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TH17 r^DtririvrcorvDr^ r Ai ruw 1 it VOL. To. GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 18W>. NO. 24. FSIONAL CARDS. Dr. W. J. RIUHARDSON •■ IOKO, N. U. ■ Dr. J. E. WYCHE, i9 - . \ ' INCOMPLETENESS V, I, ■ .(... Ill* 1- •I — >ui \,.- mM«hei IM ..i u, 1 ■ p|>lii>K vavea. 1 - :n lli.|,-<l ■' ' l.-l. iianshi ii.- ibttMl kills* - It- MM ..||1|.I.1.IM-.-. 'I III ll.VI' r«M : . I I,. I H I,,,|(. treualli nml Mwvetueiw. WILL IT BE STEVENSON? W.H. Wakefield, - ne,« I ■•• In Qi \; ■ \I|IMI House on ^ ednes-r ;>MTH> T.i a,,., i II. \<«<- ami Threat. A . M . MIAW& SCALES, i .■ a ; it IJ.-I'VAT" ; NSIH IRO, N. C. nlion given l<» KII busi-ling, ourl Square. I . K,JK. HENCK & SCHENCK, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, . ih< .■■..-■ Iliads' H JAMES D.GLENN, Mineral Insurance Agency Nil IffiwraiffX. - ■ Many Silver Men in the South Fa-vor His Nomination. Despite His Conservatism. . \ ice President Stevenson's visit to North Carolina, al a lime when his name i* so prominently men. tioned in connection with the presi-dency, makes all I lie more interest. ing the Following political gossip, which comes from one of the Haiti-i lieve that in the coming campaign my state and the national conven-tion. There has, however, heen so little thought of candidates that I have not the slightest idea whose nominati'in will he favored hy the state convention. I believe that sentiment in the South will hegin to erystali/.e now, and that within the next week or two it will not onlv he apparent what the plat-form of the convention is likely to be, but also who will be the nomi-nees." WII.I. CAKKV THE BOt Til AND WEST. Representative McMillen.of Ten-nessee, who is one of the conserve tive silver men and one who does not believe the party can afford to abandon all its principles for the sake of silver, said: "We have given little thought to the question of candidates. I am satisfied, how-ever, that a good Democrat will be nominated and that he will carry both the South and West. 1 lie Greensboro Nurseries I : IN— I;« »i;< ». % . < Ii ri. -I ■ . t ■ ■ r : f»f '">. ■ ( pverj ■ 11 .in : n Inn 'l prici. i>l ..I 1'olanil l«i n :;i-l ration, ;it A. Young. Brick: Lime! Cement! ! Lime! Cement! r ,: Ituilding more Sun's able representatives at Washington : Tin' silver Democrats in Congress consider the action of the conven-tions in Kentucky and Virginia will give some shape to the Demo-cratic silver campaign which up to the present time has been carried on without any particular thought concerning candidates. It is held that the declarations of these con-ventions, both being for silver, will probably start a boom for some candidate that will have a tenden-cy to crystalize the sentiment of the silver wing of the party- There is a strong feeling among Southern men in favor of Nice l'resident Stevenson, ami the prediction is made that a- soon as one state con-vention declares in favor of his nomination others will follow the . sample aejjhem. At the same time Mr. Stevenson's sir< m-. ,|.;J'.': the money question is having the effect of antagonizing the extreme silver men. who insist that there must be no doubt concerning the views of the man who is to become the leader. MR. STEVENSON HAS WAITED Too I.0HU. Representative Robertson, of Louisiana, -peaking of the proba-bilities of Mr. Stevenson's nomina-tion upon a silver platform, said today "I '!■• in! think the silver men of the Democratic party will nominate a man about whose posi-tion there has been doubt while the light for silver has been in pro-gress within the party lines. Mr. Stevenson has heen a consistent Democrat and is a good man, but he has waited too long to see which way the convention is likely to go upon the money question. He may lie in favor of silver, but he has not -aid go, and at a time like this -hould hesitate to proclaim ,ii- views. A-the light in thecam-paignpromises to be over the money ■. almost to the exclusion of all other I--:;.-, the silver Demo-crats will iti-ist upon a leader riews arc well known and who has done something to aid the cause for which we have been light-ing." Mr. Robertson was asked if he thought there was any chance that the -ilvcr men would nominate Senator Teller. He answered: -Not the slightest. We must have a Democrat for the nominee, and nly a man who has been such can expect to have the support of the Southern States. For myself, 1 favor the nomination of ex-Gov ernor Boies, of Iowa. The cunven tioii i- likely to take a Western man. and at the present time Gov-ernor Itoii - seems to be the -trung est candidate we can select." Many who are as ardent ill tiieir advocacy of free silver as Mr. Robertson declare that Stevenson ill be the strongest candidate in all the advocates of silver will be united and the Democratic ticket will be successful. There is no ■ i.ii -tiiHI that a high protective tariff proposition will be very strong in the coming convention at St. Louis, or any othet convention, hut it has been proved in two succes she elections that it is not strong with the people of the country. The Republicans expect to make and win their fight upon the tariff issue. Men have learned, however, that they cannot lie enriched by in-creased taxation and they are not likely to put much faith in Kepuli liean promises of increased tariff taxes. The Democrats, upon the other hand, will make a low tariff and a greater supply of money the basis of their platform. With such a platform I believe we will sweep the country. "There will lie no dilliculty in scf»".\'."„" candidates after the plat-form has been beSOT1"*1 uPon-I States that if McKinley is nomi Bated and elected upon a sound-money platform, most of the West ern Senators will be forced to aban-don the party and the Republicans will find themselves in the minority in the Senate. Tariff legislation, this Senator declares, will be an utter impossibility, and Mr. Mc- Kinley, if elected, will fitid himself in about the same position in which l'resident Cleveland has been placed since the beginning of this Con-gress. None of his recommenda-tions will be adopted andtheprom-of a protective tariff will not be kept. A Good Story Spoiled by a Man Who Knows the Facts. The Mt. Airy News of May 28 printed the following sensational story, which concerns a man living below Greensboro. While the story was plausible enough in some re epects it struck us at the time as being rather questionable. 11 Kill WAV l;o Kill. 111. Mr. C. K. Gardner, who lives near Staley, N. C, and who has been employed by the N. 4 W. R R., as track-walker between Tipton Mines and Reed Island, Va, reeeiv ed a message from home that his wife was very sick. In order to save a day or two he started on fool for Ml. Airy to tike the train here for his home, and while crossing the mountain near Fancy Gap, Satur-day night, he was held up by four highwaymen at the point of their revolvers and robbed ofj $t»;i.50, all the money he had except 30 cents. The robbers walked along the road with Mr. Gardner for nearly a mile and seemeil to be clever enough, until suddenly they demanded his money. They also took his watch and stripped him of his coat. They decided to cut his throat, and he plead for his life. He was then knocked in the head and beat until A BRAVE SECRETARY. but at the present time, so far i* - .unconscious. In a few hours he Thps. Woodroffe. Brick! Lime! Cement! Brick! Lime! Cement! POMONA HILL NURSERIES, I'omona, \. < . i . r . n-- the H. & through ' I 'I Illce and in train- make regular|the South the convention enn nom way. • I THOSK INTkKKsTKI) IN rRUITOR FLOWERS eel our YOU I AN FIND \ i:. -. - I kept Three Green Houses *ITiny i ■ t Tr - \ ni • i repti lloiitu II applicant s ti il. \ I iNhl.KV, E'rop'r, I'omona, N. < . Nervous Debility, DR. E. C. WEST'S NERVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT *!GIHAt. ALL OTHERS IMITATIONS. \\ i ill.n l.iiarniili ■.' I I . Ii a. <! k \ ...Opium, ■ - \\ I illei. ua.-i, roller 1(1 nai : c\ Naaipl i tod Label Special E>tra Strength. ' i . s ■ IT., will* ' o rillni iiiial-unleeJJ AP ' in A Piriss, Greensboro, N. C. Wanted-An Idea I know, there has been no develop-ment of sentiment in favor of any particular individual. The fact that the character of the platform must be determined before the question of candidates can even be considered has tended not only to prevent the consideration in ad vance of available men, but has also stilled all aspirations. '■It goes without saying that no silver man could expect to secure the nomination upon a gold plat-form, and of course no advocate of the gold standard wants the nomi-nation if the platform is in favor of free coinage. As a result men who, under ordinary circumstances, might be expected to announce themselves as candidates for the nomination have been forced to re main in the background waiting to see how the character of the plat from would affect the question of their availability. I do not believe that any one can tell now whom the Southern States will favor. How-ever, I do not anticipate the slight-est dilliculty in selecting a satisfac-tory candidate after the platform has been adopted." I'KNNsVI.VANiA FOB PATTI80B. Representative Krdinin, of I'enn-svlvania, who is a thorough sound money man, said that lie had not abandoned all hope of a sound money platform at Chicago, al though, ho said, events seemed to indicate the success of the oi'ver men. The l'-nnsylvaniadelcgaiion will go to Chicago favoring the nomination of ex-Governor I'atti son upon a sound money platform. When asked what the sound money Democrats would do in the event of a silver piatform and nominee, Mr. Krdman said it was difficult to tell He thought, however, there would probably be a great falling oir in the Democratic vote. Representative Patterson, of Ten-nessee, who has been one of the most prominent sound-money Dem-ocratic leaders in the South, said that the outlook for a sound-money platform at Chicago is anything but encouraging. When asked whose nomination he would favor, he said that any one of the sound money men whose name have been mentioned in connection with the nomination would satisfy him. Senator Jones, ol Arkansas, takes an extreme view of the situation and believes that silver should be made the sole issue of the campaign. lie would for the time being aban-don every other proposition and have the convention declare for silver, with a view to uniting under one organization all the silver men in the country, whether they lie Democrats, Republicans or Popu-lists. He believes that this will strengthen the silver Democratic ticket, if one is to be nominated, and will give it a chance of success. Senator Hill does not take a de-spairing view of the situation, and says that he believes a majority of the delegates to the convention will favor conservative action rather than destroy the party by causing an irreparable division. ATTITl HE OS SILVER KKI'IIII ICASS. In all the interviews with Demo crats which The Sun representa-tives have had it has been apparent that while the silver men are be coming daily more confident of suc-cess in the convention, the sound-money men are losing hope. The silver Republicans are watching development with great interest and with no attempt to conceal their dissatisfaction. A fusion between the silver Democrats of the South and the silver Republicans of the West is anticipated, and such a combination will, they maintain, develop an unlooked-for degree of Georgia this evening to take part strength. One of the Western Re-rccoY( r.'*'':,'u"' managed to get here in time'for'the =?""."!.b^.u : n<l train Sunday morning. The kin'v. .te. , graph operator here and (.'apt. Don son made arrangement for his fare and he went down to his home near Staley on Capt. Dodson's train. All who saw Mr. Gardner state ihat he was badly used up. An ef fort ought to be made to suppress this lawlessness and bring the mur-derous set to justice. Let the good people of Carroll take hold of this case and ferret out the guilty. How Daniel Manning Checked the Treasury Raiders. Mr. James K. Campbell, of Ohio, may be nominated at Chicago as a compromise candidate. He has a very crafty and ingenious platform. He is for "sound money," but not radically opposed to free coinage He would not veto a free coinage bill, if passed, and the most me moraine thing in his interview is the following reminiscence of Dan-iel Manning, Mr. Cleveland's first Secretary of the Treasury : '•There is this, however," con-tinued Gov. Campbell, "which may with justice be said of silver: If treasury officials had observed the law and paid 'coin'—silver and gold—when the bond clique were depleting the gold reserve to force a bond issue for them to fatten on, we would hare been saved the three issues of bonds made during the administration, and the public debt would now be smaller by some $210, 000,000. It was sticking to ngold standard and refusing to pay sil-ver when it should have been paid under the law which made these bond issues imperative. "Why Carlisle should have turn ed his back on plain law and taken the course he did I don't pretend to say. He had not only the law, but precedent to encourage him in another course. What was done is the more rematkable when we re tlect that the same coterie of bond-hunters attempted to bleed the gold reserve and force a bond issue when Manning was Secretary of the Treasury, during Cleveland's first term, and Manning defeated them. Manning stood firmly bv the law. like a soldier to his gun, and beat them off. There was no bond issue with Manning. There need have been none with Carlisle if he had done as Manning did—enfoic ed the law. "It was in the summer of 1885, I believe, when the bond clique came after Manning. They began to drain his gold just as th-y later 'rained Carlisle's. watched their pro-sent them The Party's Drift to Silver. "Manning ceeding a bit, and tul". all word to meet him in New •. on a day named. Manning was there, tho bond elique was there— every member—the same men, too, many of them, who later bought bonds of Carlisle. I can quote you Manning's exact words, for R sten-ographer was present to ta!;e them In last week's News a correspon- 'lown- »ml ' have a «W "f lhen> dent sets the people of his section ! here. At otic crisis in the discus-right by giving the facts in the I ,,on »lann,n8 8IUI>; •"Gentlemen, the .Treasury : inate, The very fact that he has been a conservative man, they ar gue, «ni BI rengthen him. Ilis nomination, it is claimed, would have a tendency to reassure the sound money men of that section of the country, and would make an extensive division of tin- Demo cratic vote less probable. ..l.oli..l.\ l ill Till 1 HI I'KKSIOEMT Rcpresi ntative Itussi II. of Geor gia, who ii for sound money, said: N w that seems probable the convention will declare for silver, I hope to sec Mr. Stevenson nomi nati tl. I belli ve the convention should lake a positive position up-on the money question, and if the eilver men have a majority of the rotes, I want to see them adopt a straightoul silvi r platform. If the sound money men should win the light, I should advocate the adop tion of an unequivocal declaration in favor of the gold standard. In no other nay can the controversy be determined. To adopt a strad 'form would, in the event of defeat, leave the question, so fur as the Democracy is concerned, just where it is today. I believe that Georgia will declare for silver and prohabiv for Stevenson, and 1 be-lieve thatlf the Vice President is nominated, even upon a silver plat-form, a majority of the sound money men of the state will sup-port the tick) t." l;. | : BI ntative I lobb, of Mis souri, who is for sound money, said: "If the Democratic conven-tion is to declare for free coinage, then I would prefer the nomina-tion of Vice l'resident Stevenson to that of any other man. I re-gard him as the most conservative Of all the men that have been men-tioned in connection with the silver nomination.*1 Senator Bacon, who left for case, to the detriment of tile vora-city of Mr. Gardner. Over disown signature he writes: ABOUT THE "KUI1BEHV." Editor News:—I want to give you the facts it regard to the "rob bery" case, reported in last issue of The News. The man Gardner had been at work on the railroad near Karrien Springs, Va. He had been paid oil' and started home, hiring a Mr. Tipton to bring him to the foot of Kancy Cap. Gardner got drunk soon after they started and tried all along the route to raise a row, and did have three in this vicinity. He is the robber instead of the rob-bed, as he alleges. He took a can of tomatoes from Mr. W. J. Smith's clerk (a boy), and did not pay for it. When he and Mr. Tipton ar-rived at Mrs. Jane KdwardY, near the foot of the mountain, he took on a fresh supply of liquor. Mr. Tipton asked for pay for the trip and Gardner refused to pay amount as agreed, and he and Tipton got into a row over the matter, in which Tipton's hand and head were badly-cut. Tipton is the man who tried to cut Gardner's throat and beat him up so badly, and I learn he does not deny it. No one else had anything to do with the alfray. Neither of the parties lived in Car-roll county. Our Carroll people has nothing to do with it. Stran-gers or anyone else are as safe in our county from molestation as any-where on the globo. Our people will compare favorably as to hon-esty and morality with any people. The scoundrel used this method to beat bis way home. Let him come back and make good Ilis charges and every officer and citizen in our county will help him run down his alleged "robbers" and bring them to justice. Respectfully, W. S. Lion. Fancy Gap, Va , May 29. Woman's Work for Woman. niBQ fln IQB3 uiwhTwinui 'here in the silver campaign, said : publican Senators said today that " "ii , "There is no doubt in my mind I so great is the sentiment in favor [till J'.N \ in. I .Lti'iit Attftr \ »»» * i t • ■* * c *i ^iv a > ■ ,'«.iw | thai the silver men will carry both of silver IS most of the Western uivcAtkm The donation of $4,000 made through Mr. Julian S. Carr by his wife to establish the "Lida Carr Fellowship" in the Normal and In-dustrinl School at Greensbnro, is the largest subscription yet made in North Carolina so far as we know, to aid directly in the educa-tion of women. Some women may have subscribed to help erect school buildings before. In fact a great deal of money has been put in brick buildings under the suppo-sition that the said buildings could be a college, but we know of no in-stance in North Carolina where any woman has given anything to speak of for endowment or loan funds for women. When a woman leads olf with a gift of $1,000 to aid in the higher education of women, ought she not to be set down as a pioneer in th field of philanthropy? When it is remembered that women have given such occasions recently to aid in-stitutions open only to men, it is refreshing to see this departure in educational philanthropy, and it ought to encourage women, and men too for that matter, to give to institutions for the higher educa-tion of women.—News and Obser-ver. willing to furnish gold for any le-gitimate demand, but if you at-tempt to draw upon the Treasury gold after today, as you are now doing, for hoarding oi speculation, I shall adopt an effective remedy for the protection of the govern-ment's reserve. We have a cash balance of over $160,000,000. Not one of you doubts for a moment the ability and purpose of the gov-ernment to maintain specie pay-ment. Itut if you continue to draw gold I shall at once order that you he paid 10 per cent, in silver coin the llrst day, the second day you will lie paid 20 per cent, in silver and the third day .:n per cent, and so on until one-half is paid you in silver.' " 'But,' exclaiming a banker, 'this is in violation of the implied obligation that the government will pay in gold.' " 'Make no mistake about that, gentlemen,' replied Manning, 'the law says 'coin,' and the Treasury will exercise its undoubted prerog-ative.' "Comment on Manning's stand is unnecessary. It spoke him the honest and the fearless man he was. Silver law and Manning saved the day. No bonds were issued, the gold reserve was protected, the bond clique baffled and the coun-try saved from its bleeding." This is historical, and as the Baltimore Sunday Herald was the only Baltimore paper, I believe, that published it, it may be valua ble information for many readers of the Mirror. If Mr. Manning were alive and Secretary of the Treasury, either he and Mr. Cleve-land would part company or he would Buffer a transformation as violent as that of Mr. Carlisle. Mr. Csmpbell made a line stroke for the Democratic nomination at Chicago when he consented to that interview, and had it sent broad-cast over the country. If Mr. Ste-venson or some presumably or ac tually straightoul free coinage man be not nominated at Chicago.Camp-bcll may be the compromise stand-ard- bearer, unless Grover Cleve-land and the single gold standard he proclaimed, leaving Shylock in possession of both great parties.— James R. Randall in Catholic Mir-ror. Kentucky in its choice of dele gates to the state Democratic con-vention has pronounced for free sil-ver coinage in an unmistakable manner, with the probable result of greatly facilitating the success of the silver cause in Indiana and II linois. As Kentucky with Indiana and Illinois were supposed to hold the balance of power between the inflationists and sound-money ele iiu-nts of the national Democracy, the outlook for the Chicago con-vention is by no means encourag-ing. The party seems to be at the crisis of its fate. It is in the an-omalous position of abandoning its creed in respect to the most im-portant feature of a party's policy. Till now the traditions of IheDem oeracy have been favorable to sound money; it has stood for honesty and 100 cent dollars. Now it is asked to exchange this record for the championship of .all cent dollars and universal disaster. Its leaders are now identifying it with a policy which is inconsistent witli prosperity and must eventually be repudiated. It cannot escape the odium of panic and prolonged bad times if it adopts and succeeds in the proposed program of free coin-age, and if it fails it will still labor under the lasting disadvantage of having done its best to inaugurate a policy of dishonesty, folly and disaster. It seems to be almost useless to reason with the far-gone silverites of the West and South. They have become fanatics. Over production has cheapened their products, so that they have a diminished income out of which to repay loans drawn from the F.ast. The South for years saw the true remedy, which was to reduce tariff taxes and lighten the burden on the producer. The West, biased by its prejudices, refused to accept tariff reform and economy as the cure of its ills—so far as, they were subject to cure by legislation—but went in for more pensions and more money. In the course of the Alliance movement the wholesome ideas of the South ern farmers were perverted by so-cialistic doctrines drawn from Kan-as and given a further twist by ,rs from the silver producing ...._- T*" latter taught the far- *o protection and • as to "make money more plentiful." ' lecturers of the mine owners . ,., currency to the per capita cry and cultivated among the people a be lief that if silver dollars were more abundant they could be obtained almost without effort. The issue of tariff reform was thus obscured with the help of traitorous Uemo crats who set private interests be-fore the public good. The McKin-ley tariff act was bought by the Republicans with a promise to pass the Sherman silver act, which slop-ped short only of free coinage and produced the panic of 1893. The selfish protectionist sentiment of the F.ast obstructed ils complete repeal, thanks to the aid of Senator Gorman and others, thus adding to the grievance of- people who were burdened by taxes. Congress was not without timely warning. Had tho Democrats of the Senate and House heeded Mr. Cleveland's mes sages the event would have been different and the party would not be in its present divided stale. He urged that the people be given such money as they desired by a reform of the hanking laws, so as to per mil the issue of well-secured state bank notes. He asked a reform of the currency that would relieve the treasury from ils embarrassments. The result would have been very dilferent also had his policy of tariff reform heen fully carried out. He urged economy, but economy in federal expenditure was made al most impracticable by the reckless legislation of 1890, and the efforts of a few men in the next Congress to be economical were not appre-ciated. There has -not been, it thus appears, among Democrattc leaders in Congress a statesmanlike policy to avert the drift of the par-ty to monetary heterodoxy, but merely an evil habit of nagging at the President. Personal grudges filled the whole field of view, and the country's good was lost to sight. The present decadence of the party is a measure and expression of the intellectual and moral deca-dence of the Democratic politicians of either house.—Baltimore Sun. -A. RATTiROAD CENTER. wifKfanoa*. " .■■oi „u • lirern«l-i!.. (- n„ I'liine siate, tad . It kin ■ gra rinlmiiil r i ntiarl - *• i.-in. .-..I i I«l-.r. .-II.-.H „|, ;,,„! a ,M|«|,|fu| ,1,„.,.,. nii|.r. *,■„,..,„. 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They are guaranteed to be perfectly free from every deleterious substance and to be purely vegetable. They do not weaken bv their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the syytem. Regular size -'">c. per tiox Sold by C K. llolton A to.. Druggists' Mow imimrUni law Injun iniiiit How rnaay nun their lienllli :i leipl iiiieiiuli I-Iiioeoi- nrni-tiii lr»Vle.l in lawn •• ;•"■! o I •"" '" " "' lale. r.-ovht-. guardian- nml ncwi can •! i» tier -i i >••■'" •l"' " -"'- -' "" Hutu I..I.I-..1- in (in II hawl ,!" ' r-nniilie. »:ir a I -III. a lull. I....k .1,1.111 nar, I Bv »n :,--..--11,11.01 ol mr leal ««' . ..lu 1 ih.o U1M( 1.11- 1 .1 ..1 il.elu I 1 11:1111: Iraling. null 1. ami nhi 1,1 iram III* ll,.- la,el :.-: 1 certain .k-rfru.UK I.I.II ire fa « nrevnl. m ; lavman can |»~-lbli image, ami « nu-n. 11 |«r-an «e.| in. iirainalli unrten Ihc -111 • I health, and .leatr«y the ■ 1,0 tl.e vi.-mn. ( ,11 ••»( till" indice <>": ' — mil, lei. cents in ntaiu|M i" imj 1—1 '-• ' Worl.r. i.,-i-„-aiv Medical A-neiatnav ■•• Man, -I..-.-I. BuSah. S. V.,ami the , .- wil he*c in. ir.,11. »>->■< ration 111 a plain *ealed •to "I" for Infants and Ch!!«irco. "<'a«l..rlai*i.ov.ll.-..l,|.> I r- incnd itas, .,;..■,,.., ,.,,,. i" known to ■■»." II. \ \,.-, „■ ». M In, 111 80. Oxford til . BruuMyn, N. .. "Tt,e i, .- ..r •-' 1 ' ■ ,' : ■ umleei I l-i merlins.! n.tll.M. ..r - ..j--.-T...-...... 1 . • „t , ■ ... 1 I fan lll.-s Kha do » keep! witliUteaay pi'i,." CAauMtXiaTT*, i>. ti.. :, . • Greensboro Roller Mills. NORTH sV. WATSON, PROPRIETORS. OUE IBK-AJSTDf PURITY' A HIGH GRADE PHEW. STAR: A PIIE FAMILY FLOUR. CHARM OF GREEHSB0R0: THE POOR MAN'S FRIEI These brand- have heen pill in given universal satisfaction and an | familes of Greensboro and surround i formity in each grade. Ash your merchm iBTH A WATSON'S FLOUR. . , Remember mndle all kinds of th. I- l- ]■ 1 ■ beside the besl MKAL ever made in <■ NOBTH &c WATSO JSi Mill at Walker Avenue and I . I- .•. V \ R, R. Miss Helen M. Gould contributes $100,000 to the relief of the St. Louis tornado sufferers. Avoid Pneumonia, diphtheria and typhoid fever, by keeping the blood pure, the appetite good and the bodily health vigorous by the use of Hood's Sarsaparllla. Silver Democrats controlled the I Virginia state convention last I Thursday by a big majority. Sen ntor Daniel will be pushed for a place on the national ticket. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world forCott Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Kever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup-tions, and positively cures Piles,or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refund-ed. Price *'< cents per box. For sale by C. K. llolton. Mr ,ii 1 r.'■ '. ' • r hi surprise you on prl - H make Hoods Pills have won high praise for their prompt sn.l efficient yet easy action. Subscribe for the PATRIOT now. SASH, DOORS A2TD BXJIXTIOS. Sow don'l (slink for a minute wi ■ .-.in do bualnesflon that buls. (Mir molln l.arg< W1KEXT IT COMES TO GLASS. we can show yon the larg Guilford Lumber Company, Greensboro, \. ('. Children Cryfor Pitchers Castoria.
Object Description
Title | The Greensboro patriot [June 10, 1896] |
Date | 1896-06-10 |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The June 10, 1896, 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-1896-06-10 |
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 | 871563857 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
TH17 r^DtririvrcorvDr^ r Ai ruw 1 it
VOL. To. GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 18W>. NO. 24.
FSIONAL CARDS.
Dr. W. J. RIUHARDSON
•■
IOKO, N. U.
■
Dr. J. E. WYCHE,
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