Newspapers / Gastonia Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.) / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Jan. 14, 1892, edition 1 / Page 1
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Devoted to tlio Protection ot Home and the Interests of" the County, j : ii - f (S1.50 perAnnnni,) (Cash in Advance. No. 2 Vol, XIII. TV. F. iriAKSIIACI Ed iter and Proprietor.) Gastonia, N. C, January 14, 1892. - f : V r 'j ITHII t s W r j w M m . . m m m . a CCESS. i JUDICIOUS : - '.- .-- - ' 'v. - i ' GREATES llany A New Business; ; ENIiARGES Xlaiiy An Old Bus iness; PRESERVES Many n Large Business; .. i any a-juuii Business; KESCUES Llany a Liost -. Business; SAVES llany a Failing Business; SECURES Success in Any Business. '.; To "Advertise Judiciously," use the columns of (be GASTONIA. GA ZETTE, published in one of the lire and flowing towns of N-rtb Carolina, ' wide-awake Democratic newspaper circulating among the intelligent 'and pnMperotw people of Gaston, Lincoln, CtoreUnd, Mecklenburg, and York, (. C.) Counties. It is Endorsed by the Far- t iaers Alliance. IT IS A SPLEADID MEDIUM through which to reach the people of a region rich in Agricultural, Mineral, and Manufacturing, Resources, whose trade is well worth seeking and hav ing,. pnlation of Gastonia, the county tropolis; In 1880, pOO; -In 1892 pyerl,20Q. . . . ;Hatwo Cotton Mills, two Hotels, '-two Furnifcare Factories, Iron Works, -.v'.Vf'' ' "' .' . Xumber and' Floriring Mills, Nation , x . - ' " v . , ' i : "t T- t ores, Mineral Waters gtej BURDETTE'S ADVICE. Resolutions Sujrsested for the New Year. Detroit Free Press. It probably occurred to you, my boy, sometime this morning that this would be a fitting time to introduce a series of good resolutions in your system of government. While I am not a very pronounced Muewump wnicn inaeea is an impossible thing I am thorough ly convinced that every day in the year is a good time to reform things. And, also, that about every thing on this old planet needs retorination about three times a day, and even it won't stay reformed half the time, ten min utes after the headache has passed away. ' Man, by which term I mean every thing that breathes and is capable of meanness, is sometimes at his best when he is unable to do anything, good or bad. "It was jrood for me to le afflicted," remarked the Psalmist. He was correct; and had we been his spir itual adviser "we?" Yes, I or you, or any other man liv ingbe would have been afflicted a great deal more than he was. Nothing make us so piously mad as to see peo ple imitate our faults. A man has lees charity and tenderness for his own besetting sin iu other people, tuan a cat has for a rat, or a dog for the cat. One of the mixed benefits of physical affliction or disability. Is that, while it may incapacitate a man from doing a great deal of good,, it keeps him, in a measure, from committing any vast amount of deviltry. Doesn't make him any better, neces sarily, any more than it makes a man better to hang him or send him to jail. Even the wolf restrained his evil pas sions and didn't bite or steal so long as he bad the bone in his throat. But he was a wolf just the same, and if he bad died in that spasm of harmlessness and gentleness he would have died a wolf. So, my boy, I hope that you will not enter upon a career of invalidism to help you through the coming year. I hope you will enjoy robust health and an appetite that will make glad the hearts of the butcher and baker." Therefore, "whereas, an' seeuin' an, wherefore," this is the time of year when men are" accustomed to change their linen' and put on clean things ;and whereas, to be in the swim one must take at least one annual bath in a tub brim full of penitential tears, and came out of its purifying waters sweet as a baby just a little too good, for five or ten minutes, for anything; and where as, if we start in on '92 where we stand at the close of '91, we are in the rack already and handicapped beyond all hope of taking any place; therefore, in secret session, with the doors locked and nobody in the room but ourselves, be it ' Resolved, That this year I will not beany better than I ought to be. Specification: Because, my boy, if you begin by fasting twice in the week, when once a year is all that is required of you, and by giving tithes of all you' possess, when no such offering is de manded, you will, strike a gait on the first quarter that will simply shut you out at the distance pole. You com prawney voo, don't you? I thought you'd like that. I like the spirit of your New Year resolutions last yeer. I like the spirit that moves a man to squat down, set his teeth, pull all his muscles together, and with one mighty effort try to jump clear across the slough of despond and over the hill of difficulty and across the valley of hu miliation, right over the top of the pearly gates and plumb into Heaven at one mighty bound. It's a great act, when it is well done. But so many men good moral athletes too who have tried it have missed their tip and come right down into the slough, not eleven feet from the scratch, with such a dull, splashy thud audauch awful chokings and wallowings that I confess it makes my heart stand still now whenever I see a young fellow or an old man getting ready for the jump. It Is a discouraging tumble to the ath lete, and it makes the spectators hys terical. ...Then people get into the habit of say ing that it can't be done, and the man himself says there's no use trying, and be is apt to give up and wander back to the City of Destruction, put up the sign which be had thrown into the back yard, take down the shutters, open the shop and resume business at the same old stand with a big branch house on the intallment plan in Vanity Fair. But this time let's not make more than a day's journey at a time and not travel over to exceed seven days in the week. That's the best way to get to Heaven. Resolved, That I will try to bo as good as I ought to be. Specification: And if you succeed in doing this, my son, it will leave yoa precious little time for anything else. There are heaps of mean things you had lotted on doing this year that will be entirely stricken from the docket by this resolution. "You hadn't planned any meanness?" Oh, yes, you had.- There are two or three fellows you were scheming "to get even with," and any sort of re venge,, my boy, is mean as "Injun." Reprisal belongs to privateering, and in this age privateering shaves piracy so closely that it isn't respectable. And what isn't respectable m a' gov ernment is fairly damnable in an indi vidual. And you had a plan whereby your place might be made a litttle eas ier by shifting some of your work off on somebody else. Whereas, the only way to make your work easier is to work a little harder. Some of the recreations you bad laid out but without any intention of bu rying them had just a little smear of pitch on them. True, you have made up your mind to clean house pretty thoroughly this January, but there was 1 L - l!ll1 m . jusi mile lamp or leaven you . were going to leave in a corner here and there; a questionable form of fun and Bpice that you aren't quite ready to give up. , Now, my boy, If you are going to he as good as you paght to be, all .these things will have to go. Don't be the least bit afraid that such a radical re formation will make you any better than you ought to be, and so lead you transgressing your first resolution. I will give bond in a fabulous sum that there isn't a particle of danger. Still, if you think there is, you might order your wings this weeK, in order to be ready for the transformation. Heap of grip in the country yet! j Jiesolced, That I will be good to my self. ! Specification: That is an excellent resolution, son. I dont know but it should have the first place on the list. You haven't been exactly fair to yourr self since I have known you. j Nobody else treats you quite as meanly as you do. And I don't think you -ire quite as mean to any one else as you are to yourself. You thought you were too good to yourself; one of the things you had privately resolved to overcome wa3 your growing selfishness. Vrell. that's right that comes under this resolution; your selfishness hurts your self more than it does any one else. A close listed, narrow-hearted man and you're anything but that, son doesn't dwarf humanity; he: doesn't make the world mean; he juslj shrivels himself until his stingy little soul rat tles about in his dried-up carcass like a wrinkled pepper grain in an bid shoe. All the wrong, all the evil, all, the sin you do in this world, hurts ) yourself worse than it hurts anyone tlse. The treachery of Judas only resulted in the suicide of Judas; didn't kill the Church. Peter's denial of his Master only gave Peter a sore sore heart to carry around with him, a living, sleepless ache, all the days of his life. Benedict Arnold's treason merely ac complished all that it possibly could accomplish the disgrace and ruin of Benedict Arnold; the United States is still here. Its birthday wasn't post poned a week by any man's treachery. The boodle alderman who stole liimself rich out of the city treasury only made a jail-bifd of one man. Every time you do a foolish thing, my boy. you hurt yourself. Be good to yourself and you can't help loving your neighbor. "To thine ownself be true; I And it must fallow, as the nig-ht the day. Thou can'st not then be false to any man." Now, there are three good resolutions you have entered on the record for this year. Thats enough for any fellow to forget and break. I wouldn't have too many laws on my private statute books if I were you. It only requires ten commandments to keep the whole world straight; three ought to be enough for yon. And they will be. Sometimes they will be too many for you. I reckon you will break two or three of "them this morning. But don't let that discourage you. The very fact that you consider it necessary to make them is evidence that you are more than liable to break them. We don't make laws to restrain peo ple from doing what they don't want to do, but quite the reverse. If you should go into a country and find in their statues nine laws in every ten laws against stealing you would say "this is a nation of thieves;" When you observe that the greatest; question of reform of tm n 'ml "Ticussed, j constant ly brought forward, never j changing and always agitated, is temperance, you naturally say "the prevailing vice among these people is drunkenness." And you are correct. Your good resolutions are so many barriers you erect between yourself and your faults, and you are going to try to break them down every day, and some day, I very much fear, you will succeed. Well, when you do put the barrier up again. Don't make new resolutions; splice the old ones. That makes them stronger than new ones, if you do it properly. You may break the same resolution in a new place, but that splice will hold. Before you get to the end of the year it will be all spliced; then you iwill have a hawser that will hold you.j I am almost always a little suspicious of a resolution that is never broken, or, at least, badly strained. One year, being wearied with ray many failures, I resolved that I would I introduce among others that went to the speak er's desk a few resolutions that I would surely keep. So I wrote on the first page of my new diary: I Resolved, That I will not kill a preacher this year. I Well, sir, it is a notorious fact, in the church of which I am a shining sleeper, that that very year, driving ;my pastor and two deacons over to a prayer meet-, ing in Gladwyne Chapel one night. I ran over a bank as deep as a stone wall, in the dark, and came with an accident policy of breaking the necks of the whole conference. I tell you what, my boy, I made all haste to rescind that resolution. There is something about a resolution that impels a fellow to break it- He wants to try it. You give a boy a delicate vase to hold and tell him how precious it is, and to be very, very careful with it, and be will take hold of it with both bauds at first; and then withdraw one finger at a time to see how near he can come to letting it fall without dropping it. When he plays "toss-ball" against the side of the house he always plays it just as close to the window as he can, until at last he goes through it. After that and the event immediately sub sequent the end of the barn is good enough for him. ; Well, this is a long sermon, but you can stand it once a year. Run along to church, now; got any money for the basket? "You've got enough for a church collection?" Well, not in that sneaking little nest of pennies, ' you haven't. You want to make one reso lution as an important appendix to the others, and vou want to stick to it, too; it properly belongs as a sub-head under the third: t Resolved, That I will -put into the contribution basket every Sunday at least the price of a theater ticket. Specification: And you dont sit in the gallery, either, iny boyr I know where you sill And you don't go alone, too. I know you. And I'm mighty easy with you not to put the cost of a December bouquet on your contribu tion; I know what it costs yqu when you do the thing about right. But I'll let you off with the cost of the picket. And I'll speak to the deacons about having a collection taken at every ser vice, maybe. But I wont do that right away. I will be gentle with yo-a if you will tote fair and give the church as much as you give the opera house. And, give it just as willingly. If 3'ou're going to pive it with a snarl aud protest every "time, keep it, and buy yourself pocket mirrors with it. Then you can look at the meanest man living every time you get alone. And that Will remind you that you promised to be good to yourself. sun jicjst ii ax;. (ior. Holt ItcfuMes to Save Caroline Mil pp. Charlotte Chronicle. Raleigh, N. C, Jan. 6. Caroline Shipp, a negro woman who was convic ted of poisoning her; child, in Gaston county, will be haueed on the 22nd inst., at Dallas. Governor Holt has written the following letter to the sheriff of Gasten: . "I have had the ap plication for the commutation of the death sentence of Caroline Shipp to im prisonment, under consideration for, some time, aud I have again gone through all the papers iu the case, and have concluded that ,1 have no moral right to further interfere in her case. Her petition is signed by many good people, among them J yourself, and I freely acknowledge S the right of petition and do sincerely wish for hu t inanity's sake as well as compliance i with the petitioners' wishes, that I l could feel justified in granting their re quest without violating my own cou se'ence, whichcarries with it my. oath of office. . "Whilst iis awful thing to hang any one, moi-eesecially a woman, yet the laws says it must- be done, and I am sworn to execute that law to the best of my knowledge and belief. I believe it would be a bad precedent to say that a woman should not be hanged for the same crimes as a man and I find no reason given in this case why clemency should be exercised save that the crim inal is a woman. The solicitor says he cannot reccommend commutation. "She is guilty of an outrageous murder and should die." The Judge says "There is nothing to recommend her to mercy except the fact that she is wo man." The law makes no d scrimination between male and female. It has been on our statute books from time im memorial that murderers should be hanged and never have women been exempted, but seyera to, my;, own knowledge have been executed. For the Governor to say a woman shall not be hanged seems to me to lie a usurpa tiou of power and would be the exer cise of a physical power but a violation of a moral right. In this country the cooks who provide our food and the nurses who have charge of our children are women; often superstitious and frequently vindictive, and were it bud down as a principal of law that a wo man should not be hanged it would soon be publicly known and serious re sults might follow, by the clandestine use of poison, as in this case. I feel keenly the responsibility resting upon me and regret that I cannot come to a different conclusion in this case. I have tried to persuade myself that a woman should not be hanged, but can not reconcile it to my oath to say so, and that is the only reason in this case why clemency should be exercised, I would add that I have consulted with several intelligent Christian gentlemen, one a minister, and they think my con clusions just. I would requst that you make known to her my decision, that she may direct her thoughts to pre paration for the awful doom which awaits her." The Cherryville Cotton Factory. Shelby Aurora. The Southern possesses many advan tages over the Northern mill, especially in the cost of cotton, cheapness of la bor, longer hours of work each day, cheapness of fuel and cost of living, lower taxes, warmer and better cli mate. These advantages give our mills success and induce capital to in vest here in cotton manufactories". In jthe cost of a bale of cotton, besides the advantage on loose cotton, there is an advantage of over $4.50 on each bale, or one cent per lb. on every bale, this is a big item tor profit. Suppose a small factory uses eight bales per day here is a profit of $36 each day or $11,000 per annum over its Northern competitor. To be deducted from this profit is the freight on the manufac tured goods when shipped North. The Southern mills have captured the mar ket in lower grades of cotton goods and time will develop finer work iu a few more years. The Cherryville Manufacturing Co. at Cherryville have nearly completed their large building. This company has subscribed about $50,000. D. Mauney, a prosperous farmer and mon ey lender of Cleveland is President; Mr. John Rhodes, wrho has recently moved from King's Mtn. is secretary and treasurer, aided by a board of direc tors. Among the stockholders are D. Mauney- $6,000, Mauney Bros, at King's "Mtn. $5,000, John Rhodes $5000, Jake Black $2000, Dellinger and Carroll $4000, and dozens of others who subscribed small sums of from $200 to $500. A Chancre in the Weather Bureau. In order to extend the usefulness of the weather bureau in connection with the preparation and distribution of the official forecasts, on and after January 1st, 1892, the period of time covered by the forecasts prepared upon the 8 a. m., observations, (which have heretofore been for 24 hours,) shdll be for 36 hours ending on the following dayat 8 p. jpa: At display, stations receiving the fore casts by; telegraph, the flags will be hoisted, in the afternoon and will indi cate. a he weather to-; Be- expected next day, " THE PAItSOX SHOOTER. Urmislcy Make A Statement. Snow Hill, Jan I, 1S92. To the Editor of Vie Beftector: 1 have just been shown a copy of your paper of the issue of December 23d, which does me serious injustice through misstatements of facts which I am sure you have made only on in formation' which you deemed reliable, and from no purpose on your part to injure me or mislead the public mind. I regret the necessity j that compels auother statement to begive'n to the public concerning the two attacks which I made on Rev. J. T. Aber nethy; but as a matter of simple jus tice to my character I have respectfully to ask that you will give m the priv ilege of correcting, through your col umns, the erroneous statements allu ded to, and alao to refute sundry slan derous reports which have been sent out through the press of the country on the subject named. A man who defends the sanctity of his home, and especially the purity and honor of his wife even by use of violent methods (which are often the only, effective ones) may as a general rule well con tent liimself witli silence amid the ex aggerated stories to which such occur rences invariably give rise, in the cer tain assurance that a just public sen timent will sooner or later see he has his cue and that truth shall triumph. This is the course I much (prefer to pursue in regard to this matter, aud only the peculiar nature of some of the charges referred to impel me to break that silence now. f It is charged that I invited Mr. Ab bernethy to my home to go hunting with me with the view of getting him within my power for the purpose of assaulting him. This is utterly false. The only semblance of , truth it con tains U that on the Saturday lief ore the Tuesday on which the first shooting oc curred he informed me that he would come over to my house on the last named day to go bird hunting with me, to which I assented. It is true I had previously had reason' to suspect that he had in his mind the impure design that at last produced the crisis, but my firm convictiou of my wife's unsul lied virtue (which has never. yet for a moment been shaken) and the friend ship and esteem I had enteftaiued for him lulled those suspicions to sleep, and I met him kindly when he came. But conduct of his after his arrival gave me fresh cause to believe ' that I had not erred in my previous misgiv ings. This alone led me to secrete my self, which I loathed the necessity of doing, that I might have ocular proof whether I had wronged a 'friend by such a suspicion or had rightly weighed and measured his motives and if the latter, to punish him as he richly de served for his devilish purpose and ef fort, concealed under a clerical robe, to tempt (even though unsuccessfully) the virtue of which God and the law of my country made me the defender. It is charged that my wife aud I had been on bad terms and that I had abandoned her. This is infamously false. Our relations towards each oth er were kind, loving and ; coufiding, and I was faithfully laboring and en deavoring to maintain hef and the lit tle one with which God had blessed our union, I as to the second attack, it is charged that I advanced on Mr. Ab ernethy as he was peaceably walking the street while he showed no disposi tion to have a difficulty and was not expecting one. The truth is he was warned that I was down town, and that the sight of him might again in flame my anger, and his wife and oth ers (;ts I am reliably i informed) be sought him to remain at home. De spite these warnings and entreaties he armed himself and walked) down the street, remarked that he could shoot as well as I. I was informed that he was down town, and I was preparing to leave when I saw him coming in the direction of me while I was going to ward my buggy. He walked with the air of one (as it seemed to me and oth ers) who was at least willing for the fray. The flame which for days I had smothered by a 'great effort, kindled anew, and I advanced towards him and drew my pistol and he drew his, and we began firing almost simultaneously, and continued the contest with the result well known. j It is alleged that the entire commu nity" denounced my conduct and that threats of lynching were freely made. This is also without any foundation in fact. The lynching business, if it bad been attempted, would not have been healthy; especially, in view of the host of friends who were willing to give me all the physical and moral aid in their power. I am proud to feel and know that the great majority of the people of my couuty those who do not feel that a libertine should be sheltered from punishment when he invades a virtuous and happy home, even though he wears the name and gaib of a min ister of the Most High are .with me and for me in this matter, i , While I regret the fact that I was brought face to face with Mr. Aber nethy, and thus iny anger became aroused beyond my control on the sec ond occasion named, I nevertheless do not reproach myself for inflicting upon him the punishment he then received. The good, true and devoted wife (whose innocence my victim sought: thongh in vain, to beguile) assures me that I did right; the prevailing voice of the best men and women in my community is one of sympathy with me, I can afford to await the final verdict without fear of the result. Respectfully,- - . William E. Gkimsley. What the Reflector said two weeks ago was based wholly on "what a gen tleman from Snow Hill told us, -as stated at the time, and we thonght Jthe Information he eave to be perfectly re liable. '.-Not wishing to. do -Mr. Unms leyaBy injustice we theerf ully ; give space for his statement.-Ed.l - OLD MAM iKI.lISIEY Stands by His Son. Cor. News and- Observer. Snow Hill, N. C, Dec. 31. Motives of delicucy which, I am sure, a just public sentiment will duly appreciate, have thus far operated to prevent the publication by me of any statement in connection with the two attacks of my son, William E. Grimsley, on the Rev. J- T. Abernethy. I would now spare the public this additional infliction after so much lias been said and writ t a about those affairs, if I could feel tnat a longer silence would be com patiahle with my duty to those who are near and dear to me. It has been published that I and ray entire family denounced the conduct of my son in attacking Mr. Abernathy. This statement is absolutely false, and it could not have been given to the public for any other purpose than to give a color of excuse for the wrong doing of one whose holy calling should have made him avoid the very sem blance of evil, and especially the temp tation of the innocent. So far from denouncing William's conduct we have felt all along that it was natural and excusable and, indeed, justifiable, in an honorable and high-spirited man under the provocation which led to it. His pure and stainless wife joins us in this sentiment. . . In this connection I beg leave to say that nohle and devoted wife and Chris tian woman, all through these unfort unate circumstances, has not suffered any diminution of the respect and es teem and conuuence which have so long been accorded her (as it surely was her due) from my entire family and all who knew her. Her husband and all "within my gates" and this entire community with one voice and one ac cord acquit her most freely and fully of the slightest purpose to do wrong. A trusting and confiding nature, zeal ous in the cause of religion and the advancement of the interests of her church, si in i1 v failed to detect crimi nal wrong in the approaches of one who was her pastor and spiritual ad viser, when she herself was too pure to suspect a corrupt motive and there was no open disclosure of actual criminal purpose, we earnestly beg that no blame be visited upon her unoflVnding head. In due time I feel confident that my son's conduct will be success fully vindicated, hut his vindiaction will not be (for it cannot truthfully be) at the expense of her honor and her good name. W. P. Gkimsley. The Best Yet. States ville Landmark. Pastor Abernethy has written a card, tie does not deny kissing Sister Grims lejf, but expresses .-.the-, opinion .that- it would have been so much better if Mr, unmsiey had just ordered him away instead of filling up his mortal body witu Dird snot. Well, yes; but every body can't be as nice as was the gen tleman who caught a stranger hugging his wite and declared atter wards, that he would have spoken to him about it except that he wasn't acquainted, with mm. How Dawns Received the News of , Bits Commutation. CLarlotte Chronicle. When the news was received that Gov. Holt bad commuted the death sen tence of Alfred Dawns a Chronicle rep resentative visited the jail to inform Sheriff Smith of the Governor's action With the paper iu hand, the sheriff led the way to the condemned man's cell. He was asleep. The sheriff called him. He jumped up and came quickly to the cell door. He knew the sheriff's visit meant life or death, and he trembled with emotions as he answered the sheriff's call. j Sheriff Smith read the message to him. lor a minute the negro seemed dazed. Then it seemed to dawn upon him that his life was to be spared. and that by the clemency of the Governor the awful fate that had been hanging over him was to be avert ed. He said to tha sheriff' "thank the Governor and you all a thousan d times." When asked if he dreaded the im prisonment for life,he said he could stand that, but the thought of hang ing was awful." Not once since Dawns was imprison ed has he made the least attempt to break jail, nor has he given the sheriff the slightest trouble. Sheriff Smith was almost as happy over the commutation as Dawns. The sheriff said he "was mighty glad the sentence had, been commuted." A Diplomatic Dun. The letter below was written to a gentleman a short time ago, and ap pears just as written except the names and places are left blank in this copy. It isn't a diplomatic dun then I would like to see one; S "A ,N. C, Dec. 18, 1891. ! "Mr. A A , T , N. C. : "Deae Friend: It has been a good while since we have corresponded and I thought I would renew our acquaint ance of the past. I have had ups and downs since I have heard from you, but the ups haye been as many or more than the downs, and therefore I have no rea-. son to complain. But with you it has been different, perhaps; the downs have been more frequent than the ups. Such is the fate of many a clever fellow, like yourself, but maybe the rougher it is here the smoother it will be ever yonder- The presence of your smiling face is always inspiring in this sad-visaged age, and your cheerful letters are always refreshing. Let me hear from you at your earliest convenience. There is a little ballance between us an old busi ness arrangement in my favor, a mat ter of some $30 00 or more. If you could remit a little of same soon, without hurt to your family or other preferred interests or claims, I will be much ol.lig.-d, and shall. -call it a Christui is or New Year's gift. , t '11o;.iujt to see or hear from sobif; I urn, your true friend. , -you -Scrofula cured,- evenu in Ka worst forms, by p- an1 you wjU tm atfonir and health v in a short time by ths uia of P. P. p orai?. hv' ,W, J. Torrence drugstore. I vXor. 8411 r by v., .. " -. . . - -' OIST ENJOYS ' Both the method and results when 1 oyrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts fently yet promptly on the Kidneys,: . aver and Bowels, cleanses the eys-. tern effectually, dispels colds, . head aches and fevers and cures habitual, j constipation. Syrup of Figs is 'the only remedy of its kind ever pro-' duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- 1 ceptable to the otomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only- from the most ? healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it : to all and have made it the most: i popular remedy known. -. i vj Syrup of Figs is for sale in BOf . and $1 bottles by all leading drog- gists, i Any reliable druggist wh..t may not have it on hand will pro-" cure it promptly for any .one 'who 3 wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. c - ' 1 CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. ' I SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. ' IQUISVILLE, KY. , AEW YORK. M.I. Mather Be Without Bread, XI , , : ! , Bishop's Besidence, Marquette, Mich., I Nov. 7.1889. ff The Ber. J. Kossbiel, of above place, -writes t I nave suffered a great deal, and whenever I foel' ! now a nervous attack coming on I take a doee of Pastor Koenig'B Nerve Tonio and feel rev . lieved. I tLink a great deal ef it, and would -itiier bo witbout bread tban wl-icut tbe Xonie , ! . - - Well 'Satisfied. '-'--'A I - VjLi,TEaiS,'TBx., Oct. tr, leox ' ; ' ! Abont 1) years ago my son had ihe first at. , --aek o eijiiuiiuio di2ainoBB. .an.d.. sudden Ulues.' five dLGEoreiit doctors did hiai no good ; on the; contrary, bis case grew worse, and the attacks became moro frequent and severe until be even' bad 4 to 6 attacks daily. After taking 3 bottle of Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonio the attacks entirely ceased. HENBY g; MUFiM.KR. -' FREE A Valuable Book en ZTervoaa-' Diseases sent tree to any address, and poor patients can . also obtain this medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverena Pastor KoemR, of Fort Wayne, Ind, since 18 and; la now prepared under bis direction by the KOENIC MED. CO., Chicago, III. ' t - - Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle, CfbrSS Tarjje sixe, S1.75. 6 Bottles for S9. ; Jin Charleston, S. C, by C. Fi.Hen drick corner King and George Street. ' I K. "W. SANDIFER, ' .. ATTORNEY AT LAW, ' - ' Dal, las, N. C. ." "Practices in the courts of Gaston and adjoining counties. . Also, in toe Supreme and Federal courts of North Caroina. . . - '. ".- W. H. -WILSON". , J. M. SLOANy Dr's Wilson & Sloan f PHTSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Offers their professional services to citizens of Gastonia and surronnding country. . - . : , Calls left at Torrence's Drug Store will receive prompt attention night or day. ATKJBiaa PB. Tim abvwx At.raa f& I IrllVirt Ainenneniiraik:sendusr address, we will mail trial W U II E II BOTW f n B" THE DR. TAFT BROS. M. C0.,B0CHESTEM..r KlilA DEAF NE88 & HEAB RBISES CORES? Fack' INVISIBLE TUSOLAB IAB CUSHIdllS. Whismn heard. Conk fortbl. SiuerMfblwlMrc.il Oeia4lMhil. SoUfcyrvHISCOX, -all. M BC4w7, tea. Writ. Car katk ml arMti MUUU PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM ClOSxuea and bearttlflM th. ka!& Promotes a luxuriant growta. Never Palls to Beatore Gray Kaiv ta lta Youthful Col.r. Cure. K&lp dtseaaea A hair tat g0c,a.4tl,Wat DrBKgiat, 3 WW V Vx T arker'a G-iBf ar Tumio. It utm l .r aou, eak Lunpt, rxbUitj. Irrigation, Fain, Traa hi 6upaP jaiu? 2c?a?iri5 ruista, or UiBoaX A rwtfr TOT. MADE WITH .BOILING WATEfe GRAJEFUL-COMFCRTItta, MADE WITH BOILING MILK. .LABELED 1-2 LRWVS'QXJjY. mm For Sale -by W..'J Torrence,; i I JC o o O e - y V 1, . r . '. ;.. . : --v-. . - Y . ,v4-
Gastonia Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Jan. 14, 1892, edition 1
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