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VOI,. 7 1 THE GREENSBORO THE PIEDMONT BANK OF GREENSBORO, N. C. Capital, $70,000.00. BBBBN8BOBQ. N. p., WEDNESDAY,! PATRIOT. or mountain Surplus, 87,000.00. J. M. W.ii MI:, /', . ,,/(„/. ure, on the seashore S. L. TKOODOK, K. «». \ AH.UN. I „ DIRECTORS : Vicc-l'rcs. Walker. I II •I. -. HIM KI:. ■■"■«■-■:■*.■.. n.w.55 ■*" ■ * 1 '■•■■■ American To. N. IVylli, I'M.li IT i. i t'K, \l Manufaclu (ban K'eskall i, i to ' MTCR- ^ aooonnniHiatloaa PROFESSIONAL CARDS. LONG AGO. Tnv !\°\ ""tm of P'ea8"re 'than any that can be mentioned. With ""'•■•ted means i, seems but rea-sonable to think that in that lies the chiefest pleasure. But a study or the people who frequent summer resorts proves conclusively the con-trary. The under classes reap the largest benefits because of their abandon. They go out for what tl'erc ,. ,n life, .nd do not appear at these places through any false pride. The middle classes make themselves uncomfortable by eon-roubl7 fr,tting "nd """""i"? nZ ' 0?d are generally hard to Please than either the wealthy classes. They gratis attentions which the lower do not ask or expect and J. M. HAYS, M. D., GREENSBORO, N. C, • i Ulioner Dr. W. J. RICHARDSON, U • r,.. 1 '• a BORO, N. C. " Ueia. ana Surnorr in in try. Dr. W.H. Wakefield, N be hi Greens- H n Friday, I i IHITED To lt>. Ear, Ifoae ami ihrnat. "V.'".".,n,"'"""uI in- •!.. - RSfttM I'M* ■"tatheuiuitlelo.; ''u"',:' II., ..ddeep. Hi' in "Hli.it olden l..i er lower or demand, class ^a,thewca,thy"pa'/f;r'Vhe: »ean all right, and are indulgedas far as reason will admit. Thev have their charms. y The island has had some very dwtii.gui.hed visitors every \Jr ^ce.thasbeenknownasasC mer resort. By . review of ,„£ of the records, found in the ar-chives of the island, which by the »ay are guarded most sedulously by some of the pioneer sentinels* fLh- 1 """ '|Uite an •««• of fash.on throng the island during trusts -- •keeper" 0f tl,es* d gressive cise, and were secured after hard research. The illustrations used island as it appeared nearly twenty years ago. Tt «. a ong about this time that a spTrU of development and progress was rfsSand S'»™ '"• tne islanders possessed was ..., nation. Nor has this quality waned or even faltered. To-day thev are nNeewwddeeTvee,l6opmamenbtistia°rUe8betihn"g on«er"at" distant their general utility will be » boon to the defenses offhe New aErnegallatnodgectohaesft;eab8uitblweihaenthi|etor tthheeBsee lVJl?y. ?™ bei"g operated at the °BAY AND BLUE MIX. EXC° w«rteS EeC6iVe a Co«ial Welcome in Chicago. CHICAGO, MI sent in >y 2i).—The south representa^s^ theg"iostdc,iVi^ 'Tb^ ,he ^"^*•** the truth, the com, " g was tendered RAILROAD NO. L>:{. CE3STTER, te lh',,iniC' 'fWe allusion her. ,h !rn°e t0 what is termed !h« n ?* great ealt pon<'-" <""' to the fisheries. The salt p0nd cov-ers an area of 1000 the acres. It is the season. rusts are not blinded by prejul l,0„W„CVer- >". areo'faVro- Dr. J. E. WYCHE, I ' I Nil- I ,, ' ■ arm* folded 25, .... ; 31 Tt •I, ','""'•"- -ill ;'•" ,l:,"K "" Memorj . wall mthelieMofall. —Ai lei i .1,, spirit, rather, proffcrino-unstinted aid in the tasPk of"8 lightening the world. The most noted visitor to the is- CnJVn" "'e year 1875- wl"*n rtT«ral.pra,nt- then President, h.S,T,a8,He,ll?,,UtiC8andCar"0 his ohce that he might enjoy the hospIta,,, of 1{hode j^JJ-ssttaaftee ffoor severBa0l,,dnagysa, bt0h,e,tG°evneerrtahl,e accompanied by a cabinet and - "or S Tt Tu° U U" as a ha'- h»rh/ gue- There i9 °"e good iarb0r „,, the north side of thl i-inn," Ihe.onl>'way in which an appropr.auon could be secured was by deceiving the islanders into the toal',:LbyrninguPab-a^ to admit the salt water from the sea. the fishing industry could be carried on in all sorts of weather! dead—those who d and saw that the first day Jffi v...t was pleasantly spent. Leu enant General James Longstree. accompanied by his daughtefs,Mr' street"^er' fr L°U'Se *-°S street, preceded the main partv ar nving last night. V Y' Southerners and citizens of Chi-cago united to do the •The He said. «--h the hSoryTf ff P"" venerable Georgia soldier all honor. Later in the day he divided the honor,I WttS thus benefitiDg t„—« •«-« Thi« WM done to aid in securin-small sums of money from the stat at different intervals. The tru purpose of the project is to gradi - ally open up a harbor at the ex- II to68""6- Whileit«eem8 lent to encourage every possi- .mprovement for the good of General Wade Hampton, who five-'i hne °f the pany »< thi"y* It 11 a-llTnd fr°m ffMbi»«to» at II o clock a. m A reception committee of promi-nent citizens was on hand to rf™ greeting to the visitors whence train stopped in the Grand Central depot. The informal reception «. enthU81astic, and wa, followed by the transfer of th-party • A l KB. SHAW* SCALES, A.t1 •n,.,y^atL,a-w GKEENSHOKO N. C. I usi-i iturl • V. M. HACKETT, Wall Paper, Decorations s, end r -! - i*. M. C A BT THE SAD SEA WAVES. An Intcrestine Letter from a So- Journer on the Atlantic Coast. BLOCS [BLAND, K. I. -Mm- 84, 1895. While roeming about this won-deru i-H„,l,nanapp„ren,lvva"n e..n of matter f„r sober though,, (for the roar and dash of the surf be arrival and departure of ves-se .. and the invigorating and ex* °"8ht and cheery thoughts coupled with youthl „ Iambi,ions I, the wri ler chanced upon some am. some senatorial friend.; ac-ceptod an invitation from Hon Nicholw^B.11 ,„ Ppenil « day on the island Those attending Gen-eral Grant were Secretarv BHstow, to s An?i ;enera' P,OT"PO»». Sen.-' tors Anthony and Burnside. The slanders made the occasion a gala ('a3, leaving off all work, decorat-ing their homes with national col-lore and assembling en masse to »eIcome the distinguished party. Iheoccas.on.nfused new impetus nto he amoitions and purposes of the sturdy citizens and dating from hat event a new era dawned? so to interesting •: Ugh for one short chapter isturv. ' Greensboro Nurseries! X c. l.« "HM'IM I l|, •Shade I'REES. T. Pigs, Jolni A. Young-, NURSERIES, , tiala in hi Loth to deny himeelf by foreeo-jngthe most natural inclinations n the midst of such surroundings, be so maneuvered as to accomplish considerable the while he gratified a less worthy yet predominant dis-position. The construction of the elements upon and surrounding the Mud rather encourage nonchal-ance, even while they are possessed of higher oualities-buoyancy and lieakh. It ,s remarkable how apt-iv these conditions instill in one a disposition ,o revel in pleasures and in life „se|f. imbucd wi[|] these gracious attributes, the mind pursues the most naturally- sug-gested avenues, whether they tra-verse paths of indolence or carry tbe nun,I through vistas from whose plethora, p. reliance, maybe borne something new. Even in tbe indulgence of such choice f.mcies, it is but reasonable to '■--nine that there • for each a cottage summer. His Salvador de Mendonca, the lira f,ilan minister, occupied here during oi generosity and genial manners while among the people won for him an honorable admiration. The m.iuster was very much delighted with his outing. No visitor to the island won the hearts of the people more than the ffa«v„ori■;te resoarrtnunH'-e wTahsi8vewryasfolnijds of children and would gather them nto carriages and pilot them lrilUS i8-?'1 °Ver ll,e «n"gnilicent druee. 1 his act .lone waienough to create him a hero, yet he possessed of noble peuse of the state all ri hi «uUnd, this "does not seem ,ard- V the e,|Uare thing t0 do £g People are proceeding with it. The ZddVfTtiSn8tUrall-V0ne that should fall upon the general gov-ernment. Captain Bixby in're-porting a survey „f the proposed improvement rather discouraged it unless it was undertaken in the proper way and with the assurance of suihcient appropriation to carry U through upon the most scienti" The island is nine miles long and from two to four miles wide. There are located here two light houses, burV.„ A*8 8tati0ns- ■ weather bureau, and a cable line to the mam land, all belonging ,o the g-enment. The citi.enf are pr^ud of their possessions and do not ( hesitate to show the trait, peculiar arcthe i^««.,'wh?orh leerrnaeerres w^hPoPwI"egrePin,Cv"itefd°f ttohepa8r0tui"ci'-- pate in the dedication. In the parlors of the Palmer house an mformal levee was Qd as soon as the distinguished guests had made themselves8 comforube and continu.id until preparation had o be made for the banquet at 'Kinsley's. The heat interfered somewhat with the enjoyment of therecept.on. Genera. Ugstreet npeellleeHd ,to spene'nyt >m'o•*st"oofIdt«hewatismecomin-his room. From 5 to 7 o'clock the reception w.. form.! and a large number of Chicago society folk agt ™ 'D eVe"",g dre98- Ge"eral Longstreet and his charming daughters were the objects of much '",""■ '"e general was com 10W. ^ r?CeiTe Wh"e 8eated" Over 1.000 people were introduced to and welcomed the city guests. 30 o'clock General Kitzhugh rate dead. Genera. iT,""", Were Solicitor Character and Physical Conditions. Perhaps, after all, i„ our pursuit of harmony in our lives, we are n' Paying enough attention to phvsica conditions. Science preLZ to have made great progress in inter? pret.ng the relations of body and mind. We have, on one hand, the t a'VO r:ale8.,of Physicial culture as the reconciliation of our disordered physical i 11 cure for every and disturbance. X raining and diet for a specific and temporary purpose, like footba eontests or the ordeal of ora?o ica compete we are f.mi,iar wff Bu anything like a broad, sclent, diet has hardly been attempted.1 S'e a r,eare,l Certain P°pu,ar n°tions and «? 6 6UbjeCt' a8 that fish The mo,°; "f g°°d f0r the brain-to In , re L formers have forced us to consider she properties of tea co» ee, and alcohol, and the phy-sic. ans unite in condemning or commending at different timesg the STLrt&£diet in re,ation to fl, ?iV'pat,enl8- But the ef- Ur. Wm, M. Wilson Pullmsn, W. Va. Than For Years people ,n a moral conation, upon the power or quality of the., brain work, u their di8pogitJon J-' -rue Americans, of asp/rlng ' , he highest and for the best that is to be had. The chief industri are li.hing and farming. The man who r»rm9 is also a fisherman, and vice versa. In former years the inhabu nts were clannish; but ever since t. -.inception of trickery into the is a ,d politics there has been ! a gradual severance of these come-y attributes. The population at! tins time is about 1500 delightful place for a outing. It is a summer's II. H. Fuoosov. 1 ' in V«' R. ,\ grounds ■nd t STKDIN '.LOVERS ■ our IIM. . Vines Kosea • ■ •»ll- , are divers condition and cir- 'tance. While some seek these delightful spots for the purpose of throwing themselves upon the mercy of wind and wave, there are Where! others who need a stop at 'heee recruiting places that thev ■" >»y "> a supply of ballast- Just enough to tide them over the billows Until the advent of another merchant, after a nine months seige of mental distraction over making a proper selection of -aims, chiffon, tall'ettas, dini- - etc, etc.. etc.; toiling night night through the spring months; spending untiring energy m loyal efforts to please an unan ■■ "ive class of hard-to-please, ••'■r vet-been suited patrons,— -himself away from his ardu- I'us task that he may find a few »' '■•- _ol rest and recuperation. He vi-its some such place as Block I: and while gulping down lie ozone and dabbling in the surf be attempts to discover to the i some new scheme wherebv HI be perfectly satisfied in - for the next season. The quence, natural enough, is that he is as bad off when he quits the island as when he made the re- , „ , r »olve to do better, and he returns a Wreck and a woman hater. The reader is allowed to consign him to ilr- proper class. r " »" "Out of one dollar he tries to ,„ake seven; l-oslne bia health ami hie chances of ueaven.*1 was iualities, and generous to a fault. Mr. Barnum's death was keenly felt by his friends ere H19 daughter, Mrs. Dr uchtel, of Denver, Col., visited the island last year in order to view a favored spot of her father's. Vice-president Hen- Iso S. ster to Cottonseed Meal for Human Beings. i ne late V ice-President drieks spent a season here, al O. W. Benjamin, late minist< Persia. ii HOUJ rersand " ~ r ^ S i . LUMBER! Then there have been members from each of the Japanese and Chinese legations, tho Mexican le-gation and others. A. W. Greely the Arctic explorer, .Secretary Jno' Carlisle. Senator Mandcrson Samuel F. Miller, of the Supreme Court, W. It. Alli.ter. and hosts of others have often found charms on lilock Island. In the July number of Harper's, ■n the year 1876, appears a most interesting article on Block Island from the pen of the late Charles l.anma... Mr. Lanman, who was Haniel Webster's private secretary during President Filmore'a admin-istration, left for the benefit of rising generations an almost indis-pensible volume in his Biographi-cal Annals of the Civil Govern-ment. In his sketch of the island, Mr. Lanman referred to the poet Dana as having chosen this spot as tho scene of one of his charming stories, the "Buccaneer." The verses quoted from Mr. Dana's poem are so truthful that to repeat them will serve to revive pleasant recollections of the writer: A South Carolina physician has discovered a new use for cottonseed meal He says that it is a valuable article of human food, and it is not by any means bad eating. His first idea of using the article as an ar-ticle of diet was suggested by a young nephew, who, after looking at the feeding of the cows, took to eating the cottonseed meal from the bins. No restriction was laid upon the youngster, who for two years thrived well on his singular food. This led to experiments be-ing tried in the kitchen, and one-third of the cottonseed meal was mixed with two-thirds white fio.ir or corn meal, and baked or fried either us batter or Lee and General John B. Gordon, who had been detained south, ar-med. (jenerai Lee brilliant throng in the Palmer house nut the gentleman from Georgia "as toj tired from travel. General I.ongsteeet was forced to retire be-fore the end of the function. General Wade Hampton was en-thusiastic on the subject of the monument, saying: -The dedica-tion of Chicago's confederate mon-ument to-morrow is by far the greatest event that has taken place in this country to cement the north and south. Chicago cannot be too greatly praised for pesistency her noble and husbands' treatment of their wives is sharply considered. We blunder along til we reach middle life, ex-perimenting without any scientif c programme, and at last, when the game ,9 almost over, begin to learn what to avoid, and so mitigate the failures of our remaining years. We do not treat horses this way, or cows, or dogs from whom we except any intelligent service in hunting.' He know that some plants are stimulants and some are narcotics : there is a belief even among savages that certain articles of food give courage and others make the eaters chicken-hearted. There is good reason to suppose that every sort of food, vegetable or animal, has an action as specific as what we call drugs have, and a specific relation spite of the snee"rs and "scoldings' &• c.^"-'^-'-"^— CapaCily-administered by Massachusetts. Mood'. 8.r.apar'l|a Domon.tratee Its Merita. rfarinT ""V"' & Hood5. SaWat *5"fciZZV u?'v,->1- KoadttE 8evere Pains In the Back gj.y■*?■* end al*o in my ,|,i,.. j WM Hood's *s> Cures taken over BPven botll.-. r V llav'' M.'.v.tLso.v. iSSiZlSStSSi:,A" In Poor Health 'means so much more than you imagine-serious and latal diseases result from ;«"P»8[ailments neglected Uont play with Nature's greatest gift—health. Brown's Iron itters '')">■ •refetlia. ml ol snrls wcall mil RenrraMy cx. l!4.'"' I. Mnrok ■ppttltc lllll I.lilt .KIRIII lit oruri il ' ' nielli,,,. I'l' *tfr,n;i|,rf,„,,. "•*'ii"- »hl.l, i, "»', s Ir,,,, n,,. ■ t«S. A (rw till 'e» cur.- I,.-,,,.;., ' «nn lr.,m n„. ety hrst doie. ,/ - *"■ ' Halt Pm.00<1,'* TW% *" "'" ,",,t •''•^-'llnntr Ireif It Cures £euralKia, Troubles, Constipation, Bad Blootl "»taria. Nervous ailment.^ "omen's complaints, line?^S'!ti^la?"l,«T!i I"' ' nmui. i«J 'lHiluIl' Is I Hi»f'e'cl'efn«,,. All o.he,, an lUli- ol ,„„ s,.,nl.„"v,. , &•*&?£ ftk5sS,d w°"d • BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE. MO. generous in deed, in are a source of comfort. They nre a source of care, also. If you care for your child's health, scnii f„r illustrated , book on the disorders to which children are subject, and which FrcyS Vcrmltuxo has cured for 50 years. OM toiuobrauuiruri4BtBUH . , K. »_8. liiLy, ^\ 1 BalUmorc, 04; ' Will cure ai'v si.n-,,, I,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,.,,,. wiUmtrasanliosiicm i...-.,, ■ . A"'''"''UALtpHCALiHe rut-fun,,,l0N -ecus— Ti -. Hi.:;-. , I,;,!,., ,:,i(. ,.,,, . . C'Urrh. l..--;,i„...|, „i.i.i„r,. , , |.'' w»m«.(;hai 1 II»,,.I.. :i,„|" „n ■kii nii'l -.all, .11 , . ~»iinv to cem Inn. K, i'•i?.".,'.V!.."'b-) iI;I"i->. I'- vi|.l,.| |,r, . i.UKl s-l. ■ -OVE a x t 1Aholoinsland lies nine leagues awav B its solitary shore Of craggy rock and sandy bay -No sound but ocean's roar Save where the bold, wild sea-bird makes her home, iler shrill ery comiug through the sparkling foam. "lint when the light winds lie at rett fe££5.S#w ^ """glossy breast dough. The mixture cooked well, and possessed a rich, nutty flavor, very pleasant to the palate. Cottonseed meal is very rich in albuminoids, or the nitrogenous elements (ilesh and blood formers) as compared with the starch and fat elements (heat producers,) possessing a nutritive ratio of one to one, i. e., one of the former to one of the latter, while that of whole wheat is one to six. It is well known that Graham flour, which contains all parts of the wheat, is almost a perfect food more nearly meeting all the re-quirements of the human body than does any other natural product. The mixture of cottonseed meal with cornmeal and white flour gives a combination almost identical in composition and nutritive ratio to wheat. In many states cottonseed meal is produced in such quantities as to sell for 1 cent per pound. The same States will buy annually millions of dollars' worth of meal and Hour at an average of 1A cents per pound. The economic advan-tages of the use of cottonseed meal as human food are obvious. (EAST OK THE MEN IS BLUB A.V1> OKAT. The banquet assembled at Kins-ley s in the evening marked an epoch in the history of the united north and south. Veterans who fought each other sat together and called one another brothers in all sincerity. Spontaneoti» outbursts of loyalty on the part of the ex-confederate ollicers marked the so-eial occasion and good fellowship prevailed with all. Before the reg-ul «r toast list was called General Stephen I). L»e. of Mississippi, was cailed upon and said: "Chicago's hospitality knows no sectionalism. No American is a stranger. This city, the future metropolis of the country, is cath-olic. This event will be historic. «e make no war on the dead and we, the vanquished, come to the home of bravest victory. We ac-cept the friendship in the same spirit it is otrered. Come and con-quer us of the south again, but not with bayonets, but with your commercial men." Mayor Swift extended the 1 swinging silently— " no ripples break the tosirabl 1 lure are the government people, it i8 different with them. They spend eleven months of every twelve delving into, around and through the catacombs of the de-ft Farm «„ cT 1 I''rtrnt-ntul service, sickened by the *rtiIU IOrOcUe. "I."-|> "'"r- ■•'■id stilled by the dust ! decay. This is enough to teach N. C. How beautiful! reach, A'"' vl!!I -vaTCS K° noiseless up the ■ 1 1 1 11 'hem what appreciation to place upon freedom. They know a thing ■'. There is no unnecessary work going on .1. their minds when, f I nele Sam. they -<td to appropriate any I lh« thirty days al-lowed in them 11, avenues of pleas-beach." When verses can arouse the heart from its winter lethargy to a degree sufficiently clear for a prop-er appreciation of realisms, the mind and the body long to soar to such delightful spots, that they may rest. Such was Lanman'e in-terpretation of Dana, and each sea- Bon found him a sojourner on the island. Mr. Lanman'e story of the island was written from a sincere motive, and his sayings were inspired by a natural love for the place. The historical portions 1 f it Wero con- Deputies Shoot Each Other. MONKOE, La., May 30—A fatal ?J"ZA'Z? maile hy DeP"'y Sher-iffs Ed. Kdwards and Willis Bax-ter near this place last night. The officers were sent out to apprehend Hugh Abrams, who had been shoot-ing into passenger trains on the outskirts of the city and they sep-arated m order to capture Abrams. L 152 J«the dark •""' ""'"took !n»H ? " ^ the CU'Prit "<« "P- «»rf » " J5dw»'de dropped dead and Baxter received a fatal wound. Buckleu'g Arnica Slave. Brui,«ie8sLSa'Ve,i.n ,he w°r'd for Cuts Fe"er w. res,' l lcers' Salt Rheum, Cn lbla*n?,' 'eUer' tapped Hands tio w .?n 1' 0■r",,• and al! «k'" Erup-pav re I, r1'?8" Ve|y curea P"«».0' ™ erfo? 1i"rud,' " ia guaranteed to give Id iirii'c?et,2,«5,ccte,n0tBs'poerr «»b«o>xn.cy Froefrusnadle-hy Q, E. Holton. dom of the city to the guests and told them the hot spell was sym-bolic of the warmth of Chicago's welcome. General Wade Hampton present-ed a resolution in regard to the death of General Gresham and the 200 guests silently drank to his memory. Acting as toastmaster, Colonel Henry L. Turner, commanding the first infantry of the Illinois Na-tional Guard, welcomed the south-erners as "comrades," and otrered his tribute in the form of a poem. I.OKOSTUEET WAS THEltE. "The Army of the Tennessee" was responded to by General Long-street, who was greeted with an outburst of applause. He said : "You all seem to know that I was there, with the Army of North-ern Virginia. It was there that I had the pleasure of an introduc-tion to the Army of the Potomac." The banqueters applauded a touching tribute to Grant. In responding to "The American Soldier in History," Senator But-ler, of South Carolina, placed him in the front rank of the world's soldiers. As an example he por-trayed Gresham, and concluded : "I do not think any other city on the face of the earth would have had the audacity to invite us rebels here to-night. It is to your everlasting honor and glory." General Black, of Illinois, re-sponded to the toast "Here's the dculate roughly that such « thing is indigestibie.or that another article of diet increase nervousness —the special disease of this period of time. But we do not study what diet will make a man kind, or truth-ful, or a lyric poet, or an honest historian, or a disinterested politi-cian. We have got so far as to see that we must discriminate about medicines, but it would be as rea-sonable to expect a dozen persons with as many maladies to go to the drug shop and swallow the same kind of doses as is the spectacle of a dozen people at a dinner table, all unequal in mental gifts and habits and in physical status, help-lessly eating the same things. This demoralization of the taste is probably a sign of a deeper in-sensibility. We may not be able now to prove that a bad egg will produce a bad man; it may be that only a bad man will eat a bad egg; but as we know that a man's dispo-sition is airected by what he eats, and that much of the evil in life comes from bad digestion, it is a fair inference that moral and in-tellectual qualities are transmitted in food. It is the business of science to make better men and women. It gives itself great airs about heredity, but hitherto has done little in the investigation of the subtile causes of the so-called hereditary qualities in our consum-ing relations to the animal and veg-etable worid.—Harper's Magazine. History of The Last Legislature LADIES' FRIEND. THE BEST. The superior merit of the light-running DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINK is too well established in this community to need any further recommendation and is uni-versally preferred to all other ma-chines on account of its simplicity, durability, Ac They are now being sold cheap by W. J.McDCFFIE 327 SOUTH ELM ST., GREENSBORO, X. < . Greensboro Roller Mills, NORTH & WATS0\, PROPRIETORS. Buy .inc. Onl. 1, „ «',.„(». A neat, attractive pamphlet, 160 pages, with ornamental cover, de-voted to the record of the last Leg-islature, the worst Legislature, save that of 1MJ8, ever assembled in the State. This book gives its record plainly and truthfully. It gives facts and names and is thoroughly reliable. It has been prepared by some of the best Democratic writers in the State. Every patriot, every citizen and every Democrat should have a copy. Price 10 cents per copy, post paid. Lower prices by the hundred. If not on sale at bookstore or drug-store, address. E. M. L'ZZEI.1., Printer and Binder, Raleigh, N. C. OXJB B:R_A.:N-;DS= PURITY: A HIGH GRADE PATENT. STAR: A FINE FAMILY FLOUR CHARM OF GREENSBORO: THE POOR MAN'S FRIEND. These brands have been put on the market on their merits ami f»n«nii'r satisfaction and are pronounced excellent by tl for* ,v Ii Grfnsbo,ro an(l surrounding country. We guarai FLOUR gr" -V""r U,ercl,ant8 f,,r NORTH4 WATS< Remember we handle all kinds of tbe freshest and BEST .KM, beside the best MEAL ever made in Greensboro. NORTH &c WATSOJS", Mill at Walker Avenue and C. P. * V. V. It. R. ZLTTZMZZBIEJIR,, S-A-S-K, DOOBS -A-JSTID BliiJsriDS. Nothing Cheap About It. Dr. Driimmonii's Lightning Kemedy for Rheumatism is put up in large bot-tles, and onue seen it is never mistaken for any other preparation. All the cheap remedies put together are not worth one bottle or Drummond's Lightning Remedy, ami any sutferer Hand of Fellowship," General Fitz-1 -who ha> 'aken it, will bear witness to Effi. NotrGrPa0sDd,e t d>t.0 "*"'" Hr^WSaS South ISot Grasp It.'" by mail and tbe full month's treatment i. S He said: "I am surrounded by the llag of the United States. I I had a simular experience about of two large bottle, by express, upon receipt of *5. lirummotiil Medicine Co., 48 Maiden Lane, New York. Agents Wanted. 3&I, No trouble to build a house if you know where to buy the cbeapesl material. We manufacture all kinds of DOORS. SASH ItliMi- MANTELS, DOOR and WINDOW FRAMES. GLASS. TURNED WORK, SCROLL SAWING, STAIR WORK. MOULDING of all kind. FLOORING, CEILING, SIDING, CASING and all kinds of FINISHED LUMBER. We carry in stock ROUGH LUMBER. SIIINGLFs "j IS TERING LATHES, and all kinds of BUILDING material. See our New Window Fastener! Requiring no weights and 75 per cent, cheaper than weights, and can be used where weights will not work. Guilford Lumber Company, Greensboro, NT. C.
Object Description
Title | The Greensboro patriot [June 6, 1895] |
Date | 1895-06-06 |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The June 6, 1895, 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-1895-06-06 |
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 | 871564444 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 | |
Full text | VOI,. 7 1 THE GREENSBORO THE PIEDMONT BANK OF GREENSBORO, N. C. Capital, $70,000.00. BBBBN8BOBQ. N. p., WEDNESDAY,! PATRIOT. or mountain Surplus, 87,000.00. J. M. W.ii MI:, /', . ,,/(„/. ure, on the seashore S. L. TKOODOK, K. «». \ AH.UN. I „ DIRECTORS : Vicc-l'rcs. Walker. I II •I. -. HIM KI:. ■■"■«■-■:■*.■.. n.w.55 ■*" ■ * 1 '■•■■■ American To. N. IVylli, I'M.li IT i. i t'K, \l Manufaclu (ban K'eskall i, i to ' MTCR- ^ aooonnniHiatloaa PROFESSIONAL CARDS. LONG AGO. Tnv !\°\ ""tm of P'ea8"re 'than any that can be mentioned. With ""'•■•ted means i, seems but rea-sonable to think that in that lies the chiefest pleasure. But a study or the people who frequent summer resorts proves conclusively the con-trary. The under classes reap the largest benefits because of their abandon. They go out for what tl'erc ,. ,n life, .nd do not appear at these places through any false pride. The middle classes make themselves uncomfortable by eon-roubl7 fr,tting "nd """""i"? nZ ' 0?d are generally hard to Please than either the wealthy classes. They gratis attentions which the lower do not ask or expect and J. M. HAYS, M. D., GREENSBORO, N. C, • i Ulioner Dr. W. J. RICHARDSON, U • r,.. 1 '• a BORO, N. C. " Ueia. ana Surnorr in in try. Dr. W.H. Wakefield, N be hi Greens- H n Friday, I i IHITED To lt>. Ear, Ifoae ami ihrnat. "V.'".".,n,"'"""uI in- •!.. - RSfttM I'M* ■"tatheuiuitlelo.; ''u"',:' II., ..ddeep. Hi' in "Hli.it olden l..i er lower or demand, class ^a,thewca,thy"pa'/f;r'Vhe: »ean all right, and are indulgedas far as reason will admit. Thev have their charms. y The island has had some very dwtii.gui.hed visitors every \Jr ^ce.thasbeenknownasasC mer resort. By . review of ,„£ of the records, found in the ar-chives of the island, which by the »ay are guarded most sedulously by some of the pioneer sentinels* fLh- 1 """ '|Uite an •««• of fash.on throng the island during trusts -- •keeper" 0f tl,es* d gressive cise, and were secured after hard research. The illustrations used island as it appeared nearly twenty years ago. Tt «. a ong about this time that a spTrU of development and progress was rfsSand S'»™ '"• tne islanders possessed was ..., nation. Nor has this quality waned or even faltered. To-day thev are nNeewwddeeTvee,l6opmamenbtistia°rUe8betihn"g on«er"at" distant their general utility will be » boon to the defenses offhe New aErnegallatnodgectohaesft;eab8uitblweihaenthi|etor tthheeBsee lVJl?y. ?™ bei"g operated at the °BAY AND BLUE MIX. EXC° w«rteS EeC6iVe a Co«ial Welcome in Chicago. CHICAGO, MI sent in >y 2i).—The south representa^s^ theg"iostdc,iVi^ 'Tb^ ,he ^"^*•** the truth, the com, " g was tendered RAILROAD NO. L>:{. CE3STTER, te lh',,iniC' 'fWe allusion her. ,h !rn°e t0 what is termed !h« n ?* great ealt pon<'-" <""' to the fisheries. The salt p0nd cov-ers an area of 1000 the acres. It is the season. rusts are not blinded by prejul l,0„W„CVer- >". areo'faVro- Dr. J. E. WYCHE, I ' I Nil- I ,, ' ■ arm* folded 25, .... ; 31 Tt •I, ','""'•"- -ill ;'•" ,l:,"K "" Memorj . wall mthelieMofall. —Ai lei i .1,, spirit, rather, proffcrino-unstinted aid in the tasPk of"8 lightening the world. The most noted visitor to the is- CnJVn" "'e year 1875- wl"*n rtT«ral.pra,nt- then President, h.S,T,a8,He,ll?,,UtiC8andCar"0 his ohce that he might enjoy the hospIta,,, of 1{hode j^JJ-ssttaaftee ffoor severBa0l,,dnagysa, bt0h,e,tG°evneerrtahl,e accompanied by a cabinet and - "or S Tt Tu° U U" as a ha'- h»rh/ gue- There i9 °"e good iarb0r „,, the north side of thl i-inn," Ihe.onl>'way in which an appropr.auon could be secured was by deceiving the islanders into the toal',:LbyrninguPab-a^ to admit the salt water from the sea. the fishing industry could be carried on in all sorts of weather! dead—those who d and saw that the first day Jffi v...t was pleasantly spent. Leu enant General James Longstree. accompanied by his daughtefs,Mr' street"^er' fr L°U'Se *-°S street, preceded the main partv ar nving last night. V Y' Southerners and citizens of Chi-cago united to do the •The He said. «--h the hSoryTf ff P"" venerable Georgia soldier all honor. Later in the day he divided the honor,I WttS thus benefitiDg t„—« •«-« Thi« WM done to aid in securin-small sums of money from the stat at different intervals. The tru purpose of the project is to gradi - ally open up a harbor at the ex- II to68""6- Whileit«eem8 lent to encourage every possi- .mprovement for the good of General Wade Hampton, who five-'i hne °f the pany »< thi"y* It 11 a-llTnd fr°m ffMbi»«to» at II o clock a. m A reception committee of promi-nent citizens was on hand to rf™ greeting to the visitors whence train stopped in the Grand Central depot. The informal reception «. enthU81astic, and wa, followed by the transfer of th-party • A l KB. SHAW* SCALES, A.t1 •n,.,y^atL,a-w GKEENSHOKO N. C. I usi-i iturl • V. M. HACKETT, Wall Paper, Decorations s, end r -! - i*. M. C A BT THE SAD SEA WAVES. An Intcrestine Letter from a So- Journer on the Atlantic Coast. BLOCS [BLAND, K. I. -Mm- 84, 1895. While roeming about this won-deru i-H„,l,nanapp„ren,lvva"n e..n of matter f„r sober though,, (for the roar and dash of the surf be arrival and departure of ves-se .. and the invigorating and ex* °"8ht and cheery thoughts coupled with youthl „ Iambi,ions I, the wri ler chanced upon some am. some senatorial friend.; ac-ceptod an invitation from Hon Nicholw^B.11 ,„ Ppenil « day on the island Those attending Gen-eral Grant were Secretarv BHstow, to s An?i ;enera' P,OT"PO»». Sen.-' tors Anthony and Burnside. The slanders made the occasion a gala ('a3, leaving off all work, decorat-ing their homes with national col-lore and assembling en masse to »eIcome the distinguished party. Iheoccas.on.nfused new impetus nto he amoitions and purposes of the sturdy citizens and dating from hat event a new era dawned? so to interesting •: Ugh for one short chapter isturv. ' Greensboro Nurseries! X c. l.« "HM'IM I l|, •Shade I'REES. T. Pigs, Jolni A. Young-, NURSERIES, , tiala in hi Loth to deny himeelf by foreeo-jngthe most natural inclinations n the midst of such surroundings, be so maneuvered as to accomplish considerable the while he gratified a less worthy yet predominant dis-position. The construction of the elements upon and surrounding the Mud rather encourage nonchal-ance, even while they are possessed of higher oualities-buoyancy and lieakh. It ,s remarkable how apt-iv these conditions instill in one a disposition ,o revel in pleasures and in life „se|f. imbucd wi[|] these gracious attributes, the mind pursues the most naturally- sug-gested avenues, whether they tra-verse paths of indolence or carry tbe nun,I through vistas from whose plethora, p. reliance, maybe borne something new. Even in tbe indulgence of such choice f.mcies, it is but reasonable to '■--nine that there • for each a cottage summer. His Salvador de Mendonca, the lira f,ilan minister, occupied here during oi generosity and genial manners while among the people won for him an honorable admiration. The m.iuster was very much delighted with his outing. No visitor to the island won the hearts of the people more than the ffa«v„ori■;te resoarrtnunH'-e wTahsi8vewryasfolnijds of children and would gather them nto carriages and pilot them lrilUS i8-?'1 °Ver ll,e «n"gnilicent druee. 1 his act .lone waienough to create him a hero, yet he possessed of noble peuse of the state all ri hi «uUnd, this "does not seem ,ard- V the e,|Uare thing t0 do £g People are proceeding with it. The ZddVfTtiSn8tUrall-V0ne that should fall upon the general gov-ernment. Captain Bixby in're-porting a survey „f the proposed improvement rather discouraged it unless it was undertaken in the proper way and with the assurance of suihcient appropriation to carry U through upon the most scienti" The island is nine miles long and from two to four miles wide. There are located here two light houses, burV.„ A*8 8tati0ns- ■ weather bureau, and a cable line to the mam land, all belonging ,o the g-enment. The citi.enf are pr^ud of their possessions and do not ( hesitate to show the trait, peculiar arcthe i^««.,'wh?orh leerrnaeerres w^hPoPwI"egrePin,Cv"itefd°f ttohepa8r0tui"ci'-- pate in the dedication. In the parlors of the Palmer house an mformal levee was Qd as soon as the distinguished guests had made themselves8 comforube and continu.id until preparation had o be made for the banquet at 'Kinsley's. The heat interfered somewhat with the enjoyment of therecept.on. Genera. Ugstreet npeellleeHd ,to spene'nyt >m'o•*st"oofIdt«hewatismecomin-his room. From 5 to 7 o'clock the reception w.. form.! and a large number of Chicago society folk agt ™ 'D eVe"",g dre98- Ge"eral Longstreet and his charming daughters were the objects of much '",""■ '"e general was com 10W. ^ r?CeiTe Wh"e 8eated" Over 1.000 people were introduced to and welcomed the city guests. 30 o'clock General Kitzhugh rate dead. Genera. iT,""", Were Solicitor Character and Physical Conditions. Perhaps, after all, i„ our pursuit of harmony in our lives, we are n' Paying enough attention to phvsica conditions. Science preLZ to have made great progress in inter? pret.ng the relations of body and mind. We have, on one hand, the t a'VO r:ale8.,of Physicial culture as the reconciliation of our disordered physical i 11 cure for every and disturbance. X raining and diet for a specific and temporary purpose, like footba eontests or the ordeal of ora?o ica compete we are f.mi,iar wff Bu anything like a broad, sclent, diet has hardly been attempted.1 S'e a r,eare,l Certain P°pu,ar n°tions and «? 6 6UbjeCt' a8 that fish The mo,°; "f g°°d f0r the brain-to In , re L formers have forced us to consider she properties of tea co» ee, and alcohol, and the phy-sic. ans unite in condemning or commending at different timesg the STLrt&£diet in re,ation to fl, ?iV'pat,enl8- But the ef- Ur. Wm, M. Wilson Pullmsn, W. Va. Than For Years people ,n a moral conation, upon the power or quality of the., brain work, u their di8pogitJon J-' -rue Americans, of asp/rlng ' , he highest and for the best that is to be had. The chief industri are li.hing and farming. The man who r»rm9 is also a fisherman, and vice versa. In former years the inhabu nts were clannish; but ever since t. -.inception of trickery into the is a ,d politics there has been ! a gradual severance of these come-y attributes. The population at! tins time is about 1500 delightful place for a outing. It is a summer's II. H. Fuoosov. 1 ' in V«' R. ,\ grounds ■nd t STKDIN '.LOVERS ■ our IIM. . Vines Kosea • ■ •»ll- , are divers condition and cir- 'tance. While some seek these delightful spots for the purpose of throwing themselves upon the mercy of wind and wave, there are Where! others who need a stop at 'heee recruiting places that thev ■" >»y "> a supply of ballast- Just enough to tide them over the billows Until the advent of another merchant, after a nine months seige of mental distraction over making a proper selection of -aims, chiffon, tall'ettas, dini- - etc, etc.. etc.; toiling night night through the spring months; spending untiring energy m loyal efforts to please an unan ■■ "ive class of hard-to-please, ••'■r vet-been suited patrons,— -himself away from his ardu- I'us task that he may find a few »' '■•- _ol rest and recuperation. He vi-its some such place as Block I: and while gulping down lie ozone and dabbling in the surf be attempts to discover to the i some new scheme wherebv HI be perfectly satisfied in - for the next season. The quence, natural enough, is that he is as bad off when he quits the island as when he made the re- , „ , r »olve to do better, and he returns a Wreck and a woman hater. The reader is allowed to consign him to ilr- proper class. r " »" "Out of one dollar he tries to ,„ake seven; l-oslne bia health ami hie chances of ueaven.*1 was iualities, and generous to a fault. Mr. Barnum's death was keenly felt by his friends ere H19 daughter, Mrs. Dr uchtel, of Denver, Col., visited the island last year in order to view a favored spot of her father's. Vice-president Hen- Iso S. ster to Cottonseed Meal for Human Beings. i ne late V ice-President drieks spent a season here, al O. W. Benjamin, late minist< Persia. ii HOUJ rersand " ~ r ^ S i . LUMBER! Then there have been members from each of the Japanese and Chinese legations, tho Mexican le-gation and others. A. W. Greely the Arctic explorer, .Secretary Jno' Carlisle. Senator Mandcrson Samuel F. Miller, of the Supreme Court, W. It. Alli.ter. and hosts of others have often found charms on lilock Island. In the July number of Harper's, ■n the year 1876, appears a most interesting article on Block Island from the pen of the late Charles l.anma... Mr. Lanman, who was Haniel Webster's private secretary during President Filmore'a admin-istration, left for the benefit of rising generations an almost indis-pensible volume in his Biographi-cal Annals of the Civil Govern-ment. In his sketch of the island, Mr. Lanman referred to the poet Dana as having chosen this spot as tho scene of one of his charming stories, the "Buccaneer." The verses quoted from Mr. Dana's poem are so truthful that to repeat them will serve to revive pleasant recollections of the writer: A South Carolina physician has discovered a new use for cottonseed meal He says that it is a valuable article of human food, and it is not by any means bad eating. His first idea of using the article as an ar-ticle of diet was suggested by a young nephew, who, after looking at the feeding of the cows, took to eating the cottonseed meal from the bins. No restriction was laid upon the youngster, who for two years thrived well on his singular food. This led to experiments be-ing tried in the kitchen, and one-third of the cottonseed meal was mixed with two-thirds white fio.ir or corn meal, and baked or fried either us batter or Lee and General John B. Gordon, who had been detained south, ar-med. (jenerai Lee brilliant throng in the Palmer house nut the gentleman from Georgia "as toj tired from travel. General I.ongsteeet was forced to retire be-fore the end of the function. General Wade Hampton was en-thusiastic on the subject of the monument, saying: -The dedica-tion of Chicago's confederate mon-ument to-morrow is by far the greatest event that has taken place in this country to cement the north and south. Chicago cannot be too greatly praised for pesistency her noble and husbands' treatment of their wives is sharply considered. We blunder along til we reach middle life, ex-perimenting without any scientif c programme, and at last, when the game ,9 almost over, begin to learn what to avoid, and so mitigate the failures of our remaining years. We do not treat horses this way, or cows, or dogs from whom we except any intelligent service in hunting.' He know that some plants are stimulants and some are narcotics : there is a belief even among savages that certain articles of food give courage and others make the eaters chicken-hearted. There is good reason to suppose that every sort of food, vegetable or animal, has an action as specific as what we call drugs have, and a specific relation spite of the snee"rs and "scoldings' &• c.^"-'^-'-"^— CapaCily-administered by Massachusetts. Mood'. 8.r.apar'l|a Domon.tratee Its Merita. rfarinT ""V"' & Hood5. SaWat *5"fciZZV u?'v,->1- KoadttE 8evere Pains In the Back gj.y■*?■* end al*o in my ,|,i,.. j WM Hood's *s> Cures taken over BPven botll.-. r V llav'' M.'.v.tLso.v. iSSiZlSStSSi:,A" In Poor Health 'means so much more than you imagine-serious and latal diseases result from ;«"P»8[ailments neglected Uont play with Nature's greatest gift—health. Brown's Iron itters '')">■ •refetlia. ml ol snrls wcall mil RenrraMy cx. l!4.'"' I. Mnrok ■ppttltc lllll I.lilt .KIRIII lit oruri il ' ' nielli,,,. I'l' *tfr,n;i|,rf,„,,. "•*'ii"- »hl.l, i, "»', s Ir,,,, n,,. ■ t«S. A (rw till 'e» cur.- I,.-,,,.;., ' «nn lr.,m n„. ety hrst doie. ,/ - *"■ ' Halt Pm.00<1,'* TW% *" "'" ,",,t •''•^-'llnntr Ireif It Cures £euralKia, Troubles, Constipation, Bad Blootl "»taria. Nervous ailment.^ "omen's complaints, line?^S'!ti^la?"l,«T!i I"' ' nmui. i«J 'lHiluIl' Is I Hi»f'e'cl'efn«,,. All o.he,, an lUli- ol ,„„ s,.,nl.„"v,. , &•*&?£ ftk5sS,d w°"d • BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE. MO. generous in deed, in are a source of comfort. They nre a source of care, also. If you care for your child's health, scnii f„r illustrated , book on the disorders to which children are subject, and which FrcyS Vcrmltuxo has cured for 50 years. OM toiuobrauuiruri4BtBUH . , K. »_8. liiLy, ^\ 1 BalUmorc, 04; ' Will cure ai'v si.n-,,, I,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,.,,,. wiUmtrasanliosiicm i...-.,, ■ . A"'''"''UALtpHCALiHe rut-fun,,,l0N -ecus— Ti -. Hi.:;-. , I,;,!,., ,:,i(. ,.,,, . . C'Urrh. l..--;,i„...|, „i.i.i„r,. , , |.'' w»m«.(;hai 1 II»,,.I.. :i,„|" „n ■kii nii'l -.all, .11 , . ~»iinv to cem Inn. K, i'•i?.".,'.V!.."'b-) iI;I"i->. I'- vi|.l,.| |,r, . i.UKl s-l. ■ -OVE a x t 1Aholoinsland lies nine leagues awav B its solitary shore Of craggy rock and sandy bay -No sound but ocean's roar Save where the bold, wild sea-bird makes her home, iler shrill ery comiug through the sparkling foam. "lint when the light winds lie at rett fe££5.S#w ^ """glossy breast dough. The mixture cooked well, and possessed a rich, nutty flavor, very pleasant to the palate. Cottonseed meal is very rich in albuminoids, or the nitrogenous elements (ilesh and blood formers) as compared with the starch and fat elements (heat producers,) possessing a nutritive ratio of one to one, i. e., one of the former to one of the latter, while that of whole wheat is one to six. It is well known that Graham flour, which contains all parts of the wheat, is almost a perfect food more nearly meeting all the re-quirements of the human body than does any other natural product. The mixture of cottonseed meal with cornmeal and white flour gives a combination almost identical in composition and nutritive ratio to wheat. In many states cottonseed meal is produced in such quantities as to sell for 1 cent per pound. The same States will buy annually millions of dollars' worth of meal and Hour at an average of 1A cents per pound. The economic advan-tages of the use of cottonseed meal as human food are obvious. (EAST OK THE MEN IS BLUB A.V1> OKAT. The banquet assembled at Kins-ley s in the evening marked an epoch in the history of the united north and south. Veterans who fought each other sat together and called one another brothers in all sincerity. Spontaneoti» outbursts of loyalty on the part of the ex-confederate ollicers marked the so-eial occasion and good fellowship prevailed with all. Before the reg-ul «r toast list was called General Stephen I). L»e. of Mississippi, was cailed upon and said: "Chicago's hospitality knows no sectionalism. No American is a stranger. This city, the future metropolis of the country, is cath-olic. This event will be historic. «e make no war on the dead and we, the vanquished, come to the home of bravest victory. We ac-cept the friendship in the same spirit it is otrered. Come and con-quer us of the south again, but not with bayonets, but with your commercial men." Mayor Swift extended the 1 swinging silently— " no ripples break the tosirabl 1 lure are the government people, it i8 different with them. They spend eleven months of every twelve delving into, around and through the catacombs of the de-ft Farm «„ cT 1 I''rtrnt-ntul service, sickened by the *rtiIU IOrOcUe. "I."-|> "'"r- ■•'■id stilled by the dust ! decay. This is enough to teach N. C. How beautiful! reach, A'"' vl!!I -vaTCS K° noiseless up the ■ 1 1 1 11 'hem what appreciation to place upon freedom. They know a thing ■'. There is no unnecessary work going on .1. their minds when, f I nele Sam. they - | xn.cy Froefrusnadle-hy Q, E. Holton. dom of the city to the guests and told them the hot spell was sym-bolic of the warmth of Chicago's welcome. General Wade Hampton present-ed a resolution in regard to the death of General Gresham and the 200 guests silently drank to his memory. Acting as toastmaster, Colonel Henry L. Turner, commanding the first infantry of the Illinois Na-tional Guard, welcomed the south-erners as "comrades," and otrered his tribute in the form of a poem. I.OKOSTUEET WAS THEltE. "The Army of the Tennessee" was responded to by General Long-street, who was greeted with an outburst of applause. He said : "You all seem to know that I was there, with the Army of North-ern Virginia. It was there that I had the pleasure of an introduc-tion to the Army of the Potomac." The banqueters applauded a touching tribute to Grant. In responding to "The American Soldier in History," Senator But-ler, of South Carolina, placed him in the front rank of the world's soldiers. As an example he por-trayed Gresham, and concluded : "I do not think any other city on the face of the earth would have had the audacity to invite us rebels here to-night. It is to your everlasting honor and glory." General Black, of Illinois, re-sponded to the toast "Here's the dculate roughly that such « thing is indigestibie.or that another article of diet increase nervousness —the special disease of this period of time. But we do not study what diet will make a man kind, or truth-ful, or a lyric poet, or an honest historian, or a disinterested politi-cian. We have got so far as to see that we must discriminate about medicines, but it would be as rea-sonable to expect a dozen persons with as many maladies to go to the drug shop and swallow the same kind of doses as is the spectacle of a dozen people at a dinner table, all unequal in mental gifts and habits and in physical status, help-lessly eating the same things. This demoralization of the taste is probably a sign of a deeper in-sensibility. We may not be able now to prove that a bad egg will produce a bad man; it may be that only a bad man will eat a bad egg; but as we know that a man's dispo-sition is airected by what he eats, and that much of the evil in life comes from bad digestion, it is a fair inference that moral and in-tellectual qualities are transmitted in food. It is the business of science to make better men and women. It gives itself great airs about heredity, but hitherto has done little in the investigation of the subtile causes of the so-called hereditary qualities in our consum-ing relations to the animal and veg-etable worid.—Harper's Magazine. History of The Last Legislature LADIES' FRIEND. THE BEST. The superior merit of the light-running DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINK is too well established in this community to need any further recommendation and is uni-versally preferred to all other ma-chines on account of its simplicity, durability, Ac They are now being sold cheap by W. J.McDCFFIE 327 SOUTH ELM ST., GREENSBORO, X. < . Greensboro Roller Mills, NORTH & WATS0\, PROPRIETORS. Buy .inc. Onl. 1, „ «',.„(». A neat, attractive pamphlet, 160 pages, with ornamental cover, de-voted to the record of the last Leg-islature, the worst Legislature, save that of 1MJ8, ever assembled in the State. This book gives its record plainly and truthfully. It gives facts and names and is thoroughly reliable. It has been prepared by some of the best Democratic writers in the State. Every patriot, every citizen and every Democrat should have a copy. Price 10 cents per copy, post paid. Lower prices by the hundred. If not on sale at bookstore or drug-store, address. E. M. L'ZZEI.1., Printer and Binder, Raleigh, N. C. OXJB B:R_A.:N-;DS= PURITY: A HIGH GRADE PATENT. STAR: A FINE FAMILY FLOUR CHARM OF GREENSBORO: THE POOR MAN'S FRIEND. These brands have been put on the market on their merits ami f»n«nii'r satisfaction and are pronounced excellent by tl for* ,v Ii Grfnsbo,ro an(l surrounding country. We guarai FLOUR gr" -V""r U,ercl,ant8 f,,r NORTH4 WATS< Remember we handle all kinds of tbe freshest and BEST .KM, beside the best MEAL ever made in Greensboro. NORTH &c WATSOJS", Mill at Walker Avenue and C. P. * V. V. It. R. ZLTTZMZZBIEJIR,, S-A-S-K, DOOBS -A-JSTID BliiJsriDS. Nothing Cheap About It. Dr. Driimmonii's Lightning Kemedy for Rheumatism is put up in large bot-tles, and onue seen it is never mistaken for any other preparation. All the cheap remedies put together are not worth one bottle or Drummond's Lightning Remedy, ami any sutferer Hand of Fellowship," General Fitz-1 -who ha> 'aken it, will bear witness to Effi. NotrGrPa0sDd,e t d>t.0 "*"'" Hr^WSaS South ISot Grasp It.'" by mail and tbe full month's treatment i. S He said: "I am surrounded by the llag of the United States. I I had a simular experience about of two large bottle, by express, upon receipt of *5. lirummotiil Medicine Co., 48 Maiden Lane, New York. Agents Wanted. 3&I, No trouble to build a house if you know where to buy the cbeapesl material. We manufacture all kinds of DOORS. SASH ItliMi- MANTELS, DOOR and WINDOW FRAMES. GLASS. TURNED WORK, SCROLL SAWING, STAIR WORK. MOULDING of all kind. FLOORING, CEILING, SIDING, CASING and all kinds of FINISHED LUMBER. We carry in stock ROUGH LUMBER. SIIINGLFs "j IS TERING LATHES, and all kinds of BUILDING material. See our New Window Fastener! Requiring no weights and 75 per cent, cheaper than weights, and can be used where weights will not work. Guilford Lumber Company, Greensboro, NT. C. |