Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / April 2, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. . . DEVOTED TO tes mmii ASJ BETSLOrmi OF TTtrrVTrTsjrr pad rvT tit a si WO TlrottQt larUnr estera Carolina. THE SENTINEL Has No Superior as an Adver- tlslng Medium. J. O. FOY, Ed i tar and Proprietor. A NORTH CAROLINA DEMOCRATIC FAMILY NEWSPAPER FOR NORTH CAROLINA PEOPLE, IN THE STATE AND OUT OF IT SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, SI.BO PER YEAR Vol. xxxt. No. 2o WINSTON-SALEM, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1891. Price 5 Cents CHARLES S. JOHX90N K. E. JONES. JOHNSON & JONES, SUCCESSORS TO FRANCJS B. KEMP & CO. . Real Estate Exchange, 212 MAIN ST., FIRST DOOR BELOW HOTEL FOUNTAIxNT. Business, Residence and suburban property bought, sold and exchanged. Rents Collected. Carriage at door to show customers property. -:-A FIRSTrCLASS -:- BARBER SHOP. SAM'IiBBBWSB Xrop'r- Gentlemen who wish First-class Shave a a white man's shop should call on him. everything neat and clean J. Ij. LUDLOW, O. BL, S.f Member K. C. Board Health Clvtl and Sanitary Engineer, WIM8TON. n. c. B B. GLIXIT. CLMiEKT MA2f LT Glenn & Manly, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, WIK8TON, - - - - N. C. Particular at eneion paid to settling estates and advising executors and administrators' Will practice regular y in the counties of Fonyth, Rockingham, Stokes. Surry and Wiles and in the Mnited State Courts. E. A. GRIFFlTHr Attorney at Law and Notary Public. (Office above Thompson's drug store.) WILL PRACTICE in Forsyth and ad joining counties. Special attention given te the settlement of estates. All legal papers carefully drawn, titles investigated and abstracts furnished- Loans negotiated en good security. Special attention given t the collection of accounts and returns made promptly. jao2i. . WANT EEfj'ERJM 0 N T H.T One Hundred Watches to . Repair. "Every fiftieth Dame on ray watch repair record I will give one stem wind and set nic watch, warranted a good time keeper. All watches, decks and jewelry promptly and neatly repaired and warranted. A r good assortment of watch chains and spectacles for sale. T. J. BAXTER, .In Singer Office. R0MI0KE& SOUTHERN H.R. OTXXwCS TABLE. Northbound. Daily except Sunday. . I So. 1 No. 8. L.v. W iostun-oaiem, 7.00 a m 4.00 p m Ar. Oifliurn. T.09 it m 4.10 p an Ar. WalkertowD, 7.23 am 4 21 p in Ar. Dennis. 7.30 a m 4.35 p in Ar. Walnut Cove. 7.S5 a m p in Ar. Water rank 81. ling 8.06 am (lip m Ar. Dan Hirer Siding . Ar. Latlforu 8.15 a m 8.30 p m Ar. Madison, 8.40 am 5 58 in Southbound, Daily except Sunday. Lv. Madison, , Ar. Lad ford Ar. Dan River Siding Ar. I alcr Tank biding Ar. Walnut Cove, Ar. Dennis. Ar. Waikertown, Ar. Ogburn, Ar. VV inston-Salem, I No,S. 8.50 a m I 9.15 a m J "." 10.45 a ra 10 00 a m lo.io a m 10.25 am 10.36 a ra No. 4. 6.10 p m 6. '5 III .45 p m 7.10 p m 7.25 p ra 7.35 p in 7.50 p m 8.00 p m Nos. i and 3 connect wi h Bouthloiuid and Vox. 8 ni 4 witb northbound train on the C. f.A V. V. K. U. Ly. Gieensboro Ar. WinstonSaiem, Lt. Winston-Salem, Rural Hall, Ar, Elkin, Wilkes boro 645am 8 31 am 1230 pm 354 p m 5 15p m 0 45 p m Daily except Sunday 9001m 1012 am IN) pm 254 pm 330pm 3 55 p m 510pm ill carry passengers SOUTHBOUND Lt Wilkesboro Lt. Elkin. " Rural Hall, Ar- Winston-Salem, Lt. " Ar. Kern era villa " Greensboro Mixed trains between Winston-Salem and WilKes boro bat none between Winston-Sa lem and Greensboro. ' . R. R. KPTOGERS, SupL W. T. VOGLER, The Leading OF WINSTON-SALEM, THE NEW EXCELSIOR COOK STOVE IS THE BEST ON THE 1 MARKET.. - . IcIt is not a new and untried Stove. It's used by thousands of tbe Lett people in North Carolina. " .. have sold over 500 and never had a single complaint. . I can tell you this excellent Stove as CJeap as any good article on the market. Tin roofing and guttering done promptly at low prices. I a ok handling car loads of Terra Cotta Piping lor drains and chimney flues. It makes s cheap, good chimney. Try it. , GEO. STEWART, Main Street, East of Court House." BROWNS ' PALACE DRUG-STORE The Hanes Building ! T?f EDITOR'S TABLE. - ,s : ; 7 ' The Farmers Alliance is organized in New Hampshire. to be A Rhode Island owner of an oleomargiriue factory, seized by the revenue officers, killed himself. There are sermons freshets and ice gorges nl Maine. Costly dams and valuable manufacturing mills have been destroyed. The Chicago and North Western yielded to the demands of its switch men, discharged an offensive em ployee, and averted a strike The record in the family bible shows that Joseph E. Johnston was born Febuary 3 1807, thus making him 84 years, one month and 19 day s old on the day of his death. General Sherman left a very small estate. His pay as General of the Army constituted all his income. His children decide to sell the New York residence, which is a plain house, but a valuable property. in are The grip is so alarming in Pittsburg that prayers have been offered some of the churches. Pastors down with it, churches closed, and scarcely a business house or manufacturing establishment that does not report a large per cent of employees sick. THE OLD NORTH STATE. HAPPEHTNGS WITHTW TTTTR B0KDEE8 8HJ0E OUR LAST ISSUE. Newsy Notes Carefully Clipped,. Galled and Paragraphically Packed Into a Column- The commission appointed to re-assess damage to parties along the line of the Roanoke aid Southern Railroad in that county reported to the county court in Salem, Virginia, allowing a total increase of $809. The representative of the railroad authorities wisely decide, to submit and keep put of court. The largest soap manufactur ing concern in the world has been organized at Houston. It will have a capital of $15,000,000, and proposes to establish plants to cost from $50,000 to $200, 000 in Houston, New Orleaus and other Southern cities in the cotton belt. Has the - largest stock of Jewelry, Silverware, . Clocks, CjoIu l'eus, Walking Canes, Umbrellas, &e., in fact, everything that belongs to a Jewelry Store. His Spectacle De partment is complete. If yon need a pair of Spectacles you would do well by calling on him before buying elsewhere, as he is the only -: RATA OPTICIAN In The Place. He is- also prepared to do all kinds of Engraving', fancvand nlain. and all styles of Monograms. He does all kinds of fine ' , ' '". ' R.32iA.iRisra and all work warranted. Offers every thing in :the drug line at 'vlerr prices. iTlm stock is - Iirge land" varied and the quality of oar goods cannot be surpassed, 'v. f . ; s -. V7e oRrithe finest line -ot domestic and foreign cigars ever taoirn m w ins ton. -... 7" make wholesale prices to eomtry taerchants and others .buying ta large quantities. Your friends, . BROVN: BROWN' Mortgage Sale of Lot on Broad Street and Warehouse on R. ft D. R. R. BY VIRTUE of a power contained in a certain mortgage deed recorded in book 2, page 256, Bejrmter's office Forsyth county, executed by S F Young to F E Patrick, sec ond to a mortgage from said - Young to H W Friee, which it is proposed to pay first out of the proceeds, the said H W Fries assenting, 1 will sell at the sourt house in Winston at 2 o'clock p ra, on Monday the 13th day of April, 1891, a lot on east side of Broad street 100x200 feet, being lot 867 on Salem map, to gether with a good dwelling house thereon. By virtue further of a power contained in a mortgage deed by and between the same parties recorded in book 2, page 258, 1 will sell at same time, place and manner an un divided half interest in a Warehouse 30x60 feet on B A T R R in Winston, known as Gilmer. A Young's warehouse, Ac Terms cash. CF PATRICK, Ad'mr. By Kllkk & Stabbcc. March 11 tds PHOTOGRAPHS, large siies, cheap froa February 1st to Msy 1st, . I- will make enlargements from negatives takeaV with order fur photographs at- the following re- narkahle low rtrir ' -ink i Pllxl4, $15; 14x17,! fLfiOj 16x80, t2. rr specunen oi eniargeroents call and ex am ne work at Hough's Gallery; on Main atreet, opposite Quiocy Hotel. Renembrr thisofferisonly to May .1st, and that the enlargements mtm worth . double the price I ask for them. Call and see for yourself. 8. E. HOUGH. 1 The United States mint is a money making institution, -sure enough. Between the bullion priqe and the coin value of the silver already minted under the silver act of last summer," there is , the comfortable margin of $2,095,000, which Uncle Sam complacently Transfers to his side of the account. The Monument to the memory of the late Henry W. Gracly is to be placed in the middle of Mari etta street, a principal thorough fare of Atlanta, Ga., and in the heart of the city. -The statue is heroic size, nine and a-hulf feet high, of purest American bronze. 1 he pedestal is to be of granite from the quarries of the Southern Granite Company. Birmingham, Ala., isgettingto be quite a city for conventions. The Southern Baptist Conven and the General Assembly of the Southern Presbylerian Church will meet there in May. The Montgomery Advertiser says the people of Birmingham "are gen erous and hospitable and the visitors will have a most ?gree- ble and pleasent sojourn in : this most wonderful of all places." - We see it stated on apparently Rober authority- that the old town of Hillsboro has raised the money for a $150,000 cotton lactory, and that the new town of Marion has established a bank ing and industrial company with a capital of ; one million . and half dollars, $750,000 of which iatogo immediately into build mgs and manufacturing' enter prises. One has to shut his eyes Concord will establish a hospital. Morg-anton bond election April 27th. Reported 1,000 cases grip in Ral eigb. ;- . Shelby petitioning for local option election. Eastern farmers outlook not en couraging. Great demand among Morganton house-renters. Burke has 50 churches and ?7 white preachers. Rapid construction work, Char lotte, electric road. Freight car smash up, High Point and Asheboro Road. Eighth Congressional district hat 199,311 population. Strawberry shipping begins April 10th from Wilmington. H. K. Reid, elected President ReidsTille Cotton Mills. Charlotte manual training school instructs 600 children. Full blown pea blooms in the trnck fields a round Goldsboro. New 44 star flag received'for goT ernment building, Raleigh. Denied that Richmond and Dan ville shops go to Charlotte. Fine early pea prospect through out the eastern trucking regions. Shelby Aurora agitating and in terviewing on the graded school. A $25,000 company forms at Ra leigh to manufacture cotton presses. Railroad work, Jacksonville and New Berne, seems to have suspended. R. M. -Phillips becomes editor and proprietor of the Jonesboro Leader. Tryon street Methodist church, Charlotte, to be handsoaiely remodelled. Representative Morton, of New Hanover, weds Miss Eliza Ward, of Onslow. Law department, Shaw Universi ty, Raleigh, colored, graduates two students. Family of ladies embracing four generations, of Michigan, wintering at Morganton. Conservative action and cautions movement will characterize the Rail road Commission. A South Carolina capitalist pro poses establishment of a bank at Rutherfordton. Supreme Court decides legality of New Hanover county elections in favor of Democrats. Conobo is the name of the junc tion town of the Scotland Neck and Albemarle and Raleigh Railroad. A mammoth modern hotel is to be erected South of Nash-Square, near the new Union Station, Raleigh. Books opened in Bosten for sub scriptions to capital stock Norfolk, Wilmington and Charleston Rail roads. S. H. Gray Manufacturing Com pany pulp and wooden ware mills, New Berne, to be sold at auction May 12th. -. "Many Citizens" in Wilkesboro. Chronicle call on county commis sioners to refuse farther issue of liquor license. Engineers force take the field nday to lay off the lands ef Car- aleigh Mills, Raleigh, locate factory site, operatives houses, etc. Several wealthy, medical, men at the North are expected to liberally endow the Durham Trinity College Medical Department. On appeal from excessive fine in Mayor's court, a Caldwell jury ac quitted accused of a charge pleaded guilty to before the Mayor. The Carolina Inter-State Building and Loan Association of Wilming ton is organizing local branches in some of the towns f the State. Four mess halls and pavillions, handsome and substantial, size 50x100 feet, are being built on the grounds of the permanent encamp ment, Wrights ville. The Chronicle says they are put ting in some good work grading the streets at North Wilkesboro. work ing above a hundred hands, and are throwing dirt pretty lively. William S. Barnes, of Wilson, was Thursday eleeted Secretary of the State Farmers Alliance, to succeed Secretary Beddingfield, appointed liailroad Commissioner. , Managers itaieign southern expo sition decided upon special exhibit by separate building nnder. manage ment or itev. Jos. u. irice, to illus trate the progress of the negroes. - Governor Fowle offers a reward of $400 for the unknown men moon shiners, who last Friday shot and killed revenue officer Barnwell and wounded officer Brim near Mt. Airy. Edmiston and Rankin, Philadel tihia. nronose a mineral railroad be. tween certain points in Moore and1 Chatham, and a systematic develop ment of the mineral resources of that section.'. . i ; THE RACE PROBLEM. Southern White Women the Highest - Embodiment of Civilization. The adjustment of the relations of the white and colored races in this country has made very little prog ress since the war. Education has been upheld as the preliminary pan acea, while assimilation has been discussed as the ultimate means. From England, where an African is a comparative rarity, there comes an I abundance of advice upon the sub ject; bat all these suggestions take no heed of the practical difficulties that stand in the way. It does not require any farther persuasion than a common interest to induce the white men and the col ored men of the Sooth to co-operate on public questions, the merits of which may be compassed by an av erage intelligence. Freedom of ao tion has done something toward bringing the races to a political lev el. But the social separation is, if anything, more strongly ' defined than ever. The white men of the South assert that the white woman is the highest embodiment of oar modern civiliza tion. They assert that this product is the result of centuries of effort, and that the race problem in the South cannot be solved until the col ored people shall have gone through a similar refining process, and brought forth equally , satisfactory results. It may possibly be doubted wheth er there it not an initial difference between a Caucasian and an African savage as great as the final difference may be when education and civiliza tion shall have done their utmost for both The problem, however, is an interesting one. particularly for the people of the United States. Pbila delphia Record. When we proposed to remonetizeit in 1878 and admit it to limited coin age of not less than $2,000,000, nor more than $4,000,000 a month, we were told by the representatives of capital that a silver dollar contain ing 4:12 grains was worth less than a gold dollar, and that it would be a dishonest dollar, and if we remone tized and admitted it to even this limited coinage we would reduce this country to a silver standard and drive all the gold out of the country. We passed the bill, however, and un der it have coined some $300,000,000 upon most of which silver certificates Wre issued. We had in 1878 about $230,000,000 in gold in this country. Mr. Sherman, then Secretary of the Treasury, issued an order authoriz ing the exchange of silver certificates for gold, dollar for dollar, and in a very short time $80,000,000 in gold were biought to the Treasury and exchanged for the silver certificates, and Mr. Sherman then suspended the order. And so far from driving the $230,000,000 of gold then in the country from it we have gradually increased our gold until we have now about $700,000,000 in gold. Sena tor Harris, of Tennessee. eatteatloaat aeattasieea. You spend more money on cigars made in Pennsylvania than you do in printer's ink. More on watch charms made in Providence, R. I., than you do in charming the people down here, xou subscribe for more papers published in New York, Bos ton and Philadelphia than you pay for home papers to be sent out to in duce people to come to your htate. Yet you nave papers that are a cred it to the State and the intelligent people therein. The papers should be sent broadcast by the thousands for we judge a city or a people by the standard of its newspapers. 1 ven ture to say that when you are through reading your daily paper or vour weekly paper you throw it aside in stead of marking some paragraph concerning the progress of your city or State, and sending it to some one outside the State. Commissioner Patrick, at Charleston. GENERAL NEWS. PERSONAL AMD POLITICAL P01HTS AST) COMMON AFFAIRS. Hews Notes Taken From All Portions of the Country and Quarters ef the World. Queen Victoria has arrived at Urasse, France. Constantinople founded the first hospital in the world. A company has been formed to bore for oflf at Athens, Ala. The Virginia Board of Pharmacy is in session in Richmond. Large foreign exports of refined sugar from New York are reported. Ballot reform amendment to the New York election bill will be adopted. The money needed to erect the Sherman statue in New York has been secured. , Women architects are to submit all plans for women's buildings at the Chicago fair. Cuba wants reciprocity with the United States. She is even willing to pnt sugar in it. It is believed in Berlin that France and Russia have concluded a formal treaty of alliance. Zoe Gayton has arrived in New York, having completed her walk across the continent. A Swedish steamship went ashore at Chicamicomieo beach and one of the crew was drowned. Th Grant Monument Association wants $500,000 of the direct tax money received by New York. It is calculated that in Maine this season about one million and u-quar- ter tons once will be harvested. The suspension of the Washinston National Bank, of New York, is said to have been due to "check kiting." The New York . Camp of Confeder ate Veterans is growing rapidly, and has already done much srood in re lieving distress. California has a plank sixteen feet wide. Write -tariff reform and free silver on it and put it in the Demo cratic platform. The richest man in the next Con gress will be John L. Mitchell, of Milwaukee, who is credited with a fortune of $40,000,000. A Kingston (N When the best citizens ol a town get together, resolved to pull in har ness and poll together, that town is bound to grow. . It has secured some thing 'better, than foreign capital or outside labor; it has developed its own strength and spirit. The best An nn x ii and close his ears not to realize J which the people arouse in them that the march of progress over b68- 'And this spirit is invincible i , . ; wben everybody feels it. Henderson the State is rapid and vigorous. Gold Lea - , ; . HsN Lsssl HUtlsar. We are asked to say something about tbe Greensboro extension Argument is no account. The man who wants to keep the town dwarfed is not worth wasting time on. Tbe man who is opposed to extending the city limits because he is afraid bis clique will lose control of the place and little pickings, is too hollow headed to try to do anything with; and the man who dreads a little ad ditional taxes and would rather die than pay them, can't be reached in anyway. We believe that a large majority of our voters in and out will be found against the above "kickers." If they are not, the best way to do is for people who can move to Winston or some other live place to do so, and those who are living away from here to stay where they are. Greensboro North State. . Drift t at Cak mt ..' Capt. . Freeman Mnnroe of the schooner John J. Whit tier, Glouces ter, Mass., reports the loss of a French woman and daughter about six miles op tbe gulf from Red Is land, New Foundland. The daugh ter was sliding on the ice when it broke away , from the Bhore. There was no man at home or a house within a distance of five or six miles, and the mother put out in a dory to the rescue. On- reaching . the cake of ice - tne mother stepped from the dory to get the child. Tbe dory slid off from tbe ice cake, and motherand aaugncer-anrcea to sea and were never heard from.: Y.) man has an ess 6Ji" inches round, 8 inches long, and weighing 7 ounces, which he claims was laid by a hen he owns. Republican State League of Massa chusetts adopt woman suffrage cs a means of keeping the Republican party in power m that State. The Woman's Christian Temper ance Union buy the old building of the first National Bank, Baltimore, lor a headquarters at $2o,000. A turnip measuring four feet in cir cumference and weighing fifty pounds is on exhibition at the XMew Whatcom (Wash.) Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. Mary Ann Buchanan Smith, of Philadelphia, daughter of John Smith, Jr., a merchant of Baltimore, was the first of the French spoliation claimants paid. Aaron Holman, a farmer of West Milbury, Mass., who died the other day, used for a bookmark in the family Bible a certificate of deposit calling lor $700. There are about 193,000 acres of land in Alleghany and Garrett coun ties, Md., owned chiefly by non-resi dents, on which no taxes have been paid for a century. William Fowler is the name of an eight-year old tramp now in Mem phis. Tenn. He began to travel when barely six years old, and "has been all over the country." A committee of the Virginia House of Delegates have adopted a plan whereby it is expected to cut down the criminal expenses of the State $75,000 or $100,000. The Marquis di Rhdini, tbe Italian premier, and Lord Dufferin, the Brit ish minister at Rome, have exchang ed protocols delimiting the British and Italian spheres in East Africa. A "trust" has been formed to raise the price of Jewish beef, in Philadel phia, and a counter organization is preparing to open a co-operative butcher shop to break down the trust. The Supreme Court of Georgia has decided that a conductor has no right to put oft a train a passenger who has no ticket and refuses to pay more than the fare would have been had he purchased a ticket. Real estate, $2,504,747; personal, $2,308,109; city debt, $133,000; tax receipts on real and personal prop erty, $4:3,iJiJT.72; street improve ments, average amount of annual expenditure about $25,000. Don't imagine for a moment that we think you impertinent or conceit ed when you suggest to. us tbe best method of running our paper, tor we are fully aware of the fact that the most humble man in the world has suggestions he would like to offer the Lord. . A Nebraska Supreme Court judge has announced that no more foreclo sure sales of mortgaged farms will be confirmed by., bim when the mort gagors can make it plain that failure of crops was their reason fornon payment to the mortgagees. Mr. Moody continues to have hard work to convert the inhabitants of Boston. "There are 50,000 men in this city," he told the stiff-necked fel lows, "wno would be Christians m ten minutes if they could get into heaven by some side door." This was afacerfortheBostonians. They nm mi used to sroinc into inlnnnn hv the side door on a Sunday that their : ideal heaven has a side door, or a sa-1 loon is their ideal heaven. , I THE SOUTHERN PEOPLE- Their Triumphant Advance Aeain to Plaoe and Power. Although they were overthrown in the war, their fortunes ruined by the disastrous issue of that contest and their whole social svstem disrnnted i and permanently altered, neverthe less Southern people still control the social nie of the capital of tbe coun try, and their supremacy is recog nized by their fellow-citizens from tbe North, in spite of the fact that in mere point of wealth the latter oc cupy in comparison a very much su perior position. it has been surprising to manv people to witness the resurrection of the South and its triumphant advance again to power and to place ; bat it is a fact, worthv or not. as the case may be, of some study. If things go on as they have been for tbe last ten years, the South by the end of an other ten years will as fully be in possession of the Government, and will as completely direct its policy as in 1858 ; and it cannot be said that this will happen because of any peculiarity of their lives, nor the habits of authority and domination which were the natural outcome of their system of slavery, and of the necessity for their banding together regardless of all other questions, to protect it. Such conditions exist no longer. The South is poor and needy and her people are compelled to work as hard as any Northern laborer ; but over and through all blazes that power to rule and that fitness to command which characterized them before the war, and which is rapidly being recognized and submitted to now. Gen. John Pope, U. S. Army. Tate Rest Spalker mt The speakership will be settled without serious difficulty, as there is a general disposition among Demo crats to select the most available man, without regard to the section of country he comes from. Manv of the leading newspapers of the South are opposed to a Southern man succeeding "Czar Reed," not because they do not believe the Rep resentatives of that section are com petent, but because they do not wish to offer any pretext for reviving sec tional issues in the next presidential campaign. There may be sufficient force in this suggestion to brine about the selection of a Northern or Western man, but it is nevertheless a fact the Representatives from these sections are neither doing nor saying anything calculated to draw the sec tional question into the contest. They desire that a cool-headed, fair- minded, skillful parliamentarian be elected speaker, one who will con stiuct the committees with a view to promoting the best interests of the party, leaving out altogether the question of long service in the House Jasiat Wilkes Boalk'a CrsT. Yesterday gentle hands had work ed on tbe grasses and twigs on John Wilkes' grave. The scythe had shaved the dead graves, and a rose bush a wee thing at the head had been deftly clipped of dead shoots The work was done but a few hours before I was at the grave, for I taw fresh foot prints on the wet ground I am not sorry that somebody goes witn tender ministrations and per haps tears to the grave of him whose name is so despised .by men and whose memory is so accursed by his tory. All conjecture that John Wilkes Booth is not buried where I have indicated is groundless, and should be dismissed. There are those in this city who know that he who dreamed of empire for his beloved South, and wrought unwisely the bloodiest tragedy is dead dead, and in that grave. John a. Morris. SvatkeraTlB Or. The Tin Mining Company are mak ing preparations to go right along with the work of developing their valuable property near Berryville, Virginia. The exposures thus far made warrant the inference that there is an inexhaustible body of the tin-bearing rock in the tract owned by the company. Tbe tin hill is 300 feet above the surrounding tract, and is supposed to be a compact mass of the metal-bearing stone. Already sections across the hill: more than a hundred feet in length have been cut and a shaft 40 feet deep has been sunk. The exposure at all points shows that the precious metal is present throughout the stone. Clarksville Courier. HEW WINTER MILLINERY Is novy Arriving Daily at MRS. ADA MASTER'S If s New and Pretty, Come and See. rf-All the Late New York Styles. SCHOULER'S nit ii iitry Uskeii. THIRD ST., SOUTH OF COURTHOUSE OUR MEW 1RTIST M1LLHER. MISS MOUJER, -:- Is in New York Buying. -:- Any orders 'from our patrons will receive her personal attention. Can f e Do AnytMni For Toi 1?, Complete line of Harris's Celebrated Kid Gloves aWars on hand, A. F. ARNOLD, Late of Elgin Watch Co.) Watch-Maker -AND- JEWELER (Successor to I. if. Roberts Co.) LEADER III LQV PRICES. WATCHES, CLOCKS, CHAINS CHARMS, RINGS, BRACE LETS, NECKLACES, ETC., ETC. Of all kinds and of best quality. Next door and Shoe Store, House, to Baity's Hat opposite Court A 11 Tar let. Rev. A. H. Latimer was given a verdict of $ 450 in his suit against the Metropolitan Street Railway Company Tuesday. The suit was for 2,000. The allegations are that he was put off the cars at Georgia avenue, when he had paid his fare for the full distance from Alabama street to Clarke's university. The occurrence was July 13, 1889, before the system of transferring was inaugurated. When he reached the point of trans fer now and the conductor called for another fare, he declined to pay it i .v &i x- auu woa Liu v uu. Auanui lAutsULU tion. Atlanta Constituonti. A band of one hundred crofters of Lewis Island, the largest island of Hebrides, off the west coast of Soot- land, who had been evicted from their homes in order to make room for a deer preserve, have formed camp near tneir nomes ana ar pre pared to fight any attempt to re move them from the land of which they have taken possession. WINSTON, N C FOR SALE I i GOOD JOB OFFICE OUTFIT UTCLUDINO Two Good Job Presses AND ALL XECJ0S3ABY TYPE AND MATERIAL Or will consider propositions to run tneomce on shares trom proper ly accredited parties. APPLY TO The Western Sentinel,
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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April 2, 1891, edition 1
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