Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / March 31, 1905, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The Gastonia Gazette. BUSINESS LOCALS. WULLB HORRD—Cash or on w time. J. X. Smith. a&p EOR RENT—4-Rooai cottage. M. H. Sllurosp.Mtl CRUSH MILCH COW for sale. Ap •_ ply to R. I,. Hell, Gastonia. 7pS CNURAVINO-Louve your orders L lor engraved visiting cards at Tmk GAxmrrx office. COUR ‘ DELIVERY WAGONS lor l sala. Bargains. Apply quick to Thomson Company. Gastonia. A7cJ JOE PRINTING—Leaveyvnr orders st Tun Oaxkttn office. K<,uip ment. experience, promptness, aatis lactioo. DARREL OH NORTON YAMS Jor D seed on the way. Also Miller's prolific seed corn, and garden seed. J. M.Cuammtt. Nice ih^ck overcoat left last fail at Long Urothers .tore Owner can get name by proving Property and paying for this notice. IRD 1XM» LOST--Black and white setter, full grown. Strayed from Dallas toward Sit. Holly Jfoti day. Reward for return to Sam Ulumutoh. R P. 1). No. 2. Gastonia. COR SALE—Eggs (nr batching » from S. C. llrown Leghorns. Barred Plymouth Rocks. Silverlaccd Wyandotte's, $1 for IS eggs. J. N. Huberts ik Son. McAdenvfile.K. C. FLORODORA COTTON SEED For sale at $1 per bushel. Seed are Stouey's stock and have been carefully handled. V. O. Guinn, M24-C4Pleasant Ridge. N. C. MARKET .HOURS - Beginning next Monday and continuing through the summer months the Davis market and McLean market will be closed from noon tilt three o’clock each day except Saturday. —A7c3. HOUSE AND LOT lor sale-1 offer for sale my house and lot on Third Street in Gastonia. Six rooms, good well and garden, sixe of lot 1W,Sx200. Terms reasonable. Joh.v R. McAlisthx, Salisbury. X. C. P2»n. FRIDAY, MAR. 31. 1905. LOCAL AFFAIRS —Summer must be nigh. Baseball talk ham arrived. —Early closing of tbe stores will begin in a few more days. —A large new safe was in stalled Wednesday by the Arm strong Company. Second Baptist Cbnrcb—Ser vices morning snd night by the pastor, Rev. J. L. Vipprrman. —Cotton Growers and Good Roads advocates meet in Dallas to-morrow. A big crowd ex pected. —“Have got to the place we can’t do without Toe Gazette,” is tbc way one reader states his good opinion of this newspaper. —The Gasrttk’s new story, "The Sowers,” by Henry Seton Mcrriman, will begin about tbe 10th or 15th of April. It is worth waiting for. —State Senator Long and Mr. Wilson, of Statesville, were in town Wednesday on business connected with tbc estate of the late John A. Butler. —The annual stockholders meeting of the Citisens National Bank was held Tuesday after noon at the bank, for the trans action of routine business. —A novel force pump for sup plying to honscbolds fresh water from the well is advertised in to day’s paper by the inventor, Mr. I. U. Robertson. - A cut and a description will be given later. —Add to your phone list tbe following: Ed Rntledge, resi dence, No. 96a; Adsins Drag Co., Loray store. No. 114; Gray Manufacturing Co. No. 115; D. R. LaFar, residence. No. 116. . —Notice is given in business locals that McLean Company’s and Davis Brother’s markets will be closed from noon to three o'clock each afternoon through out the summer months except Saturdays. —It reined a light sleepy sum met shower Wednesday night and next morning was bright, clear and sunny. There is a say ing that when it begins to rain at night, there's no telling when it will stop. • —"It would do me a lot of good," said Mr. J. R. Warren, "if the people who borrow my toots would bring them back. Here I am now needing some that are lent otrt, and 1 have forgot who borrowed them. I wish . they’d bring them back." —The clatter of many boots made lively mnaic down Mein street late Monday night. An other car load of floe Kansas city mules had just been un loaded. There were 24 in the lot tod some as pretty pairs as a body often sets eyesnpon. Many of them have been sold already. —Four flat Holstein botl catvas in crates were received l>V Mr. Jao. D. B. McLean by exams# Saturday night. They e*** •« No. 35, and as they were hauled along the street on the truck kept Np e lively bleat ®“**ea "*• horn the State Hospital farm at Morgen ton and were sent by Dr. Chariea McLean to be raised on the home farm. They ere cm he young—only about ala weeks oM. PEtSONAlMEJmOH.1 J. II. Scpark returned Sal'i'bnryrem " ***** t0 ,rietxU * • -Um.C. lI, Robinson has bass the guest this week of Mrs. J. R. Turner at Charlotte. *'• J-Lots* Blows aid bU dsagh **r- “l“ Klbsl, watt welcome visitors a* Tbs Qsmtta offios Wednesday. • Dixon, a merchant tailpr of Columbia, S. C.. spent ye» trrduT hers shaking hands with nM friends. Mr. Dixon is a native ol \otk cuuaty and has many friends in this section. . '“Mr\ W. Atkins, who has basn with rim liAxnrrit so long as J1® •>«<>•»» P«rt of it. finishes ty» his work to-morrow and will ha Kin work for the Charlotte Chronicle next Monday. / TurbydlJ, of Nor folk, came in last Friday to see the (olk* . J*f spent Sunday ia l.aitonia and a day or two with his ~4t*r' ^r* Jno.~C. Moore, in Dal las. He returned to Norfolk Tues day night. . B. B. Reid, formerly of Mc Adcnvillc, has lately moved from 8'.C- to Spurtanbnrg. At the latter place be ia now aaslst snt superliitendeni o( the Crescent Knitting Mills, siud to be pie most up-to-date hosiery mill 1u the South. .i,r.?r"id.in,* «W*r R M- Hoyle will dll thejmlnft ol Mata Street Meifao dist church Sunday morning and night. The night service will be a union meeting of all the Methodists of Gastonia. Rev. C. R. Ross, pas t«» of West Rnd, will have no .<^Vic* Sunday night. “"d Mrs. I. B. Robertson, of H*. Holly, with their little non Du ford, were in town I'ursdsy. We were glad to have them visit Tug D as irrrri office and see onr Printing plant. Mr. Robertson ia inventor and patentee of a storage-weight pressure pump which U advertised elsewhere in to-day's paper. -ri^ept. G. F. Ilaaou returned yes u.r£*y morning from Washington W.‘,.Uvh"h«>d I0** in Q“«*t of his old bsttlc Uor, that of the 6th N. C nnt he didxj get It. He brought back instead an opinion of some of 'S*, 8",r< Al«* officials up there that will make you want to go back with him and get that flag. We have s nation oi interviewing Captain Ha son for next Tuesday's paper. Acraaa (ha Lias Mr. W. D. Huffstctler and Mias Mary Glenn, both of South Point township, were married at Bandaua, S. C., Sun day, the 26th, Mr. E. D. Thompson, notary public, officiating. CamWstni Stecka. Mr. H. Schneider, proprietor of the Bee Hive, is combining the stock of his Davis Block store with the J. Q. Holland & Co. stock which be recently purchased. He moved all bis goods yesterday into the Hoi land building and will close bis Davis block store to-day. Else where in to-day's paper will be found Mr. Scbneider’a ad of bargains he is offering. Anniversary of Societies. Invitations reading as follows have been issued: AMivmar? CcMkntlw cmiSBBSHSums Jenqnil Dlnneft On Saturday evening Mr. *n,d Mrs. T. I,. Craig enter tained their house party with a jonquil dinner. The guests were Miss Maude C. Morgan, M>*» Carrie Marshall Brown, Miu Wile Rhyne, Mr. Phil Mc Mahon. Mr. William Moon, John M. Craig, Mr. J. Robt Craig, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Jenkins. The house decorations were entirely of jonquils. The favors were jonquil boa bon boxes and the place card* were band painted jonqulla. With Mrs. LaPar. The Tuesday Afternoon Club held a-moat enjoyable meeting *hi« w#»k"5tb Mrs. D. R. I«eFar. Besides the clnb mem bers there were present the foi lowiug gnats : Miss Msude C. Morgan, Richmond. Va.: Mk. uiim Kuyna, Mt. Holly; Miss Faome Withers, Abingdon, Va.; Mr*. C. B. Mason, Charlotte; Meadames C. D. Holland, h. L. Jfkitu, W. J. Clifford, H. Rut R- *• *•«. H. M. Bddleman- Miaaea Birdie cildwell '^/ria"V^kWB’ h Caldwell, Bessie Horton, sod Bleanore Hussey. Hew Depet Attest. To-aronow the auditor* lot the Boothera Railway sod the Southern Express Co. will ha here to check np the accounts of the two companies, pre paratory to the change of depot aetata. Aa nota<T in them columns sometime ago Cant. C. M. Nolen h.a resigned as depot actnt to five Mf tBtlra {time to the business of the Southern Express Co. Ht will open m ■p towa express office -to-mor row. the first, la the building occupied by W.lliaat tad Up ton sad expects to put on a free Mr. Z. 0- Horry, formerly rim* acre of the Western Union of fice, will succeed Mr. Nolen ua Fire la the business section of Loulabeijr Wednesday afternoon destroyed property to the salna of 1*0,000. ■J- .... - ——»p———w BUND TlttEK WHSKCT. 8«f> Several Tiu| Mm bto Cscrt—lavseiigatUa Kernels Uniggs Made of rrscurtnj The Staff Bat (Wen t levsal (ha Guilty reifies. From all appearances, es pecially those of toe police court, there is plenty of blind User .whiskey floating around and Mayor Dixon is called upon frequently to pasa sentence on it* victims. Wednesday afternoon Will Stowe, John Heath, Jesse Mc Neill, Vcmic Dalton, Will John sou, and Paul Chisholm ware before the mayor to answer to charges of drunksuneas. Stowe was fined $2.50 and cost on a charge of drunk and stag gering; Heath forfeited a bond of $7.50 for being drunk and disorderly; McNeill was fined $3 and cost f jr a similar offense; Dalton forfeited a bond of $10; Johnson plead guilty to a plain drunk and was fined $2 50 and cost; Chisholm was fined $5 and cost for being drunk and disorderly. Immediately on the con clusion of the trial of these cases Chief of Police Alexander, s L.___1_ A li--n _ _ tit ww*« a iwsvu^m ttuwubr wwi rr • wii* aoa, served a subpoena capias sd tesllficandam upon atf of these young men and they were at once placed under oath to inform the court where they procured the whiskey. From tbe previous evidence it seemed that tbe boose for tbe entire crowd bad been obtained by two of tbe number. These two were the principal wit n e a s e a. Their testimony brought out some interesting farts with reference to Wind tiger operations in this county. On information obtained from a Dallas man, presumably a cotton mill operative, whose name the witnesses did not know, they drove beyond Dallas some dis tance, stopped in the road, and at tbe expiration of some thirty minutes an unknown negro emerged from the woods and asked what they wanted. And •o they got the booze. This seems to be the common modus operand! of the Gaston county blind tiger. — How can yon cut loose from tbe telephone when you are through with one number and want another right quick? Some phone users were discuss ing this yesterday. Tbe fellow who invents a short, quick, sure way to do this will confer a blessing upon his kind. —One of the most beautiful o btnomiajr trees is the purple niagnof lia in the city cemetery on the lot of the late Captain J. A. limit. It was in full bloom last week and week before, and was worth seeing. Tbe blooms appeer before Ihc leave*, and the tree wu a chimp of rich purple blossoms. One cannot help noticing the neatness aud taste with which Mr. Wylie, the keeper. Is caring for the cemetery. It is constantly grow ing mote beautiful. —We are glad to have our Me Adcnviile correspondent Mr. Robert Hare, with ns again. He is a judicious and reliable news gatherer and one of the beat cor respondents this newspaper ever bad. Any courtesies our Mc Adenville friends may show him will be appreciated by our cor respondent and by Th« GaJ XKTTK. —You can't lose Thomson Company’s office cat, known by her intimate friends as Kitty. Wednesday the show window was decorated with a group of curd board figures showing a cit and kittens advertising "Black Cat Hosiery.” That a#.. i_, / . _ -—»vui kitten* ol her own, and it i* now np to the window dreaaer to Kt Mr*. Kitty and her cot* nestling* in the other side of the a bow window. New Haosc. —WBa—mmm—mm i MBS. PBVBB>A8BDB DEAD. J', « lha ! at ftallirfc. .R1*; JW-ah Broom Pasour, wile of Mr. S. P. Pasour died about eleven o’clock Monday morning at their borne near Dal She had been ill about one month with some form of kid ney trouble. After funeral serv ice* at the home Tuesday after* noon .conducted by her pastor. Rev. W. A. Deftou, Mrs. Pa sour was buried at Antioch church. There was a large gathering present to pay their reaped* to tlie memory of this good woman. Proin Gastonia Mrs. J. S. Tor ««*• and daughter, Miw An nie, Mr. Booth O'Brien and fam Ur. *nd Capt. and Mrs. J. D. Moore attended. Mrs. Pasour was the mother oI Mrs. O’Brirq, an sunt of Mrs. Torrence, and a former neighbor of Cape, and Mrs. Moore. Mr*. Pasour eras 72 years of ■** hjf maiden name was Broom. She leaves an aged husband, one son, and seven daughters to moaru her death. Her living children are Mr. Miles Pasour. Mrs. Philip Jenk Rfs. Frank Rhyne, Mrs. Booth O'Brien, Mrs. & White, Mrs. James White, Mrs. John Payne, and Mrs. Than Rein hardt. In the death of this good the community in which she lived is a great loser. She was a kind-hearted, motherly woman, a devoted wife, a wise and loving mother, and a much loved, open-hearted neighbor. There are manv neighbors sad (rirntlK mhA maw t_!i.. sorrowing on account of her death. Entertained U. C’s. Miss Lottie Blake delightful lv entertaioed the U- C. Club yestoriay afternoon. Besides the club members the following guests were present: Mrs. D. R. LaPur, Mrs. S. A. Robinson, ltes. P. R. Pulls. Mrs. E. H. Tuttle, and Misses Nell Smyrc, Pansy Withers. Mary Grey Sandifer, and Frances Sater. In an interesting contest the prize, a handsome collar ease hand-painted in violets, was won by Miss Mamie Csbsniss. Mrs. 5. A. Robinson won the consolation prize, a bunch of violets. Refreshments were served in two courses. The parlors were prettily decorated with jonqnils and other spring rowers. Social at Stanley. Miss Ivey Lineberger enter tained a number of her friends on Monday night, the 2ftb. Those present were Misses ft«rl. u°ebf. Hattie Blanche. Zella Smith, Maggie Rhyne, Lola and Annie Clem mer, Maggie and Ola Hanson; Messn Wirt and Boat Summey. Puel Hoffman, Ernest and Alic Rhyne, Billy Peysour, D. Dram, of Dallas, Kenneth sad Clint Moore, Geo. Hoover, Leonard Hoffman, Geo. Shelton, Ernest Smith, Ed Hoffman and Robt Clem mer. Oi* special event of the evening was selling the girls at suction, Mr. L'-'ouard Hoffman crying the sale. The event was greatly enjoyed by «U present. A Slick Horse Thief. Rufes Lnvendtr. alias Roe endaaveral other names, tried his band at hone trading Mon day as the resalt of whi6h Mr. Banmgarten, a Tnckaseege Ford fmmer, is sky $45 and Mr. Henry Hartis, a Chariot.e liveryman, and Craig and Wilson of Gasto nia were pat to some trouble. Lavender hired a hone and buggy from Hartis Monday af ternoon saying ha wanted to moke a round trip to Gastonia. When be reached Gastonia ho nut up hit home and buggy at Craig and Wilson's stab& aad began to make himself known m a prosperous farmer of the Klags Mountain seetion. Lavea Craig and Wilton giving therefor a mortgage on Harris7 taruoat aod a Jersey cow which be had at bone. He wad the boy driver then drove to Tnekaaeege Port when he told the Craig aod Wilson home to Mr. Baumgarten for H5. Ha then told the boy to take Harris’ torn out back to Charlotte and be himself took to the woods. Craig and Wil ton succeeded in recovering their horn. Two years ago Lavender did tine at Abbeville. S. C., lor stealing a suit of Hit mother Uvea In Salisbury. Ate Your Kidneys Well? imssjsm fmt itEf! TrwjW#* c*****<1 hr J. Sllbmady dkCe., the writ KW* hr ears ^ dotheuwra. M-M aader a gmrttiva gasraatee. 1 S». Michael's Catholic cbnreh —Sunday school I|90 p. at. and •mice at 8 p. m. Bandar. And continues through Thursday and Fri day. We feel safe In saying that all our former efforts will be surpassed la this exhibition of stylish Hats and Bonnets* We most eordlally Invite every one to visit our store during this display* Miss Collins and her efficient corps of as slstants have spared no effort to make this a feast for the lovers of pretty stylish Hats. Donvt forget the date* We will appreciate your coming out and taking a look through every department* Kindley-Belk Bros. Co. ————————n——m—a FL8ATWG BUT HWCO. Oast Mi • Owns Oaiv 9MM Stalamsat by Mr. JL B. Mmts. TNMWa In order that' the citizens of Gaston is may know exactly the amount of the looting debt of oot town, I desire to state that I made a payment of one thou sand dollars (SI,000,00) thin morning, which leaves six thou sand dollars (8,000.00) due. as follows: $2,000.00-AnIsm ». IMS. 4.000JO_Detmaad note As most of the cklseus know, the present board inherited a defat of seven tboasaod dollars ($7,000.00). This we have re duced ooe thousand doQars ($1, 000.00), besides nuking ex tended improvements on the streets, and water works plant. Yours very truly, H. B. Moons, Trcaimrer, Town op Gastonia. Gastonia, N. C., March 20, ’05 To Mr. sad Mrs. Thomas Sparrow ou Wednesday. Stock 26th, IMS, a sob. *W»a*MiM=nMssnB Sale of Realty for Taxes. * i On Tmdcr tbe 25th day of April. 1905, 1 will aril at the door of Urt City Hall ia the town of Gastonia at the boor of noon for cosh to the highest bidder, for tones raneiaia* unpaid and coots, tbe following described realty la the town of Gastonia: One residence lot oa Dallas Bt. property of John B. Hill $4.20 One vacant lot on Dalles St. property of John B. HB1 .70 i Operea. lot on W. Air Use St. property of G.F.McLoaghca $21AZ • One too. lot on H. Boot Gestoala 8t. property of Eli Rhyne $7.95 Onaren. lot near Modena MSI, property of I» X* Thornton* $3.64 1. N. ALEXANDER, I Tax Collector Hr the Tnwn nf Oastsak. March 79,1905 tda. __ .—...— ..... STATEMENT OP CONDITION OP THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OAOTON1A, N.C. At the Close of Bsalssss March 14, ISO*. CONDENSED FROM REPORT TO THE COMPTROLLER OP THE CURRENCY II £ h L.L.JENKIN! 0YC£ ' Prc»IJ' CM^«r.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 31, 1905, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75