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I IJHWHjllUP- h I ^Ul| I. M."-lMW.IJ{l|MIHIW^lg-. ■? —* -^■————— "■"■"■"■a ■a*" THE GREENSBORO PATRIOT. NF.W NE«IE»,««>. 1.183 GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY MAY lO, 1803. I By tko l-slrlo. Pi.MUh!■>• C« 1 TEKXN ai.oo e. Katie Lee and Willie Gray. ' AS TO THE PAY OF OUR POETS A. M. JGLAS, SCALES & SCALES ATTORNEYS AT LAW. l^iXt&SSISZ, ■ Tw»brown beads with laug'uingcurls, Red lips shutting over pearl.-, Bare feel white all wet irttb dew, blue: u , »inga II Katie Lee and Willie Gray. late and Kodcral They were standing where a lin.uk, Bending like a shepherd's crook. Flashed Its »llver, and tliW-k ranks Ol green willowa fringed the basks; Hall in thought and half in play, JOHN T. BRITTAIN, ^^Z"^* AS'Il' iUilKJN..1'KBI.VI -\V'If lE ,.\ii\»\ . jH, - Mailer—'moat a bead; b„ nitll aruM uhe wreathe of .loll \ ri a - -• nt l'i r- h I peo] i i»l tiuill : .i ol nal scr- :• : p. ml'. . Dr. W. ii. Wakefield U ill lie in Gr ' M<"Ad«] on '! ': I'll "■'■'■- I'KKTHI I.IJIITI l> To f ... E..M . %!>««- iini Threat r. -.. Owning In the meeting <if - ,,,. Medical .J y duringitnd week i i allll'i! ■..-.' 'in :■•'" re "» ■1, \ n i ual. Dr.Arthur E. Ledbetter, ..i i (..:- Ill |i . ! r - ■ BHARD! : ;. s uo i: ' c. lr>, Dike Itook Company, GREENSBORO. N. '-. ,.■,..■ ,.s, ,l /;..../.,, /■■> lm ills for • nl»*r»al Cnlteiii.. J\ II- USTZMIESIE, -. 01 >! . K IN Am . .. • I. ilian MnrUo. ■ • The EYE A SPECIALTY. pi nt lin a ema-il ■> n t ll r hlimi-in- -.hi :t'l;.i'h,' i.r any •eve In uhlo thai . ml may have ■ lo VV.'l;. ! API: VII ,\ M i.\ I once, MI . .i ::u c you lilo. Tl:- > are well til all the Latest m : Improfed 0? dalmk nn 111 > •' > t Ul ■. ■» .■ . ' I : ' . in tli.-< • . ' - -i • ill . ■ it in \ it -■:.. Ily- •|. i. I'r »hyo| la, 11 \ i r- • It '. I'ropl : . M . . . • r all) ■ nm|willlid - i.r the grtal i, KKM ^ KYK W.VI Kit, pi by IT. VGNKW. Tli ■ ! • - ■ f for hill inn ii\ -. granular or scab '■ eyi - litl-, and n vcr railii tu euro, and gives ii" pain. Ill . hi lirs fr.nti I" a. in., lo :! p. in -. ■'. I lar I '■ w. II hm & Son, IKWKI.KKS, . 1 ir.. ii-tiiif". N.«'. Administrators Notice. nith aruii libe wreaths of snow, S« ung a baskel to anil Irn. As they loitered, ball' in play, Katie f.ee and Willie Gray. • I'rcltu- Katie," Willie said- Ami there eami a flash <if red I brough the brownnesa of his cheek— faBoya arc strong and girls are weak, And" I'll carry. -o I will, Katii 'a basket up the bill." Katie answered wltb a laogb, '•i ..11 -ball only carry half: Am! then, tossing back her curl?, "Boy's are weak as well as it'irls. Ii.. ion think that Katie gue*sc.l Half the wisdom she expressed? Men arc only boys grown tall, ileartsdon't change much after.all; And when, long years from that day Katie Li e and Willie Gray, St. i again I ■ Ide Ibe brook II tiding like a shepherd'] crook— 11 i- strange tl.r.t Willie said- While 1 gain a i! 1 of red 1 r ■ - .; tn brow 1 .-.•■• - <.t lii-- cheek— ••! :.m strong and you are weak. I -11 - - i' but a slippi ry steep Hung with madows cold and deep. ••Will yon Irn.t me, Katie dear- Walk beside me without fear? Mar I carry,if I will, All your bu.-di in up the bill ? And be ansv 1 n .1 v. Ith a laugh, •■>'.., bul yon may carry hall." 1 lose I ilde ! l.i little ! r.i I. Belli ; ike H sli ; V rd'a crook, ii g ■.rh its silver bands 1 ... ■ ml u 1 ■;■ : t the gauds, I - . <■ : tage, a In re to-day Kati Ives wiih Wlllii Gray. In the pi '■ '. '. -. and !■•, Sv ■ . - ■ i .1 •■-' '" : nil fro— \ -•• lilli relil In a the one I ' - •.. 111 / in 3 r- :i.. ■ The Price of Some of the Produc-tion* of the Later Verse-Writers —Figures which aro Apt to Surpnsg. Lord Tennyson dit.l a rich nan Bow rich no one jet knows, but if he left a fortune "of f 1,000,000 and over it would surprise no one. His j early publisher' Messrs. Strahan & Co., paid Dim, 3Ir. tJmrge W ; Smalley writes fr..ui London, ♦ 20,- ! 000 a year for the privilege of pub-lishing his poem?, anil a royalty t'l-i i. s, which was above the con-ventional 10 per cent, paid to most authors. It is fair to suppose that lie changed bis publishers to his profit and that the Helen. Mac Blillan pai.l him during recent years in which they were his pub-lishers n still larger sum, which may readily have reached, with royalties and other returns, $40,000 French novelists nnd journalists get better pay than English, the | French poet receives in genera" less.—Philadelphia Frees. In a Whale's Belly. A CYCLONE AT OXFORD. OXFORD. N. C, SWEPT BY A FEARFUL STORM. A correspondent who says that he once spent three-quarters of an hour in a whale's belly thus relates the strange adventure: The good ship Europe, on which I sailed as 1 cabin boy, was anchored olF the Lower California. We had taken a number of whales and were at work trying the oil out of the blubber cut from the whales lying along-eide. To get the fat inside the whales we were cutting oil' the ends of two or three ribs and hoist-ing them up from the whale's body. This left an opening large enough for a person to crawl into the whale am! strip off the fat, which was sent on deck in buckets. We were short handed, and the to .«50,000 annually. He was paid ; cnptain toI(, Ilie togo jown int0 by the Fifteenth Century *!,•'■•• j t|1(: „-halc and strip off the fat. for the "Revenge" Good Words ;Bnv.|ikp, 1 jumped at the chance, paid him twenty guineas, or about , j |lail „,„ ,,pen ., work ,ong ,,e. |105a line for one of the worst f()re , !lenr,| onc of „lp 8aiior9 ging poems he ever wr.te, and twenty I ou,. ..1>ul, |ne |)0J. out of ,ne years before he received .*„0 a Imc h,f Th(, ,ack,e fa„g are stran(1. from an ambitious publisher. 1 et, jn„ •■ down to the issue of his collected ihad a small -"monkey rope" works, forty-four years before hieUM around my waisl. The other death, he had obtained next to end was on the vessel's deck. At nothing for his poems during ", the sailors cry the captain jumped period in which he had produced ! anl, grai)1)e,i jt ,„ plll| lne out, nut •' Maud" and '• In Momonam,' and j it wa;I 1(,() htl. The tack]e fall Ins Drat assured income came from | snupnC(! in ,„.„ the rj!)s ploscd t0. the familiar two volume edition_ in gether, and I, like Jonah of old, -1 many of his generation WM Bhut np Jn „ bale's belly. When the ribs came together, Fifteen L.irge Builings Demolished— Other Property Destroyed—Ono Person Killed and Others Badly Injured — The Damage $54,000 I'lii- Ali-I i long, and deep, and wide, . is—ro« .% rs "ii •l • -i'l • I .'.. ■ .: S ."'lfe': II ...!ii-irat« r .-ii nwd, late il.ll rcjij 1.1-ag ill t ■ ■ • 1 in for ,. ut 011 "i March .list. . .11 bar nl ' . ■ N V! ; r "ii- .iiil.-bt- . 1 t 1 , 111 ike tin 111 -Male pai . 1 ■. 1 ■ • A r. IX'KKI . . . r. . -1.■.;.■. . ItiMuNA 'III.I. NURSERIES, |*oiti; mi. ".. * I . - • - :" '. r. 11 -- l„,r, •, 1 . . .-■ i:. .v D. 1. |; 1 - ... . ; ■■ grounds ■ . 1,,■• ..| ih oil an 1 1 trains 1 iki regular >t..: - 1» !.,■ daily each way. IIJOSK ISTKRKSTKD IN . • pn 1^ school teacher, f.ir a little diverti . in. nt. had-asked her cla*. f..r th.- la-t original defini-tion of '•wife.'' and the bey in the cornel had promptly responded •a rib." She looked at him reproachfully, and nodded to the boy with dreamy eves, who seemed anxioQS to say something. "Man's guiding star and guardi-an angel," he said in response to the nod. •A helpmeet," put in a little flaxi n-haired girl. "One who soothes man in adver-sity." suggested a demure little girl. "And spends his money when he's flush," added the incorrigible buy in the cm There was .. lull, and the pretty dark-eyed girl said slowly: • A a iff :- th.' envy of spinsters," "One who makes a man hustle," was the next suggestion. "And keeps him from making a fool ..I himself," put in another girl. "Some one for a man to iind fault with when things go wrong," said a sorrowful little maiden. ••Stop ii;.h; there." said the pret-ty schi ol teacher. -That's the best definition." Later the sorrowful little maid-en -idled up lo her and asked: "Aren'l you going to marry that hai [some man who calls for you nearly every day ':" "Ti•-•. dear,," the n plied, "but with us nothing will ever go wrong, lie says liini . If.' —S kefed. Woman. distinguished by virtue. . I :'i. ntal eleva ion, wo- - the .-■ lace of our weary r.e spirit thut, when the busim -- ..re ..ver. gives us | Kilmarnocft editions of bi d 'i!i asure, and creates in « . hi . 11 . '.:. .. . ' toils., unall ■ ■ : ability u( future exer- :i .:,- ..- a mother, sho is the cen-tra of the domestic circle,as a wife the : ector of oursubstance, and ;i - 1 rcature to whom we can feai - . iibosom ourselves. By '.. ir.a : 1 :ir wants are anticipated, our pleasures extended, our hopes are bliss strengthened; and *:•' ml her .livin- influence our ; ; - r.i 1 gistenre wi uld be ton irk- - a. 1 pi itt icted endurance. In our fi m lie it the first to come f. r'. ird—the lasl to leave us ; in ..tir • dversity *hi< ij ever •:■■• angel of • mfort ai I the inspirer of all that i- pleasn ganil cheerful. She i-. like the morning and evening first read his poems. It was In the sting of straitened resources after j the loss of his personal fortune and before his poems yielded him a • revenue that he accepted the pen- •ion of $1,000 a year which he j continued to receive up to the time 1 of his death. "Kaily neglect followed by later riches has been no unusual lot among the poets of the century. Longfellow, who received $13 for "Excelsior," $20 each for the "Goblel of Life" and ""'To the River ' llarles," and .•si.'i for the •' VTi • k of the Hi Fperu ," lived t^. receive $4,000, $20 a li-ic, for the " Hanging of t!ie Crane" " I wish." b« wrote in 1S10 of ti.e $10,000 a year made by N. P. Wids, •• that I made ten hundred. ' Down to 1652, $2,800, he records, was the largest sum he hail received in any one year from his pen, and this wns after he had published " Bvnnge-iine,'' perhaps his most popular poem. Tel when lie died lie l:t an estate of $356,200. Whittier baa just left $200,000, though for his earlier poems he received noth-ing. Lowell, on the other hand, published lift lii-t p.cms nt his own expense, audio the end his income from them was small; and it was only in the closing ten or fifteen years of his life that Brown-ing, n bo bad a similar ixpei ience with his first vol'ime, received any-thing from his ]!,.< nit. The enormous incseaee In the number of readers in this century has undoubtedly addi d to the gain-of the average and mediocre writer. It has. too, given genius a reward ii has never before had, hut the returns of popular poets were as great half a century, 11 century, or even two centuries ago ;.- now. >.'o author of the last half of the cen-they closed upon a taggle or pin I used on the tackle. This pin had i come out and caught between the 'ribs. Through it a small hole for I reeling a rope had been bored, and 1 solely by means of this hole, which ' naided me to breathe, my life was saved. Ali was confusion on the ship's I deck. The men dared m.t use their Isharp cutting spades to make an-other incision for fear of injuring me. The tears were rolling down ! old Captain (' '.- faee. One of the men jumped on the whale, and I shouted tlircUgh the hole in the toggio that I was all right. Then there was great rejoic-ing. The ol I captain jumped on the whale himself,and with a small siieathknifc cut away at the Ilesh until he came to my body. Great care had to be exercised not to disturb the toggle, for they knew ! was breathing through it. At length the hole was large enough for me to crawl through, and I came on dec!;, sick and weal; from n;y expei ' • re.—Youth's Companion. Eve . Children Must Work. OvKoito, N. C.| May 3.—A cyclone struck Oxford ubout o o'clock this afternoon, destroying considerable property. It took out both ends of the large Miner Warehouse and blew down a partition of Leach's livery stables near by. It then struck the three-story prize bouse of W. J. lloykin, com-pletely wrecking it. Mr. Boykin and his assistant, Mr. J. A. Long, with Gve hands escaped with a few bruises, which is miraculous. The building was full of leaf tobacco. The building was owned by Mrs. R. 0. Gregory, the three-story prize house close by, was badly damaged. The next building demolished wns Norman Ilurwell's prize house, occupied by J. F. While, and full of tobacco. Prescription for Distemper in H6rses. The following prescription was given me by a skillful Veterinarian some years ago, when I had a line young horse with a bad case of dis-temper, and a largo running nb-cess ou his throaf. Its use wns 'so quickly successful in curing the distemper that it should be gener-ally known: let. Two ounces of chlorate of potash in a Ipailful of water, and give him all he will drink. 2nd. Powdered opium 1 ounce, erd. •• aloes 1 " Ith. •• rhubarb 1 " 6th. " nitrate potash 1 " Oih. " sulphur ;l " Mix all well and put a tablc- I spoonful of the powder well back I on the tongue four times a day. I Put liaxseed meal in his drinking water. Keep the nbscess open and well washed. W. E. MASSEV. The Central Christian Advocate joins in the growing cry, down with the saloons, and arraigns the saloon for its infamy: "What is there that is vilo that is not found in the lowest saloons? Vice of all kinds resorts there, lodges there. A 17-year-old colored boy by the Utalks there every hour. Houses J-1 of ill fame are intimately aaaoei-nted with them ; all crimes and all It is 1 old sayin that half the w.u i lives oil tiie earnings of the other half, and we believe it is not far from true. Not only should ever;, man and woman have so::.-:- tegular employ-ment to occupy their lime but even the children should be taught to work, and if the older folks would only exercise some patience every day in showing them how to do little things,-they would be aston-ished to see how .illicit tin: little ones would learn and become in-terested. It is natural for them to feel proud of anything thut lookB uirvhas approached the $1.500,000!,ik" "''"> »re "f ;>»V""?»™- Sclt earned with his pen. For one troebf' 8".v,8 ,!u" .^"'d™ \™"> j novel he was iriid at the rain „f too iiiucu of the uniform and form-1 fl less and too little work; although'The Governments Pay for Drinks. neath the ruins and killed, and a large crowd set to work removing the debris and found his body. It blew dov n the three-story brick Hicks tobacco factory which was not running and the loss is heavy to machinery. It also de-molished the three-story prize house of Mrs. Lewis .Smith, which was empty. The residence of Mr. Zack Lyon was badly damaged, blowing out all the windows and doors. No one was hurt. Near town it took up.a two room house, occupied, and set it down two hundred yards away injuring uo one. RALEIIIII, Muy o—Though the cyclone struck Oxford this after-noon, delinite ne»s of it couldn't be had until after midnight, owi.ig to trouble with the wires. Fifteen buildings were wrecked, one man killed, four men badly hurt and one negro fatally injured. The track of the storm was 150 yards wide and passed through the Western part of the town near the Oxford and Clarksville depot, where there were several large wooden tobacco prize houses, which were wrecked, as was also Adams' tobacco warehouse and some dwell-ings. The approximate loss is as fol-lows : R. A. Gregory, $0,00"; W. J. Boykin, $5,000; T. N. Burwc-ll, $4,000; J. F. White. $.'1,000; Hicks' tobacco factory, $0,000: Miner's tobacco Warehouse, $3,000; Mis. L. G. Smith, $3,000; S. W. Parker, $5,000; W. R. Taylor, $4,000; Lyon A- Day, $0,000;" 11. W. Laesi te'r, $2,000." The small damages are loo num-erous to mention. R. 0. Gregory and W. J. Boykin held a tornado policy and were fully insured. The cyclone struck Greystone, near Henderson, and wreck. .1 sev eral houses. It there badly injur-ed three persoiiS. Henderson 1 scaped injury. A quantity of forest leavi *'and bark fell in this city from 1 ^reat dis-tance in the air, but there wns no storm. $252 a working day. The " Lost 1 Minstrel" be sold for $3,94«.50, *™ ,earn,n8^ wo,rk M "■"•■««• ••Marmion" for $5,000, and the «'>ly more impressive and cmupre hensilde, anil causes a more living, continuous development in * ileelf Lady of-the Lake" for $10,500. Byron began where he clo?cd, with $20,000 for •• Cbilde Harold." $15,- 000 for ••Don .loan," "I.alia Rookh," a few weeks' v.ork, was sold in ad- I vance for $15,750, and Moon- re ; „ it least one I est activity to the production some outside work. and in the children. There 13 no child, and later no boy and youth, whatever may be his rank or posi-tion, who should not daily devote ci ived $45,000 f r "Irirh Melci'ies" I ampbefl, comparatively unknown,! received $15,000 for tie "Pleasures two hours in earn , Of of Hop''.*' though Burns, less for . Of course iL would be unwise to I ; Innate, was paid .*|oi, for the fir61 : overlook the i ducation of the voulh. cms The proper step is to edu ite both -single copies of which sell for l;«nd and mind as they grow up far more—and $3,500 for. the Bee-1 ,a writer has said that the pres the I th 0111! edition. 2'oe, who sold •• Raven" for $20, never hail ■good fortune to see a second tion of his poem panted. Earlier English poets did as well—commercially speaking—as the brilliant group which opened the century. Dryden's "Virgil" brought him $0,000, and Pope's "Homer" $10,000: Gray, it is true. receive.1, only *-' > for his poems. but this v.i s due to his prejudice again pen. : gave : Usher made they wi j various lactic I • otherwise could nave taught a FRUIT 0 II !•' LOWERS ■?rf ^•^^■>^^u no 0 ., ;„„ |5( pleas.ur.e in aug.h.t.t.h.at is. not mixed; cessor ..i1»o„iiiiv,. ,.■■ \r,- cord l :■■ Inspect YOl' < AN KIND Over i»i Kveri etc In la in a first - •; ai Fruit i 1 ■ Xur- r . i'r. t'-. vines . Suts, Kosos usually kept up with our Selected. individual tastes.— A Hundred Years to Come. Wouldn't you like to live until the year A. D. 2000, just to sec the people and the world generally'; JlU't'C til'i'i'll II 0 US CS| Who knows but you might. Ifyou observe the laws of health, and ii. ep the Stomach. Liver and Bowels in full action. The best medicine kno* n forthisis Dr. Picrce's Pleas- 3. tir, n House ant Pellets. They arc small, su- ; , , gar-coated granules, but powerful Give the li'lle folks j the home problem to j they will be happier, wiser i better.—Newi.em Journal. part of bear, anil and t vancl 1 "i 1 low i . - II01 i:.i-e- lor _.: .. 1 • ; Krai: Tr.. -. \ •- anil 1 ri 1 -• . \ \ \ I I \ 1)1.EY, it. "'r. Pom .1 . \ 1 e s OTTUI "y. lilt. It MUX 1 - I ! MAI 'i KEGt - LATIN! III.! - : !. - nil ii.c-tal 'rice, i 1 . : ge. gent -1 i.. li Irooi i.l -, rv a-id Ir. --. I la. R. l>l Mo* 1. !I9 S. ilaisHO M., < hlcaeo, Ills. L'.S. A. All Female Troubles Cured. April Paly. to cure: pro luce no nausea or iping: easy to take, and a sure ' t billiousness constipation. IP daclie, and diseases prodnsed . active liver. A cjnvenieni veal ;■' :•:..•". remedy. Careo of Slaves D.owaed '. making money with his id the "Elegy," which he ■ Dodi shy, bi tight the pub-s. 1.000 in profits. John Gay . '•-',360 out of the "Beggar's" ,000 out of its sue- Goldsmith, it is true, only received $500 for the -Traveler." $500 for the "Deserted Village," but this was due to lack of any business ability in driving the bargain; while the $75 paid Milton for "Paradise Lost," is a classic example of the unrewarded genius, though the same public j lil0 plajn am, simplc fare of (he made Byron rich with the profits j forefathers is done away with. of his work. I latent flour, and high seasoned •• A man in Texas, near the boun-dary of Mexico, went into u bar-room and ordered a drink. In pay-ment he threw down an American dollar^ Not having any small coins, the liar-keeper made change by handing over a Mexican dollar. In the course of a few days the m;in was across the border in Mexico, where he likewise purchased a drink, throwing down the Mexican dollar and receiving as change an American dollar. I cite this as a little problem for the gentlemen "f the clatis to p.indcr over. After several months' rtudj myself. I have reached tiie conclusion that laziness ' neither barkeeper lost by the trans-immense action and that the man who pur-remains'chased the drinks gained 20 cents, immense lone-half of which (Came from the [government of Mexico and the other from the United States. In other words, the two governments purchased the man's liquor. ••A traveler who recently re-turned from Havana inform- 1 11 :, become distasteful, and; that he can take $1,000 in Ameri-ill be tempted to practice|can gold to that city and receive to avoid what ent home 1 ducation as well the ichool education, leads the child into bodily inactivity and I in respect to work : an amour.! ( !' human power thus undeveloped and an amount wholly lost. On the other hand it wouli do at all to he too demanding up-on their tender years and make it a but len to them, for whatever tl.ei might be called upon to do, would s not The Good Old Times. "Then times were good, Merchants eared Dot a rush For any other fare, 'than Johnny cake and nius'li." But now times have changed, and for it $1,150 i'. Spanish silver, and after spending $110, can receive for $1,040 the sum of $1,000 in American silver. Gentlemen who are so fortunate as to possesj the requisite gold should adopt this method when they go to Havana. It might be worth while intake the jaunt to get away from the 'grip' and lay in n stock of eigars.-North Carolinian. The Impudence of the Trust. Trusts arc impudent and dicta-torial. The American Tobacco English authors have in the! food, and strong drinks, have taken | Company is trying to compel deal-main been better paid than -those1 its place, and. as a result, dyspep-on the Continent. Few countries.I»ja, impure blood, And diseases of like Norway, pension u poet BSI the stomach, liver nnd lungs are Ibsen has been, or. as in Hungary, j numerous. This great change has provide a residence and income by led onc of the most skillful physi-ti rifts of friends, as has beenlcians of the age to study out a done for Moriz Jokai, the lltinga- j rcmedi for them modern diseases, rian poet. Schiller lias been paidIwhich he has named his "Golden $450,1 in copyrights, but he Medical Discovery." Dr. Pierce only receited $14,500 from 1704 to in this remedy has found a cure era in Winston to refuse to handle Winston cigarettes, b'lt we are glad to say that we have not heard of one dealer so subservient unil unpatriotic as to bend t'„ that trust's desires. The new cigarette factory in Winston deservei the encouragement of our people and is getting it. The- impudent Amer-ican Tobacco Company may as forms of criminuls ure harbored there. There you may find tin-thief, the murderer, the pander, the assassin, the uunrchist, the plotter against the home. No form of infamy, no sort of vice e in he found that docs not frequent thu saloon It broods all kinds ■•' sin, it is fraught with all fornit of iniquities, it hatches out every day a vile brood of monstrous offenses against the home, against the pub-lic health, against peace, law, or-der, morals, and righteousness, its progeny is fraught with peril to all the interests of society. Profani-ty, indecency, Sabbath desecra-tion, infidelity, murder, theft, dis-ease, fraud, assailment of public order, ami scorer of other offenses, are the vi! -p: •.. n of the saloon. It is fcrtic in evil things, prolifir in vileness, it teems with vice! Especially i.i view of the influence of the saloon in municipal govern. metit the motto of all men and wo-men, regardless of party allilia-tions, should be. Down with the saloon!" •• We have got to make allowance every day in the year, and I am growing to feel it more and more," said James Wliinconib Ililey to a Cincinnati Times-Star reporter. " Manners and polish are often too far from what the nun leally is. Suppose you see a man eating with his knife; now people will keep awav from him though his heart is as big as his list. He will have to keep close to nature and to Clod as the only things thai don'l spit at him. ■•I was associated for a week with Josh Billings. Now, I thought to myself, what a pity that such a good-hearted fellow should wear his hair long just for effect. I didn't say anything, but one day after a particularly big dinner, I guess I was particularly dull, and my friend began to nod. Finally his head fell backwards a little on onc side. I saw on his neck a birth-mark, a great, ugly, grisly lump that usually was carefully hidden by his hair. Then I felt I had wronged him, but 1 never spoke of it. People who knew him will re-member that he always stroked his hair in a certain way with his left hand. It was one of his charac-teristic motions. He was thinking of his mark and keeping it from sight. That taught me a lesson, I assure you." The Presbyterian arraigns the saloon after this true-blue fashion : -The saloon has nothing to com-mend it. I • social feature is a cheat and delusion. It is a curse, and nothing but a curse. It is in imical to our best interests, It wars against the home, the Church, and tljp community, it blights and cures all who follow it as a ipeans of living, ail who patronize it as a pleasure resort, utid all who fre-quent it for the gratification of tastes which it has created and developed. It deserves no recogni-tion from the order-loving and the man-loving. It should be legis-lated out of existence. It should be hated, despised and spurned by ull who feel its demoralizing effects. The State • hould declare .: a foe to good citizenship; the Church should anathematize it. We would have better politics, safer homes, purer civilization, more orderly so-ciety, and more frequent revivals of religion, if it were buried be-yond the power of resurrection." Ho w a Beautiful Flower was Named NEW GOODS. DON'T FAIL TO SEE W.RMurray's NEW GOODS. Staple ■ Fancy dry Goods, DRESS GOODS, Ladies' and Children's SHOES nnd OXFORD TIES, Men's and Boy's FINE and COMMON SHOES. HOSIERY, Cloves, Handkerchiefs, Ac , Ladies' (iauze Vests from 84, to 75 cents each, Men's gauze underware Black, Blue, Pink nnd Cream, Henriettas, White Goods, and Laces, Crepons in all the Shades, Colored aud Plain Satins, a large stock of Cinghams and Chambrays, LACE CTJI^TAIlsrS, From 75 cents per pair up, White Coiintcrpins from $1.00 to $5.00, White Table I.incns, Napkins and Doilies, Silk Umbrellars, $1.25 to $:!.00. All of the very best GOODS at LOWEST POSSIBLE PKICKS. W. R Murray. Sou'h Elm Street, CREKNSUORO, N. C. o s H ?• k""o g 2 3*= 3^ DOYOTJ 3ST .Hi IE ID Sash, Doors, Blinds, Moulding, Braeketo, Mantels. SIHIXi; Ult FLOORING, KKAMIW, SIIIKGT.Ksi AN'li I.ATIIKS. I.IIIIIIIIII LUMBEB MlIFillTlISfi I'D. Can supply you with anything in tin-lino on short notice and on the most reasonable terms. See our EMBOSSED WOOD, something new, being highly ornamental and costs very little more th-n ordinary lumt'er. I sed for decora-tive work. Agents for Uill'a INSIDE SLIDING VKNITIAN BLIND, best ever made, and costs very little more than the old style. Any Size Glass Kept in Stock. HATS! HATS! We have jusl reeeiysd an immense Block of 11 ATS of every descrip-tion. Also u line of Drummers Sample Hats, 850 different STYLES, which wo will sell at about HALF PRICK. And if you need a PAIR of SHOES or SLIPPERS do not buy until you see what we have. You will also find a good stock of DRY' GOODS NOTIONS, Ac, to make your selection from, (live us a trial. HiidsorL <~j-to:r?e CoirLjpaxLy, TOM SHERWOOD, .Manager. 518 South Elm Street, - GREENSBORO. N. C. r, o 1905, fjdethe was paid by one for Dyspepsia, Bronchitis, Asthma, i well understand that publisher, Colta, $141,770 in his!Consumption, in its early stages,: oun their own souls and bodies!— I.OMI.V. May l. —A dispatch |U*yfime, and his heirs received as and '■ Liver Complaints." Winston Sentinel. from Zanzibar brings news of the l^uch more after his death, chat-drowning at 120 slaves hy the cap- leaulniuiid wes paid $00,000 for his: "» may not be renowned,'' said! Hon. HannisTejlor.of Alabama, *iz<i.goi nniAnh dhow in which: t Bi-cted works, and Lumsrtine ibe barber, " yet all of my clients recently 'l^l^l^fc^H'r to jtuecaptijaa^lB being coaveyed j iu,|oo for "Fall of an Angel," andi^e their hats off to me."—Indi- I splin, is a i An old legend tells of two lovers, walking by the river Rhine. The lady begged her suitor lo pluck a little pale-blue Slower, growing on the bank. In doing so he fell into the water, and wns drowned : but, while sisking. he threw the llowcr to her, and cried: - Forget me not!" Thousands of women will never forget what Dr. Pierce*! Fa-vorite Prescription has done for them. It is prepared specially to cure those diseases from which they alone suffer, and often in si-lence, rather than consult a physi-cian— as periodical pains, weak r people back, prolapsus, and all uterine troubles. Purely vegetable, am' guaranteed to give satisfaction in every case, or money refunded. . - V I • • . '' * "s-.'.'-.••--•' I E H. CARTLAND, Has Received a Large Supply of Eleg-ant Cloths of all kind for FALL and*WINTER SUITS. IFPe-TTfeot; FITS Ouaranteed. H. H. Cartland, lll'i .Smith t'/w .SV Orecmboro, if, while'euapoiia Journal. mam ■~- -— I Bute. Time will change everylning but a counterfeit dollar.—Elmira Gaz-ette. II "Will PIPER" IT 4 (illtil VMI. IF YOU WANT "WALL PAPER" CHEAP, MY PRICES ABE VERY LOW. CHARLE _; 311 South 'ACKETT, House Block.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | The Greensboro patriot [May 10, 1893] |
Date | 1893-05-10 |
Editor(s) | Wharton, H.W. |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The May 10, 1893, 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-1893-05-10 |
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 | 871563453 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
I IJHWHjllUP- h I ^Ul| I. M."-lMW.IJ{l|MIHIW^lg-. ■?
—* -^■————— "■"■"■"■a ■a*"
THE GREENSBORO PATRIOT.
NF.W NE«IE»,««>. 1.183
GREENSBORO, N. C, WEDNESDAY MAY lO, 1803. I By tko l-slrlo. Pi.MUh!■>• C«
1 TEKXN ai.oo e.
Katie Lee and Willie Gray. ' AS TO THE PAY OF OUR POETS
A. M.
JGLAS, SCALES & SCALES
ATTORNEYS AT LAW. l^iXt&SSISZ,
■ Tw»brown beads with laug'uingcurls,
Red lips shutting over pearl.-,
Bare feel white all wet irttb dew,
blue:
u ,
»inga II
Katie Lee and Willie Gray.
late and Kodcral They were standing where a lin.uk,
Bending like a shepherd's crook.
Flashed Its »llver, and tliW-k ranks
Ol green willowa fringed the basks;
Hall in thought and half in play,
JOHN T. BRITTAIN, ^^Z"^*
AS'Il' iUilKJN..1'KBI.VI -\V'If lE ,.\ii\»\ . jH, - Mailer—'moat a bead; b„ nitll aruM uhe wreathe of
.loll
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peo] i i»l tiuill
: .i ol
nal scr-
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Dr. W. ii. Wakefield
U ill lie in Gr ' M<"Ad«] on
'! ': I'll "■'■'■-
I'KKTHI I.IJIITI l> To
f ... E..M . %!>««- iini Threat
r. -.. Owning In the meeting |
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