PAGE TWO MONDAY. JANUARY 16. 1922. THE GASTONIA, (N. C), DAILY GAZETTE " - LOiVELl LOCALS Correspondence of The Daily fiatotte.) JXTWELL, Jan. 14. Mr. iitl Mrs) Y ' J. A. Smith entertained thu Men's Hhle class of Oie Methodist . church at .!.! 1,. Thnr1av eveninff at seven .-ith delightful font course din Fifu-en members an.llgnesTs """i present to enjoy their charming liospi jilitr Kn-. H. H. KenninRton, iwIor rfthe Metlm-list rhuTih. ftcd as toast - ' 1 , IV .1 Hnat b. USSTOr 01 : the Covenant Presbyterian church, made: Vt annroi.iatc nd" pleasing talk afterj '.iiiiner. The erfum? enjoyed or an ndboth Mr. an'l M'- ith ,r? vu,'a an ideal host and hfei. . Mr S M. Rol.iiifMi is spending this ytilt in Philadelphia " lysines. "' lr.-K. I". fcmdifer and vming son, Charles visited rclntives in Stanley this .week. .... , " The Woman's Inn held " regular Meeting in the srho.il n.litorimn 1'hurs '.lay afternoon. Miw l-ouiwe n.ldwell - as leader ami had an interesting prog-. ,U,Ui of music lifter the t.uMiiess w;is .transacted. IVlie-litful ret're-dimeiTts of iiot chocolate sn t cake were served .it .the end of the program. Miss Caldwell was assisted in nerving ).v the girls of 'her domestir science elnsR. ,-Mr. Paul Murphy mi l Mit TiiV.innn were visitors in i Kdith (liarlotte ' Thursday. Mr. John M. fiast.-n ih t-otidii. ;tni(c a .ieaehera' atn.1v (lass every Wednesday I afternoon in the Lowell m-hool l.tiildinit.i ' Besides the Lowell faculty, the teaihernj from the tJoshen Orove and MeA lenvilli'i schools roni)iO!e the elasa. i . , CHE&RYVILLE CHAT. Orrennondetiee of The Daily Oiuette.) , i " mKRBYVlT.T.K. .tan. 14 On Monday night. January Wtli, Mrs. 8. A.I Roberta .died at the Lineolnton hofipi- tal. She had lafn ill only a few duyaj witieal till tiundnjr night, when ahe waa: . '-ifihe leave a liuaband and nine children j ' tion was jterformeil. j ' Shv leave a husband and nine children , all of whom were with her when she died. ; '"THe funeral servient were conducted! Ijv Rev. D. F. Putnam and her remain l.i.l n runt in Kt .lnlin' .-.mmtiirv Tnnaitiiv a f tnvnn111 Mrs. Virginia Bustle, of Gaioiiia, has returned to Oastonia after apend iafe several days here with Mrs. L. L. If. 1 "' Miss Kathleen Crawford, of Oantonia, is in C'herryA-ille nurainK little Caroline Mnuney, who has pneumonia. . Mrs. Forest Davis, of Charlotte, la spending the twk here with relatives and friends. 14 Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Rudisill. Mr. S. 8. Mauney; Mrs. Julia Hall and Master Herman Hall were visitor in King -Mountain, Tuesday afternoon. ,: Mrs. fS. 8. Mauney, who has been ill for a week or more, is improving. --Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Tippett's sister, , Mrs, John F. Hearener. " "Mr. L. C. McDowell hnd son, Carlisle, were in Charlotte, Tnrtiday. Master Fred iVdlinjrer, son 'Of Mr. and Mrs. SylvSnus JielliiiKer, of route me," waS takeifio thri Iincolnton hospi tal Tuesday for t-reatmetHt. ' Ho has been offering with" rheumatism for some time and his sight is. intirh impaired. "''Mrs. J. A. Allrnn is af home again after ..spending sometime with her son, A! L. Allran in Kings Mountaiit. " -'Mr. 4 Dean Ctyers,' who has been, at .Snow Hill for several years has accepted a'position in Lincolnto. ""Mies Blanche and Mable Barnhill flnd -Mr. Forest. Barnhill of Oaffrtey arc Jtisiting relatives in and near Cherryville. FOR n lonpn time 1 inow one guy wot never do any work and lu v Ptta pienta cash, too. He wear jdenta diamond on da feenger and da awella Rothes and he no care eef lie nta. meat five, aeesa tlnie every week. 11 trr one rlcba guy, allarlght. ''lOtie time I nska my frlen how dat guy maka da leeving. My frlen tella tne he Leepa da blind pig and maka pienta cash dat way. I no iec how Can do dat weeth da blind peeg and iI think my frlen try maka fool weeth 1 ine by da joke. .1 tella my frlen wot's matter dat . Tgny ecf he gotta pienta money why lie n6 keepa da peeg wot can see. My frien say erf he (to dat he go een da 3all and righta queeck losa hoes cash. He say everybody looka for da blind peeg and weel pay beoga price eef con find. For tella yon strftljthta goods, I tink my frlen dunuo somatlng ver mooch. When he tella me ces pienta money I "for anybody wot keepa da blind I feegure he craze een da head. He - leila ine eef I no tink he knows wot ' .he talk Jusa getfu myself da blind ieeg and I maka ;lenta money preety non. Well, I am almost bust weeth da 'cash so I try aotnating once. I go out on da farm and pceva look for da i Mind peS. bat I no tan find. Every Kie can set good too much. no like to putta da eyes out f or dat peeg Jsa for maka da money. I ,po treata even da peeg so bad as dat. 5o I feegnre da system for getta da cash and no geeva moocha tronble for da peeg, too. I hay da peeg and putta landage over da head so he can. no see. Dat way ee so good as eef he no jrotta da ejes. Rut 1 dunno wot'a mat ter noho.Jy ciine yet for buy da on-of-a-gun. I liava (bit blind peef fop three week now and he cost a tne seexa dlla for da food and nobody show op -tteeth da rash yet. I dunno. but I tink tfiiy frlen foola me allarlght " Wot you tink? - tCopyright) ' j"DE CENSOS, SHE EES CRAZE" . . - Jn' laptistt Telle the World Why tile" Population of Quebec Sejtne Immobile. The old hifbltant of Quebec, who will lie ilep regain gly amazed to dis cover thfit the cjj man gives that province a bare li.f'-Ki.O.S or a popu- lartoii. will trot out his decennial ex ; ' I"" , " tlon In extenuHilon : Saore iumii de Vleu," .lean Ruptiste Will sniuurr. ur t-nii.ua won unir to iue" on de farm ami he say: ' J Baptfste", h"v many III" boy and Jenti ur girl you fot (lis tain by you'' An w'en I takkPb" inn tnm tVa not foriret : TVr- .leantie Marie Itosine Anirellinie Snplil Josette ilflt'a lie Ml' irr "And ilere'a Polomiiine Telesplinre nipnlte llcl.eniiiv Ilineml dH Aljilmlise (lilt's de HI" loy. "Dut inaiidit rein-nH man, lie write down lit It i-eat lieec fuol : "Jean Baptist : ine jjtrl : Jeanne Marie Huslne Anrflluiie Soiilile .Irt , ette. One hny : Po'piii'iiuk Tele apliore lllpixjlyte Hel.emlre Horseml i dsa Alphonse. 1 "So dere jnu aee liow It coiiie Cnna i daw jot so few MijMilatioti ! 3Ie wit' i ul v 111 lif.tr uurt llv III frit1 unit K'' ' ... c. ...... ... '"' "'" '"" 'f r I" ''t dnnne iisult for a brave habitant. Why, tie fifxt tarn' Vierorine ilut's me femili la tell rile go queel; for de ("oeteiir. we'en I come ha'k from fetch lieem, alie gift two leetle boy unit one 1 leetle girl for Jean Kuptlnte. And af ter dat we nevnlreget lesa 'an t weens at de one tarn'. And de censos niiiii he write down : One boy, one uirl !" Varieottver World. INDIANS IN THE WORLD WAR Ttn Thouiand Fullblooded Redskins Ll With American dead In France. IYftft ntfl.iv tuinnla Irt Mil.. AAiinim . . ' S ' " 7 " "r ....j mi m i eftlde fl' oni London Hint 10,s)0 full- blooded Itidliins lie with the American dead In France? Honor of a eon aplmous sort has been done to almost , every class and group and rnee that ' contributed In any May to the allied victory before the world was reminded ! of the singular part played In the ! war bv thoxe American who may properly he called 100 joi- cent. The United States ami all Us people owe a debt to Dr. Joseph K. Tlxnn. f thin Hty, And to tlie founder of tne Wahamfiker hlstoilcal expeditions for the part they played In bringing ree- j ngnitlnii formally to the lAnierUiin ! Indian. Ilalg, Foch and Pershing fotrrd these trlheVnen deserving of n place with the noblest soldiers of all ' tfme. Tliry wefe cool, dlspitsslonnte lighters, Invnrlnbly brave and niiir veloi as nuirksmen. Most of them were volmiteers. The Indian in Fiance may yet live In a great American epic. 1 He never knew complete freedom,- yet he tvent ont to fight for It until he died.--Philadelphia Evening Ledger. Recovarmg Art Treasures. j Craclio-Slovakla -1 the latest of the ' state to begin tha recovery of nrt and i historical objects Awarded under the ; Irt'aty of St. Cermaln and now, In the I pnlu.-es and museonis of Vienna. A i commission lias Just been appointed j tor that rmrpofe. The" comprise, nmohg other things, ; the almost p'rlcelpsi documents, his- j forlcul memoirs, maps and other mute- , rial which Thsulaw von Rosenthal re- ; moved from Pragtie by order of the j Empress MnTla Theresa. Thfn there j ore the valuable documents originally contnlned in the Royal Attlie chancel lory of Bohemia anO the At:lic Cham ber of Accounts of Pobemia, well n the works of art formerly In the royal chateau of Prncie and other castle Of the liapsbnrgs located in 'ou linv0 1,pon "rl by his plays, or what I now Czech o-SI ova kin and which ! "nt "'iKful l)iilf-lours In the read were removed to Vienna dnrlng the : ,nP of llls r,ov0r character sketches; reigns of Emperors Mathtns. Ferdinand but ,,,lpss .voa ,lnve Fnt wlthin tl" IT. OhaVles VI (about 1TSS-1S.17) and j 8onnd 'f his vo!cc nTHl nP!,r(1 frora hl" Francis Joseph I. ' ' "St. Napoleon." Saint Napoleon mounds somewhat tra:ige to ears of KriKllsh-apeaking persons, but ft Is nevertheless a fact. At the heyday of his fume, Bonaparte discovered tba; it would be well for him. and the Napoleonic dynasty whb h he lipped to found, that a nanie- Knatr.m should find prominence In nf'Oiich history. With obliging real his ecclesiastical supporters managed to trace an obscure faithful one Ne opoliis, who had been martyred in Al exandria. Upon his memory the au reole was placed; the French bishops, received a pastoral letter from their can'fnal chief; anil Pins VJI called St. Napoleon into being. His day was theg emperors nirtimay, August 1.1, f.jid open It the dual event was celebrated. Vtari.i4 Out Clubs. He had taken up p...f, and after playing a week he went to buy some new clubs. "Pld you break tlie ones 1 sold you about a week ago?" a sized the cluh denier. ' No, I didn't break any of in,r was the reply, "but I for.K so m:inv j shots with Vm that they're ! out !" Yonkerg Statesman, ; . won , ' A Lowffdwn t rick. 5fr. Lamb- -" iee you're not speak-' ing to Mrs. Fox. i Mrs. Wolf- -I should say not ! She ', told me lir cook was a treasure and") I- found; t'.e cook dirty, lazy. Ircmnpe-j ie:t a. .j dishonest after I'd doubled' ner wares to get her away from Ur, ; Vox. Shake Before Using. Motto for reformers of the modern dances: "Let your conscience he your glide. ' Cartoons Magazine, OPIE READ. The name. Opie Read, is a "best seller" whether It appears on a title puce or lecture list, because it stands for one of America's best-loved person alities ns well us one of her most bril- I Hunt author-lecturers, j Opie Read is like no one else in the ! world. His very presence lends a : strange enchantment to his stories. You 'may have enjoyed his books In ttie solltudo of your library; perchance OPIE READ. own lips the quaint tales that originate , In his brnin, you do not fully ap- I predate the splendid genius of the i man. On the pint form Mr. Read shines : with a brilliance all his own. The Indescribable witchery of his words, (ie (.jmrn, 0f nS voice and manner, the influence of his personality tom- bine to weave the magic spell that holds his hearers enthralled. Mr. Read has a new lecture, "numan Nature and Politics, composed for the most part of erperience stories that have never been printed and never before been told on the plat form. He gttre this lecture on a Chautauqua' totfr last summer and every audience was Inimenrely en thusiastic. 4 Subscribe for Tbe Daily Gazette. ; i . " v s:w :- ,)- v j ,. I , i v "Vt t .. . " THE WORLD MUST BE MADE SAEE FOR DEMOCRACY. ITS PEACE MUST BE PLANTED UPON THE TESTED FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL LIBERTY." THE NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE WOODROW . WILSON FOUNDATION HEREBY CERTIFIES THAT IS A FOUNDER OF' THE WOODROW WILSON AWARD CREATED BY PUBLIC SUBSCRIP TION IN THE YEAR 1922 IN RECOGNITION OF THE NATIONAL AND THE INTERNATIONAL SERVICES OF WOODROW WILSON, TWICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES Good Housekeepers Have ' T 13 aIOmatte that the hornet or the careful, conscientious house keeper seldom Is visited by fire unco he never permits the accumula tion of rubbish nor allows other ob lcnaly dangerous conditions to re r.atn unattended to. -.very housewife should insUit, In lie interest of her family' safety, t iut the heating and cooking fcii-j-iratus of the home should be made a free from danper as pospible. She l o.ild see thul the stove. If it ia not of the built-in kind, ptundn at least elsht Inches from the wall and above Un Door, und that the nearest wood en aorfaces are protected With sheet mntal or iu.bej.to8 board. If jnetal aluno Is used, there should be an air simu.0 behind it. Smokeptpes should have ventilated metal thimbles where they enter walls or partitions and should be at least elpht-tnehes from the cclliriK or woodwork. Smoke pipes containing accumslatlons of soot are likely to overheat and cause ftre, and tfiey shosfld therefore be c.l.wmed thoroughly at least once a year. "Cold" Amort That Were Hot The housewife should never permit towels or other intlnmmablf materials o be hung close to the stove toilry. A SAFETY MCASUXB Matehe ihould alwar b sent est of the reach of mail cMkhea. Read tlie ' K o Wot clothing, also, If placed too near a heater or open Are Is likely to be come ignited. Ashes should never be put Into wooden receptacles. The coals are often very much alive when they are thought to be burnt out, and may smolder for hours and theh burst Into flame when' no one i about. There was an instance where supposedly cold ashes placed in a wooden box oti a back porch started a lire tliat destroyed almost the en tire house. Fires often occur In the kitchen from the ignition of grease or fat. Like oil fires, such blazes should be smothered with salt, sand or with a chemical .extinguisher, since water only spreads them. A sauce-pan cover is also effective when the fire is small. i i Another source of danger is the improperly constructed tireless cooker. The insulating filler should always be of some strictly non inflammable substance and never -of excelsior, paper, ground cork or other combustible material. 700,000,000 Hatches a Say "Children and matches" form a combination that is found with re grettable frequency among " the list of fire causes. Practically all re ports Issued by the various state fire marshals contain this item. Matches of the "strike anywhere" variety are left lying carelessly about, ' Instead of being kept In china or metal re ceptacles out of the reach of childish hands, and the result is that the little ones find them and adopt them as playthings, too often with seri ous consequences. There was a little boy in a Massachusetts town who was left alone) by his mother While she attended to her marketing. When she returned she found him dead upon the kitchen floor, his clothing burned off his body. The evidence s indicated clearly that he had been playing with matches. The only un usual feature of the occurrence was that the bouse itself did not catch are something over 700, 000.000 matches consumed In the TTnited States every day, or about 486,600 a minute, and each one con tains the possibility of a conflagra tion. That fact should always be borne in mind. .V. . , . Matches, lamps, can Ales and other open flame lights are all exceedingly dangerous , when rused to- illuminate a closet where there Is easlly-tsntted clothing hanging about. Gazette Want Ads Few Fires Careless Smokers The smoktntr babit constitutes one of our chief fire causes, and every wlfe and mother should educr.te t-.a CAUCjHT IN THE ACT One way to which the heedleos (moker starts fire. tobacco burning members of the. household to exercise care in dispos-: ing of their matches, ciirar and cigarette ends. Pipe "heels" are' likewise dangerous. A realisation of; the fact that matches and smoking, together cause a loss of over $18, 000.000 sc year should Stay the hand of the most careless. Spontaneous, combustion- Is another hazard which the housewife should, guard against. The frequency with which it causes fires Is not generally appreciated. It develops about .the - home usually from the presence of oily doths, certain "dustless" dust era and paint rags, although somv of the sweeping compounds are also' dangerous in this respect. Cloths saturated with vegetable oils such as linseed, cottonseed, soya bean and so on. are particularly subject to spontaneous ignition, and they should either be destroyed or kept h metal containers. Rubbish should never be allowed to pile up in the attic, cellar; or elsewhere, as it is always danger-' -ous, and when it contains oily, ma terial it holds the additional haxarri of spontaneous combustion. Even ordinary accumulations of old furni ture, clothes, papers and similar ma-, terials offer an inviting opportunity for the, cbanc spark. . ' ' PROFESSIONAL. CACD2.' Dlt CHAS. O. DeLAttEY Announces the opening of his office in - the Ragan 'Bullling Practice Limited to Geniio-Urinary Diseases , d R- J. c s m all CHIROPRACTOR .407-408 I'irat Nat. i Bank BoHdin, . Phones 53S and 843-J : C6naulutiom Free, AH., G. B. POWELL " ' OSTEOPATH 202 Realty Building ; Office Ph6n ifii " 'r Residence' Phorie 601 W. W. GALLOWAY . V -AUDITOR:.-.:. PoMIc Accountant, Bank .' Exanv , tner and Office, dystematir Chavlqite: ana Atlanta Offices t Resideaoa GASTONIA, If . C. V Pi Ot Box 33 miMauimiiSuaaAA numb wsrm1;u; 1 1 " JOHN E. ECK i Pnbhe Accountant - 2 1.111. C. .. M . . SP ii 5, uun, oysiens, tost nndiagl tdi Krtt National Bank rboncit: Office 627 . ,esidanc0 846 L .........,..co.......M: Cff AS.' C. WILSON ( F. A,. A .-- Architect . Member Am. Soe. C. X. Home Office t 804-5-6-7 Palmetto' Bmldinf Colcmbia, S. C.a Branch. 'Offiuea 208 First National Bank Bid,,, Gastonla, N. C. Ernest Coats, Mgr. 101 Davis Building, Wilson, N. C. G. R. Bfrtymsn, Mgr. Army Salvage .Co. "Ji ) 1 119 E. Main Ave. at Saunders Pressing Club All kinds of Army Goods Cheap. Hum Goats Spe cial. - - STATIONERY This has'always been a specialty with ,, us. We carry a big Hne of all kinds of fine stationery. You will find in our stock almost anything ' in sta tionery that your taste may demand.' Come in and ask for it, :. The price, too, is anoth er thing you'U like about our stationery. Spencer-Atkins v Book Co. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM SCHEDULES. v (Effective Sunday, November 6, 1921.) Awival anAsIepar7ure i of passenger trains at Gastonia. ... Schedule figures puliTTslicd as informa tion and not guarahteiy) J ":i,V Arrives , "-J Departs from f of v 4:06 a 2C. Y. Waslin-Atla-Bham 4:06-a 8:2.a Charlotte-Atlanta. 8:25 fl:20-a Bham-Atla-Washn-N..:Y. 0:H)-a 10:09-a Washington-Atlanta 10;09- 12:35 -p Wegtminstcr-D:invillo . 12:35-p ;40-p Athinta-Biclimoud 4:40-p 5:20 p Danville-Wesminstcr ... 5rf 0 p . 8:2S-p Atlanta-Washington 8:28 p 9:52-p N. Y.-Wagliu-Atl-Bhm . 9:52-p 12:17 a Bham-Atla-Waslm-Y 12:17 a Trains 29 and 30 I'ullmaa "sleeping ears between Birmingham and ' New York. . .- - ' . Trains S3 and 36 Pullman sleeping ears between New.. Yprk-Ncw Orleans and Birmingham. Trains 37 and . 35 Pullman sleeping ears between New York and pw Or leans. - ''" ' Trains 137 and 138 Pnllmaa sleeping ears between Washington afid Atlanta. T. E. Sossamon, Ticket Agent, - ' ,IL- Gastonia, N: C. h. H. Graham, D.T.' A., - - , Charlotte, N. C. Fifteen thonaanS people read Tbe . telta every flsy . A small aisotmt will earrv a message to them fox 701. .It's tbe cheanest and the best. B i !r -1 i 7