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PATRIOT«) VOL. (I!). GREENSBORO, X. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, l894. SHAW A: SCALES, , \A/~ A SUMMER MORNING. B Ml-. APP, ITS AT LAW r :,• Wakefield. v '- ... and ! Iiroal. DSON. N'. V. WYCHS, 1% < . HACKETT, V... .Decorations > .- I.-, cn.I ..ill. ' i . i ', LIMES! 1 ON 0 iiioameoial Stock. ■ ■ ■. ■ ■ ■ ... V 1 1 1 ■■ ■ i . • IWIIIIl) N . I I ■ ■ ; THE WRECK. : the other t has I ermen of the place often sp< ak at ■ ■ li an ■ .;;.- n ■ ■ ■ oe to lei particulars. I was ■ LSI wrs after it. You |ahonta that madman, the brigadier. ' .■■-..tiiic-rs aren't rich, and But no one laughs now. A great a cap costs. Well, it seems th I tumult on the bridge. The" fog our man, lifting his bead, saw right prevents their seeing one another, j him through the fog a scudding along under ard the Lavezzi isla This ship went very fast, so faat that be had hardly time for a g look. Everything leade to the be-that it n :- the Semillante, half hour Inter the ship, herd r.f • , heard—Why. comes the shepherd himself He will tell you. Bonjour, Palom-bo. i oro' uan . th; self. Have ir." I man, whom J ■ • prowling around our lir.-. and whom I had taki n foi to 1 did not know t!.;,i there was .-, shepherd on ; the island, approaching us timidly. He va- an old leper, three-quarters ■'■ idiot and a prej to I know not icorbutic evil, which 9 horrible to belli I, - i « " Wi re they. Thi y I >.- plained to him at length what we iut Then, lifting I il lips with his ii;. the old man said that on the leetion, about noon, he heard f im his hut a frightful crash on the island was ■ er he could not It was not until ■ bat '-a openinj door lie had seen the beach covered with driftwood and corpse-. thereby the waves. Insane with '''•' we did not n led to bis boat to go day through Mare!;. The wind to Bonifacio for help. much. ; lal down, and the eaptain w< nt or, with his store. Vi -. in msii r, r was this poor How who came to warn us. il. was crazy with fright, and evei The sailors go and come, groping along frightened. The helm is gone. It is impossible to guide the ship. The Semillante, adrift. Hies before the wind. It is at this moment that the douanier sees her pass. I: is half after II. Just ahead they hear, like the roar of cannon, breakers! The breakers! it is finished. There is no hope. They iri going straight on the rocks. II. • captain goes down to his cabin. us up in a moment to take his place on the bridge in his full I without doubt been an excellent He wishes to meet death thing and a mark of civilization Tiie Credit System and Panics Financial crises are the sinister concomitants of the vaat expansion of business which has been the re-sult of the development of credit. If all transactions were settled in cash as soon as made their would be no crises. The industrial pro gress of the late century has, how-ever, been ehiellvduc to the Growth of credit, to the facilities which have been extended to those who endeavor to grow rich by running into debt. And the development of tho confidence of mankind in each other and in the future has NO. 8i. A Pleasant Call. T, ,. „ — ANIMAL EXTRACTS Some three months ago, as we were on our way to Valley ( ity in PreFa«<J According to the Process search of subscribers, a hard-look- !md Under the Supervision of ing strnnger stepped out of the I DR- WILLIAM A. HAMMOND woods and proceeded to hold us up. Young, Nl ES, ious, and ■ f calm I. i li evening before the ;• . ■ ■ mouth trait ; lands. : i i il iri since his brain has been off tl il 11 k, i ., ; track. To I the truth, there was lentiak, - enough^for i:. Imagine BOO few tufts of absin rpses in heaps on the sand, mixed i re attire. Between decks the soldiers, in mortal terror, gaze at one another without a word. The sick try to sit up; the little brigadier laughs no longer. Then the door opens, and the chaplain with his stole appears on the threshold. " To your knees, my children!" All obey. In a ringing voice the priest begins the prayer for the dying. Suddenly a fearful shock, a great cry, upstretched arms, clinging hands, wild eyes, before which the vision of death has Hashed. Mis-erere ! It was thus that I passed the night dreaming, bringing back through 10 years the souls who had perished in tho poor ship whose debris surrounded me. Far away in the strait the tempest raged. The flame uf the lire bent under the i i>t. and I heard our bark-thrashing and straining at her moorings ;,t the foot of the rocks. —Romance. A Matter of Pride. ■ in the si ■ tying picci etter to pass I inii .. on I bark, hal .: So we c< ntented - timbers and strips of millai te! The sea .1 her into crumbs with Palombo with difficulty gh wood to build a fence ; I his hut As for the men, horribly disfigured and i til ited. Ir was pitiful to em clinging together in ". found the cs ill ; ■ • ■; . • el i stole. In ... corner bi tween ittle cabin T!iO . IN OWERS . : ■ almost ■ of thi ■ '' . • . iii . e wi • t In I he i. . sieur. ; Seinilla . 181 10 year-y di n't li usl uc ran do is I and - n •• W it;; al my II iw - tery of if till, with vail; its and hard to open , il- si the hundreds of "■ I •■■■ .Nut one wi ■ ; : . •• ild they mbs! We stai I a t 1 he ca] Eiicr .' - if • hi cerueti i y, heads, mingli .-.,. crjee The praj erfinishi |iy |, ,,-k l tho bai'. \ ■ a lost during our a mine in I t ick and I 1 down in a circle, ir feet to the each had on - - , howl of •... . : ■ ., •, was a s ere wet, en l nearness : the gra However, a ...... emptied r talked a little—naturally of the Semilllante. me, how did it ha| tl captain, who. with his in .-. stared at the tful air. ' How |-; en?" said the with a beav - gl ein • ■ in tell! it thi Si millante, ; s, left Toulon the ; re in bad weather. ■ igl • it grew v. tnd a terrible sea. the . was DI \ er Been before. in ■ the wind fell a lit- -i i was w --.. if j, ig with it the devil's own r x BO thai ;„• could not ban - L> ; ! 1 !:■■-.- r Thi .< Green Houses . .. , i . V • . • ■ boy ■.. eyes open. One might but, no, it had bei n di creed that not should escape." Her be sto] "I areful, Nardi," said he, • the I "lit." ' tarred ;• which quickly tin. tetti ■ ■ inued ; '-The saddest part of tl - II \t .-• • . c The people of Mecklenburg should be very proud of the reputa-tion the county has gained from its road working system. It has been conci ded for some time that in road building .Mecklenburg leads the state, and other counties inspired by her example, have investigated her system and the work being done and have adopted the 6ame. Not only have our roads given us a state reputation, but in a . sense they have given ua a national nation. Col. Jno.C.Tipton, of Shelby, the statistician of the Ag-ricultural Department,attended the recent National Road Congress al iry Park, New Jersey. He out-lined the Mecklenburg system, giving cosi. amount of work done, etc. The 1" St road builders of the country were so astonished at the small coat compared with the amount of work dono that they wen- :• 'lined to doubt his state-ments i •■' due of these roads to our i . »weeks before the disast. • " \my "''""'"! be ovet e«"n">ted, little cutter, whirl, was zoina i..lw,dw?*w ""!»'"<T-t to we them the i . imea, like the Semillante fas wi iked in thi same way in nearly : ..■ nly this to save the crew and 20 - ildiera who were on board. We took them to Bonifacio and kept them tbi station with us for two days. extended over our entire couniv. and progress. Pobably the basis of the modern credit system was the invention of the bank, bv which the power of money was reduplicated. Before this invention there were speculations and enterprises, or ad-ventures as they were then styled, but they were confined to few hands. Modern banks by gather-ing in tho money cf the whole pub-lie extended the liberty of using the credits founded upon it to the whole public alike. The gradual abolition of monopolies, which had confined almost every branch of commerce and manufactures in the hands of a few, was an accompani-ment and result of this extension of credit. Competition called out new inventions, and cheapened all pro-ducts of industry. But with the advantages that were gained came also new dangers. The failures and tlnaneial disasters and consequent losses were no doubt more frequent previously than they have been since, but they did not come all to-gether, were more distributed and attracted less attention. More fi-nancial machinery, by which credit is fostered and systematized, gives longer and longer periods of pros-perity, which are broken into from time to time as crises or breakdowns occur. Some ha70 attempted to show that there was a regularity amount-ing to periodicity in the monetary panic or crisis, but among the seers of finance they must be rated as the the weather prophets who claim a regularity of period in storms and other meteorological phenomena are rated among the experts of the weather bureau. It is true that close students of the financial crisis justly observe that there is a cer-tain sequence in the conditions that lead up to the catastrophe. Tho symptoms by which they are preceded, and which give fair warn-ing of their approach,rapid advnnrp of prices and wages, great activity .' trade and multiplication of new enterprises, have been often ob-served, just as the symptoms of an approaching storm. The imagina-tion of traders and those who desire to partake of the profits of trade are strongly excited, and with rising We had |27 in cash, two guns and a watch, and his eloquence was so persuasive that we [quietly surren-dered everything. Very little con-versation was indulged in. The stranger didn't appear to be in a talkative mood, and we seemed to have several things on our mind to worry us just then. He didn't ask for our name, and we didn't hand out our card with the boodle. As soon as courtesy would permit we put spurs to our cayuse and can-tered away, and the matter wns not regarded of sufficient interest for publication the following week. On Friday of last week a stranger entered our sanctum and laid our lost property on the table and in-troduced himself as the person who despoiled us. He explained that it was all a mistake. He used to run a newspaper in Indiana him-self, but a combination of circum-stances drove him out of business. He was feeling low spirited the day ho encountered and us did not ask for the usual explanations. It was several weeks before he acciden-tally discovered our identity, and as soon as circumstances" would permit he had called to make resti-tution. We found .Mr. Palmer, as he called himself, an intelligent, agree-able gentleman, possessed of a laudable ambition to aid in build-ing up the glorious West and a firm believer in the future of Arizona. There isn't as much money in the hold-up business as is popularity supposed, hut he is making an average of Jf.lO per week and in-vesting it in real estate in the grow-ing towns. He expects to be able to buy four vacant lots on Apache avenue within the next few weeks. Mr. I'almer, of course, subscribed for the Kicker before he left and hopes to read it regularly even-week. He will work the road be-tween here and Valley City most of the time this summer, but will occasionally visit other routes and drop in on ranehes.-Arizonn Kick-er. ■ EBKBRINK. the ■Unluatl cMri.i .1 11.. SME&SSS: ■"'-'"-' '-"■•'■■ ■two! lianilar efltoary, a«— J 5l. llv-u"."" lr"""a""" "-"■«'' 11I1. Nervoni Djancnma, Kb. Hypochondria and II l| .., .„,,,, i.oc.Vh':;^ ' woMrlk;,. li.-oa.nia, realm.,- from ,..,-, m.nwl CARDIXE, th. nerl t U.C 0\, CO aod 11111-.-111 ttt.«r.■,.;:■:::;.,,: -,.- ana iiiu-.-ular. required by the n.-a.i ,r , - ...ir.i.on wd normal action. 1. u ,,n„,r ,1 «"> ■ "Ml «en> ;.- Inauanra w»h!n . tew minute;after ito admin.«r»u.„ itrtrengthensthennlae,and I,...',. ,. ■.,. l^eyintnow cue. in whirl ™.;'.'hV"1 1. M" in..,„-.- • . In Poor Health means so much more than you imagine—serious andi |,; ;'■ ■'■'' ■ a» i t suit from 'trifling ailments negli cted. Don't play with Nature's 1 greatest gift—health. Brown's Iron itters have T... ami-iii.! ■ ! WOfk. ■ [I ' |. blv Mr.-nvilit Rihw ■ whu hi, !<•,.»„ i | | ten ' r '. M. |. . H. ..111 th.' -»' .11 I ■■■:-, ft Cures Dyspepsia, ICUney and Neuralgia, Troubles, Constipation, Bad Blood Mnlarb. Nervoos allraeats \ women's complaints. "IiTI ■•■' », Inn'".,-l,| iIon, IW,,a,,ulllul \s. ,IJ f. (' "MCHEM ■ Should Anxerieans Eule America? Let the good work go on and let all Price? "" er" ?f "Initiation if ?"rc in.r nonnto „,. ,.„„.„.„ ...;.i. .u. to enlarge and culminate. 1 he de- ITAL 1 IHOOD. . ■ -..i, ,:' r 111 four feet -MEVCNTIVt- ■ Ma | ' ITS.T|» ■ II ...w to ob- ■ \ '.ii, | . i . In tl v - It.i "' ' fogs, monsieur! You i itfultheyare. .• an idea th must have lost her helm for the captain ivy fog could hardly , mistake, lie tried mariner. We all knew him. He had commanded the i orsican station for three years and knew the i isl as wi aa I else. " At what Semill . It mus ivi on—yes. ir, noon—b u t. forsooth, a f.'s; that no m was worth li" in..re than ;. night as black as thi iwe of i a f, A ife saver of »t told that th. same day toward hall pasl 11. - ■ ibin to rasten bis shutters, the win l wl iri. I away Ins cap, and at the risk ol being ■' 'nci ighly dry and on • i- iodby, good luck. Tiny returned t'. Toulon, from which port they embarked again several days later fur the Ami imagine on what ship! (in the Semillante. We found them all—all 20—lying ist where we are now. I picked up myself a hand-r, with a long blond from Paris, •II my own in.use. - . time with his -■ rii - To see him . ■ i' holy mother !"' < eupon the good Lionetti. sho ik the cinders l.is pipe, and rolling himself in ' is cape wished me good night. I'nr BI in.- time longer the sailors i es. Then, after the other, 'he pipes «• inl ■ spoke. 'I be old shep herd hobbled away, and I was left away the hours in mid ... ping crew. intl lence of the lugul .. Inch I had heard. 1 tried to n build in my Fancy the poor departed sidp and the story of this agony of which the sea gulls were the only witnesses Several • — tiie captain in - -. the chaplain's stole, the to imagine e scenes of the drama. 1 Baw ;ate l< aving Toulon in the night. She loses ; sight .if the port. The sea is bad, the wind high. The captain is a valiant Officer, and every one on board is undisturbed. In the morning a mist rises from the sea. They commence to be uneasy. All the crew are on deck. The captain loes i I leave the bridge. Between .-.here the BO liere are abut up. it is dark the air i- cl ise. Some in, ill, lying on their knap sacks. The ship pitches horribly. I: is im] - stand up. Sitting on the lloor, talking in groups,they - It N neces-sary to shout to be heard. Some begin to be frightened. Listen. thi ii. \V;\. . . i|uent in the The sailors are there to BBJ - and what they say is not ring, Their biigadier, too, - in who always talks wildly. makes their Mesh creep with his "A wreck! Oh, a wreckIAver's 8« i- amusing, v< ry. We will be well! : II after our iced bath. Then they will taki us to Bonifacio to j cat blackbirds with old Lionetti." - Idea | . crash. What is itV What can it be? ■• I'be in-1 in la gone," cries a drip our people co-operate with the County Commissioners in extend-ing and facilitating the work.— Mecklenburg Times. To Experiment with Balloons. W ISHIKOTON, July 25 —The army arge sire to buy on credit to sell at an advice seizes upon all but a small minority of the community. The crisis begins with a panic, during which debtors and creditors, every-one at once, suddenly lose confi-dence in each other. Those who is about to make some extensive. have been granting the credit upon experiments in military ballooning. In this feature of military opera- 'i- the t'nited States have made but little progress, while other countries, notably the French and Russian, have perfected the system to a degree of reliabilty that as- - ires the balloon as an important factor in discovering movements of troops in future wars. This sum-mer a corps of signal ollicers will make some interesting experiments at western army posts. Instruction will be given each post in the use of the balloon for strategic pur-poses, and visits will be made to all the interior army stations, where the soldiers will have an opportun-ity of witnessing practical tests. Eower tind Mebane. NORTH WII.KESBORO, July 25.— The congressional convention met here to-day and re nominated Hon. W. II. Bower, present member, by acclamation. The judicial conven-tion met immediately afterwards which the business has been done cither are unable to grant more or shut down from fear of doing so. Knterprises once most hopefully TU s out against the accumulating ose all their glamour. 8.0urI «° demoralizing to our people Let us reconsider the matter as one of the most important issues involving our nation. Our country is t..-day groaning under oppressive wrongs. Never was our American government so shaken by political agitation and political strife. Em-igration of the lowest cast has been pouring in upon us by the millions, and our entire lnnd seems to be dividing against itself. The Pop-ulists (and may we hope they are not in sympathy with the Anar-chists) are struggling to gain the ascendency of power. Many honest and fair minded men will be lead into this, unconsciously and un-suspecting of tho danger that may lie secreated beneath its folds. There has been no period in the history of our nation when it be-hooved us to be wider awake to our national interests. The spirit of the grand old whig party with its Know-Nothing attachment comes whispering to us, beware, and ... .... Hnnu nn,i i,■)..,• ,.i ii,,. i„.,|.| |.,.J1( fpg£: . THEEMERS0N&F1SHERCU SS^-^-™»S^»i- CARRIAGE BUILOERS. Weak Heart, .r Rendered Hogulnr. ml. in Dropi; due i ■''■'"< ; abed U I prewirel a creuM action of the kidneys. ,..:'"; .'" 'J <-':.-•- ■■! Ilr.nl.i'. I'.-.-:.-.- in " I'.,-,!",' """""I"'""''"'>• n»|Uire»tobe ■ll.l.l-U.INI...,i,u Mtrubwl ,„,.„i „r UH N'lnaloord ..f II... ..v.roiitain- .In- -nl.-i.-m... re. NUiredhythUormnto. IU nutrition and ...... ...al not...... U inof ui-'iu iH-neiii m rnnetional nn ... Bymittonw. Ml .si I"LINK, II„. uenllicd e\tra« m IIT r-c"qoaTlrned'iVIn'"t!h"e'"m1"iu. leav-f'..r T>»..'-",,'■«„l„'e,,«„i.l„»„ta.„n"., n..rn.i.l ;,,„..„. I - .., .,.,.,r .,...,. „ «™» ;«« inmiis.-ul.ir i.oiik...-. In il,,.,-,,. .; ,„.,.,„,. wao ii. ■ re. entlj . n k :. ... -. v< n ml ... .,- exertion and who are ir leaauihauste.1 l.» ii.-- Mra.n to which v hare i.. . - . . .. laeaaea „t ronvaleeccace Irora .■.,.... .n-. i-. - or in others la which the system requite* t.> u-i. uilt i.|i. .t it superior ... itsactioa tolteefex-ira.' U «.r beel ton. n.f abore-named .'.."I othei t'\trart-.Te>tine, Ovarlne,Tbyrodine,etc.. are now .... MIC at tin-un.ioi... |.r.,-i. .,i (j..-,.. ner IwtUe, In drna-u.- is eenerally. and 1.7 ..,.- manurnr <lu....l.u.lii..t.Cia. Uucmical ( .... 17.»l ., M.. lVa>l>intf- Voraale bj lll.-iia-.i-.... a i.-.r..-. ..... n.i- r... looked upon 1 Whether they have real merit or not makes no (inference. This panic does not last very long. It is the forerunner of the crisis, which bears the same relation to the panic as cleaning up the railroad wreck does to the accident itself. The modern credit system is the cause of panics and their attendant crises. Its benefits and its evils come alter-nately, so the remedy for panics and commercial crises is in careful management of the credit Bystem. —Rhodes' Journal of Hanking. The Dr. Will Catch It. The liev. Dr. Mai ley, of the Con eord Baptist church of Christ al Brooklyn, N. Y.. is likely toencoun ter a storm of feminine vitupera-tion on account of a recent sermon in which he dwelt upon the fact and W. W. Barber, the present in- j ihat the Bible nowhere speaks of a) cumbent, was unanimously renomi-nated for solicitor. There was a considerable tight as to the judge-ship. J. •!\ i;raves, the present judge; W. N. Mebane, of liocking-ham, and K. I.. Gaither, of Davis, win- prominent candidates. Mr. -Mebane. of Uoekingham, was nom-inated after a hard fight, on the thirty-second ballot. Tho Commissioners Appointed. EXECUTIVE MANSION, Washing-ton. D. i:., July 25.—The President has announced the commissioners to investigate the controversies be-tween certain railroad, and -heir employes connected with the recent strike, as follows: Carroll I). Wright, who is designated by stat-ute as one of the commissioners; John 1). Kernaii. of New York, and Nicholas K. Worthington.of l'eoria, III?., selected by the President Under the law he was obliged to appoint a citizen of Illinois a8 0ne of the commissioners. During the dog-day season, the drain of nervous and vita! energy may be counteracted by the use of yer's Sarsaparilla. The purifring the blood, it acts as a superb cor-rective and tonic, and enables the system to defy malarial and other climatic influences. himself by the blast be I ping sailor who goes running he-commenced rawl along the tween decks. -Bon voyage!'' Sunday is a good day for writing letters and .Monday is a good day i i forget to mail them.—New ur- I M.S Picayune. woman being in heaven. " 1 don't believe there is a woman there now. or eier will be," he declared. His theory is that all members of that sex "Jwill go back into their origi-nal state whence they were taken by the Creator," and that when the Savior said that there were no mar-riages in heaven, but that all should be as the angels, " he meant that there were no such creatures as women in that world of blessedness and song." This view is not an agreeable one, to say the least, and it is to be hoped that Dr. Matley is mistaken. Coxey Deserts His Great Common-weal Army. WASHINGTON, July 2."..—Covey's army at Hyattaville is gradually dispersing. The men have been on the point of starvation. Coxey in an address to them to-day told them anywhere about the only thing for them to do was delivered by Rev. L. F. Jones, now was to go to Washington and of Gastonta, which was a logics beg, get arrested and have the Dis-1 and most learned address, and : declaring that Americans should rule America: that no foreigner should exercise the right of suf-frage until having become an iden-tified and worthy citizen. But these principles wero deemed in-expedient and wrong and the grand old whig party had to BUOCUmb. We ask what has been the result? Hell has taken an emetic. Our American shores have become the repositories for the vile contents of its polluted stomach, and a de-moralizing element has swept over our country until to-day the peace, happiness and prosperity of our American people can only be pro-tected at the point of the bayonet. I ask then, has not the time come when we should manipulate such laws as will protect us from foreign emigration and foreign demoral-ization? OLD TIME WHIG. Gala Day at the Baptist Orphanage. Last Wednesday was a delight ful day in Thomasville. being the annual meeting at the Baptist Orphanage here. People were present from all parts of the state. The exercises were of a most pleas-ing character. The little orphans, 150 in number, rendered some most beautiful and plaintive music, and many very creditable recitations were given by these dear little souls. The Rev. J. A. Munday had intended to preach the annual sermon, but was prevented by sick-ness, and that ablest of divines. Rev. Dr. l'ritchard, of Charlotte, was at a late day selected in his st.ad. His sermon was a masterly effort, as is everything which em-anates from his pen. lie is one of the most thorough pulpit orators in the south and has few equals The annual oration MESSRS. NKWELI. A M MINI.,.. '■ .. .v. r., GEKTI.EMI N Under date of June JL'II.I WI Shipped you ■ carload of vehicles, ami want to say in connection with tin- shipment that yon will receive a nice lot of goods, made ..T cure fully selected materials, and which we have got out especially for you. in short, you have got a car of honest buggies, which we believe will please your trade. Awaiting your further favors. we remain Yours tii.lv. THE EMEHM.1 FISHER CO. June :!3III, 1804. Let Us Put ABug in Your Bar. OUR PRICES ARE LOW. JDO "5fTOXJ -w\A.nsrT-MACH ~W"e Can. Supply You. Wo have Boilereof all Bizet*. Engines of all slai -. Saw Mill- in I'm* M/<*S I'lan log Mill Machinery of al! kinds, Ke-Saw Mill**, (jang I.I'T. s*nle K«ljjor*>, Equalizers Stave Machinery, I Excelsior Uarhinerj, ll«a<ling Machinery, Shingle Machinery, Lath Machinery, Handle Machinery, steam I'mut-. Injectors, <:ir-cular Saw*, Band Sawa, Saw Swagea, Kmery Saw (summers,Saw I ilinc M ichin-ery. Line Shaftings, dangers, Iron and IVooil I'ullej - Itabbitt Metals, i I r< - Machines—both Steam aod Horse Powers, Krenrli ("orn Burrs, I nnrii . machinery, f^eatber and Rubber Iteltings, Automatic oilera \--r Kn^ines, .ill kinds nf l!r»ss Supplies, also general mill Supplies <if every description, Reaping and Mowing Machltu ry and Hay Kaki >, drain I trills, &«. If In need "f machinery <<f any kiti-t, writ" iaa f«»r Prices and Catalogue. All inquiries will receive i»r«»Tnj.t altentimi. Any information wanted rcgardic^ estimates of any kind will be cheerfully given. Address, mo and iii2 TH::. • l\ • Huntington, • • \\. Va. [Mention PATRIOT when writing us. | Greensboro Roller Mills, NORTH & WATSON, PROPRIETORS. OITE BKANDS: PURITY: K HIGH GRADE PATENT. STAR: A FINE FAMILY FLOUR. CHARM OF GREENSBORO: THE POOR MANS FRIEND. These brands have been put on the market on their merits and ■ given universal satisfaction and are prom ■ ■ reel lent by the leading familes of Greensboro and surrounding ■ We guarantee fortuity in each grade. Ask your merchants for NORTH A WATSON - FLOUR. Remember me handle all kinds of the freshest and BKST beside the bept .MKAI. ever made in Greensb iro. IKKI) NORTH &c "WATSOJSi , Hill il Walki r Avenue and C. K. A V. \ . R. R. DON'T BUY A DOLLAR'S WORTH Of IDoozrrs, Sash, ox* BlixrcLs I'.^'tln'aunnn'r'i'tl'iom ''" ToVev ami '.'reutiv a pprcciated by the large Till you learn our prices and examine our work. W. hare been nc KnlehCh^to-d^^^^^^^^ To the fcher. and M fl ftiHAhll. MAS,*, FRAMKS.MO. MHX.W ft of Krve'e Kelly's and Gal-1 matrons too much praise cannot he Anj an kinds of BfIM>IXO MATERIAf. for the past Hi ttcen years and ■ • • .»_.(«».«<. „.a mBn.M...rt ' m-corded for the beautiful train work has never failed to give the best satisfaction. In addition to v,n s contingents are congregated , aicorue.i ior ,, r,,ik|ren i rs, Sash and Blinds, we are prepared to furnl.h on the government reservation. ing of these dear little cnnuren ^|,oarea.onein,he^,l,hw,,|o,u . p . , parents. I he Kev. Mr. nan wa-re elected treasurer and chaplain Can supply you with anything In this line on short notice anil on tie most He is verv reasonable terms. - I our KlIBOSSKD WOOD, something new, being fail l'eople with hair that is continu-ally falling out, or those that are bald, can stop the falling, and get of the institution ««> . ™j o;--^i4lmlld«0#u very little more than ordinary lumbei good growth of hair by using deservedly popular in tins com t,_eworki Agents for Hill's INSIDE SLIDING VENETIAN BLIND, munit). »• ever made, and costs very little more than tl I.I >t vie. Any Sis li .- Kepi Thomasville, July 23, 1894. in stock. Guili'ord Lumber (,'o., Greensboro, N. C. Hall's Hair Renewer. It costs more to be proud il.an it loes t.. be generous.—Ram's Horn. Subscribe for the PATRIOT.
Object Description
Title | The Greensboro patriot [August 1, 1894] |
Date | 1894-08-01 |
Subject headings | Greensboro (N.C.)--Newspapers |
Topics | Context |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The August 1, 1894, issue of The Greensboro Patriot, a newspaper published in Greensboro, N.C. by W.M. Barber & Co.. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : W.M. Barber & Co. |
Language | eng |
Contributing institution | UNCG University Libraries |
Newspaper name | The Greensboro Patriot |
Rights statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Additional rights information | NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material. |
Object ID | patriot-1894-08-01 |
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 | 871565678 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
PATRIOT«)
VOL. (I!). GREENSBORO, X. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, l894.
SHAW A: SCALES,
, \A/~
A SUMMER MORNING.
B Ml-.
APP,
ITS AT LAW
r
:,• Wakefield.
v
'- ... and ! Iiroal.
DSON.
N'. V.
WYCHS,
1%
< . HACKETT,
V... .Decorations
> .-
I.-, cn.I
..ill.
' i . i ',
LIMES!
1 ON 0
iiioameoial Stock.
■
■
■.
■
■
■
... V 1 1 1
■■ ■ i .
• IWIIIIl)
N
. I I ■ ■ ;
THE WRECK.
: the other
t has I
ermen of the place often sp< ak at
■ ■ li an ■ .;;.- n
■ ■ ■ oe to lei
particulars.
I was
■ LSI
wrs after it. You |ahonta that madman, the brigadier.
' .■■-..tiiic-rs aren't rich, and But no one laughs now. A great
a cap costs. Well, it seems th I tumult on the bridge. The" fog
our man, lifting his bead, saw right prevents their seeing one another, j
him through the fog a
scudding along under
ard the Lavezzi isla
This ship went very fast, so faat
that be had hardly time for a g
look. Everything leade to the be-that
it n :- the Semillante,
half hour Inter the ship,
herd r.f • , heard—Why.
comes the shepherd himself
He will tell you. Bonjour, Palom-bo.
i oro' uan . th; self. Have
ir."
I man, whom J
■ • prowling around
our lir.-. and whom I had taki n foi
to 1 did not
know t!.;,i there was .-, shepherd on
; the island, approaching us timidly.
He va- an old leper, three-quarters
■'■ idiot and a prej to I know not
icorbutic evil, which
9 horrible to belli I,
- i « " Wi re they. Thi y I >.-
plained to him at length what we
iut Then, lifting
I il lips with his ii;.
the old man said that on the
leetion, about noon, he heard
f im his hut a frightful crash on
the island was
■ er he could not
It was not until
■ bat '-a openinj
door lie had seen the beach covered
with driftwood and corpse-.
thereby the waves. Insane with
'''•' we did not n led to bis boat to go
day through Mare!;. The wind to Bonifacio for help.
much.
; lal down, and the
eaptain w< nt or, with his store.
Vi -. in msii r, r was this poor
How who came to warn us.
il. was crazy with fright, and evei
The sailors go and come, groping
along frightened. The helm is gone.
It is impossible to guide the ship.
The Semillante, adrift. Hies before
the wind. It is at this moment
that the douanier sees her pass.
I: is half after II. Just ahead
they hear, like the roar of cannon,
breakers! The breakers! it is
finished. There is no hope. They
iri going straight on the rocks.
II. • captain goes down to his cabin.
us up in a moment to take
his place on the bridge in his full I without doubt been an excellent
He wishes to meet death thing and a mark of civilization
Tiie Credit System and Panics
Financial crises are the sinister
concomitants of the vaat expansion
of business which has been the re-sult
of the development of credit.
If all transactions were settled in
cash as soon as made their would
be no crises. The industrial pro
gress of the late century has, how-ever,
been ehiellvduc to the Growth
of credit, to the facilities which
have been extended to those who
endeavor to grow rich by running
into debt. And the development
of tho confidence of mankind in
each other and in the future has
NO. 8i.
A Pleasant Call. T, ,. „
— ANIMAL EXTRACTS
Some three months ago, as we
were on our way to Valley ( ity in
PreFa« |