Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Nov. 3, 1905, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
I THE j||— CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK I GASTONIA, N. C. CAPITAL - - - - $80,000 | With ample capital and Northern connections We I are prepared at all times to extend our customers ft uny amount <jl accommodation desired at the legal rate o< interest, n*. We never charge customer* X I carrying balances with os above this rate. Our ft customers accorded every courtesy and accommo- x dation that sound banking will permit. Toor bsiisiw 1» re—ecilolly igyttnd. ft A* G. MYERS, Cashier | 6°|o8g8g-MW8?HH;!»!.. A 4.4.4-4.4-4.4-A 4-4-4.4.4. A A 4-A 4 M 4M 4.4. ±Save Your | t Horse-Money | | I ^ Why sot invest your horse-money in some of out 4^ 4, splendid unbroken stock and thus save from $35 to $50 A A o» every purchase? It is like getting that much pay A A for simply breaking the animal to harness. A ^ During the past week we have bad a good trade in ^ 4^ our unbroken horses and mules and they have given 7 I good satisfaction. Plenty of both broken and unbrok- * 4. en stock still on hand. See our stock at once. Terms A A always fair. A ^ A + 4_ 4. i * i * Craig & Wilson ± *■>..* I M. MIIMMUIMIU RAILWAY 8AFETY. ■Iu4u4> ta MUr AimtImi ■—<» u Hl«k aa la Ixtaal. American railway* barer recently mm* ta for cocaMtreble oafarorabl* criticism oa account of tba number of acetous accidents ta some of the lea* thickly populated districts at tba United Stataa, while at the line time ttngllab roads bar* beta * pretend aa baring attained a combtaatloo of spaed abd safety unknown In tbla country. Aa a matter of fact, many American rellroedi are gradually being brought to a standard of safety width la fully aa Idgh aa tba English, while tba com fort of passengers la glean far more at taction beta than on the other side of tba water. Yroui tba American standpoint safe railroading la primarily dependent on a system of signals which arc practically Infallible. Tbla is attained by a com bination of automatic machinery and human Intelligence, each of which sup plements tb* other and aneh of which la power!aaa to do anything without the ooaaant of tbo other. In tb* operation of such a system tba a*bent feature Is the division of the road tat* short Bas tion* or •'block**' by maaaa of algesia worked primarily by an electrical con nection with the rails. On tba N«w Haven system, for Instance which has bunt up a linn *f SM mils* bone Baa ton to Maw York that aompfUa with all tb* requirement* found aaeaaaary ta American exponent)* far eafaty, these block* *m from half a mil* ta four mile* In Imgtb. A teals cannot enter ana of than until tha preceding train ha* left It, a fact Indicated by the rla Vng of an automatic semaphore at Its former mm, which protect* the next block ahead. When thu second atonal ana polola to dang*, and net before, the operator ha tha dgaal tower that revets that aeetlon of the Una caa lower tha semaphore that la hoMlag hack the second train. Tho system la aa anangad that tha normal position of aO aomopboraa la at daagar and were tha towaraaaa a atoniae fan con Id da na bam beyond neglecting to lower a *g aal at tho preprr ttoaa to let signsrli M trains through. Ha might tie ag all traBc on tha road In this way. hat bo eoold eaasa no eeddoato. While algnal CyatotoO, roadbeds and bridges have kata brought aa near pap. taetton aa tagaandy eaa being them, tha safety of other* than thatr pnctngwa la net neglected bp the wad managag radroeda. Between New Tort aad Mow Karen, for example, a dlotoaee ad •rronty-thraa raUaa, theta are na grads >wii|i at all aad between Maw Baron aad Maw tfnlca that* are ealy •v% earn ad wklrt la waddacad dan AMERICANS AT OXFORD. tamliMn af »«!«■ - . WlMm al BaglUk UatvwswMp. A Cocfl Bbodaa acholarahtp wtunet at Oxford university who camo froaa tba ratted Staten, noticing that hla na tional custom of casual expectoration did aot obtain la Oxford, announced hla Intention with engaging candor of Mf bta boat to break himself of that hnralraa but unnecessary habit, aayt tba London rrpraaa. "And If I can’t get quit of U without." In anld. "1 gam m give up smoking right away." At tba frashmen’a sports la Novecn bar. wbao W. E. Bchutt. an American, carried off all the long distance mean ••ally defeating the pick of E^Uab public school athletes who cam* Into noldfne* In October last, the cheers which greeted him na ha broke tba tape lacked nothing of sincerity and good fellowship. Tba Rhode* scholar caanot under stand the proctors. It is a oonatant source of waadcr to him that a youag man af age to think and act for him aatf should ba subjected to the police man-like aopervtslaa of a gontloiaan to • ref rat gown who patrols the streets at night. Tba dean of a wtfi known nonage asked a Bbodaa ecbelar tba attar day if ba bad had a talk with hla tatar yet. (The twtar referred ta waa ee to a moral rather than a scholastic atasi.) "Wen." waa the reply, “a little man with a brown beard came and tamed to me yesterday aa if bo raefc noad to ba are father, bat 1 guess be ett’t." Nor wssthta as Id la aay apbtt of legist! teds, bat rat bar aa an aasar Mon af tba right of ■ young Amarleen af one and twenty to took altar him estf. Will RUk Lite M 1M hnaMm. Ha groat la tba faith of /. W. Htsrk wealhw of Santa Maria, Oel„ 1* the aSkacjr of a street far fruder levanted hP Mansct# that ho roceuttp made an oftar »• the Lea Angelas Car eetapaap and the dtp ooonett to Me to front of a epeedtag trollsg ear eqalpped with Ms Hertca. prorldsd that If be Is aot killed hie fender win he adopted ta Lea An •elra, sops a special dispatch to the Chicago BertrO-HarnW. Beth tha coua «U and the traction empaap show a wtIMngneaa ta aaeapt tha ntfer. start wsetbec's fender la shaped Its aa la Manse rolling pta aad vnretraa toward tha ear. It prelacts at a aXaht angle frea one aide af the forward track. ■edeet Wreath Mar the need. After ratstag BO bp euharrtptlea ta pnrtbasa Hewarn far tha todn at a daad fellew wortuaaa, emptayeas af tba Meaea Maps Hi Uh/slie, tad., reoant tp haM a merttog and dactdad MO waa ISuMuijglft as HorwJra. aad »VI af the pares was prmmtid to the daodlMar af the dead week man aad tha remaioleg PI aaad ta perebem a aiedeet wreath af maas. saps the tadhUMpolts News. Bereaftar this sears* win be fsWewsd RUSSIA IS FREE. HUtarlc Oraal Fran Csar—Uka Briliah Syrian Haacalarth— WUta Takas Raisa al Pawn. St. Petersburg. Oct, 30.—'To night the autocracy of the Ro manoff* and the old order of things cease to exist in Russia. Emperor Nicholas has sur rendered and Count Witte come* into power as Minister-President with an imperial mandate which will enable him to convert the farcical National Assembly into a real legislative body, elected by greatly extended suffrage, and to confer upon the people fundamental civil liberties, in cluding free speech. WITTE CAKK1UU POIXTS. These welcome tidings reached St. Pelrrsbarg shortly before 0 o’clock this evening. Count Witte had spent the day with the Kmpcror at Petcrhot, going over the final draft of the manifesto to which he insisted tost certain minor modifications be made, and before taking tbe train for St. Petersburg be telephoned to a friend that the Emperor had affixed his signa ture and that tbe imperial man date comprising the conditions upon which he bad agreed to accept office was in his pocket. These include freedom of the Press, the right oi assembly and the Immunity of the person, in cluding the right of habeas corpus. CZAR WANTED AMUR 1C AN OTJUC. Count Witte insisted ou a cabinet on tbe British mode with a selected Premier respon sible to the imperial Dooms, or Parliament, while the Emperor clung to tbe appointment of members of the cabinet on the American plan by tbe Emperor as Chief of State. The State Department has in structed Charge D’Afiaires Eddy, in case of emergency, to give American citizens asylum at the embassy, and if neces sary to charter a steamer. Foreign Minister Lsiusdorff is re-axauring the ambassadors by formally guaranteeing tbe safety of foreign residents. He an no tin ccx that the government is prepared to afford them military protection in St. Petersburg and elsewbete in the event of disorders. The following is the text of the imperial manifesto: RUSSIA'S MAGMA CHARTS. "We, Nicholas the Second, by the grace of God, Emperor and Autocrat of all the Kussits, flratirl Hi.L. T?;_1_1 _ declare to oil oar faithful sub jects that the troubles and agita tion in onr capitals and in num erous other places fill onr heart with excessive pain and sorrow. "The happiness of the Rus sian sovereign is indissolubly bonnd up with the happiness of onr people, and the sorrow of onr people is the sorrow of the sovereign. "From the present disorders may arise great national disrup tion. They menace the integ rity and unity of onr empire. "The supreme duty imposed upon us by our sovereign office requires us to efiace ourself and to use all the force and reason at our command to hasten in se eming the unity and co-ordina tion of the power of the central government and to assure the success of tncaanres for pacifica tion in all circles of pnblic life, which are essential to the well being of our people. * We therefore direct our gov ern nent to carry out our index ible will in the following: raiVI1.KGBt AND IMMUNITIES}. "Pirst—To extend to the pop ulation the immutable founda tion* of civic liberty, based on the real inviolability of person, freedom of conscience, speech, anion and association. . • Sacood—Without suspending the already ordered elections to the Stat' Douma, to invite to participation in the Douma, so fnr m thp limited limn tbe convocation of tbe Dooms will permit, those classes of tbe population now completely de prived of electoral right*, leav ing tbe ultimate development of tbe people of tbe electoral right in general to the newly estab lished legislative order of things. "Third—To establish aa an unchangeable rule that no law •ball be enforceable without tbe approval of tbe State Domns, and that it shall be possible (or tbs elected of the people to ex ercise real participation in the supervision of the legality of the acts of tba antboritiea appointed "We appeal to all faitbfnl sons of Ramis to rentsm be r their doty towards.the father land, to •Id In terminating these unpre cedented troubles end to apply their tercet in co-operation with u«. to tbe restoration of calm and peace upon our nation*’ toil. • Given at Peterhof, October 30, in the eleventh year of onr rei«o. (Signed) "Nicholas* A PENNSYLVANIAN'S FAD. •mam* mt • UImw* ■!•<•« vuM Poor nirtlm chain. X. X Lambert of UaadJan. Pa.. r» OTDttX rugletared at th# WcUlagtau ho *•*. in Chicago, tailing Clerk r~nnitt b* wanted the beet room in the bow* Ha wee taken le one. frowned and waa abvwa another, eaye the CUcag* Trlb “Thlo room la all right a* far w the walla and celling are concerned." ha aaM. "bvt It lacka the moat taawUal ««*1X7 a# eamfnrt—rural larw If I wanted aa unfnrnlahed roooi, I ebeold bare gone ataowbare." "The room la ae veil fundahed aa any In Ua laooaa.’ renturad the smell and awad baOboy, Imt If there la any P<ar* of furniture yen need Ml brim X *«balra are what I went." waa tba "Plr; "rocking cbalra. There are two fal bare, I eoe. Jaat aand up two aero —green ant* IT yon can-far I expect to be In aty room a groat deal of tba Ua** and every m often l met change *7 ebalr. After Levin* eat tm a ebalr anea I can never feat comfortable in It Hr. Lambert*• reqmot ww «wpHri with, and fur tba nest three boon waa board tba creaking nr the mitai which were being triad in turn by Law kart. **Wo bare had etoet mao who ebject ad to the height of tba bod." eeld Clerk Bansan. "bet tbla racking chair propo altlou In n new ana to nm." LABOR CHURCH FOR CHICAGO day school superintendent, la rriipiwMI by tb» Flat Janitor*' oaloa of Chicago, •aya a <3top* tea from that city a coca adtfaa la prapanof a report on Uaa feaelblllty of the proportion, which alao provide* for a anlou choir and the pulpit to bo onion mad* The proporttloo w«» utado at a recent meeting la Chicago by John Htolmaa. president of Kneel No. 106 of tba Flat JadUm' union. Ha and John TVent of the South Bide Janitors’ uniou were appotated a committee to ««eahHA a onion church, if they fonail K poodbla to do «o. Hlggloaoo, In proponing the etiorch, aald: “Tlia bulwarks of trade to day are purely commercial a ad aortal. Without religious frairealty we are week. Let os take another etep and bring the pulpit within oar realm.'’ The Idea look the meeting by storm. *a reply te a (location as to erhat the creed would be, Hlgglnaoa Mid It would lie noaecctarlan. There will be bo “lama~ or “etogtse" in tbo beilaf, he eakL JAPAN'S FIRST WARSHIP. ma«(n> VhmVi Pul U Ik* 1—fl 1*1 •» t(i* Klkste'* I»*p. Down lu I'ort Wsshlajfton, S. I.. on the atroroi «{ Uenhaoeot hay, trhoro root tho bona of «©mo of tbo inighUart m flglitere of our own flag, llvoo a mao who. in all tairacM, might b* called “tii* father of tba Japanese ai ry.” tayt a New Tor* i-orrcrpoodaat nf tho Uocheater L'aot Kxprooa. Captain Albert fltaananl, to eoao maad of tho hark rlggod dipper DaaM Wohotor, which had bean showing a dean pair of boots to all tho other •hit** to tho Cblnsoo trade to IflO. mode a deal which M rren now Indi rectly betas reflected to bhrtuty. when, with tbs aid of Tcrwnorod Hants, American mtolatcr to Japan, bo nfl to that goreratnad bla Teasel, which bo ra me tbo Brat wanddp of tbo mikado's ocaptra Although Cocamodoro Matthew Ool breath rm-y la IBM had concluded a treaty art lb Japan whereby abo s or sod to throw open three porta to (bo Undo of the world, tbo kamiarlty of soatF ■oat In that rowntry MU conHiwod. and It waa not until about four years later tbit a ■moment waa mods to found a nary, which bdgan with tba aoavundosa of tbo Wobotao. By a cart on# ootncUonce H waa an American man-of-war which, two yearn later, eont this fororonnar of tbo float that blockaded I’ort Arthur to tbo bottom, a till flytng tbo Jaflaaeeo flag and flgbt log tho bast abo cooKL ■V.*1. 1"-l-l—J'rta—BWSB - AMATmOrnKAUnt — -■ ——-J—J"" ASPIRATIONS OF JAPAN Trade Alliance With America Almost Assured,Beys "rrrTitr " ► •TTior* U mure to the teas tUe fearfaert which Me bant The Aajorlcan aretda bar «iup aught_am Up aa England and iba other rtp aa Japan.** •e Nil Bann Kratare Rawls to a Kaw Tern Heruld reporter a Utile while before ha left Now Tart the ether day. -Thla alaUln’ oaotlooed the bans. *Ta oac that I bops lbs *TTTm paw pla will take eartonoiy. W« bar* aa « ttaaaa for unto with BUgleM barn aa alBeure la faf sad aaraeM gaad trig wttfe Why ohaald we sot here e eUanra with the railed Metret Why mould not iba tip of the wing og Ska ••«K whkN naabaa (a the PhWpgtnae. reach to Jape nr* “Why.** aeked the reporter. *——** UKW BO an niDaoco, am yea anna r "Bocnaro than la nay naaaa ta u rartaata (l Hoc* ana Japan to not a competitor with tho Leltad Mataa. "Wo of Japaa try to thttk and ml We bare acted to the loot year. Wa boro a too thought lUwcm, wa an aat throagh thinking; alao wa an not Cbroagh aating." “What wtt happenT Do yoa think then la any vrwpact that toe United Walaa will henma a todaarchy, or win * au» ladatalleiy aa It la a i igtMItiT* "Tbo Uaiiod tutaa win alwaya ho a daoBocrattc rrpablte. Tho aalr woa archy or aaUcracy that la paaaMe la the Ualtad Mataa la aa eUgatM "And Japan r "Japan will arrer ha a npaMc. Ja pan today la aa near a republic aa aay caaatttaUoaal monarchy can ho ameopt ■ngtand. Vngtoad think* It la a aoa archy, bat It to act. England to a ta pabitr. Than to gaita aa atach at (ha lead a» than to toAnartcT^ la Mr toad they bare a kiag. ta America yea do net mo) arm" "la (hare a peealbUlty. da yea thttk. aC a trade tlttonco batwaaa the Ualtad ttataa and JapanV "It to better than n poaatbUMy. I hop* ttiat X to mlntcet aaaand. Japan atnuito wtth open man to the Ualtad ttataa. U to ap te the Uatoed Mataa. to oaa one at year gpttktt to totdlta goad,* United ttataaT“ "I bar* not tbo right to apeak tor the MO|*ator. Dot paroonally I aa owe that he doea. I ant alao anta that rr ary Integlgrot Japanroo wfll be aaly too glad of a bctnaaii the United Wa hare eome to know tho U mataa. Wo hero Amorims Itwn own an tlia <taj« of Cmnato* fatty Japaa baa bean a aert af aMa leene In a 1 commercial aad diplomatic eaoae ta (bo United Ptatcs. I realize that the ehle teeoe phaan to rear. I realm that Japan to bow a world pawar. t think that the people of the United ■taint atoo realize the name thing. “Wt want Japan to bold her place proudly and dtatiaetly with the otter powora of tbo world. Wa realm aad appreciate tbo ktudaaaa that tbo Aaoer kno people bara otpomeed toward Ja pan. I think I can soo aa ora of port aa proopecta. Oar flag, yea knew, to that af tbo HUag aaa. « roao aororal year* ago and draopodL It baa now rtotn again." "Win Japaa now make aa odtort to oecatmpo mlpntka to* tha Uattad •to too, do yarn tbtakY* "Japaa oarer make* aa odTort to aotad coteqleta where bar gag dam not fy. any rpot la tbe'werET that ia nat a Jnpaaooo colony, that ia why Karoo and ooathom ManrhH gton an eaV bava. according to the rag otto of loot ymr, 400.000 am people than wo hog go manewhero* rmMimhttattSa aad Korea aro now happily tha mfaty VllvM nf KhUWM TT* ■-a alaaa Aa lot off mul “There la rtUl a eertala aacttaa at iapa» ta be populated. the war* ate part. It hi hard war* to aaad eotatoOa ep there In Mat bertea region. 1 tatm •a TeJ Jo. It la hard, aoM aad atartia. tt la uot attractive. Wo bora never been able ta crowd ear extra pi pale tlee la that 4! recti oo. Waaeara are Meet tbe aaras, whether they are tram Haw Itaetaud or whotbar they are CjaMjraftyo^rbay went «ad aaad fee flaea not giro theta that* • -Watte nTtoOto tore dera aad fly Me rt«i ag ean at Japax far fear flag Tbe Japanroa an i ■ inad lie aad ae* cnaraxo anlaralleo to America. It nor arhaa. Tfea Japaaaae gevereeato ml 5"* *» awbarraaMag poalttoa that tha Hailed gratae haa l»eea pat aadar fey the Chlneaa index. "W hi in wa Japaaaae are ractatty aa aociated with go Chtaeaa. wa ragayfl tfeOM aa aa inferior race. Ilia an Mato la toM a Japanaae ad eraa ifea enry Prw •rdetnaa that ha la a ChMaaa Wa aaa pread of tmr man ato ebat tt baa flan* Wa bare raaniuerii (Man tartaa Tfea Cahad Putea haa a race prawaa featoe It vary aieab Manor tbaa eera Tfea aalared papelaitea ad flrta eeeatrj **Japaa ft* an abaotatftjr trm countrj J
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 3, 1905, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75