Newspapers / Gastonia Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.) / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Oct. 29, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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- -r- -mm n r ri - i m wn i pi ih .n 'iin n w i i vi u A : 1SD, Established . iai the .leap. iiigTOeM , imwHiwir. - . el t e The GastQiifa Qjaz Vol. 4. EDITOlf andPeoprietor. POISON ON THE WALLS. Karolts of Chemleal Analyse IUaMM Caused by AmBlmi Wall-l'.per. The Massachusetts board of health published, about a year and a half ago, the results of analyses of 'wall-paper made by Professor Edward S. Wood. Twelve years earlier the same board had published a report upon the use of arsenio by manufacturers of wall-paper, pre pared by Dr. F. W. Draper. In that re port the presence of this poison in green papers was pointed out, and green pa pers became'' unfashionable. But Pro fessor Wood showed that arsenio was to be found in papers of every hue and in those sold at high prices as well as in the cheap patterns. The quantity carried ranged from half a grain to nearly seven grains a square yard. Many green pa pers contained no trace of thi3 poison. Glazed and plated papers, prepared for the use of children in kindergartens, car ried from twenty to twenty-five grains on a square yard. Toys and candies were covered with arsenical pigments, and the white papers used in covering and lining small boxes was so heavily charged, that a square, foot yielded forty five grains, or enough to kill fifteen men. Professor Wood's rrt was accom panied by a record of iorty-two cases of illness caused by paper charged with ar senic : There have been several hearings in Boston before the legislative committee on public health. Testimony has been given by chemists, doctors and professors connected with Harvard university. The evidence submitted is cumulative. Pro fessor Lyon described fourteen cases of illness caused by arsenical wall-paper, all of which came under his observation. In one case several members of a clergyman's family having been affected the symptoms were described as fol lows: "Numbness in shoulders and arms, weakening of digestive organs, sleeplessness, nervous prostration." In other casea the symptoms were "a pe culiar sore throat," bronchial inflamma tion, loss of appetite, gastic irritability, headaches, a metallic taste in the mouth, soTeness of eyelids, cold extremities, de pression of spirits, extreme lassitude and fatigue in the morning. In these cases careful examination and experiments proved beyond a doubt that arsenic car ried into the system from heavily charged wall-paper was the cause of illness. In one housewhose owner's wife .had suf fered severely, analysis revealed eleven grains of arsenic per square yard on the wall-paper. New York Times. The Question of Labor In Brazil. Beyond the abolition of slavery looms up in Brazil the question of labor. There can be but one solution of the problem, and that is immigration. How to attract this is now absorbing the minds of the statesmen. The labor of the liberated slaves and their descendants will neyer be sufficient for tbejneeds of th country. They are by nature the most lazy and worthless laborers in the world, and have a disposition to leave the plantations and flock to the cities of the sea-coast. There they just work enough to keep them selves alive, and as long as they can . get raw farina and casasch are happy. One great drawback to immigration to Brazil is the bad reputation for health which the country has in Europe. The northern seaport towns are undoubtedly unhealthy, but in the south of the em pire and in the interior the climate is as healthful as could be wished. Still, the horror with which yellow fever ia re garded and the difficulty of making im migrants understand the vast size of the empire and Its consequent variety or cli mates, render the work of attracting them here difficult. The Argentines owe their great prosperity to the constant tide of immigration which is flowing to their shores, and the Brazilians claim that Ar gentine agents abroad omit no opportun ity or scruple at no means to divert im migrants from Rio to Buenos Ayres. New York Tribune. A King in His Own Domain. What a king ia a man in his own do main? He turns the key in his office door, locking his cares temporarily within, and strolls leisurely heme to his noonday meal, that climax of a morn ing s work. One or more women may have been dashing about the kitchen one or more hours to bring about this same climax. If he has a poor -digestion he elowers but indifferently at the food spread before him: if the world uses him well he smiles approvingly. Well he may smile. His fingers are not smarting inth rwent, contact with red-hot uten sil, hia are not filled with smoke, and hi wNanot redolent with beef- stake; he hasnopeiniration on his brow, nu duBt on his shoulders, no rebellion, no resignation, no warfare of any sort in his breast. Even though laboring under the somewhat depressing effects of onion odor in his front nail,-he may ctill smile, and that smile not be automatic. He has decided to imbibe some of the phil osophy of life, and why be irremediably annoyed by onions? Haryot Holt in Chicago Herald. The Monument Sways with the Sun. At the meeting of the Washington Monument society, Col. Casey made some Interesting statements to the members in regard to his observation of the habits of the monument, for it appears that the great obelisk is a moving, jf not a living thing, and that it has a regular swaying motion when the syp is shining upon it. On every bright day the apex of the monument moves at least one inch west ward in the morning when the sun's rays first fall upon it, and eastward . again in the af temon t when the sun reaches the western side. The heat of the sun's rays have an expansive, effect Upon; the mason, and the plummet that is sus pended in the interior of the monument registers this movement from day to day. Washington Lettetr " : T ;: ; They Item Extremely Tedious. -Professor Max Muller dares to say that there are. long passages even in Homer which seem to, him extremely tedious, and that not, a few of Goethe's writings seem to him not worth a seoond reading. It is estimated that the am&u&l cost for the picking alojae of the cotton oavp at tht Mtftbsra States is HO.OOOOS. ' The Inspiration of the Moment. Let me tell you, my son, what the "inspiration of the moment" will do for you. It will thrill you to your very soul. It will make your heart beat high and your brain whirl in a very maelstrom of eager excitement; it will burn and throb with earnest thoughts, noble ideas, gen erous impulses . mightily born of the great occasion, of the lights, the music, the applauding multitude, until your very being quivers with the hie of the pent up eloquence that is struggling to escape. . , . . , . . , . ... - j r a 1 Ana right mere ine Tnspirauou ui mo moment" will leave you. Right there the thrilling and the throbbing and the whirling and the burning and the quiv ering eloquence will go on, and keep go- ine on. but it won t come out. x ou win have all the glowing colors there, and if you knew how to lay them on the canvas you could paint a picture tnas wouiu live in men's hearts for centuries. You have only to say about 1.000 words, and if you only say the right ones and say them in the proper order, they will be graven as with a pen of iron upon the brain and soul of the nation. You have only eight notes to arrange, and the song you sing will linger while the sun shine3 and the flowers bloom. But in all tliis orderly arrangement so essential to success the "inspiration of the moment" plays little or no part. When the "inspiration of the moment opens your valves, all your pent up elo quence comes tumbling out, like a pied newspaper form falling down stairs. The type are all there iron? garret to site walk, but nobody, not even the printer who set them up can read them. The "inspiration of the moment" sometimes tells you how to say it, but only once in a'century does it teil you what to say. And you are not liable to live 100 years, you know. Burdette. Training Geese, Pigs, and Monkeys. "Nearly all animals may be taught to perform tricks," said William Conrad, the clown of Barnum's circus who trained the little elephant Tom Thumb to such perfection. "For some time this winter I was engaged in teaching a flock of geese to do many curious things of even a more surprising, character than Blitz tver taught his canary birds to do, but just as I got them- fairly broken in and under way, they fell sick, and nearly all died. As it was too.4ate in the season to break in another lock and begin over again, I abandoned the idea of the geese for this year and turned my attention to breaking some other animals. I am now putting a pig and monkey through their finishing lessons, and will have them both ir-ady in time for our opening, provided the 'monk' lives. Monkeys catch cold so easily that generally when they have been taught to do tricks, they quietly turn up and go where all consumptive monkeys go to the taxidermist. The pig I have just trained to perf orrfrt he-Bahie - tilings pre cisely as "some of the fine-bred" horses do In the rings, railed a "manege act." The pig, while ridden by the monkey will kneel, walk on its knees, waltz, leap over hurdles and bars, rear up on its hind legs, . go through a series of high stepping, posing, bowing everything, in fact, that is done by a horse, all the time being guided by his rider, the monkey. "Next season I shall not only train a flock of geese but a large number of aheep also, and if I succeed with these I shall try some other kinds of animals, for I believe with patience and kindness any kind of gentle animal and bird, and even snakes, may be taught to perform tricks. New York Sun Interview. The Peruvian Preserved Human Heads. Among the interesting objects in the national museum are the Peruvian preserved human heads, being two human heads, the bones extracted and prepared by the Indians of the valley of the Amazon river. These heads are rare ethnological objects, of which very few have been brought to Europe and America. They are held by their owners in much veneration, as trophies of vic tories, the heads of enemies being thus prepared for permanent preservation. The manner of scalping and contract ing the skin so as to make the compressed head is as follows: The skin is cut around the neck as low down as possible, it is then loosened and slipped off over the head, all the flesh being removed. The scalp is then put to soak for ten or twelve - hours in an infusion of herbs. Small pebbles are then heated and put into the scalp, which is shaken so that the pebbles touch every part, when the pebbles have, cooled the scalp is dipped again into the infusion and allowed to remain until soft, the operation being repeated until the head has sufficiently contracted. The re sults is a well-formed and quite symmet rical head, about four inches in diameter, all parts contracted in equal proportion, and with Ions, nowmj blacK hair; a braid of strings is passed through the lips, and there several other artificial appendages. Washington Cor. Kansas City Times. ' Predisposing Causes of Pneumonio. It is a well-known fact that the dis ease attacks the poor of tener than the rich, the private oftener than the officer, the sailor on shore oftener than on ship, the soldier oftener than the civilian at the same cost. It is unknown in the polar regions and common on the Medi terranean, increasing in a direct ratio from the poles to the equator. Elevation above the sea. predisposes to it; north and east winds favor its development: rainy seasons or damp and marshy dis tricts do not seem to influence it. peri ods of steady and extreme cold have little effect upon ; the old, but sudden changes are very disastrous. . The first predisposing cause is age, the disease being most common in early childhood, from 20 to 40, and,- after 60, The proportion of - male to female vic tims is as three to one... Any general condition of the body which debilitates is a predisposing cause. r The complica tions which render the disease so dan gerous are those -which diminish the nerve supply or weaken . the muscular power of the heart." Bad -sewerage and iniasroaMqi'mfluence are potent oauses of to diaoass. Professor A. L. Iioorif. Devoted to tlx Protection of Home aadnhe Interests of the County. An Actress' FetToong Alligator. Attired in a loose costume of white satin, edged with lace, Miss Kate or sythe the well-known actress was run ning vivaciously about ner room me other night, followed by a little creature with a long tail and a scaly hide. JNow and again, when the little thing Ot too close to her, she . would vent a playf ul shriek and jump on the bed or a chair out of harm's way, while the little creat ure would stand staring up at her work ing its jaws ominously. "It won t hurt you," cnea tne actress from the edge of the bed as a visitor, whose card had gone up ten minutes before and had been on the journey up meanwhile, entered. "It won't hurt you. It is only my baby alligator, Delphine. It's a dear little darling, she went on, as she jumped down and gathered the little beast up in her arms. "I brought it home from New Orleans as a present to mamma. But when I oilered it to her, what do you think? she ran away shrieking and she won't come near me juiv more when I have the the little creature with me. But I just love it. It's as tame as a pag and as playful as a monkey, and tame why it knows me as well as a real baby knows it mother. That little box there hftlf full of water is its bed. It was frozen stuT when I brought it up here, but it's all 1 hawed out now. There, you funny little creat ure, go to bed. Flash! There it is in, and I'm sure its eyes are closed already." Philadelphia Pross. Some Items for Moon-flaiers. Had we a railway to tho moon it would take but about a year to reacn it, travel ing at the rate of twenty-seven miles an hour. None of the heavenly bodies, except the sun and moon, have any direct influ ence on the earth. Old sailors think that if the direction in which the moon is at the time of its change from old to new moon be ascer tained, the direction from wiiicn me wind will blow for the next seven days can be known. The moon supplies a small amount of heat and a great deal of light.- It also affects the earth in respect to magnet ism. - If the moon were burned up ships in harbor could no longer get out, and those without could not get in. Seen from the planet Venus the moon would appear as a companion star or planet with the earth. If the moon were destroyed me loss oi heat, while hardly perceptible, would slightly lower the temperature at night. It is a maxim of farmers out west that all plants which are to grow up, like corn or wheat, must, in order to prosper, have their seed sown when the moon is waxing, but all which are to grow down, like beets, -parsnips, etc., must have the seed sown in the waning of the moon. Detroit Free Press. i ? The Tree-Frog's Change of Color. Any one may try the experiment by going to a shady, damp place, almost any warm day in June or July, and they will be very likely to hear a little piping song, something between a small common frog and that of a hearth-cricket. Guided by this song the little tree-frog is not hard to find, and when found he will be the exact color of the leaf, bark or any other thing on. which he is rest ing. - Some one jays, "Oh, yes; we know there are frogs of different colors, and that the love to sit on sometliing of like colors to protect themselves from birds and other enemies." But don't be quite so fast with your opinion; wait until our experiment-is finished. Now take him from the 'green leaf on which he now sits, and place him on the body of a tree which is a dark gray color, and in twenty minutes he will be the exact color of the bark on which he sits. Again remove him to a log or stump that has been burnt as black as hre can make it, and in twenty minutes he will be as black as the stump or log on which he sits. All these tests I have tried, and there fore feel perfectly safe in making them known, and would be pleased if another person having made any experiment with this little frog would make known the results. AsarfGregg in Inter Ocean. Immunity from Fatal Small-Pox. Dr. Ogle, having expressed his disap pointment "that the profession did not show complete immunity from fatal small-pox, The London Lancet points out that the rate of thirteen deaths of medical men from small-pox per 1,000,000 living implies that during the ten years 1873-82 only two deaths from this cause,out of 8,865 deaths from all causes, occurred in the profession in England and Wales, numbering about 15,000. "There were in England and Wales during those ten years 19,377 deaths from small-pox, and it is fair to assume that one or more medical practioners were brought into personal contact with each of these de ceased persons. Bearing these facts in mind, the deaths cf but two medical men from this disease during these ten years induces overpowering evidence both of the value of vaccination as a protection from small-pox, and of its general and effectual adoption by the profession. Medical Journal. Where John Cabot Probably Landed. Historians ana scholars can not agree as to whether to Christopher Columbus or to John Cabot belongs the honor of the discovery of the American continent, Many believe and assert that it belongs to the latter. The exhaustive researches recently ' made by Professor Horsf ord would seem to show that Cabot first landed, not, as has been supposed, at some point on the coast of Maine, but at Salem Neck, on , the coast of Massachu setts, and, proceeding southward, en tered what is now Boston harbor, and thence up Charles river, building a fort on its banks. It is probable,' then, that' John Cabot and his crew were the first white men who ever looked upon the pleasant shores of what is now South Boston. That It had been a favorite spot with the Indian tribes is attested by the discoveries mads m digging for the foun dations of buildings in later years, Bos ton Globe. ' " 1 " ", Gastonia, N. C., October 29, Has a Mom yAncanee. When we hear Jetttle thing by Raphael, half a foot square, fetching $125,000 we are amazed -until we reflect that this little trifle has a monumental significance as marking the point where the great master, and with; him one might say the art of the world, forsook the early tradition and under the guid ance of the newly-discovered antique fragments turned to the studv o mature alone. . That Raphael picture will never go out of fashion, ana the same ras-f be said of all the gsvat names which have sur vived through many centuries of change. But when such sums are paid as wehe-ve seen paid a few weeks ago for 'modem work we can not but wonder what will be the worth of those same canvasses a score of years hence. Any one who can look back a quarter of a century 'wrM re member how many changes of fashions there have been in art, as in everything else. A dozen fas-Uons have'ToSowed one another, each for a brief perfd, as the manipulators have f ound-it, "tol their interest to dir jet. Philadelphia Times. The Surface of the Caspian Sea. The results of the Russian level sur veys between the Euxina and the CaspLm show a considerable modiflcacion of former estimates, the difference fating reduced from 400 to 83 feet, 'ilvs sur face of the Caspian is certainlya little below the ix:ean loveL but its subsidence is subject to strange fluctuations. It slowly ris8 ivnd then slowly sinks each alternate thirty years. Tho inhabitants of the rooky south shore have a special name for this phenomenon and ''explain it by a vari.-ty of the aosurdest theories. Th9 Caspian is nearly as salt as the Med iterranean, and its former connection wii.h the ocean seems probable from the faot that it abounds not only with sea fish but with seal, which the harpooners of the last hundred generations have failed to exterminate. Dr. Felix L. Os wald. Size of the New English Ironclad. The new English ironclad just launched from the Pembroke dock-yard the An son, in a twin-screw, armor-plated bar bet bhip. Her principal dimensions are: Lenh beween perpendiculars, 430 feet; extreme breadth 65 feet 6 inches; dis placement, 10,000 tons; engines, 7,500 horse-power; and indicated speed, 16 knots. Her complement of officers and men will be 430. Her belted armor will be IS inches in thickness and .she is to carry four 63-ton guns, six 6-inch broad side guns, ten Nordenf eldts, and twelve 6-inch quick-firing guns. jChicago Tribune. A Theory Concerning Fruit Bearing. If is contended by some orchardists thnt. a tree bearing a certain number of bushels of small apptes will not grow as fast as one" bearing the tofls jnd ana same numbT-of bushslafJsegvawpJes. The reason offered u that toe seeds of the apples take muoh of J" the tree's strength, and that a the seeds of the small apples are nearW as large as of the large ones, the tree's Vrowth is thereby more retarded. The veagiit oi evidence anoears to favor this cmclusiou. Chi nclus: 'ative TBI cago Times- Enemy to Our Native Xtlrds. Femhiine subservience to fashion is the greatest enemy to our native birds. To minister to this vanity an army of men and boys are employed throughout the country to murder these innocents, that their stufted skins may decorate a lady's bonnet. Travel a hundred miles along our coast and you may not see a gull where five years ago there ' were thou sands of white breasts flashing in the sunshine. In many places meadow larks, bobolinks and orioles ae almost extinct. . - . It Can Scarcely Be Improved. New York Town Topics saysV that, ac cording to a hitter from London, at a re cent social event there Canon Farrar, who was one of the guests, was asked how he found America as a-wuntry to travel in. "Excellent," he .replied. "I can scarcely conceive how it could be improved in any way. The bofter classes there are really so civil and attentive that one could almost do fwithout a valet." ' - . Japan Ahead in Some Things. The Japanese are away heji cf 113 m some things. They always -ieep then backvards in apple-pie ord no ash heaps, garbage barrels, tin cans and rub bish. The Japanese back yard is a little paradise, and is made as beautiful as art and nature can make it. The Jape, how ever, have no front yards and they dump their rubbish in the street.--Chicago Journal. Night Air Is Not Iujurioui Professor Reclam, the Germanliygien ist, declares that night air is injurious only in swampy regions, whereas on dry soil, in the mountains, and everywhere in the upper stories of the house it is mnro salubrious than day air. Neither does he consider draughts hurtful unless one is in a glow. Exchange, Results Keached with American Powder. American cannon powder claims to beat all creation, some of the latest make speeding a hundred-pound projectile throuerhthe air at the lively pace of 2,029 feet per second. This result was reached at a recent trial of the new navy guns at Annapolis. Boston Transcript. Copper Wire Inside of Steel. A telegraph wire is now being brought out in England in which the steel is made to surround the copper. The wire is said to be drawn from compound metal, con sisting of a hollow in got of steel filled with copper. Philadelphia Record. Fire-Proof Theatrical Scenery. At the City theatre at Cologne all the scenery and implements have lately been impregnated with chemicals as a pre ventive against fire. A young doctor says: "Our profession Is the only one in existence which gives all its nnprovements to the world free of Charge. The census officials estimate the popu lation of the country at present to be 60,000,000. . 1 886. n Exposition, AT LOUISVILLE, KY. August 28. 1886.- October 23, GREAT HEW . YORK MOJTAR.yVBANO- 3 Concerts Esxoli Xa.-y- 33 CONTAINING A LARGE COLLHCTiOM OF FOREIGN and American works of art. i INTERfiaTIOMal EXHIBITION With Displays from all parts of the World. Machiii3ry,Ari3, fccfustries and Predicts. SKUWlNj AST AN 3 LIFE IrJ JAS'An. I C0LL3STI0ITS 0? MZMEEALS. foMer'M 1mm Oatflral Science. BAffLB OF GIf TYSBUR& Low Rates for Trayel and Afinnssinn. Y ewspaper. Advertising. DATJCHY & CO., 27 Park Place and 24-36 - Murray St., New YorK. Make lowest rates on all newspapers in the U. 8. and Canada. Established 18OT. Are - CONSUMPTIVE, nine fViiiH-h. Rror-chitis. Asthma. Indig-es- tion? Use Parser's Tonic without de lay. 1 has cured many of the worst cases and ia the best remedy lor r.H affections of the throat and lunas, and diseases arising from imoure blood arid exhaustion. The feeble and siet, Rtimarglingr against disease, and slowly Uriltinsr to the grave, will In m3t cases recov er their health bv the timely use of Pabkes's Tonic, but delay is aangerous. xaiiB n in time. Cures v.'toen all else lans. uivta new life and strecfith to the agea ana innrm, m av PRICE OF I BURNHAftVS Improved " 1 8i.-5&ft K.S3e T nriKfc of manulacturlne -'SS$s$g35: and advertising. Pamphlet free bv ' j BURNHAM BRO'S, York, Pena. ALL FOR 24 CENTS. We must reduce our stock in the next three months, and for 30 days offer all the following' for 24 cents: JO pieces choice New and Popu lar Music, full size, finely printed; 200 eleg-ant designs in Outline for Stamping and Embroid ery; 100 late and Popular sons, including an the jrems from the MIKADO, as well as "Dream Faces," ".Love, Love, Love," "Sailing-," etc., etc.; a larg-e collection of new Kiddles and Co nundrums , 'over 250, just the thing for picnio and social parties; 350 Motto Verses, just side sp'utrcra. 77 Triela in Magic, 100 Puzzles, all kinds, 26 Pcpvilur Games, a Secret Alphabet, 3tK Amusing, Interesting and Mysterious Pict ures, trie great game or ! oriunes iwu, t-w;. " will send all the above in one pacKage to any address, all prepaid, for 4 cents in postage stamps: 3 packages for 50c.: 7 packages for 1. Address all orders to WORLD MF'G CO., 123 Nassau St., N. Y. i : . E. M. Andrews,' The largest and most complete stock of FURNITURE in the State! PIANOS & ORGANS of the best makes oh the installment plan. Low prices and easy terms. Send for prices. 1 CHICKERING PIANOS, BENT PIANOS, ! MATHUSHEK PIANOS, MASON & HAMLIN PIANOS. BAY STATE ORGANS, PACKARD ORGANS, MASON & HAMLIN ORGANS. Order direct from me, and save time and freight, as I deliver Ireignt-paia to vjur nearest depot as cheap as you can buy from the head office, and will at tend to your wants in case anything should be wrong in the factory guaran E. M. ANDREWS, : Charlotte, N. C. PATENTS Ofcained, and all PATENT BUS fNESS attend 1 to PROMPTLY and for MODERATE FEES. Our oifiee is opposite the IT. S. Patent Oliice, and we can obtain Patents in less time than .1.00 rnmntA from WASHINGTON. I Send MODEL Oli DRAWING. Wepdviseas to patentability free of charge; nr.d we make NO CHA KGE UNLESS PATENT IS SECL KED. av. wfm- hum to the Postmaster, the Sunt. of Mnncv Order Div.. ami to oiiioiuLs of the U S. Patent Oliice. For circular, advice, terms and references to actual clients in yonr own State or county, writeto . Opposite Pateut Office, Washington, D. C. Dental Surgery. Dr s. J. A. & E.i F. (GLENN would respectfully inform THE PUBLIC that they have opened an office in Gastonia, N. C, ana are prepaied to attend all CALLS i in their line. I iS3F"Office in town hall, next door to the Gazette office. j 6 tf Mmi St f OneDollae and a Half per Annum, ) . A A in Advance. J , vf ; w MANUFACTURES OF " There is nothing that succeeds like Success!" I have effected arrangements whereby I will keep in stock a full line of ;urSl6lIi 'Hp Mt- Shoe Findings, etc., which I will sell low for cash, either wholesale or retaiL Purchasing as I do, in large quantities, I am prepared to sell LEATHER to the shoe trade as low as any first-class house can afford. My Boot and Shoe shop is supplied with experienced and skilled workmen, and all work of all kind is fully guaranteed. If you want a pair of Shoes, Boots . or Gaiters, give me a trial. Repairing a specialty. :....'!" " Parties wishing to purchase in my line will find it to their advantage to call on or write to me before purchasing elsewhere. - - Respectfully, cr. "w jBE.A.iEsr, WHOLESALE & RETAIL a wm - I West Trade tt.? i " A FULL LINE OF - Cheap Bedsteads, Lounges f Parlor and Chamber- SUITS. COFFINS OF ALL KINDS ON HAND. au6-ly just ; Thrived i A lot. of Standard Prints, a lot not standard; India Linens, Victoria Lawns, Mohair, Cashmere Delaines, Buntings, Nuns Veiling, Cretons, etc., etc., all at lowest prices that . , .' That Can Be Named In GASTON ! Hoes from $3 to & per Dozen! Double-foot Plows, "Boss" Plows, Shovels, Spades, Forks, Rakes, Harrows, Cotton Sweeps; in fact, almost anything usually kept in a first-class country store. f-:- ' " . : r : -, Headquarters for Bacon, Flour, Hams, Molasses, Coffee, Sugar, and other Heavy Groceries.-; ?' v;-:v-:V.;?;i-;; "We will make it to your interest to call, when in town, and examine on prices, as ..-.-v. r We Will Not Be Undersold By Anyone. (""When you want A. Remember we keep the "Piedmont," the best on. the market. Respectfully, J. D. t MOORE & CO. Dr. W. J. Torrence & Co., Wholesale and Retail Druggists; Gastonia, N. O. (Kee Building, Next Door to Falls House). itiu wmr Mli ijiarrhoea. . r t9 PA 111 I VI If II I MI IIHII IHMRI. If W Mill W V 1 1 1 1 In 1 XX ill. TUj IUJ J V 1 tPJ S.. JLWhriiunrBrv. Ho VUls- ilna oat sdotk w mpa. yuu "--J- jj" "-SC: t TnWHON 00 . SIS O.K. ft. Boston, r - Jree. Sold everywhere, or sent by mall for 35o. In stamps. Pr. I. B. JOM.H Bun JjZSl. "T fihpridn'a Condition Powder is absolutely pure and highly oon-l ! 1 1 ii ml HnAAnnM in is worth a pound of fk f J any other kind. It ioS 8 J SI triotly m mediou. to lo&erSJror nt by mau for a6 onts ia '!- THE CELE3HATED DEALER IX ALL KINDS OF s??rs n n n Charlotte, Q. uoiyu t M mm m ? FIX 11 W BLOOD. nthprm Mlie them rn the world. V, in pciM-rely our. or . Hothinff on mrtk win sufcshana lay . Ilk. it. Itnn ohiokem abator, ana all aisMses or nans. reth .traied . is-worw KS weigm is sola, urns1 atams. S lg?JSaffsVefc BOOK okbrnillft-N.. WAGON 11 Amfnrwf ? MuUiuui If iv mm a "1 -1
Gastonia Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Oct. 29, 1886, edition 1
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