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VOL. <;;>, THEM5REENSBORO PATRIOT. GREENSBORO, N. C., WEDNESDAY~ FEBRU 'KOFESSIONAL CARDS. IT AIN'T NO GOOD, OLD MAN. ARY 28, 1894. • ' A. M. >, AI.KS. SIIAW& SCALES, t * < > i • 1-i^.y a at JLarw- SBORO, N. C. n to ill busi- II i >' i i: • I i n -r. 7. ' ourl Square. - ; A i N O. I . "UP. SAPP, AilOKNEVSATLAW ry term of isional aer- ■ iint y. Dr. W.H. Wakefield. ■ n nsboro on the J ! I ruary. \ii:b. It ain't no good at all, old man. This niunitilin' go, AD' grumblin' -••. Thla everlastln< klckln' 'Bool tim scarcity of tin! .le.' I .«. » • I |i To \">l' -unl Till It. ain't no g iod :it ill, old man. This worryin . A n* liurrviii'. Because the llourscoop'a scranin' On the bottom of the bin! Bid tear, and feara depart, old man, Jes keep a cheerful heart, old man, An op,,, out your .lank old SOU) An let the sunshine in ! Yi ■-, times i» had enough, old man, AiT rough enough, An' tough enough, Bui you ain't gainin' nothin' By creatln' such :i fusa : Jes* take times aa they come, old man, An'don't look mad or glum, old man, Bui praise the Lord, an' thank the Lord That they aln'l any truss! —(ami - Rowe In Albany Argus. the Avenging Angels, is a sinister ami ill-omened one. Fuller knowledge „f the orgmniza, t on winch produced such terrible re- W,?,?" '" in"™Q *** "»» to •longed to this rothle . •- Th. (names..f,h,;p!lr,;,iilM,,rs:nt,(; ' n',c""'""'V"1'""-. <!'•"« undo, „ ... Icon' ''7!""' ''''"' hts »'»»»<» he one of those win, would lc forth atnlgtt with fire and sword tocirac terrible reparation. lien feared neighbor, and t a '■ every man spoke nearest his mil. UK. J. RICHARDSON, ■ re. UtO, N\ 0. irgsr, in «. . I SAC KETT, <-i Paper, Decorations '! [.KINGS s, and furnlsh-i. ll.CA' ' IOXA III I.I. NURSERIES, l'«»tm,ii:l. V €'. l ircens- R. A .rounds • 11 • '■ ' IN RUT OR FLOWERS toinsj out A SfUDY IN SCARLET. B^ A. COXAN DOYLE. "Iainoff. Lucy,"he said, taking;her two hands in his ami gazinir tenderly >»wn into her face; "1 wont ask yon no with me now, but will you be '■"■"':■ ' "hen l am hereagainr "And when will that be?" she asked Mushing ai d laughing. . ' \'""'!<' ' - a< the outside. f will come Blld 6Mm you ,,„.„, ,:ly of the things which heart. One tine morning. John Terrier was itarttoast out to his wheat-fields, when, he hear, the click of the latct ■""<• tooldng through the window saw ■ stout, sandy-haired, middle-aged man coming up the pathway. His heart leaped to his moutl none other than tl Young liim I m a free-horn American, and it-s all newtome. 'o.ev, I',,, too old!., learn. IfIiecomcsbrow.singaho.it this farm, he might chance to run up against a charge of buckshot traveling in theon-posite direction." "But they won't let us leave," his uaugher objected. "Wait till Jefferson comes, and we'll soon manage that In the meantime, Dreaa of Tariff Changes NO. !). don't you fret yourself. ,„v ,]carie, an,i , don't get your eve- swelled up, else f°°„„„.':!."B. 7, 8re "0t P'««Uo- W hue the republican leaders are simply making it a matter of daily business to scatter prophecies of WI "" KM1.0" "1C PaSS,'D« '•' «hp Wilson bill up am! down the land U is doubtless the fact that many "ally joined lower om. And as it was with this "i calling for a still country he 11 be walking into me when he seei you. J here's nothing to be afcard •bout, and[there's no danger at all." •loan 1 crraruttered these consoling larksln a very confident tone, but she I not help observing that he paid unusual care t., the fastening of ™that night, and that he car* ■ eaned and " ing politics in the same prof, -...„ , spirit that animates McKinlcy. Reed and the rest of the protec-tionist orators, arc honestly afraid that something bad will" happen when the tariff is lowered. The dread of change i« an ele-siioi^ ilr,',",'''1,'","1 l0Oded ,,,e rustyrfd , nientary human instinct. KsMcia] ]|r;V::-:;eh„,,ng upon the wall of; ly is this true when the proS CHAPTER IV. A niOBX BOB MCE - — proposed change in any way affects the terms of trade oorr tthh,e status of labor. When ths steam railroad wa ANIMAL EXTRACTS. so it was with England'." The pro"'.!PreP«ed According to the Proce ection.st. filled Parliament Sad i »d u»*« the Supervision^ the newspapers with their forecasts DR' WILLIAM A. HAMMONn station i a stem ■ TJirvo i AN KIND i ■ i 'r -. \ inea - 1 kept (' II II o uses versand ■ Snrlne I ruil l'n es, Vines i House ("applicants, ted. • I.IXDI.KV, I'rop'r, I'omona, X. i'. aske 1 •■. all ■ v. mi OS Ills K Et-on,- who can LADIES! lower ■ ■ want. ■ ■ ■ .- . It [g > HI to HUMAN twn ■ v->r Seed Free! ton't ■ l'l Itl 1-|||\(. K •• , MILES Importer. i"ork. rport, R. I. Oras-t t. I Springs. ■ I8lh 8L 1.1. • T a t ■ i lid wr -' will sell at JIJI ! ' II I ' '■ • " | ... in « ;il tiud ' ' r . i , Jarling. There's itand betwe Vnd lion almnt father? "He has given his consent, provided mines working all right 1 h*»e n that head." "Oh, well, of course, if you ami fa-ther have arrai ged it. there's. r0 to he said." she whispered, with her cheek broad breast "Thank nod!"' he -aid. hoarsely, stooping and kissing her. -It is set. tied then. The longer I stay, the harder it will be to go. They are wait-ing f..r me at the canyon. Good-by my own darling g lod-by. In two months yon shall -..-,• me." He tore himself from heras he spoke. ""'• "'" ■■'• I upon his horse ped furiously away, never even | afraid that In- resolution mi -in fail him if he tool: I - at what he was leaving. ■ ■ fter him until he vanished from hersight Then she wall • the house, the happiest girl In all t'tah. Jcffer-liad depart- John Terrier's I). I . l . • m .1 .V A FE f C. IVttfi - Brain > V. ■ Treatment ■ ■ - ■ t Powe, ...... i .,.,,f ■ . I OIIM1 i.l ['. v ■ i-.N- n A FarlsB, ! »niLr.' ... ■ ■ ■; ■ A*5 A PREVENTIVF «r ' iiit.nuiCRas i i hzers. . *^.i-fc. ent I luri. rmrr-. »<• ■ l.ouil I e, Oli/iT-l. io, r-l \\ liole-itli' : lit. .1 US I ...nil .: . ii „ . ulril TDI ,... .,.,,,. r Three weeks had passed sine son Hope and hiso cd from Sali I heart was sore wi ..i,,.,, he ,i","-'1" ' man's return and of the imrn-nding this adopt- V'1 ch,w- v'" it and happy f:"''' '''"' ' ■ ngement """■•' "' tmi nl could have '"""• »e had always determined, deep down m his r [ute in-art. that ' ' him to Mormon. ""'''■' ■' ' led as no la ■ that on,- P°'n< I"' ' II had Co nwever. ■ in those da - In I 1 matter— langer- •' ' their i - ■ . ghl bo HI a swift rictims ! : |>crse-it, and per- ' ' i scrip- "f Seville. 'lit nor the ' ' "' ' V ever aide to put a m.re formidable machinery in ' :'i that w:. ; cloud ry of I'tah. '' ' ■ . and the mj -' T-. which was atl I to it. i ■ i' ■ ■ It ap- ' tent, and • , neither seen nor lied away, and none < lal had "i him ili- v. if.- and chi ' no fa i her "■'• '" : lem how he had i - ..f his secret judges. i word orahasty a-t was fol-by annihilation, and yet none lighl beof Ibis terril iuspended ■ t hal men went in fear and trembling, and that In the heart of the wilderness they red no) .-rasper the doubt. which oppre, sed them. AI Brstt : vagueand terrible power ws i ipon the recalci trants, who, having embraced the Mormon faith, wished aft rward to pervert or to abandon it. Soon, how-ever. It 1 ler ran Hie ip ply of adult women wa running short, lale 1 .il-lation on which to draw, n asa l arrea ■ imors be-to 1.- bandie I rumors of muni -red immigrants and rifled camps in regions where Indian, had never been seen. Prcshwomen appeared In the harems of the elders v...men who pined and w,.;.t. and I ire upon tlieir ' " ■ dsliablo horror. Belated wi apon the mountaina i „■ of rangs of armed isked, stealthy, and no i.d bj them in the darkness. for this was grei ■ .: | -•If. Full of trepidation- 1him,,rl„ititl"e",tV- "atpcsr"r"ie''r BrTains" , '". "'''•' door to greet the Mormon chief. The utter, however, received his salu coldly, and followed him with face nit . the sitting-room. "Brother Ferrier," he said, taking a Beat, a., | eyeing the farmer from under his light-colored eyelashes th,- trne believers have been i i Wends to you. We picked you up when yon were starring in thede ert v";shar';'1 *o«J win, you. led you ■ate to the chosen valley.gave you a goodly share of land, and aUowed you to wax rich under our protection. Is not this BO?" "It is so." answered John Ferrier. "in return forall this we asked but one condition; that was that you sbould embrace the true faith, and conform in every way to its ,,-:, I his you proa,is,.,, ,,, ,1,,. a,„, ,hiv u common report says truly, you have neglected." "And how have I neglected it?' asked Ferrier, throwing out his b in expostulation. -Have i not given to the common fund.' Have I not at-tended at the temple? Have 1 no "Where are your wives?1 V i:-. I oking round him. them In, that I maj reel them." "It i- true that I have not married," ' Bui women were w-,r.- many who had better claims than I. l wasnota ly man: I had my daughter to attend to my want ' "II Is of thai daughter that I would Bpeak to you," said the leader. Mormons. "She has t-r.e.vn to be h flower of Utah and has found favor in the eyes of many who are high in land." John Ferrier groaned internally. "There are stories of her which I would fain disbelieve stories that she Is sealed tosome Gentile. This must bo the gossip ,,f Idle tongue-.. What i. 'the thirteenth rule in the code of the sainted Joseph Smith.' '1.,-t every maid-en of the true faith marry one of the eleel e wed a Gentile she com-mits a grievous sin.' This bein - ■ • • ' Impossible thai you, who profess the holy creed, should suffer yonrda to viola;.. John Terrier made no I he played nervously with his ridi whip. "I pon this one i. dnr -. ..in- whole faith shall l.e te it has been decided in the sacred council of four. The girl isy ig, and we won] have her wed gray hairs; neither' We deprive have many heifers [Ueber C. Kimball. 1,1 on,, of 1 . sermons, alludes • hundred wives under this en aring epithet], but our children m i provide,!, stai gcrs a has a i, and Drcbber lias n son, and either of them would gladly welcome your daughtei to their house. i • L.... rem v,. my first tains, he intrusted him with his mes- '" Jefferson Hop,, In it he told • '•• young man of the imminent dan- 'hich threatened them, and how ■■■■:■ it "as that be should return. Having dona thus, he felt easier in his mind, and returned home with a light-er heart * : ' approached his farm, he was I to see a horse hitched to oi the p ,sis ,,f the gate, still surprised was he on entering to two young men in possession of in- sitting-room. One, with a long, race, was leaning back in the ng-chair, will, his feet cocked upon the stove. The other, a bull-necked youth with coarse, bloated fea-ture-, was standing in front of the v. id.ev with his hands in his pockets, will tling a popular hymn. Iloth of 1 '" nodded to Ferrier as he entered, the o„e in the rocking-chair oom- ■d the conversation. "Maybe you don't know us." he said. "This here is the son of Elder Drebber, cud I'm Joseph Stangerson, who trav-eled with you in the desert when the I. ,rd stretched out His baud and gath-ered .v. u into the true fold." "\s lie will all the nations in His """- ' "me," said the other, in a nasal voice; "He grindeth slowly but exceeding small." John Ferrier bowed coldly. He had who his visitors were. "We hav le," continued Stanger-the advice of our fathers, to solicit the hand of your daughter for TOf us may seem g 1 to von and to her. As I have but four wives ■' I Brother Drebber here has seven, it irs to me that my claim is the ger one.'' "Nay. nay, Brother Stangerson." cried the other; "the question is not my wives we have, but how many we can keep. My father has now given over his mills tome, and I am the richer man." "Butmy prospects are better," said the other, warmly. ••When the Lord tween them. They are young and rich, and of the true faith. What sav you to that?" Terrier remained silent little time. « ;•!, his brows ki itt "Von n ill give l ," he said, at ing— she is scarce of an age to marry." ■ all have a mi nth to, said J .. u the end of that i .... her answer." lie was pa :,ig throuj h the door. " flasl . • . John Ferrier." he tl nder and iv 1. in • hi. cton . upon the - anco, than lould put : t the order* ol . our!" With a threat. hand he turned fro; and F, rrii r heard his hi avj step scrunch- . shingly He "as still sitting with bis , upon his ki idcrin • lion should broach the matter to bis daugh- '■ /'• when a ri and was lai I his, and lookin - up he saw her ■ I "ne glanceal her fright had beard what had passed. ••I could not help it. in aa- Bwer to hu i .... through the house. 11 what shall wo do?" "Don't 3 ou scare .. ■wered, 'W-.w ing her : Ing Ids br over her ch ■:• up somehow or anot. i r. '. . your fancy kind o' le Chap, il . you?" '' ' ■'■ lee . r her only :■ n .wer. "No; ,,f course not. I she to hear y,,n .;. ,. ■ . :| | ;.,.]... lad. and hi ... ,l,ar ' pit l o' ;.d their . ngai pro a paj ito-morr ■■■■. l"1' i ' ■ to • ■ • I in a me.-age ■w the hole we are in. If I km.w anything o." that young man, he'll be back here with a speed that would whip electro-tel Lucy laughed through her tears at her fat!,, i • ption. "" ',"''' he i I e will advi ■■ us for the best But il Is 1 :■ you that I am frightened, dear, one hear:—one hears such dreadful stories abouttl who opp > the prophet terrible always happens to them." "But we haven't opposed him yet," her father answered. "It will he 1 to look out for squalls when we ,i... We have a clear month before us; at "rill.llK ABC TWO WATS OUT OF THE ROOM," C'WF.l, rERIUBB. father. I shall have 1 tanning-yard and bis leather factory. Then I am your elder, and am higher in the church." "It will be forthemaiden to decide," rejoined young Drebber, smirking at his own reflection in the glass. "We will leave it all to her decision." During this dialogue, John Ferrier had st,„„i taming in the doorway, hardly aide to keep his riding-whip from the backs of his two visitors. "Look here," he said at last strid-ing up to them, •■when my daughter summons you, you can come; but until then. 1 don't want t) see your faces ro young Mormons star.d at amazement In their eyes this ' titiOD between them for the '•' : - the highest of hoi rs both to her and her father. are two ways out of the >' 'cried Ferrier: "there is the door, • the window. Which do ; re to use'.'" Ill. brown face looked so savage, and unt hands so threatening, that his visitors sprang to their feet and bcal Th,- old farmer • to the door. ' know when you havo lich it is to be," he said ..'... i.-atlv "Vou shall smart f.r this™ Stanger-son cri, I, white with rage. "Vou have defied the prophet ami the coun-cil of four. Vou shall rue it to the end of yourd "The hand of the Lord shall be upon you," cried young Dreb-ber; "lie will arise and smite you!" "Then I'll start the smiting." ex-claimed Ferrier furiously, and would have r tairs for his gun had not I. him by the arm and him. Before he cculd escape from her, the clatter of horse's hoofs told him that they were beyond his reach. "The young canting rascals!" he ex-claimed, wiping the perspiration from hi- forehead "I would sooner see }-ou in your grave, my girl, than the wife of either of them." "And so should I. father," shean- BWered. with, spirit: "but Jefferson "Yi II will not be long before he '""■ The —ni.r the better, for we do not know what tlieir next move may be." | TO BI CONTIKCED. | Will Wed an Indian Girl. A special from Cherokee, Swain county. X. C.,«aye: "'I'hos. W. Pat-ten, recently appointed superinten-moun- j by gtemu. so men were fierce- , their opposition to the change than the hotel proprietors, who thought they clearly foresaw that their oc-cupations would be gone if the stage-coaches disappeared. But the change which they dreaded not only failed to shut up all the hotels in the country, but multiplied them and made them far more profitable. All the great labor-saving inven-tions have been eyed askance, and often violently opposed, in the imaginary interests of trades and callings which they were thought to threaten with ruin. It seems hard to believe now that when the London Times was first printed by 6team power it was necessary to garrison the building with a strong force of well-armed police to guard against an expected riot by the men who saw in the steam press an end to their handicraft. Vet history tells us that it was so, and it also tells us that steam power and machinery, so far from destroy-ing the occupation of pressmen and printers, have caused it to employ thousands where previously it employed hundreds. The same intense fear of change was seen when the steam-power loom was introduced into the woolen facto-ries. The hand-loom weavers were up in arms and saw, as they be-lieved, the destruction of "their means of livelihood. And. as we all know, the result was that great multitudes found work and wages in factories run by steam where mere handfuls of people found it in weaving shops worked by hand. The horrors of plentiful produc-tion and cheaper prices have haunt-ed the human mind with wonderful persistence. The narrow genius of protection finds in this fact its strongest fortress. The trade guilds and unions of all countries have fought against, labor-saving ma-chinery in the firm belief that to increase producing power by mak-ing one machine do the work of ten or a hundred men must result in less work and wages for men and women. They were unable to see. before it was proven by experience, that cheaper production would mean larger demand, and in tin-end more work and more wages for labor ami more profit for capital. When liowland Hill championed penny postage he was fiercely as-sailed by the private letter and parcel-carrying companies. They felt sure that if the government carried letters for a penny apiece and parcels at a correspondingly cheap rate the private carriers' trade would be destroyed. M over, Mr. Hill was told by the shrewdest business men of his day that the government itself would he a heavy loser by penny postage, The event proved they were all wrong. The government mails car-ried millions of letters and parcels where before it bad carried thou-sands only, and the postal service has e\er since yielded it a large revenue. And the private carriers, or express agencies, h ive done a larger and better-paying busin - than ever. Multiplying and cheap-ening the cost of things does not destroy industry nor diminish its rewards; it increases employment and raises wages every time. The Wilson tariff bill will simi-larly disappoint all the fears of those who honestly dread lower duties, larger trade and cheaper prices. The Walker tariff of 1846 became a law amid a chorus ol gloomy predictions very much like that which Mr. Harrison. Mr. Mc- Kinley and Mr. Heed are now lead-ing. Senator Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania, prophesied the shut-ting up of that State's coal mines. Mr. McLean presented resolutions from the Pennsylvania Legislature against any change in the tari;! 1S42. Petitions from one industry afteranother were presented against the Walker bill as a ruinous meas-ure. Even Daniel Webster became a prophet of calamity, and declared that before a year was passed Con-gress would have to save the eoun-trp by repealing the tarill of 1846. "It lays the axe at the root of all American manufactures,'' said Mr. Mcllvaine, and Mr. Xiles likened Mr. Walker to Samson tearing down the very pillars of the nation's prosperity. We need not again quote the figures of the period from Is 10 to 1860| which we have before given, to show how utterly all these dismal predictions failed of fulfill nient. In 1857. as the records of oi woes and miseries that muse fol low Peel's abolition of the duties on corn. But Kngland throve as she never throve before, and there never has been a Parliament since 1846 in which there could be found one protectionist statesman of all the great number of them who made those alarming prophecies with courage enough to rise and propose a return to protection. In the language of Justin McCarthy the popular historian, no man in England thinks of disputing the principle of free trade any more than of opposing the rule of three. The imperative need of the hour is to make the Wilson tariir a law without any more ado. Delay is the supreme danger. The bill will speedily vindicate itself when it is passed. Procrastination is full of peril. Progress is the only hope for business and the only gaf, for the democracy.—Sun. HAMMOND fety S i :<.-,o , I...,. IS.0U • K»o.i . >.-. COM i I.l. A llul.liuorr Hi These tales and rumors took substance and shape, and were corroborated and re-corroborat I until they resolved themselves into a definite name. To ranches ,,f the west, the mini th ■ Danite Hand, or "We will raise a much as we can in money and let the rest go. To tell the truth. Lucy, it Isn't the Brst I have thought of doing it I don't can about knuckling under to any man. as these folk do toithcir darned prophet.; tribe. Ximrod J. Smith. Miss. State's iron industries had grown Smith i a quarter-blood Indian. | and prospered amazingly since ■nd well educated. Her brother, 118*6\ The manufacturing interests Richard H. Smith, recently mar- generally were so well pleased with ried a white teacher in the Bame the " ruin" they had experienced school. ; under a low tariff that they act- Early American Sport. The first settlers of this country could hardly be called sportsmen, although they were hunters—hunt, ers from necessity. There was no other way to provide for tlyir own and their families' subsistence. They were obliged to kill wild fowl and deer for their daily food, and the beasts of prey for their protec-tion; it required a generation or two to breed domestic fowl for food, and to drive the wild animals beyond the bounds of settlements. The fathers, husbands, and broth-ers of the then Colonial Dames of America were not awakened by the music of the huntsman's horn"; too often it was the Indian warhoopor the baying of the wolf. If by chance it was a peaceful awaken-ing, their first act was to feel if their scalps still covered their beads, and if their heads were linn upon tlieir shoulders, for perchance their dreams had been of Smith-field fires or the Tower block. There were no pleasures of the chase for them. A hundred years later the still extensive forests and dense swamps afforded cover for deer and wild fowl, and every wild creature peculiar to the climate and country took refuge there. Sly Reynard couched in his den, and made nightly raids upon our great-grand-mothcrs' poultry pre-serves, and was regularly hunted by dogs and men until be was bagged, if it took a run of forty-miles to accomplish it. At the period when our ancestors became sportsmen, a writer thus describes n day's sport: "A day being fixed upon for a general hunt, all the sportsmen meet at a given point with their huntsmen and hounds. There are but few of us that keep more than ten couple, but then every one having some dogs they make a very largo pack when they are all collected. The sportsmen are then equally divid-ed, one half going one side of the swamp, the other on the opposite side. They arrange themselves within gunshot of each other, and being all armed with double-bar-relled guns, are ready for sport, which commences the moment the dogs and huntsmen are turned in. As scon as the dogs enter the swamp the game run out, and arc fired upon by the Drat sportsmen they en --; they then run back to cover ktid double, with the dogfi full cry. It is not unusual in one of our largest swamps to drive out of it in one day's hunting, deer, trolves, bears, foxes, wild-cats, and a great quantity of wild turkeys. any of which the sportsman -hoots as he thinks proper." It is inter-esting to note their disposition to mercifulness, f..,- be continues: "Wenevei follow one deer after he has made his escape from the swamp unle-s l.e i.- wounded, for there is no running down a deer with us. I have seen started in one day's hunt forty deer. The wolves we always run down: as they are very strong and large, they will run from four to live bours. If they arc not shot in the chase, they come to bay in a thick cover with their backs to a burri cane root, where they will defend themselves against packs of dog--. their bits being very severe. Our bears and foxes and wild-cats are soon tired, and will always take to a tree, from which tl. \ . r< Bhaken down to the dogs." Hunting wolves has always been considered fine sport by ardent -I i rtemen. The etiqui tte of the hunt at thai period was very strict. ••When a notice ol a hunt was given, the time of inciting was stated, it was considered a derelic-tion of duty on the pan of the huntsman to be late, and the ma ter of the hounds was considered discourteous if he kept the assem-bled company waiting " Hunting clubs were not the fash-ion of the times, but wealthy land-owners in the colonies kept large Btables of good horses a::d large kennels of good luinling-dogs. and their neighbors of similar taste but less fortune uniting, fixed upon certain days to hunt, and practical-ly formed" a hunting club.—liar per's Weekly. i KBEIIKISI praia .-I the ■ , i\. tbcbrain for 11 '■ '■'--> i. .I Hie lUlel Wriluol extract - il-lllilt.l.. . .. ,,. r,,.e UUof.1D(ni : '■:■- ■ >' A He-.-|,,,| ,,. ||„. ,.,_,.,. , „a |« l>] I e «. D?™aSssr ■■ ' - '« li. Functional Brain 1 i.i ntriiion "i MM orgi 'l"":" ■ '" I■■■■■ - i imlinucl Urn rc-iiltui,-from luiella-iual urea,, « will, I rtn a ram -*-le:ii. feet! , -"11- IV. ■ tmi Urn-named mad, . Pletereuoraureol it, -111. I ii - ei.n .,. [,.. i ■ : lu,' 1.1 i 1 "Ik. lie..- be -n-ili,, ; , v,r, . I . .' You Don't Have To Die '.'." \ '■ :■ " i»«nmce under the T-mtineri nof iheEOOITABU LIFE. I i ' of Life insurance .t the II insures you ai ol ■• ..... . your t unily against waul yourdeith. Tl name of th: Equitable Life - .:.; . Its clad t of iccurit) ; and i. ' ' ' I. ' '' :i ! ■'■ ' ■ W. J. ROODEV. Manager, Department „f the CaroUnas KOCK HILL, S. C. poau.eki.luej ..-., ,|.... II IS I -I.H I. i-i. In Functional « ■ lu-.rt ,. •rtl'ne from general oi '.....i,;,,,,., "."J' , ." ,** '""' Or«nni ^"'■>:.'-o-;. ;■;,"■;■ "*»«*,** i of i . ! "■ ""' •• •'" -&a«.fi5.< . asr*"— in which the e Btrengrln a&\ II--■!- ued. it'iuirc- In ■uoonl tin- the Mbttiuice re-nutrition *nd i. - i . ■: ibe 'luiredby ihi* organ (or u iiiui action. ■^•;;;;;,v:\;;^;:::,,',;;:--;:;:-.:: superior in ita n no i MUMI ex-tea. The :il.o.-n;,„i,..| imil..tli,i-,Mr»,,...-r,,lu,e. va,,,,,.. •ll,_,ro.|,11...,, . .,. ,..,„ ,,„ _;i|(. li. uuu..,„. i.n.e... .-..;., ,„r botUcbj Urn*. , i- - s-cii.-i.uiv. i.i. I ,,.,. .nautfnclu leiiiiulaa Cbeuleal (_•... Hoi . Ion, u. C. Agenti f* '••• • . loro, Itietor i-.» J Buggies! Buggies! Buggies Cheap, '•iilit nii.il is tracts or bec u ashing- A .>ri-.-. Cheap Buggies. We guaranti r-,- Buggy '• r. eiving-tbonl test assort-r iglil to Grecnsh ,ro, al prii . ,: will astonish you. We -till hai a loi ,.f WAGONS, CARTS and HARNESS III, hand, bought of L. I'. KM--, at a big discount. Von cannot slTord to l,uy without seeing us. Respectfully, Newell & Matthews, BOSS'S Old Stand. A CASH PRIZE OF $15000 Daring llic nvit i II ' ICTICAL ,\ .on s Among u leu linn -.c |e -in ■ WAYS TO MAKE A LIVING ■A ill be found of ,r. at help and run «I -ti■-_. - II- i' r »>i THE HOME COMFORTABLE Girtng Fretfb, delightful feat itrex «rhi<.b add •■ lull-, troni tiiiiiM- H :u. bit* II i:. an •■•. -inly greaaeai value to tii -■ a ;n<- irjiDK to %et IIH ad ..f .u, ■"t. *. i- boaBe al i ii-i ,i arranmnwni n . u itli ■ Itai ■ mm I "i-'' and Hi- IMHM .waller their I ne , I ; CARE OF THE SICK ^n,'.,"'!'!"'','^',!'1 il A'":,';kr'i"Uj Hri,lr" ;"lv"''■»rill,.-|n;.liiiMti IMPROVING THE COMPLEXION i IIOI-EWIH! rorlfOI. TIIK TOILET, w ■! btntn i iwards womanlj ftracen and pi al 'iHE HOME GARDEN eon UKOW I »<■ PLANT? f'»J: I'KOKIT, m . rASTKKUL AKUANUKMKM1 And IIKAI.TH mi; THE n f eat'h -< i- nv .|-t .i-,-. trma i- .-iiiinti. i-i. h:i- a treasury »•• iloamd |>er ■ r< II. : I icroundi'., - ■ -. . ■ ,!,.,-!,.; nun, A -pi- ial featurd ui I be THE FASHION SUPPLEMENT i '' nwmih natu-rcio) i • ■■ wc tandin.^-ii , M and make, HD<I ibcau.oui I '' ' II .:,■!,. ■ ■: 1 ,\< i l, THE HOUSEWIFE, SI Warren St., If. V. City. At the beginning of the century the Bible was acceesive to but onc-flfth of the popul ition of the world. Now it may he read by nine-tenths of the people of the v |.. BO rapidly baa it- transition been carried on. Enrich and ii;a:i/.- your blood with AyerV Sarsaparilla. A won-derful medicine. Greensboro Roller Mills! NORTH & WATSON, PROPEIETOKS. OTXIR BK^^HSTIDS: PURITY: A HIGH GRADE PATENT. STAR: A I'M FAMILY FLOUP. CHASM OF GREESSBORO: THE POOP. MAN'S FRIEND. These brands have been put <m the market on their merits and I given unirersal satisfaction and are prom ..... idmg familes of Greensb ro and surrounding country. We g rani uni-formity in each grade. Ask your merchants for NOBTH ,v WATSON'S FLOUR. Remember we handle all kinds of the freshest nnd BEST FEED beside the best HEAL ever made in Greensboro. USTOKTIEI &c W-A-TSO-TNT, Mill «t Walker Avenue and C. V- * V. \ . R. B.
Object Description
Title | The Greensboro patriot [February 28, 1894] |
Date | 1894-02-28 |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The February 28, 1894, issue of The Greensboro Patriot, a newspaper published in Greensboro, N.C. by W.M. Barber & Co.. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : W.M. Barber & Co. |
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-1894-02-28 |
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 | 871565209 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text | VOL. <;;>, THEM5REENSBORO PATRIOT. GREENSBORO, N. C., WEDNESDAY~ FEBRU 'KOFESSIONAL CARDS. IT AIN'T NO GOOD, OLD MAN. ARY 28, 1894. • ' A. M. >, AI.KS. SIIAW& SCALES, t * < > i • 1-i^.y a at JLarw- SBORO, N. C. n to ill busi- II i >' i i: • I i n -r. 7. ' ourl Square. - ; A i N O. I . "UP. SAPP, AilOKNEVSATLAW ry term of isional aer- ■ iint y. Dr. W.H. Wakefield. ■ n nsboro on the J ! I ruary. \ii:b. It ain't no good at all, old man. This niunitilin' go, AD' grumblin' -••. Thla everlastln< klckln' 'Bool tim scarcity of tin! .le.' I .«. » • I |i To \">l' -unl Till It. ain't no g iod :it ill, old man. This worryin . A n* liurrviii'. Because the llourscoop'a scranin' On the bottom of the bin! Bid tear, and feara depart, old man, Jes keep a cheerful heart, old man, An op,,, out your .lank old SOU) An let the sunshine in ! Yi ■-, times i» had enough, old man, AiT rough enough, An' tough enough, Bui you ain't gainin' nothin' By creatln' such :i fusa : Jes* take times aa they come, old man, An'don't look mad or glum, old man, Bui praise the Lord, an' thank the Lord That they aln'l any truss! —(ami - Rowe In Albany Argus. the Avenging Angels, is a sinister ami ill-omened one. Fuller knowledge „f the orgmniza, t on winch produced such terrible re- W,?,?" '" in"™Q *** "»» to •longed to this rothle . •- Th. (names..f,h,;p!lr,;,iilM,,rs:nt,(; ' n',c""'""'V"1'""-. »wn into her face; "1 wont ask yon no with me now, but will you be '■"■"':■ ' "hen l am hereagainr "And when will that be?" she asked Mushing ai d laughing. . ' \'""'!<' ' - a< the outside. f will come Blld 6Mm you ,,„.„, ,:ly of the things which heart. One tine morning. John Terrier was itarttoast out to his wheat-fields, when, he hear, the click of the latct ■""<• tooldng through the window saw ■ stout, sandy-haired, middle-aged man coming up the pathway. His heart leaped to his moutl none other than tl Young liim I m a free-horn American, and it-s all newtome. 'o.ev, I',,, too old!., learn. IfIiecomcsbrow.singaho.it this farm, he might chance to run up against a charge of buckshot traveling in theon-posite direction." "But they won't let us leave," his uaugher objected. "Wait till Jefferson comes, and we'll soon manage that In the meantime, Dreaa of Tariff Changes NO. !). don't you fret yourself. ,„v ,]carie, an,i , don't get your eve- swelled up, else f°°„„„.':!."B. 7, 8re "0t P'««Uo- W hue the republican leaders are simply making it a matter of daily business to scatter prophecies of WI "" KM1.0" "1C PaSS,'D« '•' «hp Wilson bill up am! down the land U is doubtless the fact that many "ally joined lower om. And as it was with this "i calling for a still country he 11 be walking into me when he seei you. J here's nothing to be afcard •bout, and[there's no danger at all." •loan 1 crraruttered these consoling larksln a very confident tone, but she I not help observing that he paid unusual care t., the fastening of ™that night, and that he car* ■ eaned and " ing politics in the same prof, -...„ , spirit that animates McKinlcy. Reed and the rest of the protec-tionist orators, arc honestly afraid that something bad will" happen when the tariff is lowered. The dread of change i« an ele-siioi^ ilr,',",'''1,'","1 l0Oded ,,,e rustyrfd , nientary human instinct. KsMcia] ]|r;V::-:;eh„,,ng upon the wall of; ly is this true when the proS CHAPTER IV. A niOBX BOB MCE - — proposed change in any way affects the terms of trade oorr tthh,e status of labor. When ths steam railroad wa ANIMAL EXTRACTS. so it was with England'." The pro"'.!PreP«ed According to the Proce ection.st. filled Parliament Sad i »d u»*« the Supervision^ the newspapers with their forecasts DR' WILLIAM A. HAMMONn station i a stem ■ TJirvo i AN KIND i ■ i 'r -. \ inea - 1 kept (' II II o uses versand ■ Snrlne I ruil l'n es, Vines i House ("applicants, ted. • I.IXDI.KV, I'rop'r, I'omona, X. i'. aske 1 •■. all ■ v. mi OS Ills K Et-on,- who can LADIES! lower ■ ■ want. ■ ■ ■ .- . It [g > HI to HUMAN twn ■ v->r Seed Free! ton't ■ l'l Itl 1-|||\(. K •• , MILES Importer. i"ork. rport, R. I. Oras-t t. I Springs. ■ I8lh 8L 1.1. • T a t ■ i lid wr -' will sell at JIJI ! ' II I ' '■ • " | ... in « ;il tiud ' ' r . i , Jarling. There's itand betwe Vnd lion almnt father? "He has given his consent, provided mines working all right 1 h*»e n that head." "Oh, well, of course, if you ami fa-ther have arrai ged it. there's. r0 to he said." she whispered, with her cheek broad breast "Thank nod!"' he -aid. hoarsely, stooping and kissing her. -It is set. tied then. The longer I stay, the harder it will be to go. They are wait-ing f..r me at the canyon. Good-by my own darling g lod-by. In two months yon shall -..-,• me." He tore himself from heras he spoke. ""'• "'" ■■'• I upon his horse ped furiously away, never even | afraid that In- resolution mi -in fail him if he tool: I - at what he was leaving. ■ ■ fter him until he vanished from hersight Then she wall • the house, the happiest girl In all t'tah. Jcffer-liad depart- John Terrier's I). I . l . • m .1 .V A FE f C. IVttfi - Brain > V. ■ Treatment ■ ■ - ■ t Powe, ...... i .,.,,f ■ . I OIIM1 i.l ['. v ■ i-.N- n A FarlsB, ! »niLr.' ... ■ ■ ■; ■ A*5 A PREVENTIVF «r ' iiit.nuiCRas i i hzers. . *^.i-fc. ent I luri. rmrr-. »<• ■ l.ouil I e, Oli/iT-l. io, r-l \\ liole-itli' : lit. .1 US I ...nil .: . ii „ . ulril TDI ,... .,.,,,. r Three weeks had passed sine son Hope and hiso cd from Sali I heart was sore wi ..i,,.,, he ,i","-'1" ' man's return and of the imrn-nding this adopt- V'1 ch,w- v'" it and happy f:"''' '''"' ' ■ ngement """■•' "' tmi nl could have '"""• »e had always determined, deep down m his r [ute in-art. that ' ' him to Mormon. ""'''■' ■' ' led as no la ■ that on,- P°'n< I"' ' II had Co nwever. ■ in those da - In I 1 matter— langer- •' ' their i - ■ . ghl bo HI a swift rictims ! : |>crse-it, and per- ' ' i scrip- "f Seville. 'lit nor the ' ' "' ' V ever aide to put a m.re formidable machinery in ' :'i that w:. ; cloud ry of I'tah. '' ' ■ . and the mj -' T-. which was atl I to it. i ■ i' ■ ■ It ap- ' tent, and • , neither seen nor lied away, and none < lal had "i him ili- v. if.- and chi ' no fa i her "■'• '" : lem how he had i - ..f his secret judges. i word orahasty a-t was fol-by annihilation, and yet none lighl beof Ibis terril iuspended ■ t hal men went in fear and trembling, and that In the heart of the wilderness they red no) .-rasper the doubt. which oppre, sed them. AI Brstt : vagueand terrible power ws i ipon the recalci trants, who, having embraced the Mormon faith, wished aft rward to pervert or to abandon it. Soon, how-ever. It 1 ler ran Hie ip ply of adult women wa running short, lale 1 .il-lation on which to draw, n asa l arrea ■ imors be-to 1.- bandie I rumors of muni -red immigrants and rifled camps in regions where Indian, had never been seen. Prcshwomen appeared In the harems of the elders v...men who pined and w,.;.t. and I ire upon tlieir ' " ■ dsliablo horror. Belated wi apon the mountaina i „■ of rangs of armed isked, stealthy, and no i.d bj them in the darkness. for this was grei ■ .: | -•If. Full of trepidation- 1him,,rl„ititl"e",tV- "atpcsr"r"ie''r BrTains" , '". "'''•' door to greet the Mormon chief. The utter, however, received his salu coldly, and followed him with face nit . the sitting-room. "Brother Ferrier," he said, taking a Beat, a., | eyeing the farmer from under his light-colored eyelashes th,- trne believers have been i i Wends to you. We picked you up when yon were starring in thede ert v";shar';'1 *o«J win, you. led you ■ate to the chosen valley.gave you a goodly share of land, and aUowed you to wax rich under our protection. Is not this BO?" "It is so." answered John Ferrier. "in return forall this we asked but one condition; that was that you sbould embrace the true faith, and conform in every way to its ,,-:, I his you proa,is,.,, ,,, ,1,,. a,„, ,hiv u common report says truly, you have neglected." "And how have I neglected it?' asked Ferrier, throwing out his b in expostulation. -Have i not given to the common fund.' Have I not at-tended at the temple? Have 1 no "Where are your wives?1 V i:-. I oking round him. them In, that I maj reel them." "It i- true that I have not married," ' Bui women were w-,r.- many who had better claims than I. l wasnota ly man: I had my daughter to attend to my want ' "II Is of thai daughter that I would Bpeak to you," said the leader. Mormons. "She has t-r.e.vn to be h flower of Utah and has found favor in the eyes of many who are high in land." John Ferrier groaned internally. "There are stories of her which I would fain disbelieve stories that she Is sealed tosome Gentile. This must bo the gossip ,,f Idle tongue-.. What i. 'the thirteenth rule in the code of the sainted Joseph Smith.' '1.,-t every maid-en of the true faith marry one of the eleel e wed a Gentile she com-mits a grievous sin.' This bein - ■ • • ' Impossible thai you, who profess the holy creed, should suffer yonrda to viola;.. John Terrier made no I he played nervously with his ridi whip. "I pon this one i. dnr -. ..in- whole faith shall l.e te it has been decided in the sacred council of four. The girl isy ig, and we won] have her wed gray hairs; neither' We deprive have many heifers [Ueber C. Kimball. 1,1 on,, of 1 . sermons, alludes • hundred wives under this en aring epithet], but our children m i provide,!, stai gcrs a has a i, and Drcbber lias n son, and either of them would gladly welcome your daughtei to their house. i • L.... rem v,. my first tains, he intrusted him with his mes- '" Jefferson Hop,, In it he told • '•• young man of the imminent dan- 'hich threatened them, and how ■■■■:■ it "as that be should return. Having dona thus, he felt easier in his mind, and returned home with a light-er heart * : ' approached his farm, he was I to see a horse hitched to oi the p ,sis ,,f the gate, still surprised was he on entering to two young men in possession of in- sitting-room. One, with a long, race, was leaning back in the ng-chair, will, his feet cocked upon the stove. The other, a bull-necked youth with coarse, bloated fea-ture-, was standing in front of the v. id.ev with his hands in his pockets, will tling a popular hymn. Iloth of 1 '" nodded to Ferrier as he entered, the o„e in the rocking-chair oom- ■d the conversation. "Maybe you don't know us." he said. "This here is the son of Elder Drebber, cud I'm Joseph Stangerson, who trav-eled with you in the desert when the I. ,rd stretched out His baud and gath-ered .v. u into the true fold." "\s lie will all the nations in His """- ' "me," said the other, in a nasal voice; "He grindeth slowly but exceeding small." John Ferrier bowed coldly. He had who his visitors were. "We hav le," continued Stanger-the advice of our fathers, to solicit the hand of your daughter for TOf us may seem g 1 to von and to her. As I have but four wives ■' I Brother Drebber here has seven, it irs to me that my claim is the ger one.'' "Nay. nay, Brother Stangerson." cried the other; "the question is not my wives we have, but how many we can keep. My father has now given over his mills tome, and I am the richer man." "Butmy prospects are better," said the other, warmly. ••When the Lord tween them. They are young and rich, and of the true faith. What sav you to that?" Terrier remained silent little time. « ;•!, his brows ki itt "Von n ill give l ," he said, at ing— she is scarce of an age to marry." ■ all have a mi nth to, said J .. u the end of that i .... her answer." lie was pa :,ig throuj h the door. " flasl . • . John Ferrier." he tl nder and iv 1. in • hi. cton . upon the - anco, than lould put : t the order* ol . our!" With a threat. hand he turned fro; and F, rrii r heard his hi avj step scrunch- . shingly He "as still sitting with bis , upon his ki idcrin • lion should broach the matter to bis daugh- '■ /'• when a ri and was lai I his, and lookin - up he saw her ■ I "ne glanceal her fright had beard what had passed. ••I could not help it. in aa- Bwer to hu i .... through the house. 11 what shall wo do?" "Don't 3 ou scare .. ■wered, 'W-.w ing her : Ing Ids br over her ch ■:• up somehow or anot. i r. '. . your fancy kind o' le Chap, il . you?" '' ' ■'■ lee . r her only :■ n .wer. "No; ,,f course not. I she to hear y,,n .;. ,. ■ . :| | ;.,.]... lad. and hi ... ,l,ar ' pit l o' ;.d their . ngai pro a paj ito-morr ■■■■. l"1' i ' ■ to • ■ • I in a me.-age ■w the hole we are in. If I km.w anything o." that young man, he'll be back here with a speed that would whip electro-tel Lucy laughed through her tears at her fat!,, i • ption. "" ',"''' he i I e will advi ■■ us for the best But il Is 1 :■ you that I am frightened, dear, one hear:—one hears such dreadful stories abouttl who opp > the prophet terrible always happens to them." "But we haven't opposed him yet," her father answered. "It will he 1 to look out for squalls when we ,i... We have a clear month before us; at "rill.llK ABC TWO WATS OUT OF THE ROOM," C'WF.l, rERIUBB. father. I shall have 1 tanning-yard and bis leather factory. Then I am your elder, and am higher in the church." "It will be forthemaiden to decide," rejoined young Drebber, smirking at his own reflection in the glass. "We will leave it all to her decision." During this dialogue, John Ferrier had st,„„i taming in the doorway, hardly aide to keep his riding-whip from the backs of his two visitors. "Look here," he said at last strid-ing up to them, •■when my daughter summons you, you can come; but until then. 1 don't want t) see your faces ro young Mormons star.d at amazement In their eyes this ' titiOD between them for the '•' : - the highest of hoi rs both to her and her father. are two ways out of the >' 'cried Ferrier: "there is the door, • the window. Which do ; re to use'.'" Ill. brown face looked so savage, and unt hands so threatening, that his visitors sprang to their feet and bcal Th,- old farmer • to the door. ' know when you havo lich it is to be," he said ..'... i.-atlv "Vou shall smart f.r this™ Stanger-son cri, I, white with rage. "Vou have defied the prophet ami the coun-cil of four. Vou shall rue it to the end of yourd "The hand of the Lord shall be upon you," cried young Dreb-ber; "lie will arise and smite you!" "Then I'll start the smiting." ex-claimed Ferrier furiously, and would have r tairs for his gun had not I. him by the arm and him. Before he cculd escape from her, the clatter of horse's hoofs told him that they were beyond his reach. "The young canting rascals!" he ex-claimed, wiping the perspiration from hi- forehead "I would sooner see }-ou in your grave, my girl, than the wife of either of them." "And so should I. father," shean- BWered. with, spirit: "but Jefferson "Yi II will not be long before he '""■ The —ni.r the better, for we do not know what tlieir next move may be." | TO BI CONTIKCED. | Will Wed an Indian Girl. A special from Cherokee, Swain county. X. C.,«aye: "'I'hos. W. Pat-ten, recently appointed superinten-moun- j by gtemu. so men were fierce- , their opposition to the change than the hotel proprietors, who thought they clearly foresaw that their oc-cupations would be gone if the stage-coaches disappeared. But the change which they dreaded not only failed to shut up all the hotels in the country, but multiplied them and made them far more profitable. All the great labor-saving inven-tions have been eyed askance, and often violently opposed, in the imaginary interests of trades and callings which they were thought to threaten with ruin. It seems hard to believe now that when the London Times was first printed by 6team power it was necessary to garrison the building with a strong force of well-armed police to guard against an expected riot by the men who saw in the steam press an end to their handicraft. Vet history tells us that it was so, and it also tells us that steam power and machinery, so far from destroy-ing the occupation of pressmen and printers, have caused it to employ thousands where previously it employed hundreds. The same intense fear of change was seen when the steam-power loom was introduced into the woolen facto-ries. The hand-loom weavers were up in arms and saw, as they be-lieved, the destruction of "their means of livelihood. And. as we all know, the result was that great multitudes found work and wages in factories run by steam where mere handfuls of people found it in weaving shops worked by hand. The horrors of plentiful produc-tion and cheaper prices have haunt-ed the human mind with wonderful persistence. The narrow genius of protection finds in this fact its strongest fortress. The trade guilds and unions of all countries have fought against, labor-saving ma-chinery in the firm belief that to increase producing power by mak-ing one machine do the work of ten or a hundred men must result in less work and wages for men and women. They were unable to see. before it was proven by experience, that cheaper production would mean larger demand, and in tin-end more work and more wages for labor ami more profit for capital. When liowland Hill championed penny postage he was fiercely as-sailed by the private letter and parcel-carrying companies. They felt sure that if the government carried letters for a penny apiece and parcels at a correspondingly cheap rate the private carriers' trade would be destroyed. M over, Mr. Hill was told by the shrewdest business men of his day that the government itself would he a heavy loser by penny postage, The event proved they were all wrong. The government mails car-ried millions of letters and parcels where before it bad carried thou-sands only, and the postal service has e\er since yielded it a large revenue. And the private carriers, or express agencies, h ive done a larger and better-paying busin - than ever. Multiplying and cheap-ening the cost of things does not destroy industry nor diminish its rewards; it increases employment and raises wages every time. The Wilson tariff bill will simi-larly disappoint all the fears of those who honestly dread lower duties, larger trade and cheaper prices. The Walker tariff of 1846 became a law amid a chorus ol gloomy predictions very much like that which Mr. Harrison. Mr. Mc- Kinley and Mr. Heed are now lead-ing. Senator Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania, prophesied the shut-ting up of that State's coal mines. Mr. McLean presented resolutions from the Pennsylvania Legislature against any change in the tari;! 1S42. Petitions from one industry afteranother were presented against the Walker bill as a ruinous meas-ure. Even Daniel Webster became a prophet of calamity, and declared that before a year was passed Con-gress would have to save the eoun-trp by repealing the tarill of 1846. "It lays the axe at the root of all American manufactures,'' said Mr. Mcllvaine, and Mr. Xiles likened Mr. Walker to Samson tearing down the very pillars of the nation's prosperity. We need not again quote the figures of the period from Is 10 to 1860| which we have before given, to show how utterly all these dismal predictions failed of fulfill nient. In 1857. as the records of oi woes and miseries that muse fol low Peel's abolition of the duties on corn. But Kngland throve as she never throve before, and there never has been a Parliament since 1846 in which there could be found one protectionist statesman of all the great number of them who made those alarming prophecies with courage enough to rise and propose a return to protection. In the language of Justin McCarthy the popular historian, no man in England thinks of disputing the principle of free trade any more than of opposing the rule of three. The imperative need of the hour is to make the Wilson tariir a law without any more ado. Delay is the supreme danger. The bill will speedily vindicate itself when it is passed. Procrastination is full of peril. Progress is the only hope for business and the only gaf, for the democracy.—Sun. HAMMOND fety S i :<.-,o , I...,. IS.0U • K»o.i . >.-. COM i I.l. A llul.liuorr Hi These tales and rumors took substance and shape, and were corroborated and re-corroborat I until they resolved themselves into a definite name. To ranches ,,f the west, the mini th ■ Danite Hand, or "We will raise a much as we can in money and let the rest go. To tell the truth. Lucy, it Isn't the Brst I have thought of doing it I don't can about knuckling under to any man. as these folk do toithcir darned prophet.; tribe. Ximrod J. Smith. Miss. State's iron industries had grown Smith i a quarter-blood Indian. | and prospered amazingly since ■nd well educated. Her brother, 118*6\ The manufacturing interests Richard H. Smith, recently mar- generally were so well pleased with ried a white teacher in the Bame the " ruin" they had experienced school. ; under a low tariff that they act- Early American Sport. The first settlers of this country could hardly be called sportsmen, although they were hunters—hunt, ers from necessity. There was no other way to provide for tlyir own and their families' subsistence. They were obliged to kill wild fowl and deer for their daily food, and the beasts of prey for their protec-tion; it required a generation or two to breed domestic fowl for food, and to drive the wild animals beyond the bounds of settlements. The fathers, husbands, and broth-ers of the then Colonial Dames of America were not awakened by the music of the huntsman's horn"; too often it was the Indian warhoopor the baying of the wolf. If by chance it was a peaceful awaken-ing, their first act was to feel if their scalps still covered their beads, and if their heads were linn upon tlieir shoulders, for perchance their dreams had been of Smith-field fires or the Tower block. There were no pleasures of the chase for them. A hundred years later the still extensive forests and dense swamps afforded cover for deer and wild fowl, and every wild creature peculiar to the climate and country took refuge there. Sly Reynard couched in his den, and made nightly raids upon our great-grand-mothcrs' poultry pre-serves, and was regularly hunted by dogs and men until be was bagged, if it took a run of forty-miles to accomplish it. At the period when our ancestors became sportsmen, a writer thus describes n day's sport: "A day being fixed upon for a general hunt, all the sportsmen meet at a given point with their huntsmen and hounds. There are but few of us that keep more than ten couple, but then every one having some dogs they make a very largo pack when they are all collected. The sportsmen are then equally divid-ed, one half going one side of the swamp, the other on the opposite side. They arrange themselves within gunshot of each other, and being all armed with double-bar-relled guns, are ready for sport, which commences the moment the dogs and huntsmen are turned in. As scon as the dogs enter the swamp the game run out, and arc fired upon by the Drat sportsmen they en --; they then run back to cover ktid double, with the dogfi full cry. It is not unusual in one of our largest swamps to drive out of it in one day's hunting, deer, trolves, bears, foxes, wild-cats, and a great quantity of wild turkeys. any of which the sportsman -hoots as he thinks proper." It is inter-esting to note their disposition to mercifulness, f..,- be continues: "Wenevei follow one deer after he has made his escape from the swamp unle-s l.e i.- wounded, for there is no running down a deer with us. I have seen started in one day's hunt forty deer. The wolves we always run down: as they are very strong and large, they will run from four to live bours. If they arc not shot in the chase, they come to bay in a thick cover with their backs to a burri cane root, where they will defend themselves against packs of dog--. their bits being very severe. Our bears and foxes and wild-cats are soon tired, and will always take to a tree, from which tl. \ . r< Bhaken down to the dogs." Hunting wolves has always been considered fine sport by ardent -I i rtemen. The etiqui tte of the hunt at thai period was very strict. ••When a notice ol a hunt was given, the time of inciting was stated, it was considered a derelic-tion of duty on the pan of the huntsman to be late, and the ma ter of the hounds was considered discourteous if he kept the assem-bled company waiting " Hunting clubs were not the fash-ion of the times, but wealthy land-owners in the colonies kept large Btables of good horses a::d large kennels of good luinling-dogs. and their neighbors of similar taste but less fortune uniting, fixed upon certain days to hunt, and practical-ly formed" a hunting club.—liar per's Weekly. i KBEIIKISI praia .-I the ■ , i\. tbcbrain for 11 '■ '■'--> i. .I Hie lUlel Wriluol extract - il-lllilt.l.. . .. ,,. r,,.e UUof.1D(ni : '■:■- ■ >' A He-.-|,,,| ,,. ||„. ,.,_,.,. , „a |« l>] I e «. D?™aSssr ■■ ' - '« li. Functional Brain 1 i.i ntriiion "i MM orgi 'l"":" ■ '" I■■■■■ - i imlinucl Urn rc-iiltui,-from luiella-iual urea,, « will, I rtn a ram -*-le:ii. feet! , -"11- IV. ■ tmi Urn-named mad, . Pletereuoraureol it, -111. I ii - ei.n .,. [,.. i ■ : lu,' 1.1 i 1 "Ik. lie..- be -n-ili,, ; , v,r, . I . .' You Don't Have To Die '.'." \ '■ :■ " i»«nmce under the T-mtineri nof iheEOOITABU LIFE. I i ' of Life insurance .t the II insures you ai ol ■• ..... . your t unily against waul yourdeith. Tl name of th: Equitable Life - .:.; . Its clad t of iccurit) ; and i. ' ' ' I. ' '' :i ! ■'■ ' ■ W. J. ROODEV. Manager, Department „f the CaroUnas KOCK HILL, S. C. poau.eki.luej ..-., ,|.... II IS I -I.H I. i-i. In Functional « ■ lu-.rt ,. •rtl'ne from general oi '.....i,;,,,,., "."J' , ." ,** '""' Or«nni ^"'■>:.'-o-;. ;■;,"■;■ "*»«*,** i of i . ! "■ ""' •• •'" -&a«.fi5.< . asr*"— in which the e Btrengrln a&\ II--■!- ued. it'iuirc- In ■uoonl tin- the Mbttiuice re-nutrition *nd i. - i . ■: ibe 'luiredby ihi* organ (or u iiiui action. ■^•;;;;;,v:\;;^;:::,,',;;:--;:;:-.:: superior in ita n no i MUMI ex-tea. The :il.o.-n;,„i,..| imil..tli,i-,Mr»,,...-r,,lu,e. va,,,,,.. •ll,_,ro.|,11...,, . .,. ,..,„ ,,„ _;i|(. li. uuu..,„. i.n.e... .-..;., ,„r botUcbj Urn*. , i- - s-cii.-i.uiv. i.i. I ,,.,. .nautfnclu leiiiiulaa Cbeuleal (_•... Hoi . Ion, u. C. Agenti f* '••• • . loro, Itietor i-.» J Buggies! Buggies! Buggies Cheap, '•iilit nii.il is tracts or bec u ashing- A .>ri-.-. Cheap Buggies. We guaranti r-,- Buggy '• r. eiving-tbonl test assort-r iglil to Grecnsh ,ro, al prii . ,: will astonish you. We -till hai a loi ,.f WAGONS, CARTS and HARNESS III, hand, bought of L. I'. KM--, at a big discount. Von cannot slTord to l,uy without seeing us. Respectfully, Newell & Matthews, BOSS'S Old Stand. A CASH PRIZE OF $15000 Daring llic nvit i II ' ICTICAL ,\ .on s Among u leu linn -.c |e -in ■ WAYS TO MAKE A LIVING ■A ill be found of ,r. at help and run «I -ti■-_. - II- i' r »>i THE HOME COMFORTABLE Girtng Fretfb, delightful feat itrex «rhi<.b add •■ lull-, troni tiiiiiM- H :u. bit* II i:. an •■•. -inly greaaeai value to tii -■ a ;n<- irjiDK to %et IIH ad ..f .u, ■"t. *. i- boaBe al i ii-i ,i arranmnwni n . u itli ■ Itai ■ mm I "i-'' and Hi- IMHM .waller their I ne , I ; CARE OF THE SICK ^n,'.,"'!'!"'','^',!'1 il A'":,';kr'i"Uj Hri,lr" ;"lv"''■»rill,.-|n;.liiiMti IMPROVING THE COMPLEXION i IIOI-EWIH! rorlfOI. TIIK TOILET, w ■! btntn i iwards womanlj ftracen and pi al 'iHE HOME GARDEN eon UKOW I »<■ PLANT? f'»J: I'KOKIT, m . rASTKKUL AKUANUKMKM1 And IIKAI.TH mi; THE n f eat'h -< i- nv .|-t .i-,-. trma i- .-iiiinti. i-i. h:i- a treasury »•• iloamd |>er ■ r< II. : I icroundi'., - ■ -. . ■ ,!,.,-!,.; nun, A -pi- ial featurd ui I be THE FASHION SUPPLEMENT i '' nwmih natu-rcio) i • ■■ wc tandin.^-ii , M and make, HD |