Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / March 24, 1921, edition 1 / Page 4
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. I I s Vx i4 H e f I x H. PACE FOUR The Gastonia Gazette t1nl!rgJo",ru?J'rry,i,n i tiif Argonm aid on the Uruit thousand THE GASTONIA, (N. C). DAILY GAZETTE . - r" . 4 ... . t- T -i . nwiwint, BlABtn 1941. ESTABLISHED 1180 Jdiu Favstoui, Howard O.ite. an.l other' Oastun county men gave their lives on. I this man goes free. WHICH SIDE ABE YOU ON? T1 ; . .. I : mrre in no miuiiie i ...... i a : i u. J""" AIUer.c.ns, who went out fi,.bt betweea law an.l , . u... none .a April, isw. ro uerend the ,,,,, whiA,y ,raffic IMHM fry Airernooo uc .-.. v. ,r Urm, ,,e sleeping ue ,,t011 Ka,,.ln Journa Tlj,.re no Ilfufra! Iicept Saaday, t 214 W. Alrlu At. ,.,, the uf a forri(M .,. tW7(i1,. Tbe,e relIiark, gre o,.0!)sionP, " i.r.. .!.. 1 iii.I PL,r.,.l..ll t;.. 1)..., r: . . . re,,rllt hamx-nuiKs in Wake coiintv where two school houses and a church wir,. fired lv bloekaders ntnl bootleg Kr. . urthertnore, as in the hectic days (if The defenders of the liipmr trallic arc ll'l'nn,! lfMS. insidious (iermaii riji;i , show ing their color, says the Journal, garnla. the sort of slime that craN on They have hoisted the Ma. k flag a its lielly like a Miake, is beginning to gainst churches and schools the flag !ireail itself again throughout America, under width they have always operated, I lie ''Horror on tin- Hliine" inassmect irg in New York a few .lay ago is an example. Protests against the indemnity against (ierinaiiy are. other'. If there was cur a time when the ii.uiitiv nee.li the American I.eginn is now. GAZETTE PUBLISHING CO. Office: 214 W. Airline Are. Phones 50 nd 232 Jj. W. Atkins Managing Editor E. D. Atkina Business Manager Hugh A. Queij Editor Mr. Zoe K. Brockman,. . Society Editor A.itnitte.l into the mails at the Post office at (jastouia, N, ('., at the pound fate of postage, April L'S, 1902. RE YOU ON? t QUILLEN'S SAYINGS 1 oljM-rvv The Win- II1 , , lrooo4 One suspects at times that atatfsnieii consider our motto, "In God wa trust," a violation of the anti-trust law. The eensors always clip the film just Flashes of Wit and Humor ns e '''robing begins, Un,i one wonders From the Pen of Great Par- 1wiai tn,y Uo w"" ,lie str'i's they eut afrapher. By BOBEBT QUILLEN. (Copyright Vilu, Associate Kditors.) out. Speaking of infant jirudigiej, there America's live in.lo.strv. Wif.h so many conflicting divorce laws, it may yet lie necessary to change the sys'em an.l let people take one another on probation. A physician sis women are getting taller. An.l men look longer. t : . SUBSCRIPTION PRICE By Carrier or Mail in the City One Year V00 8ix Months $2.50 Three Months tl.L'5 One Month 50 By Mail Outside of Gastonia One Year M 00 His Months $2.00 Three Mouths tl.W One Month 50 Payable Invariably in Advance Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively en t tied to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or no) otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special (lis patches are also reserved. it SPEAKING OF NEWS. A day of fasting mid prayer fur the conversion of newspaper men is suggest Meth- i'd in an editorial published in n'ist I'rote-trmt. The editorial follows: "As long as only evil is news, the evi l( lice Will seem to move that the w,,rl.l '- I .... I . - L...... . ...... l.... ; ;.. .1 have to contend with. It is the arch ei.emx of schools an I churches. With but which they were careful to conceal until the battle got too hot fur them. Wake county, the home of 1hr .State c'pital, was tht seem- of the liist open battle between the foices representing the Ibpior trallic on the one side and the L.rees representing the schools an.l i I. nr. lies on the other. Two school In. uses and one chiirih building were hi, rue. I, as also were the residences ul tno la n a bi. I ing litiens who had dared to take their stand with the schools and ciiur. lies. The light is on. It has jut begun in the way that we could wish it had been started lung ago in North Carolina. Ancestors are a great consolation t. people who don't amount to anything. It is all very well to say that you can arr.v a drink in a fountain pen, but if r, is anything like ink, how are you going 'o get it out ' r-pring is t'ter one ha ic modern (loo. I .Samaritan fallen among coal dealers. The only successful effort nth and taxes was made by corn. to dodge ,lohii Par Hlood is t hi. k. r t ha n wa t er, but i nibablv isn't thick.-r than naval coin-tition. The travelling salesman has glum ..vs when he figures that he could THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1921.e is sweeping on to hell. If the good in Hie world had the sniiie kind of news paper notoriety us the evil there would be another story to tell. A good Metho Mv" I"1''1'1' s. hools and a progressive Hap .. revival among the newspaper fra tist church in their community, the GMtOOU, The South' City Of Spindlet s-ruity of this ln. would put new i bio, kaden and bootlegger, of New ' ft"''' on things. We are having all kind i ... , , . , . , , , . . ' I l-ight township found it in. rea singl v WADVlMf Ttr ' " 111 the church. How , , . WAKM1IMO U ,,, jf t(J llfm, n )iv of r.v(r dilhclty to carry on their business. In rusting fer tile men who produce theiI:"''' ,',K,,- r their wluskey plants had modern newspn per W,. are not insist been destroyed by oflicers only 11 few ing n this, we are only throwing out a , ,)llVs before the open warfaie was start suggestion." I . . el on educatiou and religion. I lie men w ho produce t h In not f urn is I. a HC S) St T''tl TrlA-i "TO TKI it stay at home and take olders fun w ife. Municipal publics is beginning to Warm. Interest, which has lain dormant through the winter, is reviving along with the grass an.l flowers of spring. And, like the present spring which came on us with a rush all of a sudden one fine iiutriiiug here two weeks ago, the political pot of municipal politics has been set a boiling over night, as 'twere. According to all outward 'signs and omens, th. present city administration . has given eminent satisfaction. Hut, it develops that there has been an under current of opposition that has been hi long time a brewing. With the primary only thirty d.-rys away, this feeling is be , ginning to show itself, and interesting developments arc looked for within the next few duys. And not thL. least one of these is the part that the women of (iastonia might play in city politics this spring. Already, have women announced themselves for the school board in Charlotte, and mi "woman has come out for mayor of rialis j bury. Gastonia women want it known that they, too, are not only eminently j qualified for public ollicc, but that they; uere among the forefront in the workers I that wou victory for equal suffrage lat fall. j One Very prominent citizen of the At that, men adjust their ties in public .'ibiiiit as often as women adjust tin-ir laces modem newspaper .In not furnish the the paper. It is furnished by women the world over. The modern newspaper man takes the news as it Since we know what it is that we news tor i ,ave f() fight, there surely can be no men an.l more compromising with and winking at this blockading and bout legging liusi Diss by law respecting, Christian men comes to him tron, the tour corners of a,., women in North Carolina. Hie eartli and lavs it out I ! 's gett ing tu n here yo anything fresh in a groceiv the i lei k. inn I h a,1, stole except As what Thev spring approaches, the frogs iavr to are full of hops. The old boys can iciiicmlx'r when wild women in a street carnival tent did a combination of the siiinunv and the tod die, but liny ca'led it by another name. WAR WIDOWS RE-MARRYING. I.OM'ON', Mar. 21. British war widows are re marrying so rapidly that tlie Chancellor, Austen Cham berla in. ex peels to be able tu reduce pensions up pr ipria t ioi.s in this year's budget l.v liMiii'l.iui.i pounds sterling. This, how ''. is only one of the factors contii bit'cl to the anticipated reduction but it ! slated that thousands of women made widows I iv the war have again be.-i me wives and thus automatically taken the'r Main- s nfT the pe lesion list. The pensions granted to widows of soldiers who died in active servi.e are withdrawn when 'le w idow s renin i ry. .GREENVILLE MAN BUYS MILL. CliPKNW'OtiP. S. c, March 2::. An iio'iiiceineiit was made today that. I. C .S it', president of the Creeiuvood cotton laid, has purchased ,,. controlling inter e t in the Ninety !-dx Cotton Mill r,,,,i I P. A I nicy. The cdii-ideru t inn was rot g:vn. The X i nely i x Mill is capital i , at ,A Ihihiiiii. WHITE EAGLE'S Indian Oil, Known RATTLESNAKE OIL What is happening in the New Light community' of Wake county must eventually happen everywhere - either the whiskey plants or the schools and churches must In put out of business. There is no neutral newspapers give gro 1 - no twilight rone. Which side aie von onf in loadable form for his clientele. And, it is not the evil news that is fen In red. It is the unusual that makes nn event newsy un.l rea. laid.., be it good or evil. However, the their readers what they demand. There is plenty to read in the average news paper besides hews of crime and scandal und a person who wants to, can skip the crime an.l scandal. Hut no nevs paper can leave out legitimate news, scandiilous or not, and survive. A Chicago newspaper, which started publication less than n yenr ago with the a-ownl intention of printing no ......e ... sen mia i news, lias Had to sus , tiK in bad sbap, pend. Kithcr the people in Chicago i, furuuuit. " Tin 'ohu Hull is not without humor. He has not yet Irish of base ingratitude. SHOULD BE PROTECTED. Visitors to Kings Mountain battle groinm report to tin- lorKMIU- r-.miuircr that the government property theii oeuig aouse.i ami dumngc.1 hv vandal aid irresponsible parties. 'fv'o uir is being take of the battle ground and the propeitv there is get lays t he Knipi irer s k has been stolen n-l.. ....... I A a:. a:i... . f , ...softe wini sou oi news from ,lu. K,(, .,rroun,liiig the big mono it-.. .L..1.. ...!... I ' - i l'r.-,-..(,.,g or mere are no slid, ,:lt.nt; 0ne of the panels has been sto ee-ic. ... vn.cgo. fr(m ,s.1lstm. M)llulm.llt ,, It s a pretty good sign that the world, bron.e tablets en the the big monument feminine gender said to The Gazette,1 "ot B"e to the demnit ion bow L, ve been si rate lied iii an.l defaced by yesterday: 4 'jAll we women want i j ow s. When goodness gets so rare that bullets. The gran. Island is tottering, simply a hint,' .and we don't have to be j 11 '"'eonies news mid crime and vice so many of the seats living gone now,. The knocked dowu with it. either. We are ! I'UMI,IH1" t'"it it is not news then it will v. hole place presents a m-eue of desola really to take our places on the eit.v i 1'n to ptiek up and try to negotiate tiou and lack of (are. Little- bits of council, or tlukschool board, or wherever " l,llsaKe to Mars. When tlu. fact that the monuments have been chipped off the ollicc calls. That's us all over. ,Si"" mith escorted his wife to church , a ml carried away. The sit,; of the fain We're not running for ufliee ; we want ; yt'sterday becomes stranger .than Mam ous ((evolutionary battle is visited daily the job to come seeking us. " i Smith getting on a dinnk and shooting by people from all sections. It does Go to it, women. '(. are with you " to farethee-well. If, within the course of a few days, they don't come to vou with the mayoralty offered on a silver platter, iiiid bid you tear yourselves from kitchen or home Work, as did the Romans of obi when they took old ('in cinnatus from the plow, and direct the destinies of this fair city, if, we say, they don't do this, throw your hats into the ring and come in any way. There is l.olhing that is not bettered by the touch i I oi a woman. i the lights out of the church chandelier, shooting lights out will be such a pain fully common practice that nobody but the sliooteis will go to church. The newspapers print the doings of the cut ' i:ps because they are. computed to the rest of the population and their lack of (lifting is i . a sort of novelty. People Mad the news for that same reason. seem a pity that the Cnitod States gov eminent, after appropriating a huge sum of money to build a uion anient there .should not make some provision to take care of if. A caretaker to live on the piemisrs should be provided hii.I I for one would certainly like to see some movement inaugurated vvi; li that end in v iew. ' ' EASTER. WHILE BERGD0LL RIDES. '.aster this year i nines on one of the 'earliest dates it is possible for it to fall j -March 27. In thirty one years if has occurred earlier onlv twice, and it will . When the American Legion was in itsi Iv later for the next nine years at least, infant days there was a disposition on The date for Kasier was fixed almost the part of the veterans of tin- war to sixteen hundreds years ago by the Couu slight its presence, its aims and purposes, cil of Nice as ''the first .Sunday after At least, there was halfhearted interest , the full union that falls on or after in the Legion. Many posts had difliculty . -March 21.'' If the full i m happen; in keeping their organizations intact. '1 he prediction was made at that time that the time would enme when the Legion would bs? the most powerful or gaiiization in Amciica, that just at the close of the war, so soon home from c;.mp and battlefield, soldii r boys, sur ' feited with things military, and all per- on Sunday. Master is celebrated one week later. This sounds simple enough, but in actual practice it is more coin plicated than "Hon old it Ann,'' und involves dealing with such terms as golden numbers, epacts, and dominical letteis that are likely to di. coinage most people. K,.r three handled war Chris- ADVERTISING. The Power of Advertising. "The ,la nuary business in Marshall Field Ac Co. 's retail store in Chicago was the biggest in all its history. It was the biggest in the amount ol money le.eive.l for goods. And most important of all, if passed all recoids in number of individual sales. You know what Field, Carson, Pirie, Scott iV Co.. Man. lei Pros., and the other Chicago department stores have been doing in the way of advertising since the first of the year. They kept at if 'I-'1.1' in and day out. As a result. State street nearly always is jammed and nut with bargain 1 ters either." C A. Nii liols, in Printer 's Ink. The Important Point In Advertising. "It matters not whether vertisiug siap. real eitat, or motor trucks. , every instance to r are a, milliuei ' appealing in ibs'racf some first gave tabling thereto, bad no desire to connect . tin ns of Jewish descent celebrated Fast with anything reminding them of the ; er immediately after the .lewish Passover war. The time has come when the l.e which elide I mi the fourteenth of the gion is Is'giiiiiing to function, luriuany Paschal moon, whether that day happen has openly, brazvnly and impudently re , e.i to be Sunday or not. Christians of fused to meet one of the conditions of Contii,. descent associated Faster with ine Treaty ot Versailles. Mic lias ir the l(,-.irrcctinii festival and the 1i.al!y snapped her fingers in the face of -lay of the week. Sunday, which the allies and told them to go to and rise to many bitter disputes. stay put. Americans sergeants who were Church of Rome graduallv adopted the i' strumental in the arrest of Berg. loll on Gentile view and this custom spread to German soil have been tried before h all the Christian world, although until German court and sentenced to jail.,I7VJ England was out of line on ae 1'ress reports of the trial state that there ' count of using the old stvle calendar, were open indignities and insults vented and where the Kussiaii and Grecian Or tipon the Americans. Hergdoll's .hauf thodox churches prevail Kaster is still feur. Steelier, wore 8 German flag dining 1 celebrated on a different day than in the tie trial and insolently aud proudly ' western world. The use of Faster eggs. l-.-atHl his German birth. Berjrdol!. in ; .-uthoritios say. is of great antiquitv. the meantime. invea hia high power.! 1h egg. in pre-Christian mythology, was car at liberty over the roada of Germany, t considered a .vmbol of resurrection, i thing that, tor want of a better name, is called human n.i'ure. It is- more im portant for an advertising man ' be cause he deals with the mind through 11 e ' tu know- how- the human mind responds to impressions mad. in printer 's ink. than it is to know the manufacturing se.ie's of tie- man whose story wo are going to tell." Frederick Seid In Western Advertising PI,,, Advrtise Convictions. 1 Here is scarcely anv portion of the daily newspapers morn eagerly scanned these dav than that contain ing news of plants reopening. And sii.h news is of .outie legitimate and interesting. Yet Julius H. Ha rues, president of the K lea rflax Linen Kug Co., purchase-, full pag,. advertising space to tell the public his action in going back to full time production." Printer's Ink It Will Pay to- See this week's Printers' Ink for facts about the "True American Stock" that constitutes your South ern market. SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION, Chattanooga, Tenn. "We ar tn p.n fr,ln, a food-exp-rt ing to n food-importing nation. "Her bert Fotrrtjr. seeretarv of .nnimeFi-e (This advertisement i appearing simultaneously in The New York Times. Chi cago Daily News. Cleveland Plain IValer. Detroit No-vs and 1( Southern News papers, in an endeavor to Sell the South to the Nation, i olIci that the Nation I l.e (d. I Indian iruie.ly tor the i lire of H '' "' l li.-urr.it i ri i . eatairali. bay fever, sore B :"''""'"' ""' mi, I swollen joints, s-Mff muscles, II I I I ..... Kl .. , , .,, toiisilit is. I'sed hv the Indians for H H m- -r erad. .-at,- ,-,,.' , , , ... ,-, ... - , . " a u, li el s ot veals, and a vv.avs been By ('looks while olb.-ials of the law observe , ,- -,' I ., ,, - Known tor its gieat , hawing quail ics. i si I let neiitralitv. ... . , ,. , , , , W ' "on blister, perl ert l.v harm less, pen.- B i, , ,, . t rates without rubbing. This gieat Oil 11 i'l'l-ears that i alilo'rn.a overlooked , , , .,, B ., I..., ,.., , , , , '.nibci- you up and do a w a v Willi u bet when she tailed to make that law , , - , , ' ,,,,,, li, .. i 1 . v ,Mir rlieiini.i 1 1 -in and pain. Jus) one a pi il lea 1 1 1.- to lap. . II applnati.iii and your pain is gone. Will H ,, , , . , pinelrate through the thickest of so'o H And next winter oal consumers mav ' , ,. , , , , D li nt her in a lew seconds, and Ihe i.n'y D Os WHirti ?sl.N:! I ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 ' ' U hHm,- vW'c' VMAffl been p.ae. d oil the lllal kef. Relief and a B lump v ,'-sC 1 1 mijtitl' . ... , In wi..i.Nij .'.pa0! "re awaits you. I housauds ot people B ' y'Vjry "ill tes'it'y how they have been relieved H r" jf jpj '""'',' ''.v "'' u lei fill new Oil. Bj fjwSY'1 , I guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction H jtgjjTjjSI "r """"'v refunded. Sold bv all drug- B plead for the return of the five.eut 1 'i ug ( o. U dent, to be'sure, but the same old ,,,-e.ju H YS WC aVC 50 alul l against land giablung. H t'() membd'S. J()ill th(! t g .' " ' " .( num.- wini ine niiiiiey you now pay as lent; m fl and I per cent interest, or free a home of a mortgage, or, .safely and prof- B 9 itably, invest monthly -livings of s. 1 ,,r more. , M I Spring Is Here and Easter Is Near When thinkint,' of these two events, one's thoughts instinctively turn to this store, where the new and un usual t hint's are always to be found. We have been pre paring for this week for some time and we have succeed ed beyond our expectations in assembling new garments am! furnishings. NEW EASTER DRESSES There is nothing more popular than a New Dress for Master, and w? have some beautiful ones, in Taffeta, Crepe, Georgettes and Satins, in a number ot styles and effects, at prices ranging from $12.50, $15, $20, $25, $30 to $35 SPRING COATS In all the n v Spring Shades and very attractive. If you are in need of a Wrap see these before you buy. Special ly priced at $13.95, $15, $19.95, $22.50, $25, $29.50 EASTER SUITS In semi-tailored, box backs, embroidered and plain. The materials are Tricotine, Poiret, Twill and Serge. Priced $20.00, $25.00, $30.00, $35.00 LOW CUT SHOES FOR EASTER Whether you choose a Sabot effect, a strapped style, a variation of the Colonial, perforated brogues, or wool sport Shoes, you will discover graceful lines that make one's feet attractive. . , Specially priced per Pair: $3.50, $3.95, $5, $6.50, $7.50 and $7.95 Hope Mercantile Co. The Cash Store h1 Voll t.. l..lltt.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 24, 1921, edition 1
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