Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / May 14, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. OKVOTED TO m mvsm m wmmi OF PIEDMONT CAROLINA. mm mm jj CIRCTJXATn-JQ jl'Tta&iislioBt Kcrtiwsslera Garcllna, THE sentinel ; Has No Superior as an Adver tising Mcd'um. J. O. FOY, Editor and Proprietor. A NORTH CAROLINA DEMOCRATIC FAMILY NEWSPAPER FOR NORTH CAROLINA PEOPLE, IN THE STATE AND OUT OF IT SUBSCRIPTION PRICE", $1.50 PERYFR Vol.. xxxy. No. 26 WINSTON-SAI,EM, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 14 1891. Price 5 Cents CHARLES S. .JOHNSON. R. E. JONES. JOHNSON & JONES, SUCCESSORS TO FRANCIS B. KEMP & CO. Real Estate Exchange, 212 MAIN ST., FIRST DOOR BELOW HOTEL FOUNTAIN. Business, Residence and suburban property bought, sold and exchanged. Rents Collected. Carriage at door to show customers property. A FIRST-CLASS - BARBER SHOP. saitlbrbwek; Prop'r- Gentlemen who wish a First-class Shave in m white mtn's shop shojhl call on him. Everything neat and clean J. Jj. LUDLOW, O. "HI, IvI. S., toeabcr N. C. Board of Health Civil and Sanitary Engineer, wimston, n. c. B B. OLE.VN. CI.KMEMT JIA5LT FARMERS FURNITURE STORE. Glenn & Manly, AT LAW, N. C. ; ATTORNEYS WINSTON, Particular at'eneion paid to settling estates and advising executors ana administrators Will practice reguiar-y in me counties r. n r n n ' intra. "Wiles and in the Stokes. Surry "inited States. Courts. of and E. A. GRIFFITH, Attorney at Law and Rotary Public. (Office above Thompson's drug stire.) BE SURE AND FIND IT WHEN YOU" Come to Winston. Next to ilinslmw & Medearis' store, nearly opposite the Piedmont Warehouse- WILL PRACTICE in Foroyth and ad joining counties. Special attention given to the settlement of estates. All legal papers carefully drawn, titles investigated and abstracts furnished- Loans negotiated on good security. Special attention given to the collection of accounts and returns made promptly. . jan22. wantepermonth; One Hundred. Watches to Bepair. Every fiftieth name on my watch j repair record I will give one stem wind and set nic watch, warranted your purchases yoa will find a good time keeper. j everything marked down to All watches, clocks and jewelry j Vi and et ive prices, promptly and neatly repaired and j & of furn warranted. i A good assortment of watch If you will go there to make. THE EDITOR'S TABLE. chains and spectacles for sale. T. J. BAXTER, In Singer Office. THE NEW EXCELSIOR COOK STOVE IS THE BEST ON THE . MARKET. (QIt is not a new and untried Stove. It's used by thousands of the bett people in .North Carolina. single complaint. I can sell you this excellent Stove as cieap aa any good article on the market. Tin roofing and guttering done promptly t low prices. I am handling car loads of Terra Cotta Piping for ' drains and chimney flues. It makes a cheap, good chimney. Try it. GEO. STEWART, 1 Main Street. East of Court Hunse. BROWN'S PALACE DRUG-STORE . . iture for you to select from. The goods are pretty and they are cheap: Remember the place and come and see me. FARMERS FORMTUE&STORE W.T. VOGLER, The Leading JEWELER OF WINSTON-SALEM, The Italian Government has decided not to take j.art in the Chicago exposition because it cannot afford to undergo the necessary expense. And yet a short time ago, this same bank rupt Government was throwing out vague, mysterious hints about engaging in war with the United .States. : The Atlanta Constitution, a most faithful shepherd of the Alliance fold, says: "The situa tion is so simple that it needs no study to make it plain. Therj? is no problem in it. If our South ern farmers do not. make money from now on, it will be because they prefer to overstock the market with cotton and send ull their money to distant States for foo.'. The South has every ni vantage that she could reasona bly desire; but we cannot pros per in any line of industry, even under favorable circumstances, unless we are guided bv strictlv business principles." The sudden expulsion of He brews from Russia by the gov ernment of that country has caused the utter disorganization of business in Moscow. It is im possible to collect debts, and hundreds of bills are protested daily. Neither Hebrews nor gentiles are paying their debts. Thousands of workingmen hither to em ployed by the Hebrews are idle. Many tiaders in the He brew quarters are facing bank ruptcy owing to the departure of the Hebrews, who only left property to cover debts amount ing to 130,000. In many cases the Hebrew emigrants wold their belongings for the merest trifle, and in other instances destroy d their goods in preference to sel ling them at u sacrifice. A new and unused synagogue is offered for sale. Heartrending scenes are witnessed daily in the syna gogues, the people weeping and praying to Jehovah to help them. Many Russians are de clinii.g to pay, debts owing to the Hebrews. Foreign impor ters are keeping back goods on the frontier. One Swiss milk firm has lost 8,000 in a single week. The Hanes Building I xvliZgCanSlmbrSi1, , ! Has the largest stock of Jewel rv. Silverware, Clocks, Gold Pens, in : fact, everything: that belongs to a Jewelry Store. His Spectacle De V j partment is complete. If you need . .a pair of Spectacles you would do - well by calling on him before buying Offeri everything In the drag ', elsewhere, as he w the only :... line at low prices. The stock is large and varied and the , PRACTIAL OPTICIAN quality of our goods cannot be; surpassed.; J We offer the finest line ot domestic and foreign cigars ever ' shown in Winston. i' He is also nreoared to do all - We make wholesale prices to kinds of Engraving, fancy and plain, eonntrv merchants and others and all styles of Monograms. He " i mZa.t ,i n e Duymg in large quauiiues. : .. . Your friends, - BROWN & BROWN, In The Place. does all kinds of fine . . REPAIRING mid all work warranted, - Any thing that would tend to solve the race question in the South must prove of interest to the whole American people. So far it has been n vexed question, especialy so to those whose homes placed them in the . black districts of the south. But it seems that Mr Porter's census just completed shows a condi tion in regard to the location of the colored population of the South that is quite a surprise to most every one. The ne groes select counties in which their number predominates, moving in to them, adding still more to their population. For. instance before the war the rich planters Jived in the lowlands, where the lands were fertile, and the richer a district was the more negroes it possessed. In the hills the soil was poor, the farmers could make no money, and were unable to buy negroes. When the war was over, the counties that were once so ri-:h became the poorest and were burdened with "inn overwhelming black population. The former poor counties- lost little)' and have chiefly white inhabitants. .Since then the difference has been growing' greater, for, obeying the instinct of race,, the whites go to the white counties, and the blacks to the black counties. Therefore we find in - tne same State counties in which the whites -greatly preponderate, and others near by in which - the blacks have a large majority! ' THE GRATSD JURY. THE COXCTiVSIOX OP THEIR RE ROKT OX THE LYXCHIXG In New Orleans Recently of a Number of Italians Who Were Alleged to Have Been Members of the Mafia. The Grand Jury, of New Orleans, in concluding their report on the re cent lynching in that city of a num ber of Italians alleged to have heen members of the Mafia and direetly responsible for -the assassination of Chief of Folice Hennesy sayB: "Direetly connectd with all these circamstanees are the terrible events transpiring on the 14th day of March last, events which in themselves may be charged as directly traceable to the miscarriage of justice as develop ed in the verdict rendered on March 13. We are deeply impressed with the serious charge delivered by your Honor to this body on the subject, and at no time t-inee have we lost sight of the necessity for a thorough investigation of all the conditions antecedent to it. We have engaged ourselves most assiduously with the examination of a large number of witnesses, embracing those who were present at the meeting on Canal street in the vicinity of the parish prison, as well as several hunred of our fellow-citizens taken from every rank and class of society. It is shown in the evidence that the gath ering on Saturday morning, March 14, embraced several thousands of the first, best and even the most law abiding of the citizens of this city, assembled, as is the right of Ameri can citizens, to discuss in public meet ing questions of grave import. We find a general sentiment among those witnesses and also in our intercourse with the people that the verdict as rendered by the jury was contrary to the law and the evidence, and secured mainly through the designing and unscrupulous agents employed fur the special purpose of defeating the ends of justice. At that meeting tht determination was shown that the people would not submit to the sur iender of their rights into the hands of midnight assassins and their pow erful allies. "The assassination of the late chief of police shows the culmina tiou of & conspiracy. His death was deemed necessary to prevent the ex posure and punishment of criminals whose guilt whs bein fast estab lished by his diligent pursuit. THE LAW WAS POWERLESS. "The condition of affairs in this community as to a certain class of violaters of the law bad reached such a state that the law itself was well nigh powerless to deal . with ihera, so t'ar-reaeting was their pow er nnd influence in the trial of crim inal cases. Good citizens were pro foundly impressed by the repeated and signal failures of justice. The arts of the- perjurer and briber seem ed to dominate in the courts, paraK yzing and rendering powerless the ends of justice. Certainly this was a desperate situation. In the public meeting above referred to, general and spontaneous in character a? truly indicating an uprising of the masses we doubt ir any power at the command of the authorities would have been sufficient to over come its intentions. Evidence is be fore us from official sources that eleven persons were killed in the at tack on the parish prison in the care ful examination as to citizenship of those men we find that eight of them were beyond question Ameii can citizens, and another had 'de clared his intention' in this court, which act carries with it the renun ciation of allegiance to his native country. KO INDIVIDUALS TO BLAME. "It is a noteworthy fact in con nection with the uprising that no in jury whatever was done to cither person or property beyond the one act vhich seemed to have been ths object of the assemblage at the par ish prison. We have referred to the large number of citizens participat ing in this demonstration, estimated by judges at from G,000 to S.U00, re garded as a spontaneous uprising of the people. The magnitude of this affair makes it a difficult task to fix the guilt upon any number of the participants in fact, the act seemed to involve the entire people of the parish and city of New Orleans, so profuse is their sympathy and ex tended their connection with the af fair. . "In view of these considerations the thorough examination ot the subject has failed ' to dUclos the necessary facts to lustifv this errand jury in presenting indictments." PHENOMENA AT A FUNERAL. A Supernatural Stream of Light in a Church Near Weldon. A remarkable phenomena occur red at Tabor church, in Halifax county, on Sunday, the occasioa being the delivery of a funeral ser mon. Several months ago Mr.s Per kins, a most estimable Christian woman, died at Aurelian Springs.. It is an bid custom ia those parts to preach the funeral sermon some time after the .burial, and last Sundav was the "day set for the funeral ser mon of Mrs. Petkins to be preacl ed by the Rev. R. O. Burton. D. D. A large congregation had assembled to hear the eloquent and venerable divine's memorial of tbo deceased. The day was calm and beautiful a perfect M ay morning but the occa sion was one of deep solemnity and sadness, as the deceased was gre.it ly beloved. The text of the discourse was, "I Know That Mv Redeemer Liveth." In the midst of the sermon the church was filled with a brilliant light, as if a flash of lightning had streamed in from every window and lingered in the building, and a gleam of brilliant radiance stood just above the head of the preacher for a minute and then disappeared. The light was thought by some who saw it to be the spirit of the departed sister. There is no natural way of accounting for this strange occur rence, which is vouched for by many truthfulpeople, and the awe-stricken congregation will long remember it as a supernatural visitation attesting the truth of the text. A Well 4.100 Feet Keep. There is an eight inch well being sunk near Wheeling, West va., by the Wheeling Improvement Compa ny, who first commenced boreing in search of oil or gass, both of which have been struck in paying quauti ties, but the boreing kept on uutil they have reached a depth of 4,100 feet. It has gone through several thick veins of coal and has traversed lay ers of gold quartz, iron and numer ous other minerals. Prof. J. C. White, State Geologist, who has watched the drilling closely, has succeeded in getting the Govern ment interested iu it. The result is that after the well has been sunk to the depth of one unle the Govern ment will take up the work and, un der the direction of two expert offi cers of the Geological Survey, dull into the ear;h as far as huuiau skill can peuttrate. The te'uiperature and magnetic conditions Will be observed as far as possible, and by means of an instru ment constructed, for the purpose a complete record of the drilling and all discoveries made will be krpt. This record will be placed iu the Ge ological Survey's exhibit at the Worlds Fair, and afterward pre served at Washington. .Professor White and the Government officers say this will be one ot the most nov el and important exhibits at the Fair, and will attract the attention of the scientists of the world. THE OLD NORTH STATE. IIAPPRXIXOS WITHIX I1KRUOR DKRs SIXCKOUK IjST ISSVE. GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. Facts About Taxes. The Washington Post presents some interesting tax figures. For the next two years our govern ment will spend annually more than $500,000,000. To pay one year's expenses of the government it will take nearly the combined wheat and oat crop. Our annual output of gold, .silver, copper, iron, coal, petroleum and lead will not foot our tax bill for twelve months. Nor can we do it with a year's pro duct of cotten, wool, rye, bailey, wine, potatoes aud tobacco. The combined capitalization of our national banks is f3i)y,00U,000. One year's taxes will nearly swallow it up. Now, all this is the federal tax We have also to pay city, county and state taxes. We pretend to be a nation of plain people, with no aristocracy, no prin ces, no standing army and no expen sive frills, and yet our taxes are more enormous than those of Austria, Ger many or Great Britain, When we calmly consider these facts and figures it must be admitted that the outlook is not Very eucour aging.' But such evils always lead to a reaction. The people will be forced by stern necessity to demand reform or revolution, and in a coun try like ours such a state of public sentiment is bound to crystallize m-i to reform. Atlanta Constitution. Public Schools in the South. A Prisoner Guarding Prisoners. The Chronicle snvs thnfc on the nht of the reeentfirent Wilkesboro, it was thought at one time that the county jail would he destroyed by the flames." Jailor Crystal fearing such would happen, opened the doors of every cell aud let the prisoners walk out. Guards were hard to pro cure in the excitement, and the result was, strange to say, a prisoner nam ed A. Y. Rash was placed in charge of the other prisoners, among whom was Tobe Muthis, who is under sen tence of death.- Not a single man tried to escape, and after the fire had been conquered ' and the danger was over, Hash, safely returned all the prisoners to the jail and himself with the rest was again locked up. The largest cotton planter in the World is Samuel S. Richardson, of New Orleans. He has . 49,000 acres of cotton land and employs 9,000 negroes. He refused $22,500,000 for his plantation from an English syndicate. The Philadelphia Times thinks the popular delusion "fostered and kept aflame by Northern partisan or gans," that the public school system receives but scant support aud en couragement iu Southern States, has received its quietus from the census of 1690. The idea, says the limes, turns out to be not only a myth but "a positive wroug toa great and nroitressive section of the Union." From the figures quoted by the Times it appears thacMississippi has made a gain of 47.90 per cent, in public school enrollment in the past decade.' Louisiana has gained 53.52 per cent.; Texas, 13J.lo percent.: JNortu Carolina, u .uo; coucn Caro lina, 50.89; Virginia, 55.06; West Virginia, 34.42. Not a single North ern State, adds the Times, , shows anything like that rate of increase. On the contrary New Hampshire sus tains a loss of 7.51 per cent., Maine 7:38 and Vermont one of 1Q.42 per cent. In the line of growth in public school enrollment Connecticut has a 6.68 per cent, gain; Massachusetts, 17.33; New York, 1.88; Ohio, 5.98; Pennsylvania, 1.59; Iowa, 15.88. Xcwfj" Xten Car fuUy CI!ppe Cull ed aid Parugi ipli!cally Packed Into - w Column, The Red Stocking Base Ba!l Club, of Durham, challenges any team in the State. A school of several hundred por poises is seen nearly every day on Wrightsville Beach. The Great Falls Canal Company has contracted with the Carolina Construction Company for its con struction. Governor Holt pardons Thomas Crocker, of Halifax county, serving a three years' &eatcnce iu the peni tiary for larceny. The liabilities of the old street railway company in Raleisrh are being sold preparatory to the begin ning of work on the new. State Auditor Geo. W. Sanderlin will deliver the annual address of the Knights of Pytheas in Greens boro on the night of June 1st. Mr. Hunter Harris, clerk in the Agricultural Department, Raleigh, has been awarded a professorship in the Bingham Military School. Mrs. J. D. Carpenter, a lady evan gelist of some note, will begin a pro tracted meeting at Sandy Ridge, Stokes county, on the 17th inst. It is learned that the recent cold spell did but little damage to the crops throughout the State being protected by the dense foliage. Large quantities ot gold has been found in Anson and adjoining coun ties and in soma neighborhoods there seems to be a gold hunting fever. The Raleigh Mirror will be tha name of the new afternoon daily to be started in that city with Mr. H. II Roberts in the editorial chair. Governor Holt has pardoned Donas' Rogers, convicted in Hay wood county of larceny and senten ced to three years in the peuiteutiary. A very rich gold mine has been discovered at' the Louder mine, 8 irii'es from High Point, and arrange meuts are bciug made t work-it. Rev. Jno. R. Brooks D. D., a lead ing Methodist ill vine an- Presiding Elder of the Greensboro district, is in Bdltimot'e for medical treatment. The citizens of Burgaw have raised one hundred dollars for the Southern Inter-State Immigration Bureau to aid North Carolina at the Columbian Exposition. Iu 1SSG only 7S.S93 pounds of manutactured cotton gooes were shipped from Salisbury, last year 993,282, or about thirteen times more than in 1SSG. The large granite slab to be used as a mail platlorm in rear of the govern iru nt building in Asheville is Ilk feet in length, 0 feet S in-hes in width and weighs y,5i!0 pouuds. Wilkesboro has el. cted the fol lowing municipal tick-t : J:iun s G. Hackett, mayor ; Commi.s.-i'.nei.-: J. C. Hubbard, E. Wallace, Milton McNeil and R M. Stanley. Mr- Harris, foreman of the mininor force at the Waluut Cove mines savs that work has begun iu i-arut, and thinks h- will be taking -ut large quantities of -oal in a few days. The grtn ry :.nd ! umber house -f Mr. Joseph Willis, near Leaksyiile, was burned a few days since ; loss in feed stuffs, e rn, carriage, wagon etc., about $I,0U0. JSio insurance. The ercitement over the school- book question in Raleigh continues. Superintendent of -Public Instruc tion Finger denies tho charges pre ferred agaiust him by the Biblical Recorder. The proposed Fife-meeting in Greensboro is being pushed by the Y. M. C. A., and it is thought quite probable that the services of the Evangelist will be secured in the near future. Much dissatisfaction has been caused in the State by the recent net of the Legislature in reference to the effect of alcohol upon the human svstem. The Biblical Recorder, of Raleigh, has fiercely attached the act. W. R. Henry, of Henderson, will deliver the annual address before the Wilson Collegiate Institute. Iu makinc this announcement, the Wil son Mirror pays a high tribute to Mr. Henry as an orator ornate and forcible. The incorporators of the Blue Ridge Railroad, to run from Lenoir, via Patterson and Boone, through Mitchell to some poiut on the Jsor folk and Western road, have made a temporary organization by the elec tion of S. T. Harper as President. All the Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, ten in number, namely, Bishops Keener, Wilson, Galloway, Duncan. Gran- berry, Key, Hargrove, Fitzgarald, Haeood and nendrix, are in wii mington this week holding their an nual meeting. Maj Charles M. Stedman and wife have moved from Wilmington to Ashevillo. Tney have lewied the- residence of the Rev. R. G. Pearson, the evansremt. and will occupy it a number of years. Maj. and Mrs Stedman expect to go to Europe in Jnne to see their daughter, who is there. The Railroad Commissioners have issued an order to Telegraph com-. nanies operating in the State instruc ting them that on and after June 1st, all teleerams having" their origin and terminating in the State shall be charged at the rate of twenty-five cents for ten words and two cents per word for each, additional word. Various Happenings in the t'nitcd States and Foreign Country. The woniPii of Parma, Italy get. up a bread riot on account of the in creased price of bread. The Italian Consul at New Orleans is greatly displeased at the report of the grand jury ' in the parish prison lynching. The Richmond and Danville direc tors are discussing the terms of the lease of the Georgia Central to the Georgia Pacific. A Northern syndicate has pui chas ed the property of the Pacific Guano Company at Charleston, S. C, and will start up the factory. Secretary M. Ohler, or the Kansas State board of agriculture, in his April crop report, says theagricultu ral condition of the State is very sat- isiaciorv. It is commendable for Boston to organize a society for the education and elevation of the Door Italians there, but they should not try the elevating process with a roj)e. Charles J. Dixon, a six-foot lunatic from Pueblo. Col., was arrested in New York tor threateniiisr to kill Jav Gould. The man said he was a mem ber ot a baud of world reformers, who called themselves Christ's Followers. The tobacco warehonse of F. W. Dorham & Son, Covington, Ky., near the suspension bridge, was com pletely destioyed by fire Thursday. The firm estimate the loss at $28,000; insurance $10,000, iu the Roval of Liverpool. W. G. Oakman, first vice-president of" the Richmond and Danville Rail road Friday resigned hi- position, ami bt-cotnes niauaging officer of the Central Railroad of .New Jersey. Mr. Oakman has been identified with the It. & D. for neaily six years as t lie manrerinir executive in New York. Twenty-five thousand Su.idav- school children, divided into eighty parties, made a canvass of the city ofSt. Louis, Mo., Thursday, for the purpose of ascei taimiir how many children do not attend Sundn v-school or church, and extended aa invita tion to all to visit places of worship. Miss .Mary p.r ckinridg, daughter of Congressman Breckinridge, of Kentucky, is not satisfied with being a social lielle at the capital, and has iwjrun the study of l.iwin her father's office. Mi-is Breckinridg" is pretty and popular, and it " without saying that she is a sensible girl and will make a goo, I lawyer. A steel rail weighing (500 pounds was laid across the track hi front of the Newport f-xpivss on the Erie Road, near Urbana, Ohio. Tliurday. The locomotive, going sixty m;'-s an hour, struck it and fortiHiitteiy clear ed the track. A mvii nan:-d Snyder, charged with the cii.'ne, lias been nr-rebte.f. The Woman's National In. In -trial League has Mtlemnly resolved that Blair's rejection by the Ohiiirs.-is ow of the greatest com jilini-iirs which the enslaved barbarians emiM have paid to him. Unfortunatelvfrtheiii Mr. Blair is not looking at the i flair through thesameend of the -scope. Allii e Hayes says that it is dilli- cuir lor u gin to at rem. coii. -ge un less she can command i;.'llK) a ve.-tr uove !ier living extiises i las is bout v much as many brainy, well euucai'M nun amintioas g;tis can earn as clerks or attendants, and bars out the daughters of ijien whose earnings are not tar above the aver- nge. Sam W. Small, president of the Utah Methodist Universifv, has ten dered his resignation to the board of directors of the institution. This action of Small is said to he due to the bitter controversy that ha- lieen going on for the past few weekt. be tween a portion of the directors and himself over an alleged misuse of University funds. On the night, of August 20, 1S00, the farm residence of Michael Shelby, near Wooster, Ohio, was forcibly en tered by four marked ir.-n, who bound and gagged Shelby and his aged wife and stole cash amounting to 12, 000. Mrs. Shelbv died from nervous prostration. Henry 11. Bincklev.hls grandson, Harry Webb, and a son. Daniel Hinckley, neighbors ot the Shelbys, have been arrested. The coke strikers, of Pennsylva nia, are having a new trouble to face. Since they quit woik aa effort has been made to force them from their cabins. In this the landlords met with some resistance. They have now adapted a different line of tactics, instead of putting them out of their houses they simply levy on their household affects for rent, ibis is something new in the striking business and is taken very senousiy by the strikers. Edith Brown, a beautiful girl of. 7 years, of Marion, Ala., was frightened to death on Tuesday by a St. Bernard dog. She was passing along the street, and the dog ran viciously to the fence and bounded against it, .. .- . l 1 : nt- climbing np on me innings, i ne child screonied and fell to the ground Passers by came to her assistance, but when they reached her she was gasping, ami in a lew moments was dead.. . The reclaimed lands in the south ern portion of Florida produce an immense yield of sugar cane, as does the rich hammock, while good pine land, properly cultivated and fertilized, though not given the same amount of juice, compensates for the decrease by an increased density in the fluid. A comparison of the cost of its cultivation with the cost of cultivation in Louisiana and Cu ba shows largely in favor of Florida. STEW WINTER MILLINERY Is no.v Arriving Daily at MRS. ADA M ASTEN'S Its New and Pretty, Come 'and Sec. All the Iatc 2r Styles New Yoilc SCHOULER'S Military SsUimsai. T11IKD ST., SOUTH OF COCItT JlOrirE O 1.000 summer liats on hand, and now nov elties coming in every day in Flowers, Rib bons and latest impor tations. Our sales arc so large now that we can afford, to sell on a lower margin than ever before. It '.vill pay to exam ine our stock and pri ces. School hats in all colors and irood straw at 25c. worth 50c. A. F, ARNO LO ' rrXs or 1'A'jlil Yuhi, Co.) Watch-Maker AND- Jeweler (Successor to J'. M. Ilohpi-ta Co.) i'. r VA TCI I lvS, CLOCKS, CI I A I NS CUAIIMS,RIXGS, liHACE LETS, NECKLACES, ETC., KTC. Of all Lin. Is a:ul of best "iah. C7Xcxt do-.-and Shoe Slorc. House, to r.ai:y OppObilfi s Hal Couit WINSTO N FOE SALE ! -o- A GOOD JOB OFFICE OUTFIT IXCLUDl.NG Two Good Job Presses AXD ALL NECESSARY FYPE AND MATERIAL Or will consider propositions to run the office on shares from proper ly accredited parties. APPLY TO The Western Sentinel, "WliTSTOlT.lT. C." TiC. EXECUTRIX'S N Having qn ilifiel as Ex-scutrix of A'illiaTn Boner, Ueceiscd, late i-f Forsyth county, N. C this is to notify all Jteraons having claim ajrainst the ttafc of Siii.l fleoca-'e 1 to exhibit them Utthe undertinefl 0:1 or be fore the lSihda of January, . or i his. notice will be plead in bar , f thicr recovery All persons indebted to sni.l eUt;e will please make immediate payment. MAKY KkMSK, kXRcmx.. Th'sJan. l.ah. ISJl.-Gw " - w
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 14, 1891, edition 1
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