Newspapers / The Business Guide (Winston-Salem, … / Sept. 28, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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4' ' .. t NtMMMIMHtlflMIMMMMM inmiiiuumu KtaimwmwiHMi r 4tm Street, winsxom. vThe Industrial Interests of our People are Paramount to Every Other Consideration It Is earnestly hoped that all readers of this Paper will yield gently to its doctrines and aid inits circulation If you have any grievances consult a physician If you have no business of your own, get married or go to worlu lf you aj pleased with the Paper, aid 5t ; if you do not like lt, hand It to a sensible neighbor.; Be serious, and help in advancing the Interests of your community. Vol. 26. WINSTON SALEM, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1906. No. 38 Surprise Birthday. On the 22nd the relatives and friends of Mr. Levy Swaim, out on R. F. D. No. 4, gave him a surprise supper it being on his 60th birthday, there were 160 present including his mother, Mrs. Katie Swaim who was 90 years old in July last past, and was as peart as any of the party, also R. F. D. Carrier No. 6, Mr. W. R. Hine. It took a table 48' feet long to hold the supper, which was as good as ever put on a table. Everybody, old and , young report a good time. Dear Guide: Allow me a few lines in your paper, which I injoy reading so much, and which "is such' a welcome paper in our home. Mrs. A. A. Williamson, 718 Buxton St., who was bitten by a snake 6 weeks ago, is slowly im proving. Dr. Kapp says she will get well now. Mrs. Jennie Obryants baby died last night, September 23rd. Sorry for them as it was the only child. Ma's Bad Boy. A. C. Brandom, 17, and Grace L. Disher, 14, were married at the home of the bride in this City Tuesday night. If taking an early start amounts to any thing, this couple should get along well. . Shame to the South. Unlike orher sections of the country, where the principle seems to be to shoot all negroes when one of them has excited public fury in the south the un written- law declares death for the guilty alone; pacification and protection for the innocent. Atlanta, with its reckless rioting, its bullets for every black face and its stones and sticks for all black bodies, has reproduced Chicago scenes in the south, over thrown whatever of justice there may have been in lynch law, and applied a cleaver to that bond of confidence which the innocent negro of the south felt in the justice of the white man of this section. No wonder patience and self-control were lost ; but in the losing of these virtues and the resulting desperate rioting, however great the provocation) Atlanta brought shame to the south, and has set a fufce that is more than apt to cause a most harrowing explosion. Memphis Commercial-Appeal. Johnie Joyce was thrown from a mule out near Stonville last week. A clap of thunder fright ened the mule and it ran away. Hillery Church and Mi6s Lizzie Hire were married in Salem on Wednesday night. A fe'w days ago we hinted to a good old negro in our city that the papers were talking about the possibility of the negroes be ing some day 6ent away from the South. The old man studied a few minutes and then brightened up in this language : "No sir, boss. The negro is not going to leave. He will die right at your gate. He don't think nothing about leaving, and he aint going to do it." Heats His Wire to Death. Chatham, Va., Sept. 20. Wil liam Nance, a prominent farmer of Pittsylvania county, has been arrested and is in jail charged with the murder of his wife. The details of the crime are brutal and shocking. Nance went to his home in an intoxi cated, condition, beat his wife with his fists, stamped her in the face and finally ended by strik ing her a blow with an iron rod, which crushed her skull. This occured last night, but it was not known until this morn ing about eleven o'clok, when the woman was found in a dying condition at her home. She lived but a few minutes after be ing found. The coroner's jury verdict places the blame for her death upon her husband. He claims that he was so drunk that he did not know what he was doing.
The Business Guide (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 28, 1906, edition 1
1
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