Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / July 28, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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FRIDAY THE WESTERN SENTINEL WINSTON-SALEM. NORTH CAROLINA, PAGE TWO HOW OF FIVE IS T FOR 5 PENSIONS ATLANTA. July ZS.--ClaiminB she Is the widow of live husbands, all of hom fought 111 the Civil War, a Wal ton county ! womttv ' i-i.s itlled for Bve tensions, a5geaatin sixty dol tars niontHlv.. f The. applicant stated that she wax lulss Malcolm. She declared mai her first husband was killed during the first of the war and that second met a like fate toward the close of the war.: She asserts the three man she married , later were all Confederate veterans. V . AFTER THE MOONSHINERS- Reports of Destruction of Illicit Dis tilleries Continue to Pour Into Rev- , enue Agent' Sams' Office at Ashe- ' vllle. . ' ASMEV1LLE, July 26. Revenue Agent Sams' office here continues to receive reports of the destruction of illicit distilleries In this territory, era bracing; this section of North Carolina:, South Carolina, a portion of Tonnes see and Virginia. ' Recent reports are to toe effect that number of distil leries have been located and destroyed In North Carolina and Virginia. - Spe cial Employe Pritcbard reports the ' seizure of three blockade plants in Floyd county, Va. where four other seizure were recently made. It is evident, as a result of the number of seizures made there that Floyd county is or wss regarded at a fertile field, for operation by moonshiners. Special Employe Kanlpe makes report of the destruction of a distillery in Ruther ford county Sunday, while Deputy Col lector Floyd Gray made three leisures in Henry county, Virginia, last week. In one of these Henry county seiz ures 25 gallons of whiskey was taken. Prosecutions have been recommended REAPER 8LICE WOMAN. Trying to Stop Runaway. Farmer RATS THE STAMP THIEVES. Of- Mystery Which Caused Revenue fleers Much Concern Solved. , ; FORT WAYNE, Ind., July 26 The pernicious activity of rat explain the repated disappearance of revenue tamp from .barrel, ot beer shipped to AviHa, twenty miles norxn or thai city, and clear up a mystery which ha given the United State Internal revenue office at Fort Wayne much concern. ; . . i', r; y.'; ...;.,': , The first complaint; received several Tweek ago, was tfoat six barrels of beer in a railroad warehouse at Avilla awaiting delivery to the consignee tad teen stripped of revenue stamp. Ta:i government authorities were notified and Deputy Collector L. P. Sharp con ducted an investigation. He was un able to- solve the mystery and with much red tap the missing stamps were replaced,:: -... .-. :- .The revenue officers were notified of the second case yesterday, bat with it came the-information that rats had been discovered at the work, and were apparently attracted by the paste used on the stamps. . . , ELDER HARDY CONVICTED ' -BUT JUDGMENT SUSPENDED. REIDSVILLE, July. 25. Recorder Humphreys returned the verdict In the case against Elder L. H. Hardy for contempt of court and announced the verdict as guilty,. On account of the age of the defendant and the fact that he is a minister of the gos Del. the court announced that judg ment, would be suspended." -, The re corder reviewed a number of ways fn which contempt could be committed against the court, and he said that this was the first time any cade of thin kind had ever come before nis court, and he felt sure It would ne ho last, as the eldsville people are law abiding and when they i Know the law, he argued, they will not wan tonly violate He also sata tnai Elder Hardy, he was sure, would not desire to srive the court rurtner trou ble, and if he did, the Judgment of the court could then be invoked. Attorney Brooks, representing Eld er Hardy, was not present in court, but he had already filed a notice ot appeal, and, while no mention was made of this fact In open court 4t is understood that such appeal appears In the records of the minutes. COLORED PYIH1S PI, TO CHOOSE HEW OFFICERS' ALFALFA GOOD FOOD FOR MAN AS WELL AS BEAST. HOT SPRINGS., & Dak, July 26. A request Is likely to be made for an other cleric to help handle the mall that is coralntr to Mark Rich.the ranch er who announced that alfalfa is good for man as well as beast. , The announcement has brought tn- atrirles from every state, and he Is swamped with letters for information and for samples, some of them lnclos ing money. ;;. i ' .., ' Rich lias met this demand by organ Ixlng a company to put alfalfa on the market as tea and as a breakfast food. ' ' The idea has drawn the attention of officers of the Department of Agricul ture, and John S. Cole, a dry farming expert for the government, spent a day with Mr. Rich at his ranch., Wife Is Lacerated by Maehln. ALLENTQWN, Pa., July . 26. Mrs. William Relnhold, of Upper? Mllford Township, 10 miles out, with, odier harvesters, stopped . work this after noon to watch a Sunday School pic- nlo - march by. When the i band struck UP the horses hitched - to the reaper, which had been left standing unwatched and untied in the new, started on a runaway. ; ,, rl - Mrs. Relnhold grabbed a bridle to stop them, but was thrown in front of the knives. She was first rolled some distance by the reaper, and, after being gripped and mangled In the teeth of the cntter bars, the knives sliced her, cutting away cloth ing, skin, and flesh and lacerating her left foot Her condition is critical. The frightened horses ran Into a tree and the reaper was wrecked. , ROASTS IN MOLTEN SLAG. Steel Worker Falls From Platform , Into Pit of Flry Metal LEWISTOWN. Pa, July 26. Albert Mananaphy, employed as helper at the open-hearth furnace at the Standard Steel Works, was frightfully burned when he fell 26 feet from the platform , at the ton of the furnace Into the slag Pit at the month of the cupola.. The ptt was half-filled with molten slag, and before he could he taken but; hi clothing was burned from his body and Ws legs and the lower portion of his ooay were tainted to a crisp.; There . nine nope ot Ms recovery. ., . narry stuck; employed as a. Mre roller at the same works, was serious ly Injured when the "go-devil" he was operating left the track, throwing him with the machine 25 feet to the floor. ?y M .'j;.'' i ill - - , 1 1 1. ' , FALLS DEAD BESIDE, PULPIT. -nea pastor, Repeating Scrlpturt ' Text, Dies In Church. . t ' POTT6VILL.E, Pa, July 26.-Enter- nig nis cnurcn,. the Welsh Congrega tional, here Monday afternoon, Rev W, D. Williams, an advanced thinker, health officer of Pottsviiij date for county commissioner on the Republican, ticket, repeated the, text. ouier name under heav en given among men. whereby ye can : be saved," and then felt dead from apoplexy In front of the pulpit from which he had preached for many years. . : ' Mr. Williams was about 70 years of age. He had been prominent as a di rector of Welsh singers and was for years superintendent of the Danville Rolling Mills, but for the past . 10 was health officer ot Po'.ts- A few minutes prior to bis death he accepted an invitation to preach next Sunday at the Pentecostal denomina tion s camp-meeting at Adamsdale. The deceased was prominent In the Im proved Order of Heptaaophs. DIES AFTER THIRTEEN BOGY. Companion of On Who Refers to It soon Drowns. .. . . BAH TON, Pa,. July 26. "There's just 11 in this party. Inside of a year wiw ui ns wui oe aead," remarked a yonng man, when a camping party ar nvea at Koxburg on the Delaware, row UUHOD. , A half hour later John Loudenber kt, oi rnimpsourg, n. j., a member or tne party, was attacked with cramps wniie swimming snd drowned On Negro Shoots Another. At an loe cream supper at German fTsylor's house, on Mr. James Daggers . farm, near Mtzpah church, Saturday mgnv naaw uraves. 20 years of age, shot and wounded Henry Williamson, aged about 18. who dlni flu nil a v Orsve lived at Benaja and Williamson lived on Mr. J. F. Wellington farm. Iieiasvijie fleyieir, COMPLETION IN BIGHT. , Cars Will B In Operation on Pied mont Railway Electric Co.'s In temrban Lin Within Sixty Days. BURLINGTON. July 25. The con struction ot the electric railway of the Piedmont Railway ft Electric Co, which, traverses a number of Burling ton' streets snd connects Graham and Haw River, Is rapidly approaching completion, and the Cbarlott Obser ver s . correspondent is Informed by Mr. Junius H. Harden, one of the pro moters of the enterprise, who now has charge of the construction force, that within sixty days cars will be in opera tion. - ... It is the purpose of the company, as Indicated in their charter,' to con- aect somt of the many cotton mill villages situated on the water courses throughout the county. Burlington being the geographical center of these surrounding mill ril; tages ana tne trade center, tne ad vantages to be derived on account of the easy access of these people to her markets are apparent AUTOISTS SPEED ON AFTER KILLING MAN. BALTIMORE, July 26. The mystery surrounding the . death Of William H. Schmidt, a street car con ductor,, who, was struck, by an auto mobile early last Saturday on Belve dere Avenue, near the city ' limits, was cleared up. Five young men who were in the automobile which, killed Schmidt were arrested. The boys declared they knew when they struck Schmidt, but were - so r.fra'd ol the consequences that they aUvwf.d the body to remain In the road snd kept on their way. Uiiestlonea by , his father, young Boy den admitted that he. was driv ing the machine, and also gave the names ot the young men in the car with him. 'We were trying to make up time we lost by having to go out of our way. When it happened I was so scared I was afraid to stop, said young Boyden, I knew we hit him, but we kept on." The others bore out Boyden tory. . , , Prominent Republican Indicted. At the recent terra ot the. federal court In WIlkeBDoro an indictment was returned against i. A. Smith, some time Republican candidate for Con Kress in the ninth district, who is charged with soliciting campaign funds from federal officeholders, con trary to the form ot the statute made and provided. It is expected that the case will be tried in Charlotte- In Octo ber. . . ., ', . Hoping for Miraculous Cures; NEW YORK, July 26 Many people knelt before the shrine of VCoodSaint Anne- in the little Church of St Jeaa Raptiste In East Seventy-sixth street toaay, and kissed the reliquary con taming one of the bones from the wrist of the Mother of Virgin. It was tne none ot tne annual aoven ot Ste. Anne, the period during which the faithful look for many miracles to be performed. For nine davs the little church has listened to the prayers of hundreds ot sick and disabled persons no sougnt relief from their Sffllc tlons through the Intercession of the Saint RALEIGH. July 26. The accounts of -officers of the negro North Caro lina Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias, were checked up recently by fetate Commissioner of Insurance James R. Young and found to be over $4,000 Short. They should have had on hand $12,000, it Is aneged, and only $8. 000 is accounted for. : ; The Commis sioner sent a communication to the Grand Lodge, now in session at Dur ham, to the effect that the Grand Lodge must elect new officers and change methods of keeping and ac counting for funds. The : Grand Lodge officers are- J. s. Fltts. Win ston-Salem, grand chancellor; R. W. iirown, f Winston Salem, .grand, secre tary, and E. D. r Miller, l Reldsville. grana treasurer.-- '.vw, t.'V... rne urana Lodge last night re elected Fltts igrand chancellor V and elected new men for the other twd positions, ; However, , Commissioner Young . telephoned the Grand . Lodge today that Fltts must also be deposed as grand chancellor. iThe : Commls- soner says the three officers are bonded and that any loss ot funds will be made good. It seems nil three officers received monies' for various funds so that the ' lax methods In volved cannot be fixed wholly either of the three. ' - . el . j ' tm.i" : i f.i . . . .1 I) ; wki cement waa reacnen wnimi Jahl was to take the Invention where Post liad come to a stop, complete It and; through friends secure a patent on AGREED TO POOL. Carnegie 8teel Company and Other Kindred. Concern Alleged To Have Done 8a. WASHINGTON, July 25. A ; pur ported pooling agreement between tne Carnegie Steel Co., and ten . other kindred concerns tor a percentage ap- viortlonment of the steel output o; the countryan admittedly Illegal . docu ment supposedly, long slnoe, destroy ed etirred the meeting, of. the. house steel trust" investigating committee. Chairman Stanley produced a copy of the agreement, togethei with other confidential data, and tha agreement was admitted in evidence agninst the protest ot counsel for the corporatipns that It was nnauthenticated. ' ' it was admitted, however, that business ' op erations ot these companies continued under an understanding similar to the agreement.'- t ' ' , .The original agreement provmea for the formation of the Steel Plate Association of the United States, and notwithstanding that the agreement was burned and only cam to light be cause a .Pennsylvania , printer naa saved a .copy from the flames, the committee found , corroborative evi dence that the 8teel Plate Association did exist after the incineration ot the telltale documents. . - s? J. R.' Van Ormer, of the Luaen s tmn and Steel Company, one of the parties to the original pool, testified that all copies of the agreement had been burned because it was thought its provisions were illegal. The. agree ment itself.r he testified, never was signed by his company and all sent to other companies were returned for destruction. - Jie admitted. ' however, that nnnratlon of the business of his company proceeded along lines of an understanding- similar to tne provi sions of. the burned agreement. Bust ness was apportioned on a percentage basis he admitted, for several;, years up to 1906, His firm, he said, contri buted to a guaranty fund. to Jnsure carrying out terms of operation ;and reports of business were made to W. C. Temple, who acted as commission er ot the combination. , . . : t , MEET IN JAIL AND PERFECT DEVICE WORTH A FOR runs. DENVER, OolH July 26. Tfcat 'it is an ill wind that blows nooooynny goou is demonstrated by an mventlon re cently completed by Albert C Jahl, for which itents have been appuea ano whlclt will he accepted toy the Colora do Telephone Company when placed upon the market, , The invention is one o iauo huii , devices which have .frequently msae poor men millionaires, ana is in me form of an appliance which will pre vent Ahe extraction of nickels from toll telephones. - J" - ; The Invention had its Inception and went Its first stages In the mind ota young mechanic named John L. Post, employed by the' telephone company, who had nimseii worsen mu ururi"" nickel-please boxes until he was de tected in the act by suspicious officials, arrested, convicted, and. sent to the state reformatory. 1 Before being banded over to tne po lice Post was summoned into , tne presence ot Q B. Field, who told Mm that sine be had shown such genius fnr ffAttinr nickels out of the boxes be should have some latent and workable Ideas on how to keep them in and aa vised him. to give some of his time to thinking out such a dovfee. Then the law laid its operating hand on John U Post, and as a preliminary step toward receiving justice be was sent to the county aiu At that time Into the orbit oi rosi entered ;Jtert C. Jahl, society man snd amateur scientist, who had been placed under arrest and brougnt bact to Denver from Texas, on a requisition muted irr Governor Shafroth, to an swer to a charge of embezzle ment . i 1 ' Jahl is a young man of distinguish d achievements in electrical engineer ing and Inventions that have aided ma terially to- the efficiency and effective ness of science. In the county. Jail Jahl and Post came together. Post bad rewar d ft nolnt id tarn fa vent ion ot the. non-nickel producer where tils -knowledge was defective. The trained sjtod and keen perception of Jahl at'onoe detected the Impractlc able points id the Invention. Many conferences were held ly. the two men in their cells and plans snd specifics' tions gone over nd over and final: OFF FOR WORLD CRUISE IN A GASOLINE YACHT, J5W YORK, July "26. James B Hammond, the millionaire typewriter inventor and manufacturer, ot Colum bia Avenue and Ninetieth street 8tartad. in his 95-foot gasolene vacht lounger ii on tne .round pi the ports e is seventy-three veara old nrt he Bays he Intends to spend the re mainder of his days on the Lounger ii.. as Mr, Hammond, has made up his mind to live to be one hundred years old, he has twentv-seven 'van of blissful voyaging ,and cruising in prospect. The , yacht is certainly beautiful and -commodious enough to tempt one to prolong "existence upon her. --i .. i;, ....... . She is sixteen feet beam, and draws only three feet ; She is, , equipped With every device that science can suggest, provided with everv com- fort and luxury. If her engine should refuse duty, .there is sail to fall back upon. She is good for fifteen knots an hour. ,r r v.. . ; i There is a refrigerating plant! for cooling the. cabin ki summer, and there are thermostatic installations for keeping an even temperature in winter: She bas a tank for carrying fresh fish. In a cockpit -'especially constructed for it nestles an automo bile. ;..,:,:.v. , -v; v-' :, The start was made from (he yard of the New York Yacht. Launch and Engine Company, at , Morris Heights,1 on tne Harlem. The first stop will be ,at New Haven. Accompanying him .are a nurse, a masseur, a chauff eur, a secretary . Pinky, a Boston bull; a mother dog and six puppies, canary and a phonograph. . Capt into is in command. The skipper's wife Is the cook. " The skipper's cousin Is the wireless opera tor and his brother-in-law the bos'un. During his twenty-seven-year cruise, Mr.. Hammead said, he intended to touch at about every port After he is through with the Lounger II. he say he will present her to the United States Government as a model of marine architecture. Some of the relatives of the wealthy manufacturer some time ago tried to have him declared ' Incompetent to manage bis estate, but the courts de cided that Mr. Hammond wa fully competent to look out for his fortune and himself. .- '. ' 80UL HA8 WEIGHT . ' BUT IS COLORLESS. B08TON, July ,20.r-Dr. Duncan Mac- Dougall, of Haverhill,; who has been long a student of ' physlco-psycbica! phenomena,- declares his belief that the human soul weighs" from one-half ounce to nearly an ounce and a quarter,- and further that the soul sub stance Is blended with the protoplasm ot the brain and spinal chord in life. Dr.'MacDougan says It has been his experience in., a dozen instances to watch the !'. tiying ..v.man'.'i or woman stretched on a bed that was part of a delicately adjusted scale, and to hear as the patient's last breath leave, the body the jiolse of the dropping weight. Again, sitting, in a darkened, room, be has watched a 'strong ray of pure white light rest along the body ot a dying man, covering him like a silver bar from eet to bead and over the (ace.. ' . .' ' .. ' - . , Dr. McDougall and bis assistants (iave made the .closest' observation of the ha" of light to see if that Intangi ble shape is cloud or wavering tints from the outworn body, PTO BE LARGEST. OF SHIPS. Curiard Company, WW Lengthen Neve f . fclner to .More Than ,900 Feet, i XONBON, July 26.-r-Plans for the hew steamer Aqultanfa.wbicfi the Oun rd Company Js building at Clydebank, have been changed to make the vesse. the largest in the world. Her length will exceed 900 feet, and be 10 feet greater than the length 'pf the 50,000 ton liner Imperator,' which the Hamburg-American Line will put into serv. ice in the spring of 1913. It Is also Stated that the lAqultania will be one knot faster than her German rlvai. The original specifications called) tor length or s5 feet ana a speed oi 23 knots an honr. She will accommodate 4,0W passen- Fletcner 5 Bros.' CLEAN ,is - ' 'i :V; A- .i. '-- '-' ' ''r ' ' "'' ' UI ID) mi The Real Clean Up Sale The Big Oean Up Sale One Week Morel-ThatVAII WAITRESS WHO MARRIED OLD' MAN WILL GET f 100,000. NEW HAVEN Conn.', July 25. Burr S. Beck,i. a wealthy- retired manufacturer, aged eighty, who re cently eloped. wIUa. a pretty waitress, Mis May Byrne, . aged - twenty,, is dead. ' Peck created a sensation when - be eloped with the waitress, They lived together a few days, when Peck in stituted' divorce proceedings. The suit was afterward, withdrawn. The estate, valued at a hundred thousand dollars, goes to the young widow. HUSBAND'S DEATH MAY KILL. Shock of New of Death Under Train Prostrates Railroader's Wit. t ' ALTOONA. Pa, July 27. The shock f the death of Harry C. Thompson, a Pennsylvania freight -conductor is likely to Drove fatal to ' his wife. Thompson was struck by a freight that was passing nis own train at Mapleton, east of here, and when the news wss broken to his wife, who hss been ill, she was prostrated. oh A Pairs Pants from our uUU Lexington Fac- (in tory Worth $1 to $1.25 yV One Lot : Boys' Suits 98c 50 Boys' Suits One - Half Price -i , -. - . .'. i -"-" it ' . " ' ' , SMsHSSSMSBsVMBlBVSisWBBHsiBBMsMSsBSBSSSBBBsMSBSBSaMHMnMs 23 Men's Suits Left One - Half Price SiAYI P's Dn s. nil II 7 m " irora our I 'Stanton Factory il smdll 1ft, worth $1.50 no Op Work Shirts 35c 50c Umbrellas 29c :5c Boy's Shirts 19c THE BIG RED IFRONT '' ' '. TRADE STEET : ' - - MLEf mm Mm V ...'. -i - " T . J .. - V it J i I -:, !.v'.---. ,j . j INTERURBAN IN A NUTSHELL. C, 300 To Stretch From Greenwood, 8. to Durham, N. C and to B Mile Long. The following facts about the ln- terurban line are taken from the Charlotte Observer's big Interurban Edition, which was Issued yesterday morning: - Tba Interurban trolley line, when completed, wNl stretch from Green wood, 8. C, Ho Durham, N. C, a dis tance of 300 miles, Joining the princi pal cities and town of the Piedmont Section 'of the Carolinas. The electric current for this sys tem will be derived from four water power plants of the Southern Power Company on the Catawba river, whjcb develop a capacity of 134,000 horse power. Forty-five cities and town In North Carolina are now securing light and power from these plants. Over 150 cotton mills, embracing 2,000,000 spindles and 43,000 looms are operated by the same power. ! Over 1,300 miles ot high tension circuit wire are required to carry this power through the Carolinas. It will be the first electric railroad In America to use 1,500-voIt direct current. Existing systems use 600 voltage. The Southern Power Company, the parent corporation, was organized In 1905. It now has a capitalization of $11,000,000 and embodies twenty three auxiliary companies. The possibilities are boundless and exceed the wildest dreams of the most sanguine. Ssteadlly this great organization is .going about acquiring new waterpower prospects with a view to developing them, and extending Its sphere of usefulness, and the present generation will live to witness the realisation Of an era of commercial prosperity that a few years ago would have read like romance. SCHEDULE IN KFFE P.M. A-M. 1.06 ?.M Lr Winston' 2.40 7.S7 Ar Walnut I. OS t 25 Ar Hadtsoi 4.09 SI Ar Martins S.tS M.4 Ar Rock tM 11. Ar aoaaok "Dally. Connection at Itw JUNE 11, 1(11 P.M.P.M era Ar LOS HP v Vt 1.14 1.01 Lv ll.U i Si LV 11 OUDt I.TJfM (.14 .Wi.lt f 1 Lv ll.lfrAjfToe. Mount l.Ui m With ttmul &at, SJoatk t4W A, Peek Into His Pocket would show the box of Bucklen's Aral- ca-Salve that E. S. Loper, a carpen- ... - U4I1 KJ V ' linn ArrlAa wr, w nwiua, .. - i inuna fat tM Nov 1 have never had a cut. w nad. bruise. I wm and Non-.- or sore it would not soot) heal." hel riiw--rpr Dinir c bollV scalds chappy band, and llpf-fES. toT I f Si fever-sores, skln-enipUons, ecsema. . y eorns and plies. I6 at P. A. Thomp-i "sviLijj m. brioq. (M ras. Try P. Ag ; END HIGH COST OF LIVING. bes Moines Consumers Establish Mar ket and Prices Tumble. ' DES, MOINES, Iowa, July 27. How to reduce the high cost of living was solved by 3,000 consumers who estab lished here a permanent market place. ! "Following a campaign of . several weeks, the city officials' turned the city hall lawn over to the vegetable and farm produce venders. .Nearly 60 hucksters were lined up on the plot. The rush of consumers began at six o'clock. Two hours later the huck sters had Sold out. -. 1 New potatoes were . bought for 45 cents a peclc, or 1.75 a bushel; where formerly the price had been $3 to $4 per bushel. Apples, which had been selling at 25 cents a peck, were sold for 10 and 12 cents. Cucumbers found ready buyers at three for 10 cents, against the price of 10 cents each which had been prevaUng. , For nearly four -hours the people tnen, women and children swarmed In from every direction and jammed the street in front of the city hall In an effort to get to the wagons. The services of a squad or police were nec essary during the rush, although the crowd was orderly. -. , HaSMBHDBHHBIWBBVHHBHBBBiE. Window : Screens At50Eacfc Bring yoft size witt w r ' Ibu. Kill More Than Wild Beasts. The number of people killed vearlv by wild beasts don't approach the vast number killed by disease germs. No life is safe from their attacks. Jbey'e In air, water, dust, even wood. But grand protection is afforded by Elec tric Bitters,, which aestroy and expel these deadly disease germs from the system. That's why chills, fever and ague, all malarial and many blood diseases yield promptly to this won derful blood purifier. Try them, and enjoy the glorious health and sew strength they'll give you. Money back, if not satisfied. Only 60c at P. A. Thompson. Parson's Posm a Gem., Prom Rev. H. Stubenvoil, Allison, ra., in praise or Dr.-King's New Ute Pills. "They're such a health neces- In every borne these nllls should It other kinds you've tried in vain. TTSB OR. KINO'S And be well' again. Only 25c at P. A. inompson i. Tne Sheet Metal Workers' TTnlon snd the Hod Carriers' Union of fsdlan- spous, ind., tjoth of which withdrew irora tn Central Labor Vnion about two years ago, will again affiliate with DR. IA-00Ktt LOCATE aWJRAL HALL '., GstSTat 'MiTflskVolff Co. Stieff Piano "Sing Their Own PraW One Of the eates d nt tlw rt nnd DresPit W ,, VIDUAOTY. The lD(fidS There is no other STIHPF. Others tryo l""; somehow they fall o ervthine." and "Indi terintic of the Stieff The STIEFF PI AN othr "indivldualitj" nt hop rroat make. It ilu ii.or Thi "Indivl sn Ideal Piano, one tW ery demand of tne most exacting mtisi cost. IS'rite tor Chas juslltf'f rdo. f... , sftniW' Jim ( ; Trad St, Jhsriotte. N. me central body., . . C.H. VYH-MTH',,'r' Til
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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July 28, 1911, edition 1
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