rocky country. Copiapo
is a fertile valley which raises
fruits andjvegetablcs in abundance.
Around you are the desert moun-tains,
rocky and sandy and making
the city all the more pleasant by
contrast. The most magnificent
grapes I have ever seen are grown
here and all the fruit seem to be a
grade liner than it is anywhere else .
This valley is a veritable oasis in
for which lie fought and suffered
has been buried forever, but there
is no sentiment of honor or patriot-ism,
which requires us to bury the
memory of those whose blood was
shed for it. Southern people will
have lost every honorable senti-ment
when they forget him who,
for their sakes, wore shackles upon
his wasted limbs."
GENERAL SUMNERS
Remains Removed to the Guilford
Battle-Ground.
WAKREKTOV, N.C., May 'JO. '91.
Editor Xi irs n„,i Observer: The
remains (and precious little at
that) of Gen. Jethn
Revolutionary fame were taken
Alliances r.nd Labor Organi-zations
in Council- Many
States Send Dele-gates.
I'lMiNXATl, ()., May 19,—Tiie
arrivals today of Delegates to i In-
National Convent ion were numer-ous.
Between lo0 and 501) came
in from Kansas. 100 from Ken-tucky
and good-sized contingents
from Illinois. Iowa, Wisconsin and
Tennessee. Fully 1,000 members
of various Alliances a:ui labor or-ganizations
arc here, and every
train adds its quoto to the throng.
Five of the eight representatives
in Congress from Kansas, Messrs.
Otis, (lover, Simpson, linker and
Davis, are here.
The Reform Press Association
held a meeting at the Emory Hotel
for the purpose of forming u na-tional
organization and arranging
for an interchange of news service.
A conference was also held be-tween
delegates from New York
and Boston and those of Southern
States, looking toward the reach-ing
of an understanding that will
enable the Northern and Southern
wings to work harmoniously on the
floor of the convention. Those
opposed to the formation of a third
party, however, detained to carry
their point.
SOMEWHAT SURPRISED.
He Went to Visit Brabham and Re-mained
a Prisoner.
There was one surprised negro
I in town—or rather in jail—yester-
I day. Policeman Irvine arrested
[one ('has. Alexander, alias Hill
Pharr, as one of the leaders
in the moli the night of Mecca's
murder, and took him to jail.
Sunnier ">i"' When they went in the policeman
|saw a man talking to Brabham,
from their resting place, the coun- "ho. slientl Smith sn.d was a vis
try town of "Bute," some six or "or "f Brabham s. "Why that,s
the man you have been looking for
for two weeks." said the policeman,
••that's Jno. Brown."
Sheriff Smith, it seems, did not
know .Jno. Brown by sight, but had
been trying for two weeks to catch
up with him.
A word to the wise was sufficient,
so the shcritl' walked up and col-lared
his man. Brown was one
surprised individual. He was al-got
out of that jail he bet he would
never go to visit anybody anymore.
—('<*. ' 'hronirU .
WHISTLING CORSETS.
An American Idea That Tickles the
Parisian Fancy.
btyA Fins tai: teg: Mias:.:-.i's. "t.:;;;::;;;!-
OF OHKKNSIJOltO,
I able lin«* place. Tin* streets uw
broad ami although not paved ure
very hard and free from dust. It
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IV N'.J. A.OOKLL.,
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DIKE BOOK CO.,
STATIONARY, FANCY GOODS.
: ■
never rains here and the climate is
exceptionally fine. The surround-ing
country is barren ill the cx-iii
and there is not a sign nf
vegetation to be sun anywhere.
This is a part of the great At.i-eoma
Desert and contains more
mineral wealth than any Other part
of the globe. In fact it has been
•ailed the world's natural chemical
labratory. On the land side the
citv is completely surrounded by
J!,nor j high, steep mountains whereon
>'.'■'; nothing but u fur cactus grow
' iy="»«»J ,!,„! ;ook like huge sand heaps.
Winding lip the lace of these
mountains are a few juulo paths
and a railroad penetrating about
fifty miles into the interior and
connecting Pisngua, about forty
miles north, with Iquique, can be
n zigzagging, twisting and turn-ing
but always rising slowly along
the face •'! the hills until it disap-pears
in a ravine at the top. This
' railroad is said to lie quite a feat
o| i nginei ring.
You would be surprised to sec
lion barren this country is. it is as
much a desert as .'the Sahara, and
1 imagine i; would be a much hard-er
place to get out of, if one should
be losl in it.
Chile is to me a very unattractive
seven miles from Warrentou, near
Jones' Springs, yesterday tile 19th.
The late State Legislature, thro'
the influence of Judge Schenck,
inaMc an appropriation for the pur-pose
of having the tomb and what
of the remains that could be found
of Gen. Sumncr removed to Guil
ford Court House Battle-Ground.
Yesterday Dr. I). It. Schenck, oi
the desert and convinces you that I Greensboro, with Hon. Charles
Chile is indeed a land of contrast j Cook, of our town, with several | ■«*.JPeechlcss from.fright. When
and surprise. It has more varie- | hands, went to the spot above men- '"' ''"' «*'
ties of climate, si.il. vegetation and! tinned and removed the monument
mineral wealth than any country land a few soft bones, all that was
in the world. There is a district', left mortal of this once honored and
in the north where it never rains ' distinguished chieftain to Warren-and
a district in the south where it | ton, where the monumentwas placed
rains constantly. Its climate ex-1 on the cars and the remains in a
tends from the tropical heat of Icasket, all to be forwarded at onee
Arica, through the temperate prov- I to Greensboro. Gen Sunnier was I All Paris i- laughing over the
inces to the extreme cold of Tierra Iquite a distinguished man in hisl joke about an American inventor
del Kuiego. Within these limits it day. Gen, Sunnier was sheriff, asI who is said to have patented a cor-produces
in greater or less quanti- | the old record in the Register's of- , set that is to bring about the reign
lice of this county shows, of the I of morality al once. If one of these
county of Bute, which then embrac-1 articles is pressed by a lover's arm
ed Warren county and several coun-! it al once emits a shriek like the
ties adjacent, lie was sheriff of j whistle of a railway engine: and
Bute sometime between the years! the inventor claims that he has al-of
1788 and "73. ready married three of his daugh-
The monument over his grave hitters, owing to the publicity thus
quite a heavy massive structure, thrust upon a backward lover.
o direct to Valparaiso and this we I which was made and erected no-1 But the wits of Paris, carrying
lid arriving there on the ^'.Ith in-t. cording to the plan, model, fcc, set out the joke to its utmost, profess
ties nearly evcrv known natural
product of the earth. It is truly a
remarkable country.
We remained at Caldera three
days, and again started south os-tensibly
for Coquimbo. On the
way, however, something 1 don't
know what, decided the Admiral t
By rail 32,000,000 pounds of fruit
were shipped from California Jan-uary
1 to May I.
Kuima Riehenburg, of St. Louis,
has been locked in her room by her
parents for lire years, because she
kissed a painter.
According to the last census
there were twenty-six 15-year-old
married women in Paris, and two
of them have since been divorced.
One of the most notorious des-peradoes
in West Virginia, George
W. Shirk, has hanged himself in
jail in I'endleton.
A reign of terror exists at Wood-side,
I.. L, where undetected incen-diaries
and burglaries have been
operated for months.
James Gordon Bennett started
the first'Sunday edition of a daily
paper. The Knglish dailies still
have no Sunday edition.
Sam Jones has converted a Ten-nessee
. editor, and some people
think that the mission of the great
Georgia evangelist has been accom-plished.
A sensation in business circles
has been caused in Montreal be-cause
the Bank of Montreal paid
out 11,200,000 in dividends and
ennreifonly $800,000.
The French army budget for
next year is larger by 78,000,000
francs than in 1891. In accord-with
tlio increased amount 1124 offi-cers,
7.100 men and 1,045 horses
are to be added to the army.
The 'only woman on record who
was the wife of a governor, the sis-ter
of a governor, the niece of a
governor, and the aunt and foster
mother of a governor was a South-ern
woman. Her name was Mrs.
Richard Manning and she came
from South Carolina.
The Raleigh Observer says all
the railroads of the State have
generously agreed to transport all
Confederate veterans to Raleigh
free who are entitled to enter the
Soldiers'* Home and who wish to
come to Raleigh for that purpose.
This is n> very handsome otrcr on
the part of the railroads.
The proverbial liberality of New
Yorkers, says the Sun, has just
been illustrated in the Madison
Avenue Reformed Church. On
Sunday of last week Rev. Dr. Kit-tredgc
notified his hearers that he
desired to clear o1f the church
debt of .120,000, and the whole of
this sum was subscribed at once,
i or before the close of that day.
The boat that bore the body of
John Wilkes Booth away from
Washington down the Potomac has
been sold for $15,000, and will be
converted into a Philadelphia coal
barge. The boat is the monitor
Saugus, and she has lain for sev-enteen
years at the Washington
navy yard. She hears several huge
dents imprinted in her stalwart
sides through the force of cannon
balls. Her turret also shows sev-eral
huge dents, as well as the pilot
house.
Lovely Women.
In this trip I obtained a glimpse of I forth in the will of his daughter, j to fear that soon the parlors will
the northern portion of Chile and I Mrs. Blount, of Tarboro. The de- become unbearable owing to the
pa—ed from the President's juris-'sign as set Jorth in the will, was
diction to that of the revolutionists I such as was in that day erected
and vice versa. These people are 1 over members of Congress buried
exactly alike, talk alike, think alike! in Washington City. The monu-but
are terribly bent on shooting ment is in a good State of preser-
,..,,.|, other. ■ vation, but is very much discolored
April 11th, 1891. by the dark and unsightly dies
' ,. , . ,,, [from nature's labratory. It is to
Mans arc irregular and so areilet- |whed aml set up j„ qnlte a
ters, from seaman. .This arises eon^ieuoua 8pot on t|le Guilford
from the nature of things and als- '
r-. » i >r.
_• in niir
I ,|-i CII.-IMIIM
from the disturbed condition of
alfairs in this country.
There are rumors that the revo-lutionist
or rather insurrectionists
have taken ('oquimbo and that they
will soon attempt the reduction of
Valparaiso. I don't believe they "J1
will attack Valparaiso for some'r
time to come. However, there is
no telling what may happen in such
a country where the people always
seem to act contrary to the dictates
of common sense.
The money here is depreciating
very much and we now get sixteen
Chilian dollars for a live dollar
gold piece. The prices of articles
the
pieuous sp
Battle Ground to perpetuate the
the memory of this distinguished
North Carolinian.
He (lied in March, 1786, and
must have been buried over one
hundred and six years before taken
perhaps the only instance on
record in the United States of the
removal of a body which had been j ^.'j^ ^ ghn
buried so long. ! ,ik,' ge,an
There is an inscription on one
side of th- square base of the tomb A White Man Turned Elack.
which reads as follows: "To the;
memory of General Jethro Sumncr. XKW-YOKK, May I'.'.—Tin- skin
one of'the heroes of "711."—••.l»«.«:0f Henry Welch turned from white
/.ex./" in Hull-i'l.'i "" "*™ «.«»«« "* 'V» "»
exchange has depreciated, con-
THE DIRECT TAX LISTS.
Zs0
' Italian Marble.
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I.re, " . •. ' .
GRCESBORO MUSIC
venuure.
practically
North of ('oquimbo it is
rreal desert and the
coast is almost a desert, even south
■ at. Valparaiso has no grass
seqliently we can live quite cheaply.
Suppose-eventually prices will go „ ,,,._Arm.
up with a jump and put a different Jj £ ^^^.^ thiBeven.
i brown, and from brown to a darker i
brown, and then to black. Welch
I was admitted to the Presbyterian
0apt A. L. De Rosset Arrives in j hospital twelve days ago. lie is an
Raleigh With the Last of Them. irishman, about *50 years of age.
and until a year ago was in good
health. lie died to-night.
s f-*\
vallevs are very fertile when water- "" her of errors in the Government
were discovered, l'eti-
„ere wrongly counted.
|and food must be shipped to Iqui-|daye ago. one. tiie There will i,P no trouble in «h-
-ZZZT f~\ r~) T. ed and cultivated. Nothing, how- Oncol our now cruisers, the count8
-LTJ-v—» v—/_J—I, Dvcr geows in the Atacoma Desert "Baltimore," arrived here a few , .(,tjes we
i i\..„i nmai lie sliiiiupil to loui- clavs ai'o. and another one, the „,,
■Mi •• l: I 11. Ill \i:.
river is uow slowly falling.
Wants Governor Tillman Put Out.
que from other points. , \ " San Francisco" is said to "••■ I u|Bjn. the 126,000 vet duo. lit- i OOK&AASMOiEEBnlI'BIKGi,, SS.. I<''... May 19.—
Lying in the harbor with us her way. If this keeps up,, the ghowe|j tn(. fiflh 'Auditor the'National Farmers' Alliance Lee.
wen-three or the rebel war-vessels Admiral will have quite a little I. . aJ aec0UnU 0f the Direct Tax turer Ben Terrell i= here today.
\L RROCKitlANIt, Principal, and several transports. The trans- lb et before long. . I Commissioner, in which not one | and in his speech advises i
d i.nt of
VOK K. VIOLIN. &«'.
. Commissioner,
ports were loaded with troops, and: 1 will note here one instance 01 | wfir(j jg snj,i about penalties. It I Governor 1 illmaii be turn
eft with all but one war-vessel two | the cruelty of these people. The | wug n)s(> foun(, th.u n rcgl,inr order [the Alliance on account of his op-
The ugly temper of a pretty wo-maiutlways
shows through.
A widow is the sandwich between
a tear and a smile.
When women speak kindly of
each other Gabriel will blow his
horn.
Woman is the complement of a
perfect kiss.
Satan never could have broken
into the Garden of Kden with a
man on watch.
If only women fought battles
there would be only wars of ex-termination.
Most women are ambitious; they
want to be men.
No woman is really beautiful
until she is old.
There would bo no religion if
there were no religious women.
Sweethearts and wives are en-tirely
different women.
A woman is seldom prosaic until
she is sonic man's mother-in-law.
Few Southerners in It.
Observers in Cincinnati are
struck with the slight attendance
of Southern delegates to the Third
Party Convention. The reasons
for this are not far to seek. The
Soiithen farmers sec in this move-ment
a menace to the harmony
that prevails among them upon
vital political questions, especially
in regard t" Tariff Reform. They
have experienced something of this
already iii South Carolina and
Georgia. In the South a Third
PartV would naturally become a
rival*of the Democrats and an ally
of the Republicans. The South-ern
farmers have no grievance
against the Democratic party, and
hence they look with distrusts upon
anything that threatens to divide
it." A divided Democratic party to
them would mean obstruction and
delay of Tariff Reform in Congress,
and danger to the orderly adminis-tration
"of their local alfairs.—
|/•;,//. ttrrord.
A Great Estate.
A customer who dropped a silver dollar on
I'U- floor remarked as it rolled nw.iv.
"A dollar goes ■ long way in thU store."
2000 Yards Figured Lawns
same quality and style as merchants have heretofore sold at SEVEN
CENTS PER YARD the world over. We have bought this lot
at a closing out price and shall give our customers the
BENEFIT by dosing the case at 5 centsper yard.
GhLV JtlBT _A."W-A_"5T a nice Japanese Fan to
every Customer.
Wo are also selling a regular (i cent Challie at .'» cents per yard.
We have recently received a beautiful new assortment of GINGHAMS,
PERCALES, WHITE DRESS GOODS from FIVE CENTS
per yard up. Swisses, Black and White Lawns, Alhatros,
China Silks, Notions, etc., etc.
It will not cost much to come and see how far a Dollar will go. If the
goods and prices arc not satisfactory, you are not obliged to buy.
■©-CUT THIS OUT and [.ring with you, and we will
allow tin* same discount as last month.
Respectfully yours,
RAYMOND & POWELL,
NATIONAL BANK BUILDING, GREENSBORO, N. C.
GEERMANf-'/AW:IERICAN
Insurance Gompany of New York.
Capital Stock, - - - . $1000,000.00
Net Surplus, - .... $2,393,735.81
Total Assets. - - $.".,5 IS, 174.8(5
S ATVT'XJ L. TROGDOW, -A-S't,
Office xxi. Sa-vlngs Ban."!?,
GREENSBORO, X. C.
IHIE-A-ID QUARTERS
FOR
PURE DRUGS AND CHEMICALS,
3?a'b©3X,t TMTfWl 1Q1 Tl n. IMIxixex-al Waters
LANDRETH'S GARDEN SEEDS,
TRUSSES AND BRACKS CAREFULLY FITTED.
From our Large Stock we can supply Physicians ami Stores in the
( oiintry at short notice
Orders and l'HKSi Il'TlONs by Mail filled and forwarded by next train.
PRICEH REASONAULE
Richardson & Fariss,
Opposite Benbow House,
feb. IS,
Successors to W. (.'. Porter.
GREENSBORO, N. U
ARCHITECT'S NOTICE.
If you contemplate building, call upon us and we will be pleased togire
you any information you may require, in regard to the matter.
Plans, Specifications and Details
furnishcil at reasonable rates, also Superintendence if desired.
Address Epps |