Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / Nov. 4, 1908, edition 1 / Page 2
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iHE TKTN-CITT DULY SlnSXC TCSSTOX-SJLEM, NORTH C1R0LIN3. THE NUMBER OF IS TRAMPS GROWING "OLD FAITHFUL1 FETiRED. LARGER? iArrry Hore That Sa erv.c in Mary Campa grit l Gv Life oi j Ease. I Ni:V YORK. Nov. 4 Old Fai'h f :l ' Hi u, famous artillery hois in the tinted States an.ij, an anfui.il LUh baj the distinction of pulling 'he matting gun of th Niutii Cniied States infant rv to the top of a hi!! overlooking tVkm when the allies stormed the t-it y during the Boxer notifies, who went ihroug h thaeuic . aign in Cuba as an artillery horie ,jot tne Yale battery, &nd aier erv Hi The Charlotte .es Inquired Mine . I......- .iv ... iKn ttt.t rrulun u,..e - ' u ,, , ,h,, urouM . tu wtnt through lh cam u aisauiRrinK. A g-ntletuau of trie , . ' T -! j.. steimed into The Sentinel . - i- ,1... ., .,r.. uHil Ultia vL : a wa. a" -- - " ,,, 1,1, il- ;.. nr.nlii.l r. ., :, ,ro ,r.,e. j ' , , . iii ' " T . ... t r,j jt-jruin II iu ;iiui'i.i. naa imirui i. .pi.t nitliripv furii it ,1 il t:i! very I '- . - " I pomiM ! tile serne to a ih- .n , . ., .,,... lease H the Philippines. There ij not i He sail that there is setn r.'l: mjiii'1-. '. , n- -.iii '. ? . i an nffiow or a soli her who till .y--H ! I ill IV lit 111 tit Ul m.-.v... jmile an. I ian sehe :l;e most suhtl. i ronlem in calculus. The tramp who win th. r or iml lets maud that il wa not and t' iiiimiier uf ttatnts is tm reasing e poet cited a tuiul time who ill- not know a'tmit '0!d Faithful." alias "Peeking" alias "Putnam." I'tider ihettrms of l is retireti:ent he is to he retained in tfle rare nf the rnitinil for the rest paid a visit to 1 lie j-enur. i i .. . ... i I... n'.i bii.i ill' rf' l)J liaii:. a-. c-.-i. i;f . ...... ,, h t nl.l k.ns for j worn in in" tietu aiiniery tu ie u-i-i i.l soxl COlt.lilklll. e iinil Ferritin, who wai In 1,iert r if his loiiiixisii ploves. liis verse was .reitv KIR.'. He "eIm toM of how lie went around 1'iiimtr. lor ;iv iiioniii-i hm eon'tnuml ;';:,!,;,;,:, va,e ini,t,.y w.u, w; I.. I. I.... 1, . in in un.l iml 11- in"' ' Silp:.lll e'".! Hi- nil.". to the read. The tramp said U.ah most pennle had ait idea that all trau iis who Uav eltil uro:iit(l wer coarse, tmz'.i fel lows. bill. Ihai tliev would '.): bilt pr; ed to learn tlii't iiukI uf them rome fioin i:ood fair. ilit b and that l fcreal many of them had lolh'Re editi stion:.. f the hattery witn wfiiel! has i!i;iiov. CROUP tiUICKLY CURED. Don't Let the Child Choke to Death While Waiting for the Doctor. The life of many a dear one lias heen nacriflred hecatt-ie the right rem edy w:ui not at hand. j'ay close attention to the child ho U feverish, thirsty, and occasion ally counts dryly mid Blitllly. This Is the tir.it ataso ot croup, and In stant treatment :diould he given. Hyonienl, the miraculous, antlccit tb di-y air treatment, will cure craup In either the first or second stasia. Kaslly Inhaled, even when the breath ItiK Is Irregular, it reitchea mote promptly than any other remedy the terrible InflameJ memhrane of the; windpipe. Its Hooihtnf balsams act Iminedlately. the Inllammatlon Is al layed, and the swelling reduced. "Not Ions auo our little hoy, Wal ter, awoke In th night with a bad attack of croup, so that ho experienc ed greif difficulty In breathing. We allowed him to Inhale Hyotuel, and he ininitdlaielv benaii to breafhe eatiier, and In half an hour waa fast asleep. Our children, helnj? Btibjoct to croup, we feel cafe with Hyomel In the house, and ! am ttlad to speak a good word for the remedy that will rob croup of Ita terrors." Hcv. Geo. Sis noil. Pastor of M. E. Church, South l.ottdonherryl Vt. Hyomel (pronounced lliKh-o-me) la the (lnickest actlnn and most sensible remedy ever discovered for all dia cn?ea of the nose, throat, and luniti. It Is gunrauieed by 0. V. O'Hanlon to (tire catarrh, couj-hs, colds, asthma, bronchitis and croup, or money back. A complete outfit, including a neat hard rubber pocket inhaler, costs only $1.00. An extra bottle of Hyomel, If afterwards needed, cost but 30 cents. General Weston. conmmioVr-in chief in the i'hiloppin s, lias done likewise and now the SecritH'y of Wur has added his O. K. to !hi order. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. SENATOR ALDRICH WILL RETIRE. After Present Term Expiree Will Not Again Go To Senate. PROVIPKNCK. TL I.. Nov. 4. Ev flovernor (leorRe H. Titer, at a Re publican rally, told the nssembla that Senator Nelson W. Aldrich had told him that he would not analn be a candidate for election to the Vnlled SUUeg Senate. This statement, (!ov etnor I'ttvr Bald, was made to him j'.tst after the general assembly had releeted Aldrich four years ago. Sen ator Aldrleh at that time WHnted call both branches of the, legislature together in grand committee arid make announcement of that fact, hut was dissuaded hv Governor Utter himself. A Wonderful Loop. Charlotte Observer. Mr. .1. Norntent. Powell, general counsel of the Carolina, Cllnchtleld At Ohio road, tells the Spartanburg Her ald a story that would seem Incredible to those not familiar with the great loop on that road. On his trt;i the first time over the road, in a regular passenger, train, he sat on the rear platform. Suddenly his hat blow off. The conductor, against his protest, stopped the train and sent a flagman back for the hat. To tho surprise of Mr. Powell tho conductor pulled tho cord and started the train. "You surely are not going to leave your tlagmnn!'' exclaimed Mr. Pow ell. "Oh, yes!'1 replied the conductor. "He will overtake us." The train was soon going at thirty tnilea an hour, but in twenty minutes stopped and the flngmnn got aboard lie liu.l walked down a steep path uliottt six hundred feet and not aboard The train he had left nine ti llis back. and. as the conductor j: tomisi.d, h id overtaken the train and waited fully ten jfiinutes for it besides. v People who have observed this re markable loop can easily believe Mr. Powell's story. At the point where lie lost his hat one can toas a rock to the track below, yet It Is nine miles .around the loop: The Caroliiri, Clinchlielri & Ohio discounts the Western Nortn Carolina on loops and tunnels. Captain Yancey Carter ran for the Georgia governorship on the Hearst tick't. The campaign expenditures In his behalf totaled $l,f.iM. and he got 12.112 votes. Out of every Vni recruits In liosnia. sixty two have flattened skulls, the outcome, upparently, of the very tight dressing of the baby's head In Its first month of life. The Fins evidently have nut found woman suffrage a failure. Nineteen women weiy elected to their first e.ar liaaient. Now twenty-five have just been ele: ted. Hans Knusden, a Danish engineer, has Invented an apparatus for type writing messages by wireless teleg raphy. Ey his device a message tali ped (nit on a form at one place is transmitted to another Trom a typo writer at a place many miles away, and is written directly on the paiier. Arkansas claims to have the largest l'aih orchard in the world and l.UDO in n and ;!U0 teams are harvesting the crop. The orchard is in Sevier coun ty mid has 20(1,(1(10 trees..' It covers 2.SUU acres and 2,00il tree are bear ing. Five hundred freight cars will be used to haul the crop to the mar ket. .. .Miss Florence Haywood, a leader in the litearary circle of St. Louis, once told a s:ory to the late Hr-?t Harto which hel iked so well ho asked her permission to write It. She te ftised, wrote it. herself in two days, and captured second prize in a i .Hi test of 1,P)H participants conducted by tho Sunset Magazine, the San Friticls co periodical. .Miss Gladys Goodrich Is a member of the Historical Congress to celebrate the hundredth anniversary nf the de fense of Saragossa, Spain, against the armies of Napoleon. She is the only woman in the American delegation, and with the other members, has been shown much honor by the Spanish au thorities. Prince Kit el Frederick, the Kaiser's second son, has been giown:-; stoat in the last two years, ami in order to re duce he has undertake!-! a novel cure, of which ho has just flni-hed the first stage. For seve-tl weeks he has been living the life of a common farm hand at his minimer residence," Ingen helm Casale, near Cliarlotlenburg, w here from morning to night he Is en- orged in the hardest iihysi i;l work, Rev. Dr. Hiram Hitri,haii, who cctilly died at Johns Hopkins Hospital. in Halt (more, at the the ane of 8(1 years, had done a great work In tie missionary Held. He was graduated from Yale In 1S3.'?, and began his work In Honolulu, afterward going to Gil bert Island. He translated tho Bible into the native language-, which he re duced to writing, making a complete dictionary. The labor involved in all this was enormous, and whe n the pro duct thereof was lost by a careless Englishman, Dr. lMughum began his task over again, and it required ten years to complete it. For fortv years he had been foremost missionary in the Micronealan Islands, where he was greatly beloved. COLISEUM SKATING RINK 13 OPEN Skating Monday and Friday Nights f-rom i;m until irj;O0 o clock. bkatinK hvery Saturday Afternoon from .2:00 to rr.Oi) o'clock. Cars Leave square at 1:0(1 o'clock. COLISEUM SKATING RINK CO. This Soldier "Got His'n" For Eating Green Apples. New York Dispatch, Six months' imprisonment, dishon orable discharge, and Iobs of pay for eating green apples contrary to or ders was the sentence pronounced wpon Bernard Letser, a private in Battery D, Third Field Artillery. Sen tence of the court martial wa3 passed at teh armory building. Tlio charge on which he was convicted was "con duct to the prejudice of good order and military discipline In violation of tho sixty-second article of war." The court martial found that Leis r had been given lawful and explicit or ders to throw away the green apples he held in his hand. Furthermore that ho did not throw them away. H-. threw away the cores. The green ap ples prejudiced the good order and discipline, They may have prejudiced his digestive apparatus, fi but depon ent sayeth not. After gravely considering the mat ter the-, court martial decided to le him off easy, only dishonorably dis charging him, forfeiting all pay and al lowances for six months, and being Imprisoned at Fort Meyer, Vu., tor sis months at hard labor. Br-aat.-' - .. -u. 9mnr; 'J 1 S T 7 EVERYBODY INVITED ! w A P S 190 is 0 Thursday, Nov. 5th, marks the 31st epoch our beginning business in this city. We wish to ebrate this occasion by giving our friends and c tomers the' opportunity of buying anything in immense stock at a big reduction in price. We request all our friends to honor us with th rxr-rwcirt ro nn -fli i c nppoolnn nnrl fair rrffr J with us between the hours of 10 o clock a. m. and o'clock p. m. whether ,you wish to buy or not. 15 Per Cent Off i ... On our large stock of hammered brass, hamm ed copper, cut glass, odd pieces in hand painted chi we will take of f 1 5 per cent on this day. Thi what this means to you. See prices below. Brass Jars 2.00 Brass Jars, this sale $1.70 3.00 Brass Jars, this sale .. .. $2.75 4.03 Braes Jars, this sale $3.40 5.03 Brass Jarr, this sale $4.25 8.03 Brass Jars, this sale . . '. $6.80 $2.75 Brass Fern Dishes, this sale $2.34 3.00 Brass Fern Dishes, this rate .'' '., ,;.... $2.55 8.03 Brass Fern Dishes, this sale $6.80 Hand Painted China Not an imitation, but the genuine 2.00 Vase, this sale .... , $1-70 3,00 Vase, this sale $2.55 7.00 Vase, this sale '. $5.95 10.03 Vase, this sale $8.50 All Fine Green Jardinieres from 30 to 50 Per Cent Off Think of a fine Jardiniere worth regular 6.03, on this sale 4.03, on this sale 2.75, on this sale $3.75 2.50 1.75 Chocolate Set, Crown Go Handles, Haviland 15.00, at this sale .. .. 3.00 Cake Plate, this sale . 5.75 Chop Dish, this cale 7.25 (Royal China) Cake Plate.. .. 12.50 Set Hand Painted Cups and Saucers.. 10.00 Set Hand Painted Cups and Saucers 8.75 Punch Bowl, hand painted 4.50 Salad Bowl.. Many other pieces in odd China not mentioned. 13.50 Chamber Set, 12 pieces, this sale s 12.00 Chamber Set, 12 pieces this rale 15.03 Chamber Set, 12 pieces, this sale Our beautiful line of Electric Portables will be off 10 per which makes these goods cheaper than ever told on this mat All other lines, not mentioned, including our immense displa. open stock Dinner Ware, will be 10 per cent off. We have just received an import order of White China with gold hand "old style" and perfectly lovely. Also a lot of Odd Pitchers, beautifully decorated. Bij shipment of Jardineers, rang ing in price from 25c up. All of these, attractive goods will go into our big Sale Thursday our 31st anniversary. S EIHD T Everybody coi and make this, o 31st year, a hap and joyous orj and lastly, a pr itable one to yd JOSS TALKS OF PITCHERS. Cleveland Twirler Tells Why "Mixers" Get Away With Game3. How many times does one hear the expression In regard to certain pitch ers: "I can't for the life of mo see how he gets away with hia games? Why, he hasn't a thing." To a good many fans, and especially those who are not close students of the, game, the pitcher who Is not blessed with tremendous speed and a fatit-breaklng curve ball is always call ed lucky whenever he wins a game. In reality the twirler who can win consistently, and who is not fortunate enough to have been endowed with the natural ability some of hia 'for tunate fel'ow-pitchers posses, is en titled to at lenst as much credit, If not W. S. Martin offers without reserve any article lu his big stork at coat to closo out business. Winter blasts, causing pneumonia, pleurisy and consumption will soon be here. Cureyour cough now, and strengthen your lungs with Foley'i lionoy and Tar. Do not risk starting the wihter with wenk lungs, when Foley's Honey and Tar will cure tin most obstinate cottfjhK and colds and preevnt serious results. Simpson Drug Co. Accident and Illness haprien to you oftener than all other things you can insure against. ' Lot the Fidelity & Casualty Co. be your hanker when you're ill or Injured. Most liberal policy ever written, and prompt payment of claims is ilys Company's particular pride. 106 W, Fourth St, Tel. 592 The Follin Co. Insurance. more, than is the other twirler. In order to accomplish the same re. suits he must have developed some thing which he can use that, will even up his effectiveness to the same stand ard of the other twirler. This is usually accomplished by three things: Control, a change of pace, and last of all, plenty of nerve. A pitcher of this class Is termed by the baseball fraternity "a mixer." Ey this is meant a pitcher who is constantly mixing them up on the batter. Not relying on tremendous speed nor a good curve ball? but one who is depnding for his success on the fact that he can pitch what the batter is not looking for. One of the greatest examples of the successful twirler of this type Is none oter tiian Clarke Griffith, who, for years, was a top-notchev. "Griff" was never accused of having enough speed to knock the init off teh catcher's hand, nor did he have a wonderful curve ball. Still, he man aged to win a handsome precentage of his games every year, simply be cause he knew how to pitch and had the nerve to hand up a slow one any time he thought he could out guess the batter with it. There are any- number of maior league pitchers who depend on this style of work to win their games and they are about, as hard to beat as any one. Instead of being called lucky they should be given credit for the won derful work they accomplish and are to be complimented for the advantage they have taken of a few things na ture has endowed them with, thus putting them on a equal footing with tlielr fellow-twlrlurs who have more natural ability. Large Plate Glass on Liberty Street Broken Someone broke the plate glass in front of the new pawn shop on Lib erty street last night, in the building where the old "Wonder" moving 'pic ture theatre at one time held forth. A gentleman was very near when (he glass broke and heard it fall and saw a man run. It is thought that the glass was broken accidentally by two men scuffling in front of the window and falling against it. Two officers watched the store last night In order to catch anyone that attempted to ef fect an entrance to the building. It is thought that the breaking of tho glass was purely accidental and that the man ran in order to avoid having to pay for the glass. itl i reins- CHRYSANTHEMUM Besides the Vantita! II' hil.it ln. tovelv fancy ar,? lielnas iii' im i i;. .;;!-. r" rents-. I 'Mi Iti'tl S'1 n. mi .i-ii'dffirh' , m'k and liulW'M n.'ff.e. : i"l!S- if,Mream.'1"t',r"N i-.,t ,, i i m- ... v f-;.Li', miu.-.' Tf,ml,le mi ,ol -,th and i!th. I" -hlZ ."Tnrr.intion f 1 Notice of n(4fr. e, iiit ' . , .1 ii folowit:? " .1. . I , "I'otne' and n" Home Mi'?r side under tli o!lf. sum and t'o.. n- t, I ,hat th0 panne , , f dissolved, am ffS; Only' two deeds were recorded at joiigintt the register of deeds' office this morn- disposed oi- mf,3nf ol ing, as follows: Mrs. Bettle F. Street, We tnK' 1 ',.,, r Pa:rf of Roxboro, to the Homo Real Estate, (customer i,a Loan and Insurance Company, lot on Cleveland avenue, consideration $21'K and Winston Development Company to Emily E. Sledge, lot on Oakland ave nue, consideration $200. . .IAS. l. coy Ai.i.nd W nd save moat'!'. Vi;i: ..lis
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 4, 1908, edition 1
2
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