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GRE DEMOCRATIC SUPREMACY FOR THE GCOD OF ALL, AND A DEMOCRATIC ADMIJtiSTRATICH ADMINISTERED BY DEMOCRATS. • ' GREENSBORO, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, L8J the niiuaiii.il as the managers re ccive the re urns, and welcome (1 7. w. « 111 1 ClIIHI. I.l||,,r,, IT.,..,,,, TEKMS ll.» frr ».,, BMrnim. ■ esterd&y'a ii • the Following estimate: iremneh inclined to think ""'" ""• present outlook that the "-1'11 '» ■ '"■ berwilldejiendan-on ili.' same States thai decided 1,1 ''■■ •■ in 1884 and m l~7.;_ >e« Vork, New Jersey, Uonnecti- Indiana. There is some ■laugei ..i losing votes in Florida HI "i the yellow fever. II thi' reyer should continue until November there will be great dan. losing that State. We oan nol nee whj Mr. Cleveland Bhonld rrj Sew Ifork, New Jersev and Indiana. Connecticut will go Democratic. Indiana is • unless uooille and colonization year stand in the way ofredeeming their county from Radicalism! If Messrs. Benbow, Steele ami Walker, in this deep trouble wLich Las .1 in1L. upon them, care leisure to fortify their flagging spirits with tin: philosophic lessons of ancient classic history, they must over ami over recall the mournful exclama-tion o! Pj rrhus: "One more victor; . and I am undone!" Iowa Michigan v. iscousm '■:;.'■' :»7,i i we will f irnii b uo i sou te for I is ■ ■ ■ their enormity aa to seem incridi- We do not vouch for thei '. L^!2™Jf! ' : ten car-load? of rails at .--,, . -* , ind the trestle over e in. ' . Di MOI RACV.—The bio. NO I Mil: l-lllt MHI'I'IM.. The Sew i'ork Commercial Ad- • • >■.">... A.I. Mill ,. , detent the Dei -rats. In the West '"'""'• •'" independent paper, but - the Democrats ! > heavj gains, we have no doubt. They will probably carry nia.which will offset Florida, ■ ». should lose thai State. The I'. mocrats an■ countingon making ns in Minnesota, but il much iloubt that i' Republican, There is a big bul n isjnol enough, we sap BI ge the State. d any Connecticut is tlioul reasonable fouu- 1 hi i! ther hand, the ho State ofFlorida through odus ol refugees From the appears to ns i ri. • ntii gi ■;.■>. to give ua grounds for apprehension. " - > n ay be counted as I 'I"- great Bghl "ill be ■ " the States of Indiana aud N. i ■! ork, the Formei ol ■ much the more doubtful ■•■'■ I' is ii ii.', Cleveland's tj in Sew Jfork in 1884 was fearfully small—only a little over ::"": !i it then Tammany, Irving Il..:i and the county Democracy pi Ii ssly divided—now »ill i"' no warring factious, and it is estimated that he will l-itj and go into the with from BO.OO i to 90,000 ritj. AI Ihu worst, should the S'urn ug il agnosia of probabilities .■•■' >• i irrect, Mr. Cleveland's elec-i ote " ill be about as in l s< i, ' i itrong probabilil l oi 10 I otes over his lasi So less influential a than ihu Philadelphia think though we me rtaiii . . \presses tbe opinion that it is impossible to make any-i mlation ..i the e suit—thai there may be a "break' all along the |line, with a ■'stam-pede" of States 1.) Cleveland which majority beyond the ngnine expectations. accuracy. They present the I,- 301,100 farms in seven Western States as encumbered with an ag gregate of four and a hall »» ''"I""''■!:■.- , « ■ ■ . aooW ., paid to our " "' ;,,,!' ••: '"' ■ ■ I be assessed valuation ol pro in these States ■ tarill empl ers of do . - ill easily com e that ma; WILLIA etwei n the i . which has hitherto .supported cry Republican administration since the war, in ii recent timely review of Pre* flcnl ' levt land's re-cord sa\ s: 'the country has been singularly prosperous under Mr. Cleveland's administration. Indeed, it was never more prosperous fat ns think about that n little I. I vote to bring thai administration loan end next .March. A great many very difficult problems have presented themselves since Mr. Cleveland became President, some ol them seriously threatening the n 1885 v. a ■ Iowa: ■f-'T... 707,00 r«3,« l,fl 625,0*1 Kansas Illinois Indiana Iowa Michigan Ohio Total ii cr couuti . too, li will be seen the i. ported mortgage debts cocer about fifths the at lei sed i.. m ol the • , ■. comes in, , ■ iriesol chai ' ■ I,Oi 1,000,01111 tu:a , COI . Caswcll county in I at Milton, inst, elected '. For the leg-lien H. Howard; for I iraves, the present : i, an office strates, ;ister of re. roncr, r, lames They make a signs of the ':' to '.heir mber. ■ IN - that the I the fact A M.\ rnntOSIAL ' 'A I ■,:•■■: _ He was very practical, ai Btabilitj of business aud the pros-1^0' '" il;,V1' everything Fair and peritj of industry. They have been|8<luaf" beforehand : ■ b.i ■: • so judiciously dealt, with by tbi administration thai uo harm has come in business or industry. Why should we nol continue in ol another term a President who lias MI successfully guided affairs in difficult cllclllnstaiiee.-.' Aiiei three years aud a hall o! prosperity under Mr. Cleveland's administration tbe business outlook in every quarter is unusually good. ''ii bject of government is to promote the welfare of the people, why should we not continue as we are. and keep Mr. Cleveland fori lour years more at the bead of our allaiis.' issesi ti iff] rurms; and the bulk of these gages are bold in the Baal dusmal States. ' 0 I Of 1,1 ■ S vembcr. urn ■ my mother ili.it my wife should be a good housekeeper am woman, i an you cookf" "1 can," she -an!, an »|lov greal big lump in her n. "Can you make go. I I Thar is the fundamental principle ol all housekeeping.'' "1 es: 1 went into a 1. ikery and lear I how to make all kinds ol bread."' She added unde breath "may he." "At d can you doyourowndress makingl 1 am comparai ivelj i poor man, love, ami dre -:.. bills would soon bankrupt me." "Ves,"' she said lianl.lv. "] ran make everything I wear, esp ciallj -., ,. pattern bonnets." "Veil are a jewi I, wit , enthusiasm, "com. j»_ ■/• lit ... : 1 . I . Party contains the I "Jud ttal by Den pnnc I ■ ' thi • ■ —J 1 • tion i are pen cmiiil il promia whit b, u few that combine, n our c lizcus by i pnrcbaserf ■ ■;, in .- • ly ol • rate of a i . . steem- ' : : led hos- . pon oar heads of fami-and a warm . - the State I'ETTEVILLE.— IN i'.-. 'rainfrom -•■iithc.. we afternoon nock-down- : there the Win-ton indthat : pl iyed a con- • as the train ■ I, ■ dealing Marley a death-blow over the head with an old rake handle. From young Smith, who was tried before Esquire Hardin at Pleasant Garden yesterday and I in jail here last night, we learn that the affair grew out of Smith's ordering ."' - throw away a chunk of fire with which the latter was lighting a cigarette. In refusing to comply n ii'a Smith's demand Mai ley endeavored tore-buke him and threatened to knife him, and at the same time made a lunge atSmithand cut his [Smith's finger. Smith alleges that at thi i juncture he proposed to withdraw from the combat, but .Marley not being satisfied gathered up an old rake handle and was in the act i f dealing Smith a blow, when he wrenched the rake hai -Marley and dealt him the fatal blow. He says Marley fell against the school-house when he itrucl him, but showed no signs of seri-ous injury. Here the row c. and Marie;-, apprehensive of the injuries he had received, proceeded homeward, accompanied by liis brother. Immedial arrival he began [rowing until that night ..! . .'clock, when he breathed his . I day made a p ist mortem exami-which disclose.! the fact ill was broken Smith is a youthful looking criminal, and says there were two or three other boys who witnessed the whole affair. He seems very •"uch grieved over the sad occcur- '•' alleges that he hi . ence, a... ' H'hatcvei, an I criminal intern Jcatl1 until not aware of Marley was al" Sunday morning when he rested. school when the blinding, free: ng storm ca HI. She is only 10 pare ■I.ut tIi.-1 isn't t ... I rstsi . ckly returned, '..: was sponse the diffi-n restored. Icsh wounds nt ol the dam- 'afrlof ii.,, . voi her arms, to the nearest habitation. reaching it in .safety—not losing one of the little lambs committed !.. her charge. It was an awful |ou y. The tornado beat her sl.ii ts aiound her, blinding her eyes and almost depriving bei of breath. Hill sin- braved it all and waded through il all with awoman's brave proles sums you speak of 1 will send you my card. Au revolr,' ai swept awaj. .And the disconsolate joung man went to the uean st drug bought a two-for a-i|ua with » i.i. hhe -i•-■<■.!.1. solaced him-self.— Dc-tr .11 Free Press : ■ ■ i ■ lid. li c—April 1 1 Col. O. iblican Gub- :- going labeled anrl rirt- • •'.'"' llCk- . . ' rocious rc- I -iitd ■ I»le to lei the lecretout, and the Fhere'la "Btrength7*e""t»k "the c*ef w'" lifi ;''","l ' '' wrung ] beginning to take youugest in her armsand faceil the "r"i"r\\\" }■'■■'■- rd. It is said that fierce, pitiless, pelting storm, it Hid oil. r two other ,;■ ; ng heartily sick ol . « i.i.-l,. for I hem. con . real deal of voting and fruits I hereof, and who Wouldn't it be uist "killing" if Mr. liurkhcad —whoseemsto be thor in earnest in his wofully u Bhould succeed, with Ins new paper, the /'< in drawing off in November 500 blew a hurricane, the drifts wen-air on the sulphurous roek pene-trated by the differ. ' ,.., tempi rature averagi abo ■legs. d..v. a th. impossible for the miners to work inn!, i .-noli condil. .:.•;!,,-r self and became imperviouslocold 8cie,,c<' will ever lie •• over •the lifficultii-s met in those each. Work on the < m n . luhund to the u| dec,.. I- was from one drift into '•" workmen haying been »f the State the negroes— another. But, with a Faith and "'the depths by the steam Heroism thai were matchless, she '' ' ;'"' il!:' struggled through the snow drift helping all the little ones through not iea\ iug on.- behind. .r.-.i bj ber noble example, the lit go to Itallyhack than tie children displayed great heart II Democratic and pluck. The tcachci forgot her- . :■••;: gtobeattract- self and became impervious to cold. .. , , 'ihe si.II ie was creal but her wo . "Tuland impassion- ,„„,., ..,,„... .,,.-;„„„,,,, ,„„„ „ owi I'dnppi ■ ■ Prohibition lead-1 danger of freezing to death herself, .,.":' in . cing an earnest de- she helped the children through !■•■ admitted into tbe fold, one- drilt after another, fully deter mined that if they perished to per-ish with them. She rubbed their cold hands, spoke encouragingly to tlirm, wiped away iheir tears, told them the jonrney would nol be long, and ill this way kept their hearts up. li was a dreadful three quarters of a mile. At last tbe lioo Durham country negroes house is insight—all hearts take pub! can party .' courage uow , and tbe little band ol (H.thcotherhand,scoreaofPro -'"''J';;"- t.-.l ti.-.tli.-r m keepthe ........ , , "ind from carrying tln-m off and lubitioii Democrats good men and | tri i ■ ■ : I : ■ ■ the reas ID that denoti s the near present • ol terranean heat."—Kat i ■ INJURY TO < IOTTON -, ro.—Several gentlemen,yesterday, : expressed tbe opinion that .1 the rain continued the cotton erop would ue totally destroyed in this eral tl section. Nobody can form any idea : of the extent of tbe damage al-ready done. The cotton is rapidij , rotting and sprouting, and much of ,. it, it i- fei :. will I ■ ' ■ ' .nfed- ■ - the office and unh : . ■ ■ ■ - impi ; i cement y f Flowers," .in! the in be noticeable. Hill's vacant lot ■ '.'. . : ■ puiploy I nk has ■ • >»ii;ii the i», Believe:— That the Third Tarty ticket will receive more than 5,000 . .hout the State That Col. O. II. Dockcry has the faintest hope of being clc rnor of North Carolina. 'hat the Lord ever made a bct- ,oosc stuff- 1 hat Cleveland's majority over Harrison will be less than soclcc-toral v •. That there is a town of ii m the South which sun Greensboro in pretty women. That there is a work- of int improvement in all the co :. of more substantial ben, tit to the people at large, and more d. edlypopular, than the Cape Fear & Vadkin Valley R. R Ii1.1t there i, anywhere to be found a city with better hotel ac-commodations than Greensboro. wiiai ■■„. Patriot fVlsbCH ■• Seer- Greensboro take its legiti il manufacti centre, utilizin | . the Full all it. rdinaryi lO.OOO or [5,000 pcoj.le at the Firemen's Tournan The organization of a c mill company in this city 3 iible. ■ .eland put into u'lf'-'ct ! the gran . ■ 1 Elm .street from d< . the work ol • lion A M, Waddell ' ' depot, with the inten-tion ol making three or four of his lid speech. 1, county. Jill historic and well-kept pub-lic park (as Mrs. Cornelia Spencer gracefully expresses it it the Guilford Battle Ground. ,.ie«i supremacy, are „|,en hear it asserted. Minnie Free in then affiliation with man is a heroine whose praises we mil man, declare that arc proud to sing. great to admit ol . : heir totes in a dep 11 intent al Washii 1 follow iug is the latest ... Kussia, 21,570,000 hi 1 .. "-." - "u l" . thanthc all of 1 hich will npbraidin letion. W kBNEB's Loo ('
Object Description
Title | The Greensboro patriot [September 21, 1888] |
Date | 1888-09-21 |
Editor(s) | Whitehead, Z. W. (Zollicofer Wiley), 1862-1923 |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The September 21, 1888, issue of The Greensboro Patriot, a newspaper published in Greensboro, N.C. by Z.W. Whitehead. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : Z.W. Whitehead |
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-1888-09-21 |
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 | 871565125 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
GRE
DEMOCRATIC SUPREMACY FOR THE GCOD OF ALL, AND A DEMOCRATIC ADMIJtiSTRATICH ADMINISTERED BY DEMOCRATS.
• '
GREENSBORO, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, L8J
the niiuaiii.il as the managers re
ccive the re urns, and welcome (1
7. w. « 111 1 ClIIHI. I.l||,,r,, IT.,..,,,,
TEKMS ll.» frr ».,, BMrnim.
■
esterd&y'a
ii • the Following estimate:
iremneh inclined to think
""'" ""• present outlook that the
"-1'11 '» ■ '"■ berwilldejiendan-on
ili.' same States thai decided
1,1 ''■■ •■ in 1884 and m l~7.;_
>e« Vork, New Jersey, Uonnecti-
Indiana. There is some
■laugei ..i losing votes in Florida
HI "i the yellow fever. II
thi' reyer should continue until
November there will be great dan.
losing that State. We oan
nol nee whj Mr. Cleveland Bhonld
rrj Sew Ifork, New Jersev
and Indiana. Connecticut will
go Democratic. Indiana is
• unless uooille and colonization
year stand in the way ofredeeming
their county from Radicalism!
If Messrs. Benbow, Steele ami
Walker, in this deep trouble wLich
Las .1 in1L. upon them, care leisure
to fortify their flagging spirits with
tin: philosophic lessons of ancient
classic history, they must over ami
over recall the mournful exclama-tion
o! Pj rrhus: "One more
victor; . and I am undone!"
Iowa
Michigan
v. iscousm
'■:;.'■'
:»7,i i we will f irnii b uo i sou te for I is ■
■
■
their enormity aa to seem incridi-
We do not vouch for thei '. L^!2™Jf! ' :
ten car-load? of rails at
.--,, . -* , ind the trestle over
e in. ' .
Di MOI RACV.—The
bio.
NO I Mil: l-lllt MHI'I'IM..
The Sew i'ork Commercial Ad-
• • >■.">... A.I. Mill ,. ,
detent the Dei -rats. In the West '"'""'• •'" independent paper, but
- the Democrats
! > heavj gains, we have no
doubt. They will probably carry
nia.which will offset Florida,
■ ». should lose thai State. The
I'. mocrats an■ countingon making
ns in Minnesota, but
il much iloubt that i'
Republican, There is a big
bul n isjnol enough, we sap
BI ge the State.
d any
Connecticut is
tlioul reasonable fouu-
1 hi i! ther hand, the
ho State ofFlorida through
odus ol refugees From the
appears to ns i ri.
• ntii gi ■;.■>. to give ua
grounds for apprehension.
" - > n ay be counted as
I 'I"- great Bghl "ill be
■ " the States of Indiana
aud N. i ■! ork, the Formei ol
■ much the more doubtful
■•■'■ I' is ii ii.', Cleveland's
tj in Sew Jfork in 1884 was
fearfully small—only a little over
::"": !i it then Tammany, Irving
Il..:i and the county Democracy
pi Ii ssly divided—now
»ill i"' no warring factious,
and it is estimated that he will
l-itj and go into the
with from BO.OO i to 90,000
ritj.
AI Ihu worst, should the S'urn
ug il agnosia of probabilities
.■•■' >• i irrect, Mr. Cleveland's elec-i
ote " ill be about as in l s< i,
' i itrong probabilil
l oi 10 I otes over his lasi
So less influential a
than ihu Philadelphia
think though we me
rtaiii . . \presses tbe opinion
that it is impossible to make any-i
mlation ..i the e
suit—thai there may be a "break'
all along the |line, with a ■'stam-pede"
of States 1.) Cleveland which
majority beyond the
ngnine expectations.
accuracy. They present the I,-
301,100 farms in seven Western
States as encumbered with an ag
gregate of four and a hall
»» ''"I""''■!:■.- , « ■ ■ . aooW ., paid to our
" "' ;,,,!' ••: '"' ■ ■ I be assessed valuation ol pro
in these States
■
tarill
empl ers of do
. - ill easily com
e that ma; WILLIA
etwei n the
i .
which has hitherto .supported
cry Republican administration
since the war, in ii recent timely
review of Pre* flcnl ' levt land's re-cord
sa\ s:
'the country has been singularly
prosperous under Mr. Cleveland's
administration. Indeed, it was
never more prosperous fat ns
think about that n little I. I
vote to bring thai administration
loan end next .March. A great
many very difficult problems have
presented themselves since Mr.
Cleveland became President, some
ol them seriously threatening the
n 1885 v. a ■
Iowa:
■f-'T...
707,00
r«3,« l,fl
625,0*1
Kansas
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Michigan
Ohio
Total
ii cr couuti .
too,
li will be seen the i. ported
mortgage debts cocer about
fifths the at lei sed i.. m ol the
• , ■.
comes in,
, ■ iriesol
chai '
■
I,Oi 1,000,01111 tu:a ,
COI
. Caswcll county in
I at Milton,
inst, elected
'. For the leg-lien
H. Howard; for
I iraves, the present
: i, an office
strates,
;ister of
re. roncr,
r, lames
They make a
signs of the
':' to '.heir
mber.
■ IN -
that the
I the fact
A M.\ rnntOSIAL ' 'A I ■,:•■■:
_ He was very practical, ai
Btabilitj of business aud the pros-1^0' '" il;,V1' everything Fair and
peritj of industry. They have been|8 |