Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Aug. 9, 1904, edition 1 / Page 2
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00 theVatfono.^BuThe *^ok^ “bet. »U the speakers spoke yeonifarts&le haadietpt. la the first place k was * ' crowd lather than a gathering; iatke secon __ Rwae very wans aad the thick torcstcat off on every side any teen that aright be stirriap, sad lathe t hit d place the an «eaea eras oo the upper aide of the stead, aad mates say It is dUBeok to talk -up-hill- to fo]bma With Us declaration of repret Mr. Webb’s abacsee lfn Newell coupled e gracefnl es S^S3,wnS!5pS‘y\«He devoted himself to a discussion of PQOllod topks bom a Repub lican standpoint. The RepabHcaa party, said the speaker, baa been for many years aaderthe hack of news* W*™*"1. tyMfc speakers. 1 candidly admit there were some things about unr party that ought to be criticised. No party behove critfcum, no party b perfect. A stroop minority party has e selatery effect upon the majority party. We need two strong white parties. Were we KTS'Kir""1 bra”' "k' Politic, is aa intellectual proposition—not personality, not hate, aot prejudice. The two ■eh other ia politi> 1 : Ia deciding which fe doctrine b based oa free trade. A bar tariff, a lower tariff, no I r i £ v. He will have on exhibition In our store a splendid array of smart fabrics, and will be prepared to tell you what Is latest and best In Gentle men's Styles, and particular ly what will be most becom ing to yourself. AAA To you who are accustomed to HIGH CLASS APPAREL, SCHLOSS TAILORING will appeal most strongly* Your critical taste will be gratified* The fit will be guar anteed, and the prices, you will find, are lower than usual* Drop la to-4ay tor a few ailoatea. Swan-Slater Co. UT CUSTOM TAILORING FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE. # tbey tackled was tbe JcIHco Mountain Coke and Coal Com pany. Tbey decided against labor. In tbe Debt cate and the New Orleans case they de cided against labor. It looks tike the Democrats might find something else to crash besides the laboring men.' Kitcbin, Bellamy, Kluttz, Thomas, voted in Congress solidly against the only measure they ever bad a chance at that would have com pletely crashed tbe traits. The Democratic ’ fudges iu. the Supreme Court voted to decide iu favor of tbe Northern Securi ties Company. , III. - Mooey. Tbe Democrats say; “What we want is the gov erntnent stamp to make aoacjr, natters not whether It is on ■rood, leather, iron, or gold.” Hiey are mistaken, says the Republican. Give ns a chance HM we will irrevocably fix the roM standard and the tariff. M stand squarely for the gold Xaadard. The Democratic tarty makes a show of stepping mddealytom Bryanfsm to tbe mil) fitailflaff! Rut Rmen and you ever had before. Under Cleveland, I was so Door I coo Id hardly get along—couldn’t find anything to do. I went out on the farm—saw I couldn’t make anything on 4Xc cotton. The bens seemed to be busy and I went to raising eggs — eggs. And when I took them to mar ket all I could get was 8X cents a dozen. Now do you want 20 cents for your chickens instetd of 30 or 40 cents ? Do you wint 4Xc in stead of IS cents for your cotton? «*>i vote for the Democrats. I have nothing against Parker— he’s a non-entity—but shall we tun down Roosevelt, the man who has helped os to this pros perity, the man who has been your friend? In the Philippines we stand for the "open door.” The Dem ocrats say "pall ont and let it go." Could we make Russia taka her bands off of Manchuria and restore it to China, it would still further open markets for onr cotton goods in Japan and China. The speaker referred in glow ip^terma to the liberation of Someone intern pted to ask ak^sif flio AtlawiLs awA mi n railroad. He Mid be bed beard that the road had 34 attorneys. Asked about the Pall River troubles, he sal I that the news* paper bad beeo declaring so ve hemently tbs* Parks* would be elected that manufacturers be came afraid and shut down. It WM joat s sample of what would happen all over the country if the Democrats should be elected. Tima was up and Mr. Newell Mt dowa amid tbs cbsen of bis fadowets. WU HOKY’S asn,v. The fallacies of Mr. Newell's speech ere ao transparent tbat it Uanueceseery to lay before Tart OaKITU'l Urge family of Intel liffant readers asy extended re port of Mr. Hoey’s able and ^tofiktpuh^w^spseebM thave muss. m ". . ^ m i i, S.v I • • 1 \ * HYOU CAN | OET THEM l FOR ALL : YDUR FAMILY FROM THOMSON CO. GASTONIA. N. O. Washington city. I prefer a white backer every time. II the Republicans want to take Russia off of Manchuria why don’t they do it. Haven’t they got Teddy the Terrible? What’s the matter with him? Ah, Mr. Newell says be couldn’t find anything to do. He was looking for work like one of these men who didn’t want to Had it. Mr. McKinley, a year before his nomination, denounced Mr. Cleveland for establishing the gold standard. The Democrats favored more money, silver or gold. We didn't have the silver; so we wanted te coin it. Bat 1 was not half tnefa an enthusiast for free silver is those days as Newell was—when both of an were supporting Bryan. When the output ol gold became so vast io volume as to cure the acute stringency, it put the money question ont ol the list of issues. Parker did the honest thing— the reasonable thing. The Dem ocratic convention was a demo cratic body. It did not act after a program ent and dried by a dictator. It had no master. Parker was not a dictator and did not wish to obtrude hii views upon the convention. • If U. XT....II I J » Tit. gal" aggregations instead of "le gal" he would have had the Dem ocratic definition of trusts. There are laws enough against trusts. The fields of trusts are white unto harvest, but there are no Republican reapers. Take the tanff off of trust made goods and it will break up the trust every time. Roosevelt is justly one of the issues of the campaign. Under him the Federal taxes average $11.53 a year for event man, wo man and child. He has referred to fanners as the basest of our citizens; he called Confederate soldiers anarchists, and said a strain of barbarism ran through the Southern people. But this will be a Democratic year. They 11 know Taggart better before he is done with them. Mr. Koey is the popular edi tor of the iofiuentisl Shelby Star, aad is also a speaker of floe ability. He is a young man of striking appearance, speaks easily but earnestly, and has a good, strong deep voice. The Democrats present heard him with appreciation, and hope it will ha their pleaanre to bear him again while the campaign is on. wmntu, s awoncoua. In bis rejoinder, Mr. Newel) grewsercestic. Writhingnnder Hoey’a arraignment of Roose velt on the mea issue be re vived the old chestnut about Cleveland and Fred Dongtasa and Fred’s white wife. Bert Senator Maaon said to Nerval) hotly i •That’s not so, you know It is not so!" •Toll tho truth I" exclaimed loom out. "Frcwo It!* sold an other. "Give it to 'em Jake, |i** It. to ’em,- said others, •they shan’t hurt you I* It looked lor o moment like trouble, hot only for a momoot ~k Mew over os galekly ns it IK* „ ^ '-ms He wrote it to that stink in’ ne gro, George White: and any body who can aland that can stand anything in the nigger line. SBKATOa MASON &PXAJC3. A good speech, clear, practi cal, forcible, ana to the point was made by Senator O. F. Ma son on State issues. I cannot let this opportunity pass, he said, without asking you to vote for me and for the other candi dates with me on the connty ticket. The State taxes are lower than ever before, the Democratic ad ministration has given the old soldiers more, the schools more, and the afflicted more. You have the best connty and the best people and if you don't vote the Democratic ticket this year, the Lord will think you don’t know a good thing when you see It. He urged his fellow Democrats to work and to bring out to the polls the largest vote ever cast. BAX-B-Q NOTES. The crowd was good and orderly. The yoang folks and old folks had a picnic day of it. Mr. Charlie Fuller is a whole host all to himself, bnt in ad dition be bad a host of helpers. The dcodIc bad a well-laden table to ait down to~and if any came away hungry they couldn’t blame Mr. Fuller. Mr. Fuller, easy-going, happy, and well-fed is a mighty good sign for bis boarding bouse. Stud a bystander. You would't think be waa active, but he can stand still and kick my bat off tnv head. And not take bis other foot off the ground either. Mr. B. I«. Wilson lost a good horse in Bessemer Saturday morning. With a four bone team, he sent the Dallas base ball team over. When nearing the stables in Bessemer tbe sorrel wheel-borsc dropped down and about an hour later died. Mr. John Harvey told ns that he made 15CJ4 bushels of wheat this year, and ft wasn’t • wood wheat year either. His neigh bor. Henry Kiser, made 982 bushels, who in Gaston can beat that? Bessemer City is still growing. Improvements on every band mark tbe ways of progress. Mr, J. R. Warren says that a man pointed to a good-looking stranger in tha crowd and naked if it wasn’t* Methodist preach «*• "No," said Mr. Whiten, roneh aroused. "It ia Clyde Hney." And Mr. Warren «m jojrs the Joke on the Shelby Benfh at Leggy. Mr. ft. A. Hudson, aped ft years, died at • o’clock Friday morning at Ms boms at the Lorsy of typhoid fever. The body waa taken through the country Saturday morning to Kessler's church In Cleveland county for burial. The inter iMUt took place at 4 o’clock in . *ttV*oom’ Surviving the *•**?“* •** • "Mow and eight •J®**- Hudson bad re elded i* flsMaufi about three EHE3EKS£ ■J-1L? . LI. IIB3E—a An OM Acquaintance. Ixli«at»o4ia Smtiael. Our old acquaintance, Gen. Apathy, is in charge of the Re publican forces in this campaign. The fact that no interest can be aroused in favor of the Koose velt-Fairbanlca ticket is signifi cant of the resnlt. From every corner of the country conies the news that the Republican voters are showing no enthusiasm. The recognised unsafeness of Roose velt and the frigidness of Fair banks have acted aa a double wet blanket. And tbe cut and dried character of tbe Chicago convention, tbe dictated plat form, tbe dictated ticket, tbe dictated program all the way | through—and tbe dictation was all from the White House—has provoked a spirit of rebellion in the Republican ranks which bodes ill for the party now in power. It is no wouder dbat there is apathy. But it would be more than a seven days' wonder if there was anything else. Why, what can tbe Republicans ex pect ? Do they think they can fool all of the people all the time ? Or even a majority of the people all the time ? If so, they place a very low estimate on the intelligence of the American voters. The Republican pfuty has recently so conducted the country’s affairs as to put it in a financial situation which will re quire careful attention to prevent For this month already there has been a deficit amounting to about one million dollars a day, and all because of the extraoral nary extravagance of the Roose uelt administration. Tariff taxes are' higher than ever before and the coat of living—because of trust prices—never was as great asnow. Apathy! Why. of course. It will stare the Roosevelt ticket in the face until the tremendous November avalanche wipes it out of existence. Spartanburg is to have a new uulon passenger station to cost $24,000. Paul Biggers, the Charlotte youth who was bald on the charge oi having caused the death of Policeman J. H. Brown was dismissed by tbc Recorder Friday. The coroner's jury ex onerated him. nus sums or caTakib.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
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Aug. 9, 1904, edition 1
2
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