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s: . .• :::i X.HO. 1.183 GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, L8<)2. jit,a. ~ 111TI III" II ' '■ *««« trench for the man—■ grave for' the. officers—and when the earth hH covered then; i., tidft h«va ' piled on stones a. a safeguard against the hyena, of the plains, we riile away in (Hence. No man has a word tor his comrade. He is too busy with his thoughts. A, thai vision dunces before his eyes and the odor of blood clings to his scent,he vows vengeance against ; warrior, squaw and papoose to the end of lima, A wee!: Ut< r, as daylight break, on il'„> valley a hundred mile, awa, , the bugler sounds the charge and we dash into .:-i Indian vil- 11 lug • Nothing that lives ii soared. No cry for quarter in heeded. There are >■'.'. men totti ring about bains burn let, th-in •. ininth ago. A troop of devils rhargea back and forth shouting and slashing, cur, ing ::-i I serial tit g Wh< a th light I- ovi r • Ii• ;. ,;,• n i pri "11. i - —no ttfMiniii . All here an-dead. Even the i!-.;■■> i.f the Xillagi hav< bei ;i t \:i, tniualed in tint »i: i fro./v tor living.-. Men l«mk :il BIG-dead Dr. 1: J. RICHABDS0M, ;or.". .v.. ..'I' . nd Surgery in ll ZINSURAMS ONLY FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES Hi I'Kl Si:»TKD. < State Normal and Industrial School, Greensboro, N. C. B National Ban* . i- araaco. .<>. W. I A"'-" A 4 ... BP3 3QIAT. SALESI ,. o r'!"" t ■' •"» L*y Dike Booli Company. i' I'icturc I rami -•. Books. .. I KW i'.ll'.l.i'".- i iJn 131 J ^ f !•- Its \;. and \ -i > ti i ■ Italian Marble. inrnl ,X»b- ■ on-cn-t' v.', N, i'. EENS3QR0 FURNITURE STORE in i>. tiir i ,\vi>r i IHI R » rh-*. . ,. J: m «tni in >:;•.:•_ ii, -r 4VOKKMAXSIIBP ;■ ' ■ • BE COOL'S, L TIIA V .1 1111: ■ i: t ;;:•.. . ii:nl .••'..• riiipr. . '. , II H KM- ..■:•• k|| |ll< ; !., I.I KIMPATMCK. . i - e-wvii ®l ... -,• • I - ■ '' " - . ,'. -A5E. -■c?i. .'■.:, : :.! LAI-US . . . • :;,. ■ i MlTt-rtd '. . n Mi vtfiin ul i 1 HXI i. .-, . mil II 1" Mill .... - . • . .i- : .' : I...., ■ - t: . ■ • . • ■ tin roun- \ . I ' •■ ■ >•. • .: : i , i . i HI . ■ ii < IP ■ ■ ■ ■ N..I. SILER. ■ ■ . Campaign Eons. • Air—" My Maryland." What means tlin* Bound whleh echoes far iif "Cleveland} drover Cleveland!" That thrills me ns the trump ot war With -1 Cleveland! t; rover Cleveland?" - i yunder mighty host advance; In |".IJI<1 array their banners dance, And vlc'iry beams from every glance For Cleveland, Brover Cleveland. i bi | r _-.. I! riu's li ' • bench and ' forge !'• il . ■•• ■ : i: ■;. i ■...-.. r • in. : i : From harvest Held and ujountatn gorge For Cleveland, Orover Cleveland, They know that Cleveland's hand i.; iutt; That a '" public ofllco is a trust; And we will win—for win we must— With Cleveland, Orover Cleveland, Till :i : I our a r-i bout ring :..::r Ki r -. li .. I tnd ! ti rov r I I . land '." And i ■:■' II aloud the glad huzza in'•■< lovcland! Grovcrt leveland!" Hurrah!1 for Cleveland and the right! Hurrah! hurrah! our cause Is bright! l»i i rracy will win tbe flghl! i-'nr ( :.'. 'lsnd, GrovcrCleveland! i .I.: Ii I, y. tillers .-f tli'. soil, I'o ' 'leveland, Grover Cleveland, ■ pay bom it cash foi bones! t"il." -'.'-..- i leveland,GrovorCleveland; ■Trotectrd trusts must surely yield," "High tariff i-:. shameless steal," •Tin' force bill veils—it ean'l conceal," Says Cleveland, Grovcr Cleveland. C. II. 0. Sprlngllekl, Mo% Aug. I. A North Carolinian Visits Chicago. We notice in the Atlanta Consti-tution an interview with Major Thomas II, Blftcknall, one of the most prominent business men of Georgia's most progressive city. He is a North Carolinian by birth, ■ native of Granville, and v;o have known him intimately from his youth. The Constitution in the beginning of the article pays our old friend and former countryman this tribute: "Major Blaekna)! is a represen-tative Southern man of cultured mind, broad, liberal views, and of intelligent and extensive observa-tion, and his visit to ti.'.' magic city of the West, was t" definitely ascertain nrbal facilities would he afforded for the entertainment oi ;!.■■ Southern people during the p: [ress of the Columbian exposi-tion. He says there will be no Ink ul conveniences for obtaining, it. abundance and of tbe bi t qual-ity, at reasonal le rat -, !;;!>:. ac-commodations, but as at i'.l! oilier t fairs, live ni ilti r of obtaining convent! nt .'i t agri able I i 1 [ing i will be a prr.l 91 y of solu-tion, and :■:■: for 1 ;:* to reallyen-joi ihe bi • ■ .I'in:.'. pleasant and .... nient lodging apartments are ..' and liiat tho6e who gu • here v. itb ul having tiis im-portant featiiti prearranged will make a gicatviid irrepirable mis-tak ." We arc gi id to see Ibis ri 1 0 :ni-tion of one of "the dispersed abroad.'1 North Carolinians from liomi generally "gets there," as the boys say. Maj. Blacknall was born in less than twenty miles of • hi r North < 'arolinian long res-in Georgia. We mean repre-itivc Henry U. Turner, who is the ablest man Georgia has in the House anil is regarded at home Hnd abroad tie one of the strongest, if not the very stu neest man in tlie House, Fat Tom Seed says lie i9 li ■ trongi i:. Of the exposition, Major Black-nail is reported as saj ing, and we copy ii because it i^ the opinion of one particularly well qualified to judge: "Marvellously grand and mag-nificently sublime, he rajs, will be this peerless manifestation to the civilized worlft of the genius and resources of America. The people of ('hicago, he declares, ate despe-rately in earnest in their determi-nation to make the World's Fair the wonder and admiration of j Christendom and the crowning glo-ry of the century, and from the present outlook their expectations and desires arc destined to be bundantiy realized." What the University Younj Men. CiiAiKi. H11.1. N. C. July 2S.— Within the past few months over a thousand letters have been re-ceived at Chapel Hill, inquiring what the University oilers to young men. Let us answer this question briefly, for the benefit of the thous-ands who have not written and who do not know how easily they Offers to I with modern apparatus for train ' ini; as well as illustration. There ' arc laboratories in Chemistry. Ge-ology, Mineralogy and Physics. 3. .1 Library of thirty thousand volumes, open live hours daily to all students. I. .1 Reading-roo» well supplied with mngnziti's. papers and re-views. 5. .1 GyMnasiitrii, large and well furnished, in eharge of a trained may svture within North Carolina instructor in gymnastics. for tl. Building), nine in number, af-fording ample room for dormito-ries anil'rtTV.'tc halls. 7. Athletic OrountfftVtlMBeball, foot ball, running, tennisAid oth-er athletic games, large, wRl grad-ed and well kept. 8. Literary Societies eoiparabh' the very "Des'i uppwtunitiea board and liberal culture. Tin: IXIVEIISITV OFFERS TO votxo MKX. I. Fice general courses of study; each differing from the other, and each furnishing a broad liberal (".!- ucation. There are a Latin nnd Greek course, n Latin course, a Science course, a Literary course, and a Mathematics (or Engineer-ing) course. Kach of these eours-cs'sceures a degree, and requires ^here aroVixty" portraits. ordinarily f.jur years 01 study. ,, ,s„ .,•,,,•,,,. for spccjal cu the variety of courses is intended to meet tbe needs of various young men who have ditrercnt kinds of preparation and different purposes in life. In each course the studies The Triangle of Death. It was 11 o'clock in the forenoon when the column suddenly halted and a minute later the news came down the lines that the trail of the Lieutenant and his six men was blotted out by the footprints of In-dian ponies. This meant that u war party had swung in behind them. The ponies had been _at full gallop. That meant tho par-ty was in sight of the redskins. We rode on for a mile, and just over the crest of a ridgo we found the dead body of n cavalry horse. It belonged to one of the men with the Lieutenant. The blood had poured out on the ground from the mouth and cirs, proving that the swift pace had brought death. : il ra-t i.'i roachful glances at Hie Irtmpers who sit on their p«ntiug hurtea In P ply I these men cileMly point to tbe I west and say : "Remember Kidder and his men." jr. QUAD. Some people arc constantly tsouMed With boils-—no. sooner dues one heal than another makes its its appearance. A thorough course of Ayer's Sirsa-parilla, tbe best of tbo blood-purilicrs, effectually puts an end to this annoy-ance. We recommend a trial. GENERAL NEWS. to any in the country. Tlftvi 'i»Jls ! Tb/WL l;.-.J been an instant's hult contain fine collections of oil por- | |toro—just long tnnugli for the traits of members who have been | trooper to seoure his aumnnjtiun eminent in all departments of life ; n,,,i mount up behind a comrade. in the State and in the nation. pceial culture, the Elisha Mitchell Scientific So-ciety and tho Sliakspeare Club, which offer unusual facilities for original research and Study. 10. .1 Young Men's Christian As-of the first two years arc fixed, but „„...„,,•„„, wblcfa meets live times the studies of the last two years eoc|, weck. ;8 active, healthy and may be selected mainly by the student uuder the advice of the Faculty. A student is thus ena-bled, not only to select a course of study carefully arranged to give him general culture, but also to shape that course by wise selection in the last two years so as to fit him for some special profession. 2. Six '•.•/'./' '•• •tries of study . each requiiing two years study and arranged for the benefit of young men who have not the time or the means lo spend four years I at college. These courses arc in- : ll Plilccs citizenship, manliness tended to supply the briefest pos- I !i:i<l humanity above sectionalism, Bible preparation for business, for <""> political partisanship. It is a law, for teaching, for farming, for State institute, governed by the medicine, for journalism- and Legislature, and it invites to its each course includes only those opportunities oi culture nil the studies essential to the profession jroutl»_<**;» otnte, selected. useful. TIIK INIVKI.-ITV OFFERS A RISCIFLIHS based upon manliness and Belf-re-liancc. There is no system of spy-j ing, nor of demerits, nor of untice- I essary and petty interferences with 1 student life, nor of compulsory \ pledges. The discipline aims to ! develop character through the ed- ! ucation of the conscience. j THE IMVKKSITV OFFERS A AND JIAM.V SPIRIT. nr.oAD ;{. Three prqfcssinal courses: in Engineering, in Medicine and Pharmacy, and in Law. Each of these "courses furnishes special technical training under accom-plished and experience teachers. I. An unlimited number •>/ spe-cial courses. These special courses are in any subject that the student desires. He may confine himself to one subject, if he prefers. A great many students have takon special oourset in Chemistry, fit-ling themselves to be chemists; wl iic others hive taken special courses in drawing and draughting, or in English Literature, or in Greek, or in Philosophy, <>r in llis-tory. Any study taught in the CnivcrsitV may be selected for a special course, and it may bo pur- eially where 1here arena colore sued as lone u the student desires. 1 l««P«e- He»« '.h< rP f Bwm8 ','* no more prooiDllity of a race 1 on£ 5. Graduate courses. These are offered in all studies to graduates of colleges or universities who wish special advanced training to fit themselves better for profes-sional life, or for literary careers, or for teaching in colleges. Five students pursued these courses last year, two ministers, two teachers and a journalist. THE fSlVEItsm OFFER8 HEW AS WELL AS INSTRUCTION. iglous faith, political belief or geographical section. It is a little world in itself, n sort of miniature state, where young men of nil classes, conditions faiths, temper-aments and talents mingle freely together on terms of equality, breathe the atmosphere of liberal culture, und learn the priceless les-sons of self-reliance, of respect for I ho opinions of other-, and of fov3 for truth. There is no place where a young man learns so quickly that he must stand on his merits. GEO. T. WI»TON. Bill "jo n „ho Race Question. An I what are wo to do with the race problem at the South? Ever-ywhere 1 hear that question, cepe ly where there .ir Hence there Another mile, and we find where the party had halted again. A horse fell, but was lifted up again and urged forward. Here we pick-ed half a dozen empty cartridge shells. The Indians had been held Off for a time. Only half a mile had been passed when the horse went down again and died as he fell. Here he lies on the trail, his bones picked almost clean since day before yesterday by wolf and vulture. Here we pick up a hand-ful of shells. As the party star'cd on again two of the horses were .carrying double. And whence were the men flee-ing? It is 10 miles to Fort Wal-lace— 30 miles back to the tempo-rary camp from where the courier started with this escort. But they make head to the west, spufcing their jaded horses as they ffver used spurs before. The Lieuten-ant rides ahead, looking !' r a bat tie ground—the Indian tel iek nnd scream as they follow after. "Halt! 1): ' ■ ml'. Lie dosrn!'-' The t •■ > <:■ .' load. 1 fell at th.- sanii instant prone up-!i th . y grass of the sun baked plain Tho oil;.r three hoave to and fro .ad pitch ab ml as their riders dismount, but keep their unsteady fooling until brut down by the bullets of the Indians. Now the doom of the soldiers is surely sealed. They are but 7 to ■10, and the ground furnishes all the cover 11 warrior could wish for. They make their circle to cut off MEMFHIS, Tcnn., Aug. 11.—J. T. Tolbert, a^plantation euperinted-ent, was attacked by a gang of drunken negroes near the Second Street Bridge late last night and fatally plashed with razors. The murder was without provocation. The all'air has created great ex-citement and a large posse follow-ed the murderers into the country whither they lied. BoHDOCT, N. Y., Aug. I'J.—A ro-mantic wedding occurred hero yes-terday. The contracting parties were a daughter of Sitting Bull, the dead Indian war chief, and Pe-ter Markle, formerly of the United 'HaSM Army. Markle served with Cttster for ■>'.tog,time and it is re-ported that his bride ono .saved his life when attacked by Indians. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. !7.-8ixty-four deaths from cholera have oc-curred in Warsaw. The disease has also appeared in Acce, where three deaths were reported on Sun-day. Of the 737 deaths in Mot-cow during the past week, nearly one half were due to intestinal complaints. BERLIN, Aug. 17.—The Princess ISentrice had a narrow escape from death from a lire in the castle at Heiliginberg yesterday morning. Her maid, carrying a candle ap-proached too near the mosquito net covering the bedstead, setting lire to the set. The princess hnd no time to dress, but ran out of the room and alarmed the household. The whole wing of the castle was destroyed before the firemen arrived. The princess lost all her jewels and clothes. Her hus-band, who was sleeping in a neigh boring woods, hastened to tho cas-horses tie as soon as he learned of tho i lay I fire. RiCHi.AKDs, Va., Aug. 12.—Two deputy sheriffs of Tazewell county, with two of Detective Bald-win's men of tlii-' city, made a raid on the Vance gang nt the house of Henry Vance, living near Hich-iands. The officers attacked the house Saturday morning nt six o'clock. In the light Reese V>nee was shot through the body and killed. James Vance was shot and Special Sale OK Black Lawnsl WHITE HM^Sf ^ * TKKSA Suva** 0FADOHI1 "•*""*' '•""•• About the wisdom of doing it lint v»c i-ni down the prices i of our SUMMKUDRE38 GOOD:' In moot the prices or Inferior GOOD.-, so.! by mm eompHilors. The 1 more we think abottl it tin- more wo an- iiu-lineil lo ihink Hint i we vo railn'i- in, i- si, |,| ,.,l Dip murk. Y.m know how it is when you Ihink you've gone bm deep. However, everything goes as Ihe earlhi|tiake caid when il swallowed a whole town ; Ihe retluelioii is there and ili-tv 11 stuys. Do yon know it almost justifies thai uliinlii and rather ini|nTlinetil i|Hi-slion: ' W!ui more t!o you want." NOT CHEAP GOODS, BUT GOOD GOODS CHEAP! riii"'kcil white Nannook i-o- 1 liiltlien's drosses llrgular price li eenls per yard, will go al lliis sale al :i mils per yard. Cheeked Nansook Regular price S els, per yard will be sold al ") cents per yard. We have all the prudes and late.-i styles in Hot Weather goods and now we propose la sell FIRST CLASS GOODS at second Class Prices. If you want Ui buy reliable goods we can please yon. If in search of shoddy ■roods our store is not the one you are looking for. Powell & Wharton, Successors lo Raymond & Powell, NATIONAL ItANK BUILDING, GKKKNSHURO, M. C. cc 5. "Mi?5* Our Determination %■} TO LBAD TIIK ^t|xSHOE Trade in Greensboro,! J_S\ Is repreFcnlod by this noble figure. Froj ' CTTTILiY 12, 1892, '. ull escape, dismount, nnd tli>'" i;nockc<l down, butmsdc biseseaps creep forward up the dry s"ii•.-'i•>s—j j„ a Bwamp near tbe house. The along the ridges—from rocs to omoers escaped uninjured, lien ir Vance was taken t 1 tho Fayette county jail Sunday morning. The rook and DUah to bush. Three of the horses fell BO US to roiko :i t;i-angle. Within iliia trianglo gath-ered the teven m a, using the bod-ies of tho horses far. n breaatsrork. The sun was nol yet two hours hiifb. No man lived to relate what crime for which tho Vancei are wanted is for tho murder of Depu-ty Sheriff Thompson on July 19th. .'NEW OBMANS, AU/, 17.—The Clark Gaines estate has llnal- ■ "\Wo ~W±±± Sell Our Summer Goads at Ureutlij Itcdueed I'/UCKS t'ntil They an Closetl Out. $£&*).As we must make room for our Fall an Winter Goods, and we WtwAA ":iJlier have the money than tl Summer goods on our shelves in winter. V'VUJIC of these good will be gold Clieaper than our competitors buy the^ DARDBN & G;AYr HOOTS and SHOES, 113 East Market Street. Qreenaboro, N. C. I HAVE NOW IX STOCK over 10,00(1 ROLLS of WALL PAPER ittici if you contemplate doing any papering in 'ho mar future you ttill do well to give me ;i call now, us I wish to reduce my stock »- much aa possible before moving, and will give jrou splendid Hnr-gains. Still al the old stand, :ill South Klin Street. CHARLKS'M. HACKETT. orders were given by tbo olficer- ££. what they planned—their hopes" cultv than there wi« when the Brat £"« sun, without writer, witlrout shipment of rolored people was ,-,. | hope of relief, v ceived from the roast of Guinea. There are :i > labor is cuiol moderate, an tin has to lie ■ ti ikes M I,ere C ilol.il v. I. Wages arc very ' «!ii:.' :i State mili-callcd out now and then in cities whero there i.* no race question, the Sirtflh, wiiliall her former WO08, his had very lit lie*trouble of that nature. The colored man will yet, no blessins when now 1. It offers time to those whose do°b«; P~" • b'!?8£g industries open up 111 „to,o Soutli. 'p.ro'p,er■ty'.,i.s not • nn.oo-wj auivm_ ai1imlaubal1e-■.. and with his wonderful powers of 2^ It offer, stxty Heholarships ,0 .kiifss reedy young men of talent and S™^ of ma2„.l work h. is most character assuredlv .1 safer man to employ, 3. It oilers loans Of money ' th talent. rt ,. ,,. 1 m , a*ts;ireti.> ;i bu ri IIJUII »" i". "'.', 3. It oiler.) loans of money "', if ho could ,lave tlle trMillin;,, lhan a very needy who shbw unusual & fire.eatjng_ (ji8tllrbin,r, dymin.it- Orlean. has givsn W. W. Whitney, the administrator of the estate, a eheck for$033,788, which pays this debt in full. Of this, I594,9f» was !".•;• principal, the remainder for in-terest and costs. The estate rec ognizes claims against it for legal fourth ! services of $279,087, and disputes CLOTHING AT COST We have decided In close nul all Summer Clothing at C( lor the nexl Sixty Days. Oar stock ia all no and desirable. If you want new, Iresh goods at manufactory cost now is your lime to bay bargains in CLOTHING- and HATS, Be sure I" See our stock and learn our prices before von buy^ Boys Clot;li-±XLg and S-tara-v^r ECa.1 at vonr own price. Very r< speclfnll^. 0. Jl. VANSTORY dt CO., Leading One Price Cash « loth Ing nnd Haiti r-. hold OUKKNSHOBO, N. ('. weighing them down, they their own hour after hour. At 10 o'clock one of their number was killed. At noon a second. Al o'clock a third At 1:30 »,„„.....^ ^ ,„,„„„. „f ,,;.,,„,,. and at .To cioek r.n.y t.ie^Ueti ui- ; T[^ flI|ivjng |n ^.^ „ „f „,0 ar.t and one man were MEDICALCOLLEGEof VIRGINL Bststel The liftv-liflh Annual M-sion 01 the above-namnl Institution will besli SKPTEMBRR 27th, ISBi. sad eontlaoe ilx 1 iths. For eaUloeac or other Infonnallon write to I111.J. -. n...-. v 1 . i.i.n .M1IV I-;.:;,," Deanofthc raeultv HI»I I'n.l r of surge J. H. Colemari, I'.l'V-iiiii i.AI'li BITPinril 1»'-"I'vine this wo can help on III ->..lll| Ir.M K M1U11 the "biMest show on earth." and .. IK 1 id ■ ■ I Turning both lion nnd Brast up to 20 inches long. ALL WORK WARRANTED. Uieycle Repairing Mo. 104, Court House Square, Greensboro, Feb. 24.tf. For :i slu^yish ami lorpkl li vi r, n- th'nv can BurptssArer's I'll is. They conrtiii uo ealomol, i.;»r any mineral Specially, j jm.-, bul lire camnortd ot the p.ellve lociplei of the be»t vegetable en- ,rtlc', sa^SM^ase always reuilta I. It oilers free tuition to young men alllietcd with bodily infirmity, to bona-Jide public school teacher?, to the sous of all preachere, and to young men intending to become preachers". 5. It oilers advanced instruction free to the graduates of colleges. TIIK 1 ■SIVEIISITT OFFERS AS E^l'll* MENT, which is a guaranty of good bon-ing outcast from Kurope. I hope I 0111 saying nothing that may wenken my social position, which is now the wonder nnd the delight of nil who hnve examined it, but if some philanthropist like Mr. Carnegie or Mr. Gould would start a colored kindergarten for the training of young colored men in the trades, so that a peaceful but dependent race might have a job, it would make the disturbing cle- Stwork. Its equipment Includes: inent pay attention and be a great 1. .1 Faculty of twenty-two pro fespors and instructors, who pre-sent the culture of twenty of the "forcuoit American and Kuropcan Universities. , t. Five Scientific Laboratories, .ob which ten thousand dollars have und good work applauded by God and humanity. »ckd ently, Mamma : How terrible! A man was drowned at the bathing beach this morning. Daugter: Dear me, and men are so scarce here.—Herald: isBed to feed on the borsei pass the corpses by, but as we look down upon them every soldier criea out in horror and indignation. The devils who show no mercy to the living can feel no respect for the dead who died a soldier's death. They have mutilated them until the spectacle will .rise up as a nightmare to every man in this troop foievermore. God be thank Campbell, ex-justice L'nited States supreme court, 910,000. All these lawyers, who managed the case in its earlier days, are dead. Messrs. T. J. Semmee ami Alfred Gold-thwaite, the latter dead, who man-aged the ease during later days, have tiled a claim for $180,000 for legal services, which is now on ap-peal in the United States circuit IDIRTXG-SI SEEDS WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS AM) SEEDSMEN. sMSsWStm Crop Turnip Seed lust srrlved. Orders from l>rugjtUt<i I'hyst *^ ' and tirocert filled promptly. I'rices as low as Richmond for '.1111c quality of goods IV.. rr.n save you sc . - - 1, r. 1 n-t.oio, N\ C? . thine in Time and Freight. Opposite Bonbow Hotel, llliiiii ,».v.-.- — - ' nolirl ed that all were dead before those cjun. fiends began their work with ar SMo£. CoasumwionCure-TU. row"1, tomahawk and knife1 . .1_ _l„. l^'OII''1ll nmi'e'udil'e:.linive w"ve t..a..v..e. e*ver sold-,, a- I We scatter out to search the bat- ,.„.-,,,,., . invariably euro the worst Thev prove what a soldier tevea to ,'..,. ... , ;.,..:.,.... tbermed :lne cin Know—that his dead coirede. ,, ..-..I. If you have it cou<l. >;V ;'£'"'; ^ught a gallai.t tight. Scores and K^^^^ilSi^Sg scores and Bcores of empty shell lo bici. |4me_ y,e snilohs l'orous I'laster. that bloody triangle, but not one •^ ,,v iuthard»on & Farina, disnens- .ingle cartridge, left. We dig a j log druggist, Greensboro, N. 'J. THOS. N. WINSLOW, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT! Assets Represented Over $180,000,000. Office 111 South Elm Street, Next to Post Ollice, March 2, 1892-ly. GREENSBORO, S.
Object Description
Title | The Greensboro patriot [August 24, 1892] |
Date | 1892-08-24 |
Editor(s) | Wharton, H.W. |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The August 24, 1892, issue of The Greensboro Patriot, a newspaper published in Greensboro, N.C. by Patriot Publishing Company. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : Patriot Publishing Company |
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-1892-08-24 |
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 | 871563673 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
s: . .• :::i X.HO. 1.183 GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, L8<)2. jit,a. ~ 111TI III" II ' '■ *«««
trench for the man—■ grave for'
the. officers—and when the earth
hH covered then; i., tidft h«va '
piled on stones a. a safeguard
against the hyena, of the plains,
we riile away in (Hence. No man
has a word tor his comrade. He is
too busy with his thoughts. A,
thai vision dunces before his eyes
and the odor of blood clings to his
scent,he vows vengeance against
; warrior, squaw and papoose to the
end of lima,
A wee!: Ut< r, as daylight break,
on il'„> valley a hundred mile,
awa, , the bugler sounds the charge
and we dash into .:-i Indian vil-
11 lug • Nothing that lives ii soared.
No cry for quarter in heeded.
There are >■'.'. men totti ring about
bains burn let, th-in •. ininth ago.
A troop of devils rhargea back and
forth shouting and slashing, cur,
ing ::-i I serial tit g Wh< a th
light I- ovi r • Ii• ;. ,;,• n i pri "11. i -
—no ttfMiniii . All here an-dead.
Even the i!-.;■■> i.f the Xillagi hav<
bei ;i t \:i, tniualed in tint »i: i
fro./v tor living.-. Men l«mk :il
BIG-dead
Dr. 1: J. RICHABDS0M,
;or.". .v..
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. nd Surgery in
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ZINSURAMS
ONLY FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
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State Normal and Industrial School, Greensboro, N. C.
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National Ban*
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BP3 3QIAT. SALESI
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Campaign Eons.
• Air—" My Maryland."
What means tlin* Bound whleh echoes
far
iif "Cleveland} drover Cleveland!"
That thrills me ns the trump ot war
With -1 Cleveland! t; rover Cleveland?"
- i yunder mighty host advance;
In |".IJI<1 array their banners dance,
And vlc'iry beams from every glance
For Cleveland, Brover Cleveland.
i bi | r _-.. I! riu's li ' • bench and '
forge
!'• il . ■•• ■ : i: ■;. i ■...-.. r • in. : i :
From harvest Held and ujountatn gorge
For Cleveland, Orover Cleveland,
They know that Cleveland's hand i.;
iutt;
That a '" public ofllco is a trust;
And we will win—for win we must—
With Cleveland, Orover Cleveland,
Till :i : I our a r-i bout ring :..::r
Ki r -. li .. I tnd ! ti rov r I I . land '."
And i ■:■' II aloud the glad huzza
in'•■< lovcland! Grovcrt leveland!"
Hurrah!1 for Cleveland and the right!
Hurrah! hurrah! our cause Is bright!
l»i i rracy will win tbe flghl!
i-'nr ( :.'. 'lsnd, GrovcrCleveland!
i .I.: Ii I, y. tillers .-f tli'. soil,
I'o ' 'leveland, Grover Cleveland,
■ pay bom it cash foi bones! t"il."
-'.'-..- i leveland,GrovorCleveland;
■Trotectrd trusts must surely yield"
"High tariff i-:. shameless steal"
•Tin' force bill veils—it ean'l conceal"
Says Cleveland, Grovcr Cleveland.
C. II. 0.
Sprlngllekl, Mo% Aug. I.
A North Carolinian Visits Chicago.
We notice in the Atlanta Consti-tution
an interview with Major
Thomas II, Blftcknall, one of the
most prominent business men of
Georgia's most progressive city.
He is a North Carolinian by birth,
■ native of Granville, and v;o have
known him intimately from his
youth. The Constitution in the
beginning of the article pays our
old friend and former countryman
this tribute:
"Major Blaekna)! is a represen-tative
Southern man of cultured
mind, broad, liberal views, and of
intelligent and extensive observa-tion,
and his visit to ti.'.' magic
city of the West, was t" definitely
ascertain nrbal facilities would he
afforded for the entertainment oi
;!.■■ Southern people during the
p: [ress of the Columbian exposi-tion.
He says there will be no
Ink ul conveniences for obtaining,
it. abundance and of tbe bi t qual-ity,
at reasonal le rat -, !;;!>:. ac-commodations,
but as at i'.l! oilier
t fairs, live ni ilti r of obtaining
convent! nt .'i t agri able I i 1 [ing i
will be a prr.l 91 y of solu-tion,
and :■:■: for 1 ;:* to reallyen-joi
ihe bi • ■ .I'in:.'. pleasant and
.... nient lodging apartments are
..' and liiat tho6e who
gu • here v. itb ul having tiis im-portant
featiiti prearranged will
make a gicatviid irrepirable mis-tak
."
We arc gi id to see Ibis ri 1 0 :ni-tion
of one of "the dispersed
abroad.'1 North Carolinians from
liomi generally "gets there" as
the boys say. Maj. Blacknall was
born in less than twenty miles of
• hi r North < 'arolinian long res-in
Georgia. We mean repre-itivc
Henry U. Turner, who is
the ablest man Georgia has in the
House anil is regarded at home Hnd
abroad tie one of the strongest, if
not the very stu neest man in tlie
House, Fat Tom Seed says lie i9
li ■ trongi i:.
Of the exposition, Major Black-nail
is reported as saj ing, and we
copy ii because it i^ the opinion of
one particularly well qualified to
judge:
"Marvellously grand and mag-nificently
sublime, he rajs, will be
this peerless manifestation to the
civilized worlft of the genius and
resources of America. The people
of ('hicago, he declares, ate despe-rately
in earnest in their determi-nation
to make the World's Fair
the wonder and admiration of
j Christendom and the crowning glo-ry
of the century, and from the
present outlook their expectations
and desires arc destined to be
bundantiy realized."
What the University
Younj Men.
CiiAiKi. H11.1. N. C. July 2S.—
Within the past few months over a
thousand letters have been re-ceived
at Chapel Hill, inquiring
what the University oilers to young
men. Let us answer this question
briefly, for the benefit of the thous-ands
who have not written and
who do not know how easily they
Offers to I with modern apparatus for train
' ini; as well as illustration. There
' arc laboratories in Chemistry. Ge-ology,
Mineralogy and Physics.
3. .1 Library of thirty thousand
volumes, open live hours daily to
all students.
I. .1 Reading-roo» well supplied
with mngnziti's. papers and re-views.
5. .1 GyMnasiitrii, large and well
furnished, in eharge of a trained
may svture within North Carolina instructor in gymnastics.
for tl. Building), nine in number, af-fording
ample room for dormito-ries
anil'rtTV.'tc halls.
7. Athletic OrountfftVtlMBeball,
foot ball, running, tennisAid oth-er
athletic games, large, wRl grad-ed
and well kept.
8. Literary Societies eoiparabh'
the very "Des'i uppwtunitiea
board and liberal culture.
Tin: IXIVEIISITV OFFERS TO votxo
MKX.
I. Fice general courses of study;
each differing from the other, and
each furnishing a broad liberal (".!-
ucation. There are a Latin nnd
Greek course, n Latin course, a
Science course, a Literary course,
and a Mathematics (or Engineer-ing)
course. Kach of these eours-cs'sceures
a degree, and requires ^here aroVixty" portraits.
ordinarily f.jur years 01 study. ,, ,s„ .,•,,,•,,,. for spccjal cu
the variety of courses is intended
to meet tbe needs of various young
men who have ditrercnt kinds of
preparation and different purposes
in life. In each course the studies
The Triangle of Death.
It was 11 o'clock in the forenoon
when the column suddenly halted
and a minute later the news came
down the lines that the trail of the
Lieutenant and his six men was
blotted out by the footprints of In-dian
ponies. This meant that u
war party had swung in behind
them. The ponies had been _at
full gallop. That meant tho par-ty
was in sight of the redskins.
We rode on for a mile, and just
over the crest of a ridgo we found
the dead body of n cavalry horse.
It belonged to one of the men with
the Lieutenant. The blood had
poured out on the ground from the
mouth and cirs, proving that the
swift pace had brought death.
: il ra-t i.'i roachful
glances at Hie Irtmpers who sit on
their p«ntiug hurtea In P ply
I these men cileMly point to tbe
I west and say :
"Remember Kidder and his
men." jr. QUAD.
Some people arc constantly tsouMed
With boils-—no. sooner dues one heal
than another makes its its appearance.
A thorough course of Ayer's Sirsa-parilla,
tbe best of tbo blood-purilicrs,
effectually puts an end to this annoy-ance.
We recommend a trial.
GENERAL NEWS.
to any in the country. Tlftvi 'i»Jls ! Tb/WL l;.-.J been an instant's hult
contain fine collections of oil por- | |toro—just long tnnugli for the
traits of members who have been | trooper to seoure his aumnnjtiun
eminent in all departments of life ; n,,,i mount up behind a comrade.
in the State and in the nation.
pceial culture,
the Elisha Mitchell Scientific So-ciety
and tho Sliakspeare Club,
which offer unusual facilities for
original research and Study.
10. .1 Young Men's Christian As-of
the first two years arc fixed, but „„...„,,•„„, wblcfa meets live times
the studies of the last two years eoc|, weck. ;8 active, healthy and
may be selected mainly by the
student uuder the advice of the
Faculty. A student is thus ena-bled,
not only to select a course of
study carefully arranged to give
him general culture, but also to
shape that course by wise selection
in the last two years so as to fit
him for some special profession.
2. Six '•.•/'./' '•• •tries of study .
each requiiing two years study
and arranged for the benefit of
young men who have not the time
or the means lo spend four years I
at college. These courses arc in- : ll Plilccs citizenship, manliness
tended to supply the briefest pos- I !i:i |