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PAGE FOUR THE GASTON I A, (N. C). DAILY GAZETTE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 1921 The Gastonia Gazette. ESTABLISHED 1880 lmr very Afternoon In the Week' Except Sunday, at 214 W. Airbne Ave.. 1 C0 0S--MWArliM!'Aye.' ' Phones 50 nd 233 ! Jaa. W. Atkins ManaginK Editor E. D. Atkini Business Manager Bach A. Query. . . . .Editor . Cn.iAlu lTitifnr Strm, X.QS a, nrocn.au,. .- ' Admitted into the mails at the Post- ofect at Gastonia. N. C'.. nl I- the pound rata of postage. April J-w SUBSCRIPTI0N PRICE By Carrier or Mail in the City Ona Year .50 8ii Months Three Months $1.-5 Ona Month .50 By Mail Outside of Gastonia n tr . l.dll X. w t-MMl CI X UIllllO Xhree Months $!.('' One Month Payable Invariably in Advance .0(1 Member of The Associated Press Tba Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ol all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special dis patches are also reserved. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1921. Gastonia, The South's City of Spindles V MAKING IT A GAME. Men back from over-seas comment with wry faces on the difference be tween the people here and in France in the matter of thrift. An ex- '. service man recently put his finger on the point. "They enjoy it," he Mid. "They make a game of it It's their favorite sport." He kit it If one is to undertake thrift, he must do it affirmatively and with sest AN INSTANCE. A day or two ago we took occasion to cite a fact that is painfully well known to many Gastonians, viz: that we do not appreciate good things when they conic to un; meaning by that good h lures and speakers, highclass musical numbers and cultural programs of any sort . (Mil people will flock by the hundreds to hear a musical comedy vevue, or a cheap light opera, but let a really substantial pro gram of good things be offered and there is a plentitude of empty seats. We are reminded of this very forcibly mis wees, in a way not at all to o'ir credit, of the very slim audiences that have heard Mr. Evans, th Bible study leader at the Methodist church. Those who miss his daily expositions of the Scriptures are missing one of the most valuable treats of the saton. As n Student, orator ami expositor of the l!i ble his fame is international. He lias lieen in world-wid demand for ju.- t su- h talks as he is giving here. For instance, he turned down a week 's engagement at Miami, where he could have been enjoy ing the fruits and flowers and sunshine of Florida, to come to (ia.-tonia to en dure a week of raiu and disagreeable weather. Dr. Evans is a man who does not ordinarily visit cities as small as Gaxtonia, and it would appear indeed, from the number who hear him, that vve have in our midst, a man far above the heads of most of us. OUR CHAMBER QF COMMERCE. "The (laslnnia Chamber of Cointnerce is one of the livest institutions of its kind in this section. One of the evidences Of its alertness was demons' rated a few lays ago when Winston Salem pet it i -d for the hard surfaced highway to the mountains through that city. Immediate ly the Gastonia Chamber of Conimene, through its directors, took quick action In the interest of Gastonia, having s'.-ul ed a campaign to pull the hard "surface highway to the mountains by wav of Gastonia. Lineolntou, Hickory and l.e noir. It is refreshing to see a town with such wiilo awak com. racial ergniixa tions ns Gastonia has. Only such mgani sations can effectively combat the ef ficient work which is being ,lone by the Winston-Salem Hoard of Trade. What esn any town without a live commercial organization exjiect to accomplish when competitive towns round about are arm ed with chandlers of commerce and boards of trade which keep their eve upon everything of commercial and in dustrial importance. May we suggest gain that Alln-marle's Hoard of Trade be pushed forward at once.'" . The above from the Maiiby News Herald bears out an editorial statement made iu this pajNT a few days ,,go that the Gastonia Chamber of Commerce was one of the livest organizations of its kind in the South. The occasion of our reference was the agility with which Sec retary Allen hopped on to the road building project referred to above. Since that time another instance has come to band in the securing of Gov. W. p. ;. Harding, of the Federal Reserve Hoard, for aa address here a week from today. This action was taken purely on the initiative of the secretary, who, trained newspaper man that ho is, sensed some thing big for Gastonia ami acted in tnter. without waiting to call the dire--tn together.' Needles to say, 'they 'unanimously approved L forethought. ' THE WEATHER MAN. It has come to lie a habit with 'some' folks to discount the weather man's pre-! dictions to a certain degree. Jokingly' they refer to the weather forecast iu day's papers, and if the prediction 'S rUt'' ,''C' grai',!''"B'jr ui,t " 0,"'e t,ie W1'a,lur hit it right t,lis ,'"lt'-" It is reasonable to assume, however, that most remarks like this come from tllos(1 ,.),!,. i1() ,0 110t understand the scientific knowledge back of I'ncle Sam'j Weather Bureau and its workings. They nw nothing whatever of the absorbing ((f ,11(.u.oroi,)(,v witll its various ; . , I .1 III I 111 ,1 l lour Ul jlll.US, I UC 11 1 IS 1 I . UM'I physiography. Tuesday afternoon the papers carried ' ' 11 short weather dispatch predicting rain fur the next i0 hours over the eastern section of the Ninth, ''as the result of t a disturbance now centered over the Mis- sissippi valley. I lint prediction lias vall.-y." been literally fulfilled. Th. cieni-e which has perfects for us the almost accurate system of weather asting is based on the simplest laws 1 of physics and physic; geography. It is no guess work. It comes as the result of vears of study and observation. T! weatln-r man is one of 1'iu-le Klin's mo faithful servants. MAKING AND SPENDING. 'Io you know that now is a linn reductions and expense cutting every where, even in our wealthiest families.'" was the ipiestiou put to The (inzcltr a few days ago. "People of ample means are eliminat ing as luxuries what a year ago they deemed as comforts and nei-essit ii s, ' ' continued the speaker. It s true, every word of it. The did lars which are being so prollgatcly east about a year ago an- being saved now. Wages and salaries were high in the boom times of a year ago, ami the wise ones who laid aside part of it are not suffering now from hard time I heir dollars are worth twice as much ;i they were this lime last year. It is just as Meredith Nicholson says in the o-mo-polilan : ''To spend all we earn is to prove our selves improvident: to spend more than we earn is to invite disaster. The only sound Tule is to preserve a sa to tmargi n bet veen a prosperous today and an un certain tomorrow. "There is a con. taut and widespread complaint of the extravagance of the American- people, l'ar too many of us think it a shameful thing to be thought economic,-! ami Hint ly. 1 he keeping u of iippearsnces is a practice of direct f dly. IVt'.er be thoughl "dose" and have a savings account than to lie idcuti tied with the free spenders who are blind to the needs of tolllorr "Much has been said and written a boiit the conservation of the national vvoal'h, but it is iio iiiubent open all of us (o s'op was'e iu our personal a fl airs We must free ourselves of the )': 11.x !h:t economy is a svnoiiym for si ing-ness. " H is trite but right thai a dollai saved is a dollar earned ! "I have watched with interest the long l;ne of depositors pressing toward the receiving windows of a trust company on a Saturday night. These no n. women and children are establishing for lb ves a shelter against the coming 1 inevitable rainv day. We mav rage the gnn, . nierica 11 i .111 of a from the total of its savings ai-.-'he number of its life insiir-nce holders, and the percentage of owned bv its citizens. I fair's town and - The world is I iiin-h with 11-; laiean-l soon, letting ami sm n-ling. we lay was'e on-- powers ; Little wo si-c iii Na'iiri- that is on. ; We have "i Ur hearts away, a - 1 Li I boon ! "Such the pl-rot ,.f .r. 1 hundred vors a-'o. a p. I it is fi 'P I Ii 'v r- tei-ite.l bv frith of mioo-ao life The fine ol, simplicities ef ..nr f iii.c. are in .barer in the-..' times of hih pressure ami hic;h prie s. "Get th- s-iving liabi; ! S.-ao voir 'l"l!:ir earefnilv b.-for- you sp. 11 I il lively pen 11 v s-ive! ;i..s o vour .-is - of mbid and s. If respect and contribu'.s to the strength and seoinitv of America." WHAT YOU COULD DO. IF We all think in terms of three .linen - '" - - li iigMi. w nil h and dept I which we measure looms, ob.je ts bv lis taiices. s,.,e. Hut mat heuiat ieians ilaim that a f-iirth diineie ion exists. If you mas tired it, you 1 .Mil l nut b,. locked in a rooinf for a room has only three diioeii sions and you could escape Ihiougli the fourth. What is the fourth dimension.' lime is the fourth dimension, answers Einstein. b to see a friend. Walk down one -tree), traversing the diineii.s-oii. len-th Turn at , corner and travel along an other dimension, width. I.'. -aching t he fiiend's house, take the elevator to his "I'art nt, traversing the third diiinn sien. depth or h.-i-ht. Hut. arriving you tin. I your trie, el out. oil have to wait - iiiinuti-s before reaching him. Thus time is a fourth dimension iu lo eating any physical object .r lea.-hiug ;i v given point (.n the earth. 4, . 4- ... , And even tune, says 1, instem, w rela-1 live. lie claims that time varies in dif- fereiit tiarti of the universe, Take the etar Polaris 110 years for its light to teach us, and vice-versa, which means that it takes 116 years for eyes to see from one to the other. A '"c" " 1'wlaris, given a powerful tele- scope, is watching events that took place ' "ii our earth HQ' years ago. Thus now is the year 1921 on earth but it is the year ISO.! on l'olaris, yet both are idea- tieallv the same, j On more distant stars, inhabitants ay lie looking down and watching the building of the pyramids in Kgypt. Time is relative. It varies with the , . . , . , . , . . UIIJOCI Ul S 1 U I S 111 rCl.lIUIIi lO WniCll 11 IS cu.'isi.Iereil. liiiisteiu advances this novel claim: Shoot a man from the earth out into .-pace 111 shell traveling with the speed! of light Isll.O'Mi miles a second. I I f the shell travels and returns lo earth ' with that speed, the man Would emerge from the shell unchanged. lie would be exactly the same jigo and uni-hangi-i physically, even though the trip had taken I .liolHiuli vears. is, according to Kin-tern. CIvYJNG TIEELi FOR A CURFEW V LAV, IN WEST GASTONIA. IIj4ih-!! i'. l-oiic; in I.orav : ehly News. We can think of nothing that is more i.iely net d'-d at tlii- time than a curfew law for our city. l'hi- is particularly true of v'i -,t (iastonia. We have scores f bo.vs and s one girls who insist (in ; the slieet.i at night. Jt isn't tault lor Ihcv have never had the advantage.-, that some parents have, and 1 hey are not as wi-e a-- they might he :-j-,ng the lines of ihild ti.iini'ig. We do think houevci that tin fault if to !.. I.t'd at someone'.-, .loo.-. I'ai t of ll i- to be charged to the lev s tin m-e!vc, and part to ns voter-. Eventii ally it is i he hope of all of us tiiat t he chuichc. an, I tin various civic orgaui.a lions vvi!l liiiiction mi as to have co,n ple'e moral i out nil of the young life of li nuiniiii! v , lui' that i- an ideal that " ta: in the I'll' lire. I u i In me.-ilit io:e ,,.lv v .-1 1 i 1 1 1 1 s .01 re, t iv e 1 m a-ores lli.it wi ni.iv i-..tit;il.'y u-e to ch. k Ho- 'rovv in,; ten-h 'ii v of our boys lcvv.ir-1 iouiior ality. v ii kedio-ss, vagrainy and common "'mini s-. that thev an- .-m-i-usIoi I I o ph k Up 10 Ilie streets at the months ;!i, !hroie'h the action- of tie- older tools of the ll.-vil who in.-:st on lueakiag but h 'In- laws of h d and of mail on t ie st n e1 s of onr city. I he ilcv ii vv i i.s a inl t Wi-o'y '' ,nr hem-; i.f 1 h ' In- ga rre f 1 1- a!i it is v loin . v c Mi'unto -,!' II hoie s, !,-' wo :ne 1 vie,- works hard d 1 v. a 'i I is in !h his king ' ui nt v I'm. r I Hi.it in C.;.s tling average tonia la mai l:s his s! , between I in- I o '1 I n k at 11 few l-i .V Wo hi, mire-!. 1,'' h un for a t "urs of siind ; ,v 11 and t welve With an , ffeelive cur '-Hi'. I i. llo'l.lv kee'i s one 11:. r lev s -n"l -iris in their i.-.l .; ' w o or I Mi l liours !!.. v .1. t urn 'IT- K'ola'-v .In1., that 1 1 'lent bn.lv '' I' -di'.- Io' .:o,-- oii-l r. ,'.-..! -.al nici, "''' ''''!. "'''I f'-et keit I'euip- w h. s,. -,,.. j , t., .-the,.:, i i looking "'v l'1'1 ' '' ''i'-""''' h.. ve Miagiiairmmisly '' oi'i-.-'ooitics to liel,, t'.,. I,. Vs. V r,'!l '''" 1 '''"' av g it lo his fa-c. M;"k " ' 1 ' '''-''I -., II e their i.llluen-,- - v '" I' ''- iv I " i . -1 1 ..!,.,. f , u. '' (' ,; - M ri"ii Star. Mr. llarlW. after ;.!l lot it -.v..;!h a p .un I of '' : " 1 "' "" ' have a newspaper tftif ' knows what the White House i.s thi'ikjjg. 1 1 ' "-' ' i- t'v Is i . , ', of r-p :i " 1 'V i ' i "11-. , ;' 1 .-, .1 :' 1 !,,,.,. 1 ' '" d-;' ' 1 - ' e b'M-.ieu an optimisl f '' '-'' bi;'... I'h, -, nr.- pi '' ' I"" '"-' that the op! ! mist owes '"- ' 1- .'ih lo,- t;,.. ioi.il !, I,.' '" H- owe. if to t h(. pi,imist. ' c o.i.'rv. I!, ,,. 1 ,.v inl.1,1 I, j, . ., -- - - vcn.,,,1 ; f., ,',.,. ,,'.. i-or',--.. '' M''- " ' 'iv; d,M. ' stop saying -'i'd I- -f 'a-'ino .. .(!: 1, ' '.: a'-.,' Hi. vie. ... mebo.lv will ,"- ' "f v, .,4 ,!( I oop!. I ... ( the .'-.oiilii is in the ''--. " in- V- .,,,, -s , ;;, ; , ,,, - 1 :!"- ""' Mii..a,.rs :i,;. , ..... 1 ,., ;. ,.., f : - ,,. ,1,, ''!' it- mi t . I.i-r, hman who would tov.n 10 ..1 .1' h a lav. -- .... ,-.s !:!," I'1" 1:1 lal-r con' r .v.-rsv n:av "!''"''' a ': i-. th. !!.,,, 1,1, ;j v; ' si'""'' '" make it a t h n-e co ne 1 ed ij.l,t '''' -'ri-' i-i. ---i -. :,:. ,,,., 1 '! '-'-I shop, ll pen shop ' " - !' He '.l.-n!,.,:. el.-m-:,. v.Wi 1 1 ;-' V- 1 ,v '"' ' ' "''" "1 p' -P1, a 11 I tli.' "'" ' "' 1 -I- Is nine.,' BIGGEST lAYS N KHORTLST ' '"' '' "' 1 "" , ii ,, , MONTH. - !v e.-.i T'l, tni- k t' -11 b ri . '- a ,1 -i ,i-o en the s'r.-.-l "0! power t I .v-.nianho. In. ". Ii' el re 1 -1 1 11 111 ft 1 tin- ke if " I. let u 1 111 v. ii! I . la ANOTHER WHISKEY I.ADEN CAK CAPTURES BY DEPUTY BAXTER Lin... in o,e,'1 News. , Thin-. I Mel V.si '''-'i " ll.pulv I'.ax'.-r 'it d.'hn I.e.-.lhermail c , I, tore, I an is ,.,. 1, 1 11, ,),,,. toiirin car. with I'1.. U-allo,. liquor on ).;,, ,. The driver "f tiie eai. Era nk tjii.cn. of ( ..1 -toniii, was arr.-sle.l and -Wen .-, h.-arMig before l.s.. Le.i'h.-iie-n. ,., boinel him ever to silp-rior court in I be s I'm of s ".oo '" n he taih d to eiVl. .., , ( in .tail over nii;lit. or uo'il bon.l i:. made. Th. re we - another man in th,. .-ar .on. I he escaped. (Jiieen stuff! that the man willi him was from Iha rl"' !. . lot 1 ha i he del mil know I. -in, he ha v i'e- Ik- 0 . n -':-' I th" Charloll,. m.,11 !,. dtive to t he -o,ir e of s'lpplv l.l oe' whi-k. y. The ai-e-' was mad.- in North Lrook The Young: Hycu. W hen : evv York lliaglslr.it. ordered a fiurii't s Ii.h.I girl'to K, iionie and wa.di i He paint on her face and tl her hair lie evidently didn't bi lieve in the lay ina' that tho n-.iinl .lv -.i,.e. in.:i.. --- r . ".ib. A IlilO dvlphia 1'ublie Ledger. ' QUJLLEN S SAYINGS Flashes of Wit and Humor From the Pen of Great Par agrapher. By BOBEBT QUILLEN. (Copyright 1920, Associate Editors.) (Vmvietioii : An opinion; the product of jslfishncss. Well, if the nations do disarm, let t In-ill make it retroactive The campaign to end wars is beiwr prosecuted l.y I ieneral Taxation. There isn't much chance of balkiu' war.-, until they delete the Balkans. A nation's conscience L'uides it un- ,-rriugly i:i paths that promise a profit. l.lo.vd (icorge seems willing to give Ireland anything sht. can receive in the .....a, Vou can't blame a boy for becoming a liar 1 as! 01 r his parents assure him that is "nice good medicine." oil The colonic ;reat war teaches us that two can be kept as cheaply as won. The ruins of Europe will inspire more pity if t'uy won't try lo come over here as immigrants. Well, why shouldn't Kritain have most of th.- oil.' Mo- seems to have most of tin- troubled waters. 'The nore one -! lid ies t he perversity and di-ris of nate ns, the more clearly he iimlei stands the I'lond. If is t I ,10 th t in. 'nigra nl s a re bring ing in an average of fl's each, America will .0011 gel her money hack. And vvhv, pray, ale people kept in asy lums for Iht' iiieer while devotees of fu turi.st art walk abroad .' Another good thing about old Dobbin. The repair I '"I ' John pat I ', b. . ate I la I'd,. 1. -"" 'i'a:'!. I' li-i 1 pill'. I,, :.'.l IK. Te. 1 t"' ' 'l a . I ' I,. : II'--., :'..sl I. lupi. I.rok.-u 1. ".tli I Mat s. on I'eb. I to M, I'uit, I - 1 S . I ' I'l .! 01 rn. 1 1 1 -' , I. , I 'to L'li r. 1. Mori h rate gone -v . l.e. I , ... state- '-I' MeTt. 1, I' 'out. I Mil. la'. .'..t 1 a I i'-ii. I I . b. 1 none. I. Is- A. loo Kll' I . .o I'' b. I'; 17.".l'.. I ...- , i i s . 1 I stat. man 'I't Weell XeW 'eb. 7, s:il a m.i n I. or, i , hot,. oik and Chi ."I ''ll Op. lie I. 'o-n.-ii! Will r. ; I'e! . s s 'o Willi Menu !j.ir, . pie ed. I' Id I., I r. 1.. !. 17;.: V"-.!tbfr bin.. Ill e-'al I s7o. A'. !,!,. .ot l.ii Al.v.iihi : 'Ppl ' ;.t i.-n l.,i "hi. born I cb. 1 '. I siei I :! I.I (.ray file teoi'hon.- palent-., t-Vb. I '. Is7.l. L. II beili '"a bv a few beer. .,o, ning the patent. Ml -I, O. l-'e P l -. 1- vva ; s - sunk in Havana jiati nle.l phono h.: I A. l-i. lis. oi i:. l 7. n. I' Washington born V'eb. L'L', I 7 !'!. - bii-iaess started Tib. .; 1'n-t iiaten' for revolver g o n I ..It. Feb. .1, !s.:i; I s ip. ranted Beginning At Home. 1 "i.s Mint s::vs that millions of jTcKZJ - wf vv I'l-n Iv vv ore out , hi died, inn's .loin 't l.eeo .11 broke. lye from chil b' n will starve tiiis winter in Fai- through the irH-stines and producod ab-r"I"'- M-eMieu in the ravitv of the bodv. "Oh. tha1 r.nnin.ls no ! I forgot to f.i-d Kido his chop, and he must be jns ' starved." Life. JOHN REED'S PLACE WAS SECOND ONLY TO LENINE AND TROTSKY. (By the Associated Press.) BEBLIN, Feb. 9. The late John Keed, American magazine writer, news paper correspondent and a leader of Com muiiists iu America, won a place in Soviet Russia second only to Lenine and Trotsky, M. bchwurtz, of San Francisco, Socialist and labor organizer,, told the correspondent of The Associated Press upon his arrival here from Moscow where ho had been four months in prison fol lowing his .attendance as delegate to the second -coucress of the Third Intcrna- tlouale. Reed died in Moscow last autumn. "When I first went 'to Moscow some friends told me John Keed was there," said Mr. Schwartz. " 'What of itf I asked, for I had known Reed iu C'liica- Co when, as a tug, good natureil, siu I cero fellow he had spilt the Socialist;18" or l"e Western European, powers i Party over the issue of communism, and i initiate more trouble. llis being iu ltussia didn 't particuarly in- . u'r-'st ,IH'- Jt soou i"terest me. I ''Some of the Ros::lim li.'id .'ixkeil me "Some of the Rus:ans had asked me about the Communist party in America j ! 1 1'ai1 'eplied we had 110 real, or ganized Communist party there, al though we bad communists. This, ap parently, did not jibe with the impres sion Heed bad made. That same day he came, coatless and angry, into the din ing room where we were all eating and walking 1 1 j to me put his hand 011 my shuubler ami in a voice which everyune in the room could bear said: " 'Schwartz did you say there was no Communist party in America f I was surprised ami answered that I bad not said vve had no communists hut that we had no legal cnniMiuni.st parly. 'I'm glad you didn't say it,' Heed declared, still in a loud voice, and walked out of the room. "Shortly after this I was given an ex hibilioii of the power he held over the a. Iminist ration. I bad seen him tearing through the streets with Lenine and Trotsky and iiiovieff in oHieial aut iliio biles, evidently on the best of terms i Then Lenine put through a resolution ill the congress thai only Hussion, (iernian and I'l eie Ii should be spoken. Heed . heard ab'.-ul this an hour or so after llii'j res lint ion was passed and he came stamp' iug into tiie convention iu a rage. He -was a dramatic ligure. II- wore 110 coat ' and his shirt was open at the collar. He walked down the aisle pointing his finger at Lenine, who was iu the chair, iu the meantime ...peaking rapidly in English. " 'English is not to be spoken here, '1 Lenine shouted, ri-iiig from the chair. ! "Reed continued in English, declaring! there were -7 delegates who spake Eng lish and English must be one of the languages of the convention. Lenine dually bear. I him through and r-voki'd1 the resolution and made English one of the official con vent ion languages.'' i When Keed fell ill of typhus he was 1 given every possible a 1 1 eu I ion , Mr. s. 1 . ...;.i 1 ,. 1 1,,., i. .i;.l t . i.ioaii. S.101, .loo ot 11 ,.i lost oe .in. 1 his funeral was remarkably reside inlaid. II- was I, iirie l under the Kremlin walls " I '.ohshev ism was his life's work," Schwartz, concluded. "He was te'rihlv in eani 'st about it, an I would, I believe. wil'inolv have died for this dream of the Soviet. ' ' LONHON, Cel.. !l. General Wrali gel's villa ill Seliastiipid has been nation al "'l by the I tol-.he v i k i, says official .vire'e-s me si-go from Mn?;ow. Man v other villas aud privately ownr farms as well as the farm of th, (leor gieff nomas'. 1 v have iM-en niiverte.l in 1 to commercial property. I en farms have been handed over to workers guilds and .lining the last two weeks t h" Sebas 1 loool l.-ileii com in it lee of the Soviet ha put l,lo:i "bourgeoisie ami speculators ' to co'i.-.ii'sorv work. I'lii; I 'G, E(d,. ll. President Hsu i Miic.han has issue. u mandate calling: ti e at'.-ui i. 11 of I he people to the election ! of a repp -.-illative ef China as a membei of i!,e Council of the League of Nations 1, 11. 1 e'.pr.-s.i.e; the wish that the ('bill I I'M' should show their appreciation of I mis by " sinking their differences ami- w oking together for the reunion tif the; 1 country." lie adds: "Onr hope is that no can .nsolid.-i t e the foundation of j foe .omit rv forever and at the same tiinc b. aole to do our part in cfl'eeliiig 11 11 vei-al pe.-.e in the worbl." ! ARE YOUR CHILDREN BRIGHT AND HAPPY? GIVE SENNA-TONE Wonderful Indian Remedy Will Remove Worms and Relieve Torture and Suffer ing. LOOK FOR SYMPTOMS ! BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE Give Them Indian Senna-Tone j Now and Keep Them Strong and Healthy Get It at Kennedy's Drug Store. j The symptoms (if worms in children are flushed cheeks, white litis and a pale look around the nose and mouth, eyea J sunken, oa ins. and svvclliiio- in the stom ach, bowels irregular with slimy slool, J greedy uppetite for dainties, and offell-i sive breath, when stomach jj, emplv.'S picking and rubbing the nose, starting and crying in the sleep, fretful and (lis- satisfied during the day and fever in the morning with a feeling of faintness. If the fever runs high and the pulse is .piick ami irregular there is danger of ,cimvusinn.i. Cnsesi are on record where it has been tdiown, by examination after death, that thine worms - have eaten For stomach trouble, eonsttipaf ion and rheumatism Senna-Tone lisis no eijual. 'Sold at Kennedy Drug Store. COMMUNISTS LACKED BOTH PEOPLE AND MEANS. , RIGA, Feb. 9. Tle Soviet Russian newspaper, PraTda, reviewing the year 1920, aayt the Communists were unable to realize most of their practical aims because of the lack of both " people, a-d means ' It proposes a revision of the part constitution as a practical measure for the building- up of the state. Reviewing the Soviet Ti,wi-. ii foreiirn V, , . , " - policy the Pravda recognizes that Lstho - nia and Latvia must be considered 'the Russian windows to Western Kuropc. Any future war with the border states must be avoided, it says, as the last war with them was very difficult and entailed inuiiy uacruices on We part Of ho Viet ; Russia. 1 fif0i i POl-GLAS, ARIZ., Feb. 9. No Other newspapers reprint rumors from : n,ort- si H,,not('r I'i,rt5,' in Au Priet. the Western European press regarding M,'x- wiJtst town " the western herai a concentration of troops on the Russian ' !,Illl, r?- i frontier and eiplain these rumors as the llanl ''" r,-;i1 lt:inl 0,lt's. t-boo. . 1 ; j BELFAST, IRELAND, Feb. 9. ' I V. :. , . . . . ! vitiation. r in ,.,' 4 '..,.'..:..! .ii-buiumuiu are in nroizresii in inhm 1 , , T ,7 f -" u........ uie oi(i insn noose or i:oinmons mace and siH-aker's chair for the new Ulster! Parliament. They are heirlooms of Lord Massereene at Antrim Cas'lc. The offer of the use of Belfast Citv Hall ns a temporary building for the new Parliai ment will be accepted. . j 1 Ladie: Very few of us stop to think of the oth er fellows troubles. When you go to give that. grocery or der stop and think of everything that you are going to need for the day and give it in one order. It is a big expense to have to make two or three deliveries a day and you can save your grocery man this if you will. The B - J Co. Wholesale Fruits and Produce We Sell Merchants Only. Phone 678 1 i M Vc S3 i ' u-x7 8 Ii ff LvW i 1 ' wit- A R STETSON HATS Why not discard that Old Hat and come in and select a New Head Dress almost any shape or color can be found in our stock and we have reduc ed them in price so that they are in reach of all. Every Stetson in the house priced $6.00 Robinson Shoe Company. RED STAR LIN NEW RATES NEW SCHEDULES CHARLOTTE TO GASTONIA 75 Cts. Big Six Studebaker - National Cars. Lv. Armington Hotel, Gastonia 8:00 10:10 12:00 2:00 4:00 6:00 8:00 Ar. Central Hotel, Charlotte 9:05 11:05 1:05 3:05 5:05 7:05 9:05 Lv. Central Hotel, Charlotte 7:45 9:45 11:45 1:45 3:45 5:45 7:45 11:00 Ar. Armington Hotel, Gastonia 8:50 10:50 12:50 2:50 4:50 6:50 8:50 12:05 RATES Gastonia to Lowell 25 Gastonia to McAdenville 25 Gastonia to Belmont 25 Gastonia to Charlotte . 75 WATCH FOR THE CAR WITH THE RED STAR ASEVILLE WOMAN FULL OF PINS OF ALL KINDS ASHEVILLE, Feb. 9. A veriUbla human pin cushion was Mrs. Mary War ren upon whom an unusual operation has ' just been successfully performed at tha Merriwether hospital Thce -were taken from her stomach as many as 30 pins of : all sizes and descriptions gold, silver and cheaper metals. Mental trouble is" iMlieved, to have caused her to take the . ..4- - .i:.., r j. .. . Bii.iBo oicv. ureai pain recently e- 1 ,.ri,.m.ed ,.,) the woman to seek medi I (..,( ai,i. 8he is reported to be,Kettin , ,, ...Mididly ,. the operation. . . Obrcvjon Put Ban On Hard Drinka And. Ham blind L 1 ri,M" ; IouU t w,lt'''ls !ir" stilh-l. neason lor me cnange WDregon. I'. S. Later, 'incinn.it i man fought 1 """I1""" UJ ...rorm" , w.ls-t George Washington. Where U 1 t M We always wonder what the heroins of the story really does when the author ""J"1 unbends a trifle Journal. Ohio Stats' n
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 10, 1921, edition 1
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