Bogs, the old boat is going font right. She it headed to ward the winning pdrt, she has the proper speed, she is Tunning smoothly, the wind and the cur rent ate wkh ns, the goal is in sight, the watchers sie cheering. Steady at the ears, no let ept Pall right along one more weak. It is gratifying to Gastonia sad her friends to bear good reports from Cherryville and River Bend townships. Many of the good people of those sections are Jfr> * .30pMte*. with toenr town and Sg ' nee be slow aboat showing oaf friendship for them arben eccastna arises in tbs matter of good roads or other pnbHc to * g m M i mm * — d m g_ 11. , nap g piipgp OX tXIi TITSn HI UivUl • AS Tf ML MVfMAirS IE PLY. Like a bee In a tar-bucket, Mr. L. M. Hoffman gets men hopelessly Involved with eve ry fatter. In bis latest circular ha evades awntiala and quibbles over non caiahHaM, and juggles figures again. Let’s be quick, brief, printed, but fast and ac* Boiling down certainly we it, Mr. Hodman. Our aoinariri tseie written before the advice waa given bat the advice woaldpH apply bare at any rote, ■iaeeoer article is shorter, we heMeve.br MO words than that to which it waa farteaded to re* ftt* Ahnaa—No, no. Thera ia no norerion to aeploy ahnaa. Serif your organ at Kings Mcntanln would* not have pro* paaad to take pay for printing abase of a landing citizen of Palfaa, the newly adopted county seat oi King county. We gnMi year eMocts to frighten people, hot it is scarcely fair to planf abuse when yon have niipgy otto Mciirta i itcut. Cigif^rin that yon have al* waya opposed raawval?—Never. W« stated that we booored aad wgirttl yon for-it. We did ('XpN yon deem tee conntry for aaaMag tea right of tea peeple te obt^ an^riacrioo oa ra* Pyou didn’t core to toeUt. The meat of the matter *** Ok mileage but money, not distance but dollar*. The cost l* •«* exaggerated fifty per cent <w wj other per cant, but given •o correctly that: you write no cihiciaw cl it at alL Hour, now, Mr. Hodman, you ouglu to quote accurately even aa you inriot on being quoted ac curately. We did not write,that $1,000 had been “paid” rince December. We did not refuse to taka notice of any new notes since made. The data suited US all right., We took account of qwi paid and notes wade sloce December, and—without multi plying words—wrote the net re mit that “the indebtedness baa bean reduced” by about $1,000. No juggling in that. Not a flaw anywhere, either in method or results. You have simply gone tangled again. If by ony.ttiag processes for brevity’s sake we published less than we knew, we are still left on safer ground than those wbo publish a littje more than they know. A* to that High Shoals bridge, the com missioner* did not (dace it a tnong the comity’s debts in De cember, and they would not in a sworn statement place it tire re to-day. Still you keep on say ing the bom is sixteen hands Ugh. ___ XI cme were called upon to naaae the moat popular innova tion la governmental service daring the two peat decades looking to the greatest good to the greatest number end in creasing the intelligence ol its citizenship each an one would unhesitatingly same the estab lishment of the rural free deliv ery system. It b probably the moat satisfactory, service for the neat mass ol country people that baa ever been undertaken by the government. It gives them many ol the conveniences of a city life without the extra com of living. It saves much waste of time in going to and from the poatoffice. It encour ages the habit of letter writing and increases at a manifold ratio tbc circulation of newspa pers and magazines. The farm er b now able to keep informed in respect to the markets and the general movements in the political and tnancbl world. In deed. the establishment of this system, in connection with the telephone may be accounted among tbc greatest of the edu cational machinery of the coun try, reaching classes of people too old or too busy to attend schools. Thu system makes country life an ideal one. » JnylWMarTm. The Board of County Com missioner* met yesterday morn in* in imlu session and will continue in session to-day. . The jary list for May term jof court was drawn as follows: 1st week, S. W. McLean, J. W. Patterson, B. W- Robinson, R. A. Lewis. J. N. Roberta, R. R. Mauney. A. R. Rankin, J. A. Costner, A. C. Stroup, Jasper L- Armstrong, G. Lather Beat, John W. Black wood, Tbad C. Faires, B. W. Boat. W. A. Lee per, Sr., B. T. Lewia, J. R. Carson, Philip Jen kins. Second week, Hugh L. Black, M. A. Friday, John Q. Rhyne, L. A. Friday, W. I. Stowe. Martin L. Rudlslll, Rob ert Mot on. Larkin A. Thorn bar*, D. F. Friday, W. C. Williams, J. C. Robinson, J. H.. RadisUl, R. A. Caldwell, Walter Friday, B. W. Goochy, J. R. Oninn, J. J. Ratehford, Bd Kennedy. The tax assessors sod Hat takers will be appointed to-day. an set ita add a_ ^a_ o*rore ’e an d Da • f». Ad. M who ■.—- -- , , -.77. ■ : iai . REASONS rOR REMOVAL. atleaa Which Nlkl Gastonia the Ufkal Place for the Ceun ty Seal. r i l«W Mitur mi Uw OWMUi The ordinary casual observer says, Gastonia sboold be the eonnty of Gaston county, and active opponents of removal say it will be some day. The reason for these expressions grow upon investigation. Gas tonia is the popular center. It is possibly not the geographical center, but this is. of no impor tance, since it is the citixens of the locality and npt the locality that goes to court. Gastonia is a modem town, having some 3,000 inhabitants within its incorporate limits, and some taro or three thousand more just outside the limits. One fourth of the people of I Gaston county live within IX miles of the town ball in Gasto nia. Gastonia * municipal advan tages of water works, of electric lights and pnblic schools are not excelled in any town of equal population and its churches would be creditable to any city iu tbfe State. Its commercial future is assured, aud it is ex ceptionally located for the con venience of the traveling public, cither within or without the county. The main line of the mutest railroad system in the South passes from the extreme east to the extreme west of the county, so that the census of 1900 shows that ont of 27,903 people Is Gaston county, 10,168 Hyed within one mile of a sta tion on the Southern Railway. Poor passenger trains going each way past Gastonia airily; two going each way stop at ev ery station In the county, and the schedule* are as convenient as persons having bnsiness at a court ' house could reasonably expect or desire. The Caro lina and North-Western Rail way passes through the county from south to north and makes Gastonia accessible from points north and south. Iu 1900, 16,888 people in Gas ton county were just four miles nearer Gastonia than Dallas. With the increase of population rioce that time it is safe to say that two thirds ol the people iu the county arc nearer to Gasto nia than to Dallas by four miles. It is also true that to one half of the other third, Gastonia is more accessible * and more con venient, notwithstanding the fact that Dallas may be aearer to them iu point of distance. Truly the section of countryi tn mediately to the north of Dallas, and a small scope east and west of north is more convenient to Dallas. On account of the Sea board Railroad and the location of the '.county roads Gastonia is very accessible and convenient to a great scope of the northern part of the county. For the practical purposes of transacting business st a court house st Dallas, our present railroad ser vice is unsatisfactory. Very few of us can depend on the railroads to take us to and from Dallas st the time we wish to go and come, and as a rule to go to Dal las mesas the time of a team as well as of a man. Gastonia af fords better facilities for appre hending and holding criminals. Onr people in the country are peaceable aud law abiding— the best citizenship in toe world—but the disturbers of society float along the rail roa.! t and congregate in the centers. The advantage of a court house and a jail in a center it double. It exercises a wholesome awe upon the law less and saves the expense of transportation of the prisoner to Soother town. A court house and jgil hi Gastonia would save the county about $300 per year ou mileage of witnesses in state’s cases. ‘ The court house should be iu the largest town in the county in order to give the greatest possible protuiuence to all bnainasa affairs of a public nature. Foreclosures, judicial sales of laud, or any kind of sales nnder execution advertised nod sold at a court house door iu Gastonia would insure more bidders and better prices titan io n small town, and would give an opportunity to more of our citizens to acquire valuable property. A court house iu a commercial ceutcr, like Gastonia gives better opportunity to know the location of the land. It makes the connty records more con veniently accessible to the busi ness world and thereby increases the market value of landed and other property all over onr countv. The saving of expense and improvement in the market values of property is not the greatest good that would neces sarily couie to the county by the removal of the court house to Gastonia. Removal has an educational value. A county seat in a large accessible town is a city set on a hill. Many citizens of Gaston county come to Gastoaia every day, on busi ness or for pleasure. County government located at Gastonia rvonld be a continual object lesson of our municipal affairs. The facilities for be coming acquainted with our county government and all affairs of a public natnre would be increased and an incalculable benefit conferred upon oar citizenship. Our conrt rooms loo, should be large and com modious; not only for the witnesses and suitors, but for our good and intelligent citizens Our courts arc valuable instruct ors to our people in law and in morals. As a rule a judge’s charge to the jury is a good plain, simple and yet compre hensive statement of law to an intelligent school boy who is to become the citizen of] a great county it is worth days at school. In $ live busy town like Gastonia the citizens of the county would find flme to drop into court and spend an hour, not as loafers, but as good citizens learning some thing ol the public affairs of their country. Judge Hoke’s charge to the grand jnry at the fall term of our conrt for 1902 as well as that of Judge Shaw at the spring term of 1903, should have been heard by jost as many young men in Gaaton county as possible. Pat the court house in Gastonia; hold np yont light! A court house in Gastonia could be used os a place for edu cational and philanthropic meet ings, for Sunday school- conven tions and like meetings of non sectarian character, and on the main line of the railroad would make all advantages of this kind most accessible to the county. Government and all its func tions exists for the benefit of the governed. The convenience, the advantage of the people, the greatest good to toe greatest nnrabeHistbegoverning principle and the motto we cannot forget without injustice to ourselves snd our fellow citizeus. Business men have been com pelled to establish their stores, their bonks, their hotels, and we to locate our schools and churches with refereucc to this principle. What our honored forefathers did in other times, under other -- ■ . . - circumstance* Is an incident oi history. The duty of tbe pres ent, the eternal now, b npon us and we must meet it. We need a new court bouse, briefly becahse tbe seating capa city oi the old one is not suffici cieut. There is no petit iury room. No convenient waiting room (or ladies who may have to attend court—the offices are small and the county superiuten deut of public instruction has no suitable place to conduct his teachers examinations. Judges condemn court houses these days and we have too much county pride ever to be put in the Ire dell and Caldwell Co., class in that respect. Let us build it now while we have the opportu nity to put it at Gastonia, and have a measure! by which we may pay for it. A court house in Gastonia means that the best and most progressive county in North Car olina has made a step forward; that among her sister counties, she is in a position to claim the honors and emoluments to which she is most justly entitled. It means a united county at work for the interest of every man in it. It means increased value to your property, permanence and solidity to every institution; in spiration a nd success to your men of ambition and public spirit; it means progress to the community and good 10 all. Gko. W. Wilsok. Gastonia, April, 13, 11K)3. List-Taken sad Tax Aasesaers. At Tuesday’s session of the Board of County Commissioners tbe following were appointed list takers and tax assessors for the several townships, the first nam ed in each list being the list ta ker anil the two followi ng tax UKSiors: River Bend Township—J. M. McIntosh, W. C. Thompson, R. K. Davenport. Dallas Township—E. L. Ma son, John J. O. Pasour, G. R. Rbytie. Chcrryville Township—Jacob Kiser. Melvin L. Rudisill, Hen ry Kiser. Crowders Mountain Townsliip —C. E. Whituey, J. T. Oates, S. M. Wilson. Gastonia Town—W. I. Stowe, J. Lee Robiosou, T. W. Wilson. Gastonia Outside—A. C. I Stroup, R. A. Caldwell. J. P. McArver. South Toiut Township—L. E. Rankin, A. J. Smith, Rufus A. Rate Ilford. It was oadered by the Board that the macadam road be ex tended through the corporate limits of the town of Lowell and to tbe bridge at McAdenville. Waste Filled Promptly by an advertisement in onr business locals depart* meat. Ten cents a line for first inacrtioui five cents a line for each insertion Afterwards. MorreAGEE s sale, or land. Moafey. iyril IS. INI. sSk v*siaf k^o-rxtC jsfeassiraaas | 2 < uitt not* or 1»««. ! t> la Gaston Loan and Trust Co., Gastonia, N. C. (Incorporated under the laws of North Carolina.) Capital - • $ 12,000. C. C. Cornwell, J. 8. Torrence, J. W. Moon, T. I* CreJjr, 1. White Were, C. M. Doan. STOCKHOLDERS: J. Let Robinson, M. A. Carpenter, R. B Babington, O. R. Rhyne, J» E« P*Wi Li P> Orovea, W.T. Rankin, B. O. McLurd, J. P. Thomson, Oeo. W. Wilson. T. L. Clinton. BOARD OP DIRECTORS: K. M. Reid. J. II. Wilkin*. W. T Love. C. Ii. AnuMruitK S. M. Koliimon, • # J. Lea RoUiuon, W. T. Rankin, J. L. Craig, 8. G. McLmd, W. T. Low. I OFFICERS: an, A tty. f opened mpnslnjr lepoiiti; and life wiodata trace* of i for our will be glad to bare yon cooler transact liar yon. SUCH A BUSINESS There is a rec^n forL'our stores being the busiest stores in town, and perhaps you mayjlearn the reason by looking through, t s We have thrown on our counters some big attrac tions for this week. They are worth your attention. . Never before have we met with such satisfying success as experienced In our Millinery Department so far this season. It Is, to say the least, the most magnificent stock we’ve ever shown. : : : The giddy [whirl of fash* in always finds us ready with the latest require* ments of the hour. t t Our stock changes so rapidly with our great trade that the goods do not have time to get £out of date. * i t i s All the new things are here all the time and at bottom prices. Visit us often* alwny glad to show you throi ih. THOMSON CO. $ S> THE PEOPLES STORE. L. .. —. i ■ ...... . ... .. . Mm HORSES MOVING We now have on hand only about 25 head of Horses and Mules. The last car load for this season has already anrived. : ::::::::::::::: Twelve car loads is our record for this season I The choice stock we now have on hand is moving fast; come nt once and make yonr selection. NEW BUGGIES. With the arrival of spring we have recived a lot of nice new Buggies just out of the factory. We aTe going to sell them. Get one and enjoy that faster ride you are plan ning fur. CRAIG & WILSON FLINCH FLINCH FLINCH FLINCH PLINCH PUNCH - PLINCH PLINCH FLINCH PLINCH FLINCH PLINCH PLINCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PLINCH PUNCH FLINCH FLINCH PLINCH PLINCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PLINCH PLINCH FLINCH PLINCH PLINCH PLINCH FLINCH FLINCH FLINCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PLINCH PUNCH PUNCH FLINCH PLINCH PLINCH FLINCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH —.-..- . - PLINCH PUNCH ^ , _ _ T A PLINCH Rjggi FLINCH ! ^[NCH PUNCH SlNCH **•»• *«***•«• CLINCH FLINCH Mor* Scientific than Whist. PUNCH PUNCH Bach D*k e<*alata of UOemBa, which PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH i.t^VuthA? .ho PLINCH PUNCH my totTJSi PLINCH PUNCH aeiamdie than whlH. ffiieh may ba PLINCH PUNCH SMEShlw PUNCH PUNCH Sc. PLINCH gflS By Wall SiiSS. K8 ?h!Ncti 0 ASTORIA BOOK STORB. &BJS8 FLINCH --- »» * FLINCH PUNCH PUNCH PLINCH PLINCH PUNCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH PUNCH PUNCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH PP1NCH FLINCH PUNCH PUNCH PLINCH PLINCH FLINCH PLINCH PUNCH PUNCH FLINCH PUNCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH PUNCH PLINCH PL gCH PUNCH PUNCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH PLINCH PUNCH PUNCH PUNCH PLINCH

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