Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / Sept. 1, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE TWIN CITY DAILY SENTINEL, WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAEOLINA FRIDAY E,cs .. . 110 CUS I ISM TO GO BY FAST F mm WASHINGTON". Sept. 1 The Pot office Department today begins an e pcrtmeut whicfe i regarded u on of the must Important steps yet taken by Postmaster Central Hitchcock !n bis plans to reduce the expanse ot the service and thereby pare the way mt it Is believed, for the ultimate ml option of penny postage. The plaa inaugurated today provides that the (treat er part of the second class mail mutter consisting of mana tines and periodicals, heretofore trans ported in railway mall cars, will be carried by fast freight. The publish ers are to be permitted to print on the wrapper of each copy or bundle of their Duplications, as a part of the address, Instructions as to the date on which delivery is to be mail. In ac cordance with this arrangement post masters have been directed to carry out the Instructions with respect to the delivery of fust mail freinht. Jlr. Hitchcock believes that the new ss tern will be found satisfactory to the publishers and the public alike, while the expense to the government be far less than heretofore. BEULAH BINFORD. will TOBACCO WILL SELL HIGH. Good FOre- Th Crop Is Going to Bring Prices This Fall This Is a flont Conclusion. it Is given up by rearly everybody now that tobacco Is bound to bring a good price llila year. The Indira tious all point that way. The Senti nel copies the following Items from this week's iBSUe of the Keidsvlllc He view bearing on the subject. Mr. W. T. Barber, who has leen buying tobacco for the Impel inl Com puny at Lake t'lly, S. t'., returned home Saturday and will go to Smith field this week, where he will lie sta tioned for the next two or throe months. Mr. 'Harder says the crop in South Carolina is short this year and alraady three-fourths of It lias been marketed. Me says the weed is sell ing very high, averaging around flf teen cents. Our countryman, Mr. Henry W. Me Qshec, who runs a warehouse at Nich ols, B. (!., has been making some record-breaking sales tli It season. One day recently he sold 2.1,000 pounds at an average above 15,000 pounds atmf he sold 45.0(10 pounds at an average of $16.50. The tobacco was" nearly all "in the rough" ungraded strlpied leaves. These are good prices and show that tobacco Is In good demand and will doubtless sell at satisfactory prices all this season. Dow a In a little virslisia town, whose name is important through having tacked to Us conclusion tnn impressive svitfix of "murt bouie." the world-old tangi of misdirected passion is beiu-; enacted for the thousandth time. In this forgotten hamlet there is a meeting of the e tremes. The bay wou jostles the big motor tar.-. The spe-dy life, the simple life, and th double life are I mingled together. The sob siuad is ou hand, making the most of the van-col ored scene, and splashing with gor geous abandon the hues of the iraag inarv over the drab setting of the dull an. I common place. There is Interest every wui. It han;;s tentatively at the heels of tae youthful Bettie. It hastens with keen Intent upon the tit-unbroken father. It gloats reniia isoently over the memory of the mid night ride, the firing of the gun, and the tragic death of the wife iu the lonely wood far from any witness, un less the stars took cogniiance and the filmy eyes of the owl made note. Hut over and above all these, it centres in lieulah. Who or what is Ileulah llinford? If she were greater, she would be better understood. If she were more palpa bly depraved, a Quick classification would soon rob her of her unlisted at tractions. Hut she is neither the one nor the pther. Vet, being neither the one nor the other, the immensity of her power for evil seems to have been enhanced, rather than diminished. In the whole whirl of evil she has been the unmoved and impassive centre around which all has revolved, herself the point (jf negation, incapable of .1 praiseworthy impulse toward good, equally incapable of an overt act of crime, a chip of a girl, viewing the uni verse from her so limited vantage point, her system of life so meager and yet to her so real, her heroes so taw dry; her heroines so pitifully small. And with all that, herself so complute Iv satisfied with herself, pasting pic tures of cheap celebrities in her little album, and all" untouched by the gloom of an irrevocable and Irreparable past. cogitating the possibilities of her lit tle future! Nature bait her moods, sublime as well as perverse. She makes a wo tuau with a soul so great that, touch ed by the radiance of Iter countenance, men aspire only to virtuous deeds. She molds a Cleopatra, and fills the pan ther creature with the desire of the desert and the longing of the East, and a warrior cries, "Let Home in Tiber melt and the wide rangu of empire fall'" And in an off day she creates a woman without a soul. Washington Host. Toledo lllaile. Mr. Ghotit All my money cannot give ma health, doctor. Doctor No, perhaps not; but It gives your physi cian great confidence. Lawsonville Man Invents Machine. Valuable A man near lawsonville has Invent ed a machine that must have a com mercial vulue rendering it Indispensa ble In hundreds of households. It is a contrivance which utilizes the energy of a cow's tail. The cow Is tied near the house, and from her con stantly wagging caudal appendage runs a cord which Is attached to a crank and pulley, which In.turn are connected with a fly brush over the dining table, a patent churn and the baby cradle. Verily, science hath ac compllsshed wonderful things. Patent applied for. Danbury Reporter HTaiE OF ML WE! We Have Just Received a ig Shipment Keystone Gray Enamel Ware? Consisting of S-: t .V 8-quart pudding! pans, 6-quarl' dairy pans, No. 30 wash bowls, bread pan! assorted, 6 quart bake pansi 4-quart dejp bake pans, 5-quart preserving kettles, p-quart lipped sauce pans, 5-quirt seamlessiowls. 2-quart Windsor dipper! 2-quart Covered, sauce pans, No. 10 cuspwors. h Every piece oi this warn sells at 25 to ou cents. sale We are going to put to entire lot on SATURDAY, SECT. 2D, AT IOC. FORSYTH HARDWARE GO. 424 Trade St. The Quality Store. ItitititttA 5HteSs ix j-rrt J1 m . i wirm is Happy, Happy, UseTIZ A Marvel For Sore Fact Acta Right Off, Vt Uain Sort Feet?' fitvtr Af Chin 9 TIZ g feet, swot tneTllng feet, flood bye feet leu feet, svwkty fefj tired feet. V Cood bye dptns. Ions and raw krs You ve nevef tri before for yoitff f from anything It acts at unM remarkably freifli TIZ is not a B other foot renietl: TIZ draws out lions whUh brii feet, and is the TIZ cleans out e (he leet your f You'll never Hasp again or draw up your face in pain, and you'll forget all about your corns, bunions and callous. If you don t find all thia true after trying a box of TIZ, you can get your money right bnclt. TIZ Is for sale at all druggists at cents per box, or It will be gent you direct If you wish from Walter Lu- 'her Itodge & Co... Chicago, III. es. You'll feel like a new person." , Houses and feun- anything like TIZ t. It la different before sold. nd makes the ftet nd Bore-proof, der. Powders and cok up the pores. I poisonous exuda- on soreness of the remedy that does. ry pore and glorifies HOW RAIDS BENEFITTED S III ST1KES HOT: A most wonderful Improvement has taken place in crop conditions during the lust few days, as a result of the copious showers of rain with which every section of the county is being blessed. The most remurkable come- out is uotl'eable in the tobacco crop. I.ate toliacco, which many people be lieved would hardly be worth the sav ing, is growing with leaps and bounds, and will ripen in good time before the frosts. Forward tobacco is look ing splendid, and cutting and curing will be In order now within a few days. Many farmers have already cured primings, and report the color good. Mr. Hayes Ougrfns, of Danbury, finish ed a barn of primings this week, and says it is a beauty. The corn crop Is excellent, with a greatly increased acreage over last year. Much land Intended for tobacco was planted in corn, on account of drouth conditions, and the consequence will be far and away the biggest crop of corn ever. The rains are making it fast. If the farmers, whether on account! of short crop of tobacco, or from other causes, may realise high prices for their tobacco, say an increase of 25 per cent, then taking Into consi deration the facts of a big corn crop, and general economy set in practice by the drought, they will be as a rule In better condition than they were last, year. After these rains are over, lands may be broken for the fall grain sow ing. The acreage in wheat this fall probably will be, and should be, larg er than ever before. Kut for the splen did wneat crop this summer, the far mers would have certainly been se riously hurt. A full grain yield for both man and beast t.aved the coun- ry. Danbury Reporter. ' , 1 BLOOD MEDICINE OR YOUNG OR OLD The majority of humarlailmjents are caused by impure blood because weak, polluted blool deprives the system of its necessary strength and disease-resistinglfowers. Children do not develop per fectly, nor are they strong aita robust unless the blood is pure anc stronc. while old people are Iftlicted with Rheumatism and othei chronic troubles becatwn (aweened circulation. S. S. S. cures every ailment which comes from i?nWor diseased blood, it tones up and reeulates every portion of the systeind creates an. abundant supply ol nourishlnz Drooerties with which t httild up the blood. S. S. S. is made entirely of healing, strengtheniirc roots, herbs and barks, abso lutely free from harmful drugs and nNjeralv and is therefore the purest and safest blood medicine For yonc Or..old. S.S.S. cures Rheumatism. Catarrh. Sores and Ulcers,. 3m Diseases, Scrofula, Malaria, Blood Poison, and all other blood disoiScs. ' Book on the blood and any medical advice free. A. A. is sold at drug stores. . . THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, ATLANTA,CA. The Fairview Furniture Company WILL OPEN FOR BUSINESSS Tomorrow, Saturday, September 2 Complete Line of Furniture and House Furnishing t Goods A CORDIAL INVITATION Fairview and Winston-Sale; see our new stock and inspect lis i Y auric; : II From the Most Medium In Pried to the Best Grade Furniture extended to the people a n general to visit our stori oods. CASH or Salesmen T. A. Stanley and C. E. Huffman. Fairview Furniture Company A. G. LOGAN & CO., Props. Cor. 14th and Liberty Sts., opposite Fairview Drug Co, UH-IWIIIC OH . i I.; FIGHT II COUHTHOUSE YARD ELKIN, Sept. 1. Track laying on he E. & A. Railroad it DrotrresglnK sat isfactorily. It is expected by tonight o have the track laid to or Derhana be- yonr Kikin Crelc. Inst north of the Kl kin shoe factory. It Is understood that Mr. Mills will send an engine hern for construction purposes within a vevV or t wo. I'artloB returning from Surrv court n session at Dobson this week reuort i nf?m in me court-Douse yard Tuesday umween a young man. wnoae name was not learned, and a man named Moore. While these two were enirn?ri In a tussle the father of the young man niBhed upon Moore and stabbed him twice m the back with a knife. Miss KfB Couch, of the Zion bpp tion of Yadkin county, left this w.k for New Garden. Guilford county wW sne win teacn again this year. She was accompanied aa far us flreensboro iy ner brother, lister, who was on his return to Baltimore, where he has been mending a dental college. Mr. 'onch will finish his course this year and be ready for the practice of his nrr.f.. slon. TWO BIGGEST BATTLESHIPS. Uncle Sam's Next Pair May Be of 28, 500 Tens, With 14.lnch Gunt. WASHINGTON, Sept. 1. The two new battleships authorized by the last Naval act probably will be of 28,500 tons displacement, the biggest war vessels in the world. The largest ships so far designed for the Ameri can navy are the New York and Texas, with 8 displacement of 2?,000 tons each, and it became known only today that the Navy Department con templated exceeding their size. The new ships will have heavier armor than has ever before been put on a battleship, which accounts for their Increased displacement. The arma ment of the new vessels will be the same as the New York and Texas, with a main battery of ten 14-inch guns. With this approach to a 30,000-ton battleship, the naval ordnance experts are considering the question of a 16 Inch gun. It will require a 35,000 ton battleship to withstand the terrific re- coll from a main battery of ten 1G Inch guns. The Paramount Ittue, . The re-establishment of comnetitlnn is the paramount Issue of present day There Is a broader fight that in. eludes everything. This great fight is one for the more equitable distribu tion of wealth. In the opinion of the noonle erally organised wealth takes more than Its proper share. To remedv this railroad regulation and the rila. solution, or at least the strict regula- uun, oi irusis are required. Senator Cummins, of Iowa. Caused Bv Klstlna. . "I think It' absurd to say kissing Is dangerous," gushed Miss Lllytop. "What possible disease could be spread by the simple act?" "Marriage, madam," grunted Clrumpy. - Do You Blame Her? when a man has told a woman he would die for her, and then refuses to do a simple thing like taking her to a picnic two days In succession do yon blame the woman for being disappoint ed In life? That is what happened in tne life or the late ftu-g. Fannie Bo gart, of New York. Her husband was an ardent, lover, but two weeks after their wedding he refused to take her to a picnic, saying ,he had taken her to one the day before, and two picnics In succession were more than he could stand. Then Mrs. Itogart realized that life was no picnic, drank carbolic acid, and two hours later her husband wan picking out her cofiln. RETURNS TO CLAIM ESTATE. Man Supposed Dead Twenty Years - Proves Identity. MILLVILLE, N J., Sept. 1. Like one arising from the dead, George Haw kins, who was reported drowned in the Chesapeake Bay nearly a score of years ago, appeared before Benjamin B. Weatherly, president of the Mill vllle Trust Company, and demanded a share of the estate left by his mother, Mrs. Hester Hawkins, who died here two years ago. President Weathcrby scarcely be lieved that this was really the man who had so long been mourned as dead, but Hawkins was identified by residents who knew him well and who state that he appears no older now than when he so strangely dis appeared. "A BOX OF MONKEYS" AT KERNERSVILLE SATURDAY. K KR N BKS VILLE, Sept. 1. A farce, entitled "A Box M Monkeys," will b presented by local talent in the Audi torium on Saturday evening, Septem ber 2nd, at 8 o'clock. Between acts will be given special numbers, such as songs, pantomimes, etc. The cast of characters in the play Includes the fol lowing: Missee Daisy 'Leak. Mollie Lin- ville, Dore Korner, Messrs. Clay Ring ana James league. The effort on Sat urday evening is under the auspices of the Philathea class of the M. E. church IEN THND DOLLARS TD Winston-Salem friends of Greensboro Female College will rejoice with the management of that splendid institu tion in the very gratifying announce ment that Mr. J. W. Fitzgerald, a wealthy farmer of Linwood, Davidson county.has agreed to donate to the trus tees of the college the sum of HI,ihmi for the purjifise of erecting a dormi tory, on the condition that other friends of the college contribute $1.1, 000. Mr. Fitzgerald Is a farmer. He is well known in Davidson county and is one of its best citizens. He is a loyal member of the Methodist Church and haa been a philanthropist in a quiet way for many years. Through his generosity chiefly a splendid church was built near his home, and many times the benevolences and in stitutions of his church have received his gifts. He has long been a friend of Greensboro Female College and edu cated some of his nleoes there. A few years ago; when an effort was made to secure an endowment of $100,000 Mr. Fitzgerald contributed $1,000. Believ ing that he can make no better Invest ment than to invest in an institution which has for its object the develop ment of Christian womanhood, he now comes forward wit la. thia I gift of $:"."". WOMAN PAST 35 NOT n;..inr. nf Cambridge ' Decide the Problem. , -I- M .aa Sfllt I 1 1 li jt.lMl Of 111 IU II MM 'I I , ... '.imnJ man 1 ' " ., ,,, ' ! i' iam!.riJpe Toil ,, Chiisiian .ori it, , im.L! liisciission t.ie iirrt'tOB 'YCI .W! have vol.-.. .i . ,J -, I. . 'I IL ' UMW I (1i bUOJi HI '"' " " -J They Found Each 0J :l "".' :.. ,..1,H M' Wllil II --if. n " ' . (toil her. Hiev '-'. ... horl same t.'A : ; iyt inl They h:i- ,"',."rli'vof iio iiln1 '' ' exist i;' ' r.,B0Glal Perrecxr..... The 1':' ' ot' .. . .. , .-, i - r w III in sit linn is ii Meal '" Before You Reach the Limit Of physical endurance and while vour condition is still curable, take Folev Kidney Pills. Their quick action and .posflve result will delight you.i For 'backache, nervousness. heuraatism, .and all kidney, bladder and urinary I troubles. E. W. O'Hanlon. i IDEAL PHOTOGRAPH COMPANY Wnston-Salcmrjyorth Carolina. pbj The best place in town to get ei&rged portraits, pean Pa'n biQet to pillow tops, post cards, souvenirositards, peony photos, t 0( tographs,7 dining room pictures, picture frames, kIsiss, kodaK other art goods. We develop ktfdak fitms finish kodak picture colorscopy photographs and Aake out-odoor photos, sue groups, etc. uur prices are tne lowest. Ai:woni yuai - ... I- i . , . i linoQ jcc ua wnen you neea anyming in me aoovc mucu 'ti4ti '
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1911, edition 1
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