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THE GREENSBOROUGH._PiTRroT. «*•»»» .0 S i ! Volume XXV. Written for the Patriot. MAHTTRS or SOUTHERN _Hl££^M. ii v B ■†■ * v " * L L " F, : ■„■ ex fries I Who ha mend —. - Ol THE GUILFORD DIXIE BOYS. MA: ■ †in Guilfo lately for •rti Wilson, was Dot nfi-eh. p] luse-kpoorcot-m^ EySBOBOTOH, ggg O, AUGUST 13, 1863. IISTuiiiiber .1,^653. which is so noticeable in Eugenie is not .econd degree, who survivedt.n^ ndr Majesty- pri our history, was *"« "bJec' of ,Lls ■*£*", „,v Thoa°£ but thirty six yean 6f age, her .abor ia conducting the great war 10 which V .„ MF' ,. horn in G.nlford county. Iftoogn DUt iniriv m ) Her cheeks wo are engaged is the inadequacy and dif- - rfhCaroliaa cniheSlstbfMay.iS'-T. Hisfath- beaulJJ8 ",,;{_? whair thin and falling, ficulty of transportation. We compareJ ginian, as Chief Tithingman, or Collector of the celebrated . ^^7^^^^*^B0 well shaped, worse in this respect with the enemy than ' of the "taxes in kind," for North Caroli. How Matters aro Managed. A principal difficulty under which wo A MOVE IN THE RIOHT DIRECTION.—It io truly gratifying to iearr, that President Da-vis uas rovoked the appointment recently Hercheeks eugaged dif-. made by him, cf a .Major Bradford a Vin com er, Mr. / rtluir Forbis, KM a son Capt. Arthur ForbU. who fell mortally wounded at «he memorable battle of Guilford Court-house, on precisely adapted to her style of****** ;ms far too prominent. Ih.a effect .B no kau.ble but cow the loth day of March 1781. Hi. father was in j —- ~ j'^- by the telling of enable circumstances ID the world, jeheeks«- Thon ner Majesty hns rotor«ea and gave bis son the advantages of as good an edu- j t<j whRt tho FrencD term c jnMjUlUage^^ cation as c._ Of -he country in the days of his boyhood. He was growing op at a time when still all the stirring in-cidents and glorious achievements of the old Revo-lution were fresh in the memories of all and the theme Of universal conversation. He heard them ta'ked over so often and so thoroughly discussed tl,,v grew with his growth and strengthened With hh Strength." That was a most capital school-ing in hi-'..rv...otwith.tandir./ he heard them, no 1 and di.sh.ped by the hues of ,nc Jeser,ed,y proud, of a lofty admiration of fine - ""'•' '""uhl haTe Ld|T. But he was ■write, ilo, M are the , | tfbwto reflect. be blind, ob- . ofthemrndbe U-practscaj .loess ■ rials ■ ad year His ambition, wl II. waf , wagon. : '^ he was ortive; andnfterhe grew turity, he mtwil ■-■•■" ,; y their time by .rally became iTing of the mil ■ • - upo! intemperan. I and, like Don Jose, ,-. an i it., n out ran BOt so peaceable," ,and the quiet of SOCK'; listic propensity lifficnlty; for he was, who indulged .i thers' am • DV. ■† hes of pat liCS Of and lib. i 1 i qi |e» i ' ■† 8°'- hereg- D down into a nerwi B "'-' waa''"' i the and ipright I ;,im to the ac-camped near he wr of wit and . i loved i. the la he liked ■ i ■; ... . i ... .: D f months. Uim, Him he ■ el iron. ■ ;- •■''ntre: ■ '.vwhen ould be obtained at the old-field schools ^. naini chcekS) eyebrows, lashes and lips". Her make up is scientific,, but plainly to bo detected; and tho P«"°" who see the Empress now for the first.time exclaim, ' Why she is not nearly so hand some as she has been represented . a no is not handsome now. Her brow has lost its bright amiable look; the cares of her newly assunvd position have wr!n.kled. U fl once smooth surface; besides she is a Spanish woman, and they soon fade. &ne has become capricious and overbearing, jealous she has ever been sinco nor marri-age, and with good cause. Her present extravagance is unpardonable ; in tact, me woman is totally transformed. The query now is, was she really as she seamed, or was it policy? were her amiability ana sweetness of deportment but assumed as occasion ye a aired ? . "Should Napoleon bo suddenly deprived of lift and Eupenio be thus made- Kegent tho world will witness strange deeds, it will seo the Pope controlling the vast empire of Franco." in any other, 'f heir country abounds in : na. The tax itseif i» not popular, though railroads, and they keep them folly equip- | wo doubt not that tho people generally ed and in thorough order. They have also ■ will submit to it with a good grace, as one an almost endless amount of shipping, and j of the necessities of a state of war such as the command of tho sea and the principal , we are now eugaged in. But to add to the watijr courses. In horses, mules and wa- odiousoess of tho tax, and to give cause for Of bis great and h*roic ancea and rekindled with the tire nWr hespota of him and of the thnlliDgscer.e. . . he passed in the: dark days of the old "*Mr. Forbis was a skOemaker by trade ; but he at Disemi loyment and followed nnll-wrighting and carpentry. Despite the oli «aw,- ..Jaokat. • . good at none,»-he was am lent workman in either of these branches of the mechanic arts. He never was married, nor ac-cnmnlated an c.«tate , but he was Btriotly honest and i„ hi. dealings, and 1 am told by an wtelh- ■n, Who long did business, in that S«- doa „trv where he mostly resided, thai he earefultopsynphisdobtsand endeavored to keep himself even with the world. n hen he volunteered under me in the spring of 1B61, he was in his fifty fifth year. He remarked a» the time, that he intended that the ancestral name „ld never be dishonored,—that he would give the remnant of his days and the strength of hie declining years freely and willingly to bisection in ■ggressive war which was thrnsl upon us. That was amanlj pint, and the right spirit! Had all under his age, by fifteen years even, turned out en , „«,tbe enemy would havebeen defeated and ut-terly diBr.-»i..iii. .1 before -hat year ended: for us Gen. Printia. remarked to Gen. Beanregard, had ,.„r forcei been able to have -one on to the city of Wasl ingh o after the victories en the plains ot Ma-independence of the South would have been achieved almost without bloodshed and without . c and iloods ot grief which have swept over lesolated different parts of our fair land. A twenty-five thousand men, fresh and v. , , , ,. M w and Mgh-so led courage bed the work, although they ,, i ffith rifles and shot-guns; lor the Fed-era G, ' ,. • at that time, the gun- and theap] ofi • ioldiers,to have succeEi- Forbiswasagoodand brave soldier. Not- ..L-his age, he readily complied with the : i endeavored to do bis wl le [nth merningofhialife, he had imbibed a . that same beverage, which made the ..,, ol TamO'Shanter berate him so .,.,,,. , his great weakness. Had Mi-juice of the vine-god with the x .,,.. „. Dg to vl.i.-h old "Uncle Billy," . was called in camp, vas accustomed to go, he would 1 ave caught him jnsl as he did old Silenus. Bu) Barn, asoldier he was much less soi-led by thevritchingsweetnees of the wine- In consequence of his age, he was not able to I ahard forced march; but he generally kept ar up that he could join us at our bivouac. On* • uble-quickedfora long dis- : 1 y the way-f ide; but it was from sheer exhaustion,—] was nut strong enough to ,s always in his file when there was ^d of a fight l-'e never in the leasl tar. grandfather's illustrious A Is'ew Candidate for Congress. The Chattanooga Rebel publishes the subjoined card : CABD 47ROM H0.\. JOHN HAiTV. To my fellow soldiers and citizens of Tennes-see : ... At the earnest and almost frantic solici-tations of two friends with whom I have just taken a small drink I bavo consented to allow my name to go bvfore the pub-lic as a candidate to represent the Twelfth Congressional District of Tennessee in the next Confederate Congress. My claims for aro multitudinous, in a gons they outnumber us, a« everything else. Bat have wedono all we oould ? Let us see. One of the earliest acts of the Provision-al Congress, after meotiDg in this city, was to appropriate a millioo of dollars for the c^nBtiuctiou of a railroad, connecting the Richmond and Danville with tho North Carolina railroad at "Greensboro*. The appropriation was made at the instance of the President, who represented tho work to Le a military necessity. It constitutes one of tho few positivo recommendations ever submitted to Congress by him. The advantage of the proposed connexion was that it wonld give us a third line of com' munication with the South and West, and would be much less exposed to interrup-tion by raids than either ot the others. At tho time- the appropriation was made labor was cheap and abundant. Tho owners ol slaves in exposed localities were anxious to obtain employment (or them in tho inte-rior on almost any terms. Six months would have boon ample time for the com-pletion of tho work. Two years or more liavo elapsed, and if the first rail has been laid wo have not heard of it. Two yoars more will prooably pass by before it is fin-ished, and then at a cost ten times as great as if it had been at once let to contract and pushed forward with proper energy We have heard that the then- Sectetary of War, Gen. Randolph, proposed to pursue tine course, but some question was raised by the President that lorbado hia proceed-ing. What we have lost and suffered for want of this road, it would be bard to esti-mate. It is no .secret that we are greatly in The city of a new complaint thai North Carolina was insulted, by the appointment of a Virginian to the ofllco, was most injudicious. We learn from a gentleman w.ho was in the appropriate Executive Department at Rich, mond a lew days ago and spoke of this im-proper appointment, that the leasou as> signed for it was, that there was no appli-cant from North Carolina for the place. No, North Carolinians havo been noted for their anti-olfice-seeking propensities, and at present a majority ot her men are in the army, and most of the others have their bands full of other business. Rut such an office as that ought not to have beeu con-ferred upon a stranger without first con-sulting the Governor or other authorities of North Carolina, The reason given is therefore a palliation, only, not a justifica-tion of the appointment. We trust, how-ever, that all unkind feelings towaads President Davis will be removed by the removal ef the obnoxious individual, which is said to have followed a remonstrance from Gov. Vance. In the mean time it had made thousands of—enemies wo had almost said-rtothe Administration. [Fayttteville Observer. civil preferment aro ruuuuuuuiu.io, '"_»i military point of view. 1 have been in j want of locomotives, cars, &c. every lamous retreat in this war from j Jackson, Mississippi, was a point at which Fishing Creek to Lavergne. As retreating ■ several railroads converged, and when the constitutes one of the chief strategic fea- , siege of Vicksburg commenced, a large tures of this war, I flatter myself, (sinco ; amount of rolling stock was concentrated nobodv else does,) that I am as expert on there. The bridge across Pearl river had a backward movement as a Doodle bug. I been burnt, and this rolling slock could not have served heroically m tho Unartormas- ; i»e removed from Jackson without the coa-ler's Department ever since the war began | struction of a temporary briJpe, which —and would do it still to the closo, if the > m;gb.t have been put up in a week or less authorities woul.I abstain irom court tim£ with ease. The siege lasted six weeks, m artialing me every two weeks lcr ma!, i Vicksburg surrendered, John-ton fell back feasance in office. To my dear, indulgent, sweet, good-natured, gallant, heroic, high toned, badly on Jitckwrij remained thero some days and then withdrew. The enemy came on, oc-cupied tho city and took possession of the clothed, poorly fed, magnanimous, brave, roiling stock, including, according to the -elf sacrificing, kind-hearted, patriotio ; Memphis Appeal, over forty locomotives. friends of the rank and file I have ever | Nobody was to blame. been a true friend. If 1 should be disgraced ] \y0 ar0 nol ,„0ro in want of rolling stock with a Beat in Congress, (I don't care it I tht.n of railroad iron. Our roads aro get-its even a seat on tho stone steps of the j tjng alarmingly out of repair, and the rails j —•-•-■-— Speaker's stand) the first step I shall toke J Wu|) wbich to relay them are not to be , DBATH OF pBAHOia i.-KIrs Esu'—The ABOUT MILK.—The Paris corre*psnder.t of the New Orleans Picayune givos an in-teresting resume of the latest scientific dis-coveries in Europe. One of them, in rela-tion to the nature of milk, is of general interest. The writer says : " Prof. Boe-decker recently determined to ascertain whether milklrom the same cow is invaria-bly the same chemical compound at all hours af the day. He has deduced from his experiments i<iat milk obtained from the cow in tho evening is three per cent, richer than milk obtained >n the morning, for tho latter contains only ten per cent of solid matter, avd the former thirteen per cent. The milk contains less water in the evening by three per cent, in the morning it contains eighty nine per cont. of water, in the evening only 80 per cent. The olea ginoua particles also increase with tho ap-proach ol ovening. They are only 3.17 per cent, rn the morning, 2v33 per cent. a', noon; and .'5 i2 per cont at night. The gaseous particles are likewise mure abundant in the evening than in tho morning; they arc 2.24 per cent, in the morning, and 3.4'J per cent. ir. tho e\ ening. On the other hand, albnmen and serum diminish with the day; tho former isO 45 percent in ;ho morning and 0.31 per cent in the evening, the latter is 4.19 in the morning, and 4.72 at night." his collar, one hundred dollars a month for each star and bar, tho fund thus raised to bo divided out amongst the privates, with which to indulge in the game called " po-ker." Consequently eve/y man who sports a "bar" on his shoulder (unless its a crow-bar— and it ought to be, in many instan-ces,) must expect to pay for the glory, if 1 am elected. I shall also introduce a bill to place a,! soldier's wives, who flir. with other wives' husbui.ds who ain't soldiers in the points~m-.rn.ed is, we oelieve, Alteon miles. More then was something like thirty miles of first class rail left us, as a free gift, by the enemy. It was only necessary to run ■ and >ka| few trains to tho other end of the road|.. Js_ ,_«/„,.., ._ terprisii.g citizens and merchants of tho State, having erected Factories, .Mills, Gas works, occ, in Salem, and managed them From the Raleigh Register. To Hiss. Lhiff ». B. In childhood's bright and sunny hours, Ere we had learned <h>- world's cold ways, We gave each other frienship'a flowers— We loved each other's praise. Sid* by side we tripped along. The white sand pain to the old school rooa; Bright our faces, gsy our song, And free our toula from gloom. Ah '. little dreamed our bouyant hearts, That either ever could grow cold, And pierce the other with keen darts. From the poiuard that false friendship holds. But a chasm yawns between us now— Thi-u iiiovrst on tkt tunny s.dr ,■ I know not wh«nceit came nor how I only know 'tis deep and wide. I would n A have thee clasp again On r :ith the binding Units oi yore; But oi h„iven, linna, throw the chain Around my yielding heart unce more. VAJTSTIS ■ The Dictatorship. A letter from tho country Bays; ''We havo boo i feeling the/»Wer of the Enquirer lor making Mr. Davis Dictator. What is tho use ot it—what good will it do?— liao'iit he enough power already I Will tho making him omnipotent inspire the people with more enthusiasm or him with more wisdom '! As (ar as wo canjudge, he has been tho great defect of our Confeder-acy. Congress was no. great things—but the Executive has been otio great failure— uo forecast, no comprehension—no heart. Kentucky lost by one pet—Tennessee by another, Arkansas by another, and Vicks-burg by still another. Are not these enough ' What more docs ho want? Will it aid the public cause to givo lum the power to imprison. Toombsor Gov. Floyd, or Beauro^ard, or Joo Johnston, or Gov. Rrown, orany other distinguished Confed-erate, without judgeorjury whohnppensto b-- so ur forluuatcas not to put the same estimats on his capacity that he does him-self? The ^raut of that power might serve to gratify -.is personal antipathies, If ho has any; but for the life of mo, I cannot see how it would tend to drive back the en.-, my, or purge the Government of Yankees and Vankce Jove. •'No—tho Executivo has more power than it knows how to wield. It, and its Yankee md IsresHtish surroundings have constituted the greatest draw bark to our eanse. Unencumbered by this weight the Stales and tho people of iho States would havo driven every Yankee out of our limits before ths. "J. saw somo time ago in the same paper which recu.tu.lends a Dictatorship, a high encomium on Democracy. Democracy I and at this time oi day ! Who in the world can be the autl.oi ofsuch DOnse ise ? Is he a continental Rod Republican or a Yankee black Repubi-'-an ornn Irish Pa-triot? JJemocracy indeed I All the gen-uine Democracy on this continent is con-tained in the Black Republican party of the North. There is an instinctive sympa-thy between Demooraey and arbitraiy power ; there always has been and always will bo. "Tho grand fact whir!) cannot be too often repeated, which the events of the last two years has established, is that tho five millions of Southern people have been able successfully to resist tho 80 millions of Yankees;, hoiauso ol tho aristocratic feeling pervading our entire population. They felt they wero superior to Yankees and that helped to make them so."—liichivmd Whig. asked li an. During the winter, he was afflicted with rheumatism and chionic dysentery, and, seeing that he was gradually declining, I recommended his He received it -.the 14th day of De- . He was exceedingly grateful. But when the time of his : 'and \< n trial to I h in arms. He parted , m ■ i the knife ions: ity." ' een . . I nol take med- . foi i vi r an • . • . Dr. Pepper, win ■ ent and :. luce him to ti - but nil in ■ •. ■re ■ for 1 [ | a * ith the g( . . roth* ... . Via- ■ - ■ wa . id, the tears trickled down his wsx-i to give utter- He 1< fl with our blessing a el | he might ( njoy many days of peace and happiness. Hut he had scarcely I salutations with hia friends at bom,-, him he 4th day ofJanuary, 1'. ace to the ashes of the venerable soldierof his country 1 by our pati: i i achieved bj rould .... !. as iroyed. Their ■ ' • • - :.—dis-er of u - in the I Tho Empress Eugenio and her Spheres. \ writer in the August number of Mar- 's Magazine says of the Empress of the ■h : Sho was and is a determined and ener-getically oi the Pope, and for hiiu she ted and worked with an energy wor thy of any cause. She sent him vast sums ot money, obtained from irregular sources; she collected irom her adherents and sur rounders oil they could give her; caused contributions to be exacted from oven the servants in tho Imperial household; and at last, when she had exhausted a'l her means, sbe pledged to tho old Duke of Brunswick—a monomaniac upon the sab-of possessing diamonds—tho jewel.1-" v nicu I he gr< at cities of Prance, Paris, ! yons, Marseilles, Bordeaux, Strausburg : others, pros ntcd to her on the occa-sion oi her marriage to Napoleon. rl ■ y wels wore, Btrictly Bpeaking, orewn pro' it in her over z«.al and religious enthusiasm, Bpiced with a spirit of opposi-tion to her husband's wishes, she sold and as sums obtained to L •• Her old antagonist, M. F'ouid, has called o office by the Emperor, who is aware of his great worth, and, as Minister of Finance, rould, is once more in position to the wild extravagance oi Eugenie. He pleads and menaces, but prayers and threats are alike ineffectual. The palace ot the EiyseeS, which their Majesties are to occupy next year has iuit been renovated. The apartments des-tined lor the Empress wero magnificent, found them insufficiently so, and has bangea and ordered additional ns'wbich will cost million? upon rails, steai cabbages, &c., after dark, shall bo immediately promoted and assigned to duty in the Damphool Brigade. lue time has come, my fellow citizens, when good men and truo, who aro anxious to get into some sort of a hole to avoid the conscript, should bo selected for offices of public trust, lam a good-l'm a Hue man— Congress is my hoie. Hoping each man ot you will cabt as many votes lor me as you can stuff into the baliot box, 1 remain y our best friend. J. H. P. S.—1 neglected to mention, that if not elected 1 shall retire like Cincinnati to the fields, and there spend tho rest of my furlough on earth beneath my 'OWL gourd> vine and frog-tree," with the sublimcsl indifference. J. H. not a rail had been raised nor a hand set i forrQed ,ho laDorious UIHi difficult duty" of to work. Monday, the 19th July, •_»•"» | preparing the tax bill of that session. We hands woi-oputto tho job, but in the mean, j^.^ ^^ hocolllract,,j al thafc 8es8i„n tin.c the enemy had re-appeai ?d in the vi-cinity, and our officer in command in ttibo neighborhood of Fredcricksburg burnt tl bnd-'o across tho Potomac tieek, which costusat a blow one. half tho Yankee gilt. the throat disease with finally terminated his life. SALBOFTHE FRIENDS' MEETING HOUSE.— possible Iheolher Sail The Friends' Meeting House and lot, situat-maybewved Perhapa so. We would | ed on-lOth street, in t.,s_.c>tX, was sob thai the Friends will purchase a lot in the THE NEW EMJPBBOR OF THE NEW EM-PIRE.— Who is Maximilian? is a question frequently asked. We suppose hira to be a scion cf the Bonaparte family, in which there are two persons of that name, grand-children of Eugene Beauhumale and his wife, the Princess of Bavaria. Eugene was a child ot Josephine by her first marriage, «uid a great favorite of the Emperor Napol-eon, who, in I80G,adopted himashisson. He was subsequently appointed Viceroy of Italy, and married the Princess of Bavaria. In 1817, he had a son called Maximilian, who entered tha service of Rust.ia, ant! in 9 married the Grand Dutches-* Marie Nicolaiwena, daughter of the Emperor Nicholas. By this lady he has bad several c Idi n two of «Liom arc sons—oin, Prinee Nicholas Maximilian, born in 1841, and Eugene Maximilian, born in la47. la the Emperor of Mexico the elder of the two '( There is none of the Bonaparte blood in their veins; but they are so allied to that family as to bo considered a part ol it. Tho choice of 6uch a person would be evidently a stroke o? policy. It associates with the French dynasty, the grandson of one ot the most distinguished monarchs that have occupied the Russian throne; and it would serve to add distinction and power to it The present French Emperor has adopted the wisdom of his uncle for his own guidance, and one part of that we know was to strengthen his position through every ramification of family ties. end Morcau waft in America he at mistake at a musical society. AHOLT WOMEN.—Disraeli, speaking of the society ol rcducd and charming women says : "It is an acquaintance which, when ha-bitual, oxi'iv.M"i a great influence over the tone oi the mind, even if it does not pro-duce any nior .i nt effects. It refines tho taste, Quickem the perception, and gives, as it were, a grace and flexibility to the intellect." Somewhere else (he same writer re< marks that "men are as much stimulated to mutual effort by the sympathy of tho gentler sex as bj the desire <i power or fame. Women arc uot disposed to appre-ciate worth and intellectual luperiority than men, or at least, they arc as often captivated by the noble manifestations of genius as by the on ol manners or the- cbo DID of persons." And Sidney Smith says: "Among men tee and liberal politeness, a womau who ban successfully cultivated her mind, without diminishing tho gentleness and uanners, is always sure to IBU'I with a respect and admiration ring upon enthusiasm." kin, another writer ob ervea thai "of foreheads, large black hazel eyes, coral lips, and fine teeth, are no '^.der- »..t.k. able attractions, when ,-Mned as they are frequently,to a vivacious and joyous d.s RETALIATION.—President Lincoln has the streets. The is used; but the panto mca has, in a great rara,~NpeiaW«d the fan. In the gen the only lyiant ne is not authorized to resist." REPORTED RERIONATIOH of GEN. PRICE. ith as m at to tc as i» in President Davis the p to which ho Goon roa GEN. TooHBfl.—The Macon was entitled by hit services, ho mnack of education, women are taughl Te| b nportM that General T. finally determ but little; an d when a young lad] can ; the guitar or f i. waltz and appear remarked untrue, but the Mail sayt itc mes so well authenticated, that iliac nstraincd to be-lieve it. ■ w ■—*^^^— »»- WE WISH To BUY, IN ANV QUARHTT, c.can Cotton rags, for ■which we will pay S cents per pound:or mixed colors, and 1" cents for clean Tho-ie v.r.o have rags lor sale, will please " The change of character | bring them ty the Patriot office. while in thecity the other day, speaking mand. itisto h» | ' "'.'"1_V! ,„," .'.' cf the high price of proviaii Zte in society, she is served up *holea Uia. whoie'he K0|.,,, j ,,. , Kht before, he matrimonial altar as qoickn aH 1»°. ^ lheproDrietor utthehou<e woold not al-bc6' n- low him to settle his bil! until be was about to leave alleging thai (WVVlsiona might rise before morning! The G> is iT-rd upon the large clasfl who can nev-er be satisfied with present prices, hot are always expectant of pretexts (o* an-other advance. < < eort[e Allen, Urcen-'-irougli, N. C-OJer ulcntar.dsuscept.hil.ty of cultivanon. Tun CF.DAU FALLS BOBBIN COMPANY, ARK now pre.mr.d tofarnisha* short notice, all km SoBBISS, BPOOL8an«tJUII.LS,fto., snttablete Woolen and Cotton Mills. j y_ ()^LL .^ Cedar Falls, N. 0., June 9, 18 Rixioioua NOTICE.—A Protracted Meet. ashhasiPlsasaat Oi •-, i-eni .-..mmencing on Friday before th* Mts Sunday iraion of^gu9tnext.I,olicit^-:^.Supi | *&JM« innn yds Itrown Sheeting. f KeglB ''lotaing sn ' I '• ■ ntxy Plaids. ^0". Bsmahsa Osttan fan No. 7 u> l*. • 8 .jjperm*. Sogai And an a "on.net •Mi-Hoi Greensborough, N. C. / -' ii . ,v '
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | The Greensborough patriot [August 13, 1863] |
Date | 1863-08-13 |
Editor(s) |
Ingold, A.W. Clendenin (no first name) |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The August 13, 1863, issue of The Greensborough Patriot, a newspaper published in Greensboro, N.C., by Ingold and Clendenin. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Greensborough [i.e. Greensboro], N.C. : Newspapers |
Original publisher | Ingold and Clendenin |
Language | eng |
Contributing institution | UNCG University Libraries |
Newspaper name | The Greensborough 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-1863-08-13 |
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 | 871562342 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
THE GREENSBOROUGH._PiTRroT. «*•»»»
.0 S i !
Volume XXV.
Written for the Patriot.
MAHTTRS
or
SOUTHERN _Hl££^M.
ii v B ■†■ * v " * L L "
F, : ■„■ ex fries I
Who ha mend
—. - Ol
THE GUILFORD DIXIE BOYS.
MA:
■ †in Guilfo
lately for
•rti Wilson, was Dot nfi-eh.
p] luse-kpoorcot-m^
EySBOBOTOH, ggg O, AUGUST 13, 1863. IISTuiiiiber .1,^653.
which is so noticeable in Eugenie is not
.econd degree, who survivedt.n^ ndr Majesty- pri
our history, was *"« "bJec' of ,Lls ■*£*", „,v Thoa°£ but thirty six yean 6f age, her .abor ia conducting the great war 10 which
V .„ MF' ,. horn in G.nlford county. Iftoogn DUt iniriv m ) Her cheeks wo are engaged is the inadequacy and dif-
- rfhCaroliaa cniheSlstbfMay.iS'-T. Hisfath- beaulJJ8 ",,;{_? whair thin and falling, ficulty of transportation. We compareJ ginian, as Chief Tithingman, or Collector
of the celebrated . ^^7^^^^*^B0 well shaped, worse in this respect with the enemy than ' of the "taxes in kind," for North Caroli.
How Matters aro Managed.
A principal difficulty under which wo
A MOVE IN THE RIOHT DIRECTION.—It io
truly gratifying to iearr, that President Da-vis
uas rovoked the appointment recently
Hercheeks eugaged dif-. made by him, cf a .Major Bradford a Vin
com
er, Mr. / rtluir Forbis, KM a son
Capt. Arthur ForbU. who fell mortally wounded at
«he memorable battle of Guilford Court-house, on
precisely adapted to her style of******
;ms far too prominent. Ih.a effect .B no
kau.ble but cow
the loth day of March 1781. Hi. father was in j —- ~ j'^- by the telling of
enable circumstances ID the world, jeheeks«- Thon ner Majesty hns rotor«ea
and gave bis son the advantages of as good an edu- j t |
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