Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / May 30, 1921, edition 1 / Page 4
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SI i T t i i t 1 -J . 3. I hi !! If- ;! ,'t PACE FOUR THE GASTONIA. (N. C). DAILY GAZETTE MONDAY, MAY 30, 1021. The Gastonia Gazette. ESTABLISHED JS86 leaned Emj Afternoon in the Week Ekcept Sunday, at 212 W. Airline Ave. GAZETTE PUBLISHING CO. Office: 212 W. Airline Ave. Phones SO and 232 Jtl. W. Atkina Managing Editor E. D. Atkini Business Manager Bock A. Query Editor Mrs. 2oe K. Breckroan,. .Society Editor Admitted into t lie mails at i lie Post offiee at (iastunia, X. ('., at the pound rate of postage, April 1902. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE By Carrier or Mail in the City Ore Year $r..00 tiil Monthi I2.50 Three Moutbg $1.25 One Month 50 By Mail Outside of Gaitonia D Year f 00 Bil Mentha 't-'.OO Three Months $1.00 One Month 50 Payable Invariably in Advance Member of The Associated Presa The Associated Press is exclusively Mt'tled to the use for republication of tJl sews dispatches credited to it or not Otherwise credited in tins paper and also the loeal news published therein. All rights of republication of special dis patches are also reserved. MONDAY, MAY 30, 1921. HOME IMPROVEMENTS. Mi (Vlctfr M fit k-1 . iniiiii' ilt iiuiDsi r.t tmh .'ii fit of lml.il ni Hit V, ns t lie 'OllMr of ollr nf ill r'j(trit (rlnjrrN ''Vi-I (Mil nWr ill tit it .-'littt , .'trrnrtlih t. rvf MirN i 'lining run, ! r t i I . It u :i -.1 Ht ti r HmiH' en m ;t iy 11 t:i nihil.-,) 1;; -T N'!f'iiilr ftlit'H tin- 'liil jrt MriiU t t tit- rOlilit V llirt Ul'ii Ml- II. tiki-1 ;i In f Mrniul.i it ,j jiLii!- iir m i r i n id. ;-fiiM'N -i t.! dninrs in iir iMi-.ihii- ', ;i i 'rofc;i i ssi v rtU'n- uiht i.,i-.iin's- lirm-JnI-Ii-.I IiiiMmt iin-i-iit m i- Id llit- ;i in);t iyn h nffrlilij; IiihT;ii i! l.i v Iltinif :iH'l u'1hmi iitfrvr't ni rt.i- t;i!k- mi ivt Professor Budlong Puts Tanlac To Test i ... e:isol ;,, Inline in til make T t hoimu ill II nuclei i .' 1 1 ' ' A hM ..(' s,, giv.s ,'in idea i itc prizes fur 1, Mil Hi 1 1 II 1 1 V I I, IIW iinii 1 1 n 1 1 v -i 1 :,lid i ..iniiiiiiiii s in w hi, h ! i I' tin- pne. f 'ill- r;i Inpa ign the . I'llilliilll it v in; rk I, IT. I . . i li. i .- king holds. Gaitonia. The South' City of Spindles FLANDERS FIELDS "In Flanders fields The Mpi.'K blow Itetween the crosses, row on row, Tlmt mark iiur (In .. mi. I in tin- sky, The larks still bravely sinking, fly, Hearcc lien nl amidst the guns below. "We are the irVnd; Short days ago we lived, felt dawn, sun MIIIHt't glow, Iioved mid were loved and now we lie In Flanders fields. "Take up our rpiarrel with the foe. To you from falling hands we throw The torch. He yours to hold it high. If you tireak faith w ith us who die, We shall not sleep, though poppies blow In Flanders fields. ' ' MEMORIAL DAY. j On a pleasant afternoon in early .luiie1 three years ftgo, when all Paris was guy with sunshine, an American hospital on the outskirts of the beleaguered city was choked with the wounded that Hooded there J rum the fighting on the Mnrne. . Many lay in , the garden outsi.U- hh.I ' otl'M carpeted the halls and stairways, llit they managed to find a lied for one! dark hn ires I younx soldier who had been shot sewn timf through the body by a (rernian nmchine gun. His life was tick ins; out, but when a Y. M. ('..A. were ! tary went through the ward distributing Jsnciln and paper, he asked for some and started at once on a letter home. Two1 sentences of it had been written when, a half hour later, they found him dead. His letter read: "Dciir Mother: , attacked the; firrninns yesterday and chased them livej miles. I am tdightlv wounded in the ankle." That was the npirit of 19IH. t'ountless ' men like hiip men as loved and as lov iK. young fellows as full of hope and . plans andthe joy of living as any of us who later eame rollic king back to every day life lie now lieiieath the little white crosses. Whatever we may now think of that life, we owe it to them. TJie world we live in, with all its evil and all its gTMvl, is of their saving. The least and ' the mios- we can do each year is to report in person or in spirit to those crosses, there to start fresh on the onlv task thev th,. reaft'si iinpi t. ciiii ht in i 1 , homes an. I yionii.K; for !ln m..' imui.ii i.-iit kitrliin; fn' tin- grt'.-it.'M inipiini llii'llt ill ,'l one te.'ii'her -illii.il ; fur tin v.iiii;iii in tin- i.nnitv writing ! In- ln-vt lOiiiposition on Wbv I in. .1 .!., -tiii lights ;l, WMtil Works ill 1 1 1 hiilli. for the h.'st si'hool mm po-dt inn on The value of th.- tr.i.'i.r to the f.11.11. -r": f.n the coiniiiiinitv h:iilig the 1 1 1 t s. n cm .1 homes; J'.ir the li.nisekeej.er ie..ntiiiy the greatest miinlier of inexpensive labor saing .e ic.-s. prie was ofTered to cver s. hoot l.iiv ,-nel girl in the e.unitx l.el tVVele eal' of'agf writing a nun position of nut less than fuor iiinnlieil words mi 'How I'lle.-l i icil v Improves Fa I III Life.'' lolintv wnl. .leliate w.'i. also held. The IplelV Was. ''Keolei1 that tlie a iitoiiioljile and traitor are nrire necessary to th. farm f.nniK than electric, lights and power. Kwrywhere great interest was shown. Old yards and school gioimds were inade over. Ifuliliish was renio."l and shrub berv and llow. rs put in its place, making the premises iiim-li iinne attractive. In the homes and in the school bliildings the changes were even greater. Condi linns were made mole sanitary aiol the work of the housekeeper and teacher wero, made easier by the addition of more conveniences and by more effective a rraiigemenl. The contest came to a close May -with a speech by I io . Moiiisun ;m the feature. The results of the campaign were (rrntifying. More than L'n, hmi was spent on improvements in the homes of the county, but this is .just the beginning of the good work which' will continue. It was a great movement that Miss lleiikel start.'. I. ami it might well be t'ol lowed by other counties in North Ca ro I ina. r sTNy . k'-i A. V ' ' 31 yt-n; tu i j- , sD( untn ' H. ration and .tir.zincs-. I had stubUirn case of constipa tion, was troubled awfully with blinding headaches and hardly knew what sleep was. My suffering had almo't made a complete nervous wreck of me and I was so weak I wasn't worth a nickel ns far as work was concerned. I thought my tioiibl."- had a life long grip on me and was about as discouraged as a man evert gets Well, before I had finished my first bottle of Tanlne I real iced it whs differ GASTONIA BSINSS HOME THE BELMONT BACON efter the sixth inhi&g when Gsronia scored on a Wmg-.trlvf. to rig tiM by Milbnrn. Inmnt ' tied the sr ik the seventh, wnieh reinsine.1 a tie until the; ninth when Milbnrn again brought in' two runs with another drive to tight field Clara-Dunn-Armstronj Baseball Team Defeats Faat Belmont Team In an Almost Perfect Game 3 t 1 Milburm, of Gastonia, With Two Long Drives, for three hawj and shut Ifrlmoat 6it in Brought In All Three Runs. Uietr hair or the ninth, winnihg two ef u . .. . , a , . 1 he three gnrrrt' series. 'LAng and "Bhort Keptmg the STdendnJ fdaying of a lM,y." Imery for Belmont did apkwaUd week ago when the team beat Stanley work, and Milbnrn. ami T. Huffstetlfr, to 1, the reorgnnir.er Clara Hunii Arm-' for fiastonla. rendered valiant nenrirr! strong team deented the fast Belmont j Mr. rl Mingtis, f Relmnt, ftrssrM a team on tlie Relmont gronnds Saturday ; is four wiuartk umpire. A eame ent from nnvthiiig I ever tried. It suit afternoon. About one hundred tiasv r"r " 'lnes.l:iy, June 1, to lie plavN at ed my case 'exactly. And now for nl tun La ns, including fccnut troop No. Loray Park, is leing arranged by the two most the first time since 1 can remember motored to the neighboring Gaston city ) tea 111C I .an eat anything I want and digest it.; to root for the home boys au.l were ro- , - I haven't an ache or a pain and have, paid with an almost perfect game. The -gained fifteen pounds in weight. I just members of both teams played first class. It's the peraiatent dvertiaer thai Taken 11 11. 1 tint feel good all over and afti full of life and energy these days. Kvery where I go I talk Tanlac It hasn't an eipial.''. ball with inanv chances one or two minor errors. Not it player on eit he; team reached second base until irins. Keep your ad in The Gatetee-, U the time and watch the reauUa. , 1Z 1L aMkyisMlflt PROF. C. J BUDLONG, Manchester, N. health for th, III v .1 I lust Inn, present , OW I to I a lilac a 11, 1 no! h i '1;' Ur, ' emphatic statement of I'n.t . Uiid long, w ell k n. iw 11 and h v h I'd l it i.ell of M I in-In si el , ing a I t School st 1 .-el . ' ' I'rai t ieally all my life I mat ism, and h.n I -a v he 1 1 ea r , I.I 101 as th. I .1 ll'ld I'hell ilnalllii I mean iery word of it. It was all over my body and especially bad in my feet .ni. I I. gs mid there wire times when I . 1 1 1 1 1 1 " t get from my bed to my chair without help. And from the time I was .1 boy I couldn't sit down and eat a good meal without being in misery afterwards and I would have terrible pains annuel iiiv liea't and frcpicnt attacks of unltii- ANNOUNCEMENT 1 1 V Our Aluminum Ware Has Arrived, this High Grade lot of "AMERICAN MAID" ALUMINUM WARE ( will be offered to you at only , 6 Qt. Covered Kettle Round Roasters 6 Qt. Tea Kettle 98e 8 Cup Perculator 9 Inch Fry Pan 2 Qt. Rice Boiler SALE STARTS PROMPTLY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1st, 8:30 A. M. SHARP. COME EARLY AND DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED Store Closes Wednesday 12 o'Clock Sharp. WMmM C A. Wednesday VWSHMMMW- MMt V V lsS. ZV Sharp. Beginning '. , I nes,ja . the banks if the .its will Wed nesda v a f t. i nouii half I, w ith t he slol es and o! ii. , pi: ness. The will be , I,,-, o'clock. I, I'll l,!i-ere the lida,s along e.'S of ),l,si d all, r ll' MT. MITCHELL. North Carolinians generally will agree' with The Aslieville Citizen when it ns serfs that there ought to be some action taken now for a road of .some kind to the top of Mt . Mitchell. Kither from Black Mountain or through the valley above Ba run n Isville, says The Citizen, ''there will sonic day be a motor highway to the top of Mount Mitchell how long the time depends up on the enterprise of Aslieville ami other towns vitally interested in this matter. In the years when passenger trains were operated to the summit of the peak thousands of visitors from probably every State made a trip that in a few hours gives the traveler a never to be forgot tell picture of great mountain masses ris ing above picture valleys toward tin 'have left us. the job of so living that the' several respects a' motor road world should prove worth the price they i to Mount Mitchell is more feasible than paid for it. American Legion Weekly. 0 n continuation of the steam road service. But the main point for the people of this immediate region is take some action now for a road of some kind to the stun nit of Mitchell s Peak. " S I X GILLETTE BLADES with HOLDER PREPAID $1.25 In Attractive Case Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded This offer for a limited time only. Remit by money order or cash (no stamps) J ir- 111 Jl .1 XvTSJ e) nbkmef Satisfaction 1 Lfi Lfi !fi -fi !fi & fi f. lfi Present lines of new Buick six-cylinder models will be carried thru the 1922 season DECIDEDLY OPTIMISTIC. .An unusually optimistic note is sound ed in the weekly cotton letter of Henry Oews & Co., an extract of which reads: '"AH the reports from the Southern markets indicate a continued good spot demand both for domestic consumption and export around previous price levels. Jn view of the increased activity of American spinner!" in New England and the tSouth and the probability of a settle ment of the British coal strike before long, there is every reason for expecta tions of increased mill takings "during the balance of the season. Both the yam afi. I cotton goods .markets are quieter, owing to some uncertainty regarding the immediate effect .of the Lmergency Tariff bill on the domestic textile trade. The distribution of finished goods, however, continues in jihout the sum,, volume, due te business previously booked. 1-ower money rates will soon icrinit out of town buyer to take advantage of present low price levels and buy on a larger scale. While th steady progress of the textile industry toward normalcy since Ihc be ginning of the year has be.-n interrupted by foreign and domestic influences of a temporary nature, there has been no no ticeable wetback in tlie improvement nlready achieved. The recent im rio.l of hesitation and uncertainty in the goods " Market is generally regarded as a season have the pains and ache of a bad able lull following activity. Price reduc-. removed to be entirely free from tions in beavygoods closer to the basis amoving, dangerous urinary disorders, f raw material are expected to corn- ;i enough to make any kidnev sufferer n,tuKI) n.uialr me neman.l Tor the e;atefnb The fnllnm-i.i ?..lvi... nf - ----- ah v i MANY WAYS IN WHICH I GIRLS WORK THEIR WAY CBy The Aasoo.aujsi t'rut.j '' CAMBKIlHih'. y-sjss.. M.iv i;. Working her way thiongh college means j many things to tht. yt im' woman at Kail clifTe. la her spare time she mav be act ing as a clerk, shopping for hire, rock ing a baby, swatting tennis halls as a ' coach, playing for dancers or teaching steps herself, mending clothing, reading proofs, keeping house or coaching plays. These and other occupations arc iinli cited as the tasks by which I oil members, of the present undergraduate bo.lv are ( king out an income to make it possible for them to continue at college. The ap j loiiitment bureau of Ha.lcliffe, which oh i tains the jobs in many cases, and keeps i the records, reports that a number of the girls arc earning their board and ' room by doing housework. Sfi g Lfi S ifi s ifi Lfi ifi 2 ifi NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION Frad Razor Co. 1475 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY Beginning June 1, the new series and prices will be as follows, f. o. b. factories Flint, Michigan ,iat.v. In the I'r w I, l!ls. ta ke tied as a 1 o e U" J-uperior North ( aro 'i,;'c d'e, or, e t 'l.in !,d:lll'. I.y tile a and the said do ke not j, ,. that s,c t the tel !11 of the id ci.i.Vv to be CHEERFUL WORDS For Many a Gastonia Household. fall and winter trade. e Oeeuireneea like that reported from I iOve Height a Sunday night are calcu lated, aid reasonably ami justifiably so, to swell the ale of firearms in local hard Ware stores. Caston county rotten mill eeentivei wfuae tn be iertorl)eJ by threats of a rike aoioiig textile operatives. They Save eonfideaee that the majority ef the workers know wliich aide f their bread buttered. - It's tht peniatwit tirtrHwn that wins. Keen ywsr ad U Tat Gate tee s0 the time and watck the results. - one who has suffered will prove helpful to hundreds of Gastonia readers. Mrs. Carrie Larroy, - station No. 2, Gastonia, says: "I found Doan 's Kid r.ey Pills to be a splendid remedy when I had need of them for my kidneys. My kidueys were weak. I lecame run down and felt tired out. My back ached so I thought it would break. Often I had spell of dizziness and headaches, too. My kidneys acted irregularly and there, were other distressing svmptoms of kid- j rev complaint. I used Doan s Kidnev Pills and they soon removed the aches fiom my back and freed me from that; tired feeling. My kidnevs were regu lated, too." 60. at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co, Mfg., Buffalo, N, Y. - Nort h ( a mi i 11:1 . Superior Cimii'. John W. lli'vii' Th,. defeiij.in: n not i.-e 1 hat an act not en has I n comineii, 1 : in Court of I i a s t , , 1 1 1 '. , : n' . I ilia, to obtain ait ai. t he a bo c named d, j . .,, bove 11:1 1 1 1 1 1 pliiintiff fen, hint will further I is required to a pp. .. Superior Court ,f s held on the 2nd Monday after the first Monday in September. 1921, at the Court Hon f slid , ,i!i,tv in (.astonia. N. C.. an, I .in-w.r or demar to the complaint in s.,i, a. tioi.. (o- p;,in tifT will apple to the Court for the re lief demanded in said complaint. K '. IIKMHtlCKS. Clerk of .Siti criof Court. This the 7th day of Mav . IHL'l. KKNKST !;. WAKRKN. M-IOci. A'tv for plff ifi Lfi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi Lfi ifi ifi ifi ifi Lfi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi -1 1 ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi ifi Model 2-44 Three Passenger Roadster, Model 22-45 Five Passenger Touring, Model 22-46 Three Passenger Coupe, Model 22-47 Five Passenger Sedan, Model 22-48 Four Pasenger Coupe, -Model 22-49 Seven Passenger Touring, -Model 22-50 Seven Passenger Sedan - Old Prices New Prices $1795 $1495 $1795 $1525 $2585 $2135 $2895 $2435 $2985 $2325 $2065 $1735 $3295 $2635 ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Having ipialifiod as .-idininist rat or of the estate of Ben I.. Clark, deceased, lat,, of tias'on County. North Caiolina, this is to notify all persons having ("laims J against the estate of sni.l deceased fn Lfi exhibit them to the undersigned at Gas- ifi tonia, Xorth Carolina, on or before the S 15th day of May, M12. or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 11th dav of Mav. 1921. JOHN O. CARPENTER. W Administrator of Ben L. Clark Decea sed. BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICH. Pioneer Builders of Valve in-Head Motor Cars Branches in all Principal Cities Dealers Everywhere GASTONIA BUICK COMPANY GASTONIA, NORTH CAROLINA - r- " "'in- WHEN BETTER, AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM 1 3IJ20cC. fKIfi!fiifi.fi!fi!fiLfiifiK I . ' I f II i nssSSMSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSM Mil !
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 30, 1921, edition 1
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