Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / July 3, 1908, edition 1 / Page 2
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- GASTONIA GAZETTE. Issued every Tuesday and Friday by The Gazette Publishing Company. E. D. ATKINS, Editor. #. W. ATKINS, Business Manager... Armstrong Building, Main Street. PHONE NO. 50. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One year ..*1 50 Six months.7 5 Four months. -50 One month.. .15 NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. ' / " We are mailing out statements this week to all subscribers who are In arrears and notices to all whose subscriptions expire during the . month. To these we shall hope to receive a ready response. We do not make a practice of “dunning” . our subscribers through the columns of The Gazette, but our pressing fi nancial obligations make it necessary ; for us to take..thia-method or brlng tng the matter to the attention or * those concerned. The amounts sep i arately are small, but in the aggre gate they make a sum that is of much Importance In conducting the business. ’ ' * — FRIDAY, JUDY S, 1008 ' ;ss=sHe3l6==^=^=== Beginning next Tuesday, the 7 th, .all ejee will be turned toward Den ver where the Democrats will be gathered to pame a man to enter the ' arena With Taft for the presidency. Bryan and his forces claim to have enough instructed votes to put the Nebraskan In on the first ballot, frhls is denied by the Johnson and :Gray followers. For the past week •ior more readers of the daily papers :hare had pll sorts of speculation 4salt out to them and It is sufficient ly undetermined to cauae thousands 4o kefip their eyes and eat# open, ^awaiting the retnlt At this distance it looks very mneh like Mr. Bryan prill he the nominee though there Is a possibility of its being Johnson. .At any rate the Denver, convention ' is not going to be a tame cat and dried affair like that other one re cently held in Chicago. * Sunday School-Picnic. There will be a Joint Sunday school picnic at High Shoals Saturday, the 4th. The Sunday school pupils will form in procession and march in a body from the ehnrch to the High ’Bhoals Park where the day Will he spent in enjoying the usual picnic festivities. A band will he on hand to furulah mask for the occasion. Rev. W. H. Hardin, of Gastonia, will attend. Eighty-Ninth Birthday. At the home of Mr. Michael Klaer on route two from Beaaemer City, on Saturday, July llth, Mrs. Cathey Ine Froneberger will celebrate, her 89th birthday. The Gazette it re quested to say that a cordial invita tion is extended to all to come and bring their baskets and enjoy a big picnic dinner. Thla is an annual * vent and has heretofore been en joyed by many people every year. The Gaaette is in receipt of a note from Mr. W. G. Flowers,0 who lives on roots two from Gastonia, in whioh he etatM that they ate ripe watermelon Tuesday morning from their own patch. This is the first homo-frown melon of the season, so far, as The. Gazette has learned. Can anybody in the county beat this? If no we wouVl like to know it. Up to the present time- no home watermel ons, we believe., have been seen on the local market ' Mr. and Mrs. George Vanderbilt are making preparations to ^ ClOae their eetate Blitmore toy a year dur ing which time they will he absent abroad. l” * Engineer B. M. Stulti. for six yesiy' ja the employ of the Seaboard . Air Line Railway, running out of Raleigh, was shot and killed! by Turner Smith at Raleigh"early Wed nesday morlng. Stultz, It la said ' was attempting to enter Smith’s home Mi the time he was Shot. NOTE AND COMMENT., All eyes are westward-ho watch ing the completion of still another transcontinental railroad. There is great interest in the West, its lands and the struggles. The National Magazine has been telling its readers a great deal about the "new pion eers.” In the June issue there 4s an article on "Making Opportunities for Homes In the West,” by Editor Joe Mitchell Chappie. It has many e laborate Illustrations showing pdo ducts and results all the way from a little apple tree less than six feet tall, bearing seventy-four large and sound apples, to a steamboat loaded with western home-seekers on one of the large lakes in the Rockies. Protracted Meeting. Rev. W. R. Ware, pastor of Main Street Methodist church, will com mence a protracted meeting at the Old Mill chapel Sunday night. He will be assisted by Rev. J. C. Har mon, pastor of Franklin Avenue MethodiBt ohurch. Mr. Harmon will fill the pulpit of Main Street church Sunday night and the Franklin Ave nue church pulpit will be filled by Mr. J. H. Separk. The meeting at the Old Mill will probably continue for a week or more. [ Death of an Infant. The grim reaper Death hag again laid tribute on the home of Mr C. C. Johnson who was- only a few weekB ago called on to suffer the loss of his wife. This time the death angel took his youngest child, -V • . Reese Ayers, aged four months and 20 days. It died yesterday evening at 6:40 o'clock and the little body was taken on No. 36 this morning to Charlotte there to be laid to rest be j • »■ sfde its mother. The body wsb ac companied by the father* his sister, Miss Bessie Johnson, and Miss Len nle Clemmer. > The sorrowing fath er has tlys sympathy of many friends in his second sore bereavement. Craig More Popular Than Elver. Statesville Landmark. , Mr. Locke Craig 1b to-day more popular lrf western North Carolina and in the State than ever before. He fought a^ood fight and he kept the faith. Never before in the State’s history was a Democratic candidate so shamefully slandered and tra duced by fellow party men,' but Mr. Craig and his followers have nothing of which to be ashamed; and notwlth standing many provocations will give the ticket loyal suppqrt' , * „ ■',* }. .** f> i f y i »■ SM—t The "Working*’ Habit "Some men prefer to dpend their vacation pattering around their houee,” (ays John T. McCutcheon in the Jnly Appleton's. “They leave the^r work for a two weeks' rest, with the conscientious intention sf sitting arpund. smoking or reading or lying In the hammock in the little back yard. They do not care to leave town. On the first day they rest, according to plans and specifi cations. On the second day they do a little digging in }he garden. On the third day they get out some tools and repair all the furniture on the place. On the fourth they go down to the office to see’if there is any mall. On the fifth they repair the roof, and so on, until they are do ing two men's work around the that they cannot be happy unless they art busy.” Perfectly Awful. Charleston Gazette. I'd rather pull a donkey's tail '.Or ride to church upon a tail, Or walk to meals behind a snail, Or take my rest within a Jail, Or bare my head to falling hall, Or get rich quick at auction sale, Or play the Jonah to the whale, Than live on this full dinper pail. - Thirty gauging stations are being maintained by the United States Ge ological Survey and-the State Survey co-operating, on the principal rivers and streams In the State which dally measurements have been made of the height of the river surfaces; and oc casional measurements of the flow And volume of water have been made by means of electric’ current meters. r-1 - CLEVELAND’S CABINETS. '— Eleven of (lie Members Dead and Ten Yet Living. - O. 0. Stealey, in Louisville Courier Journal. Mr. Cleveland, though in his sev enty-second year, survived one-half of his official family during his two terms as President.- Two of his Sec retaries of State, Bayard and Gres ham, are dead, and Riqhard Olney re mains. Two of his Secretaries of the Treasury, Charles S. Fairchild and John O. Carlisle, are alive, and Daniel Manning la dead. His two Secretaries of War, Endlcott and La mont, are both dead. His four Sec retaries of the Interior, William F. Vilas, Hole Smith and David R. Fran cis, are alive, and L. Q. C. Lamar is dead. Of his two Secretaries ot- the Navy, one. Mr. Whitney, Is dead, and” the other, Hilary A. Herbert, is liv ing. Of his two Secretaries of Agri culture, Norman J. Colman is living and J. Sterling Morton is dead. Of his four Postmaster Generals, Wil liam F. Vilas and Don M. Dickinson are living and Wilson S. Bissell and William L. Wilson are dead. Of his thre^Attorneys General, Richard Ol ney and Judsom Harmon are living and Augustus H. Garland Is dead; which males eleven dead and^ten living. His runningmates In 1884 and 1888, Hendricks and Thurman, are both dead, and Mr. Stevenson is living. Mr. Sftvensoh now has the distinction of being the only living ex-Vice President of the United States. , - Dntmril AmuhoTn Man nlng, Endicott and Lamar lived to be past three Bcore years, some of them reaching three score years and ten. Whitney, Lamont, Morton, Bls sell and Wilson died in the prime of life. Don M. Dickinson, twice a Cabinet officer, is now in a sanator ium with littia hope of reoovery. He was 63 last January. Norman J. Colman, now In his 83d year, is, of course, in a very precarious condi tion, being ten years older than the oldest member of Mr. Cleveland's Cabinet. Next to Mr. Colman In age comes Hillary A. Herbert, who was born in 1834, making him 74 years of age. Mr. Carlisle is 73 Septem ber 6th. Mr. Olney Is just ten days younger than Mr. Carlisle, having been born September 6th, while Mr. Carlisle was born September 15th, 1836. Mr. Vilas is 68 in,Julv next. Mr. Fairchild is 67 In April. Mr. Judson Harmon is 62 and Dave Fran cis will be 58 In October. -Hoke Smith is'SS In September, *hich makes blm the youngest living man of the Cleveland Cabinets. I _;_ SPEECH MAKING CANDIDATES. William Henry Harrison the First Presidential Candidate on the Stomp. \ ' Boston Globe. It was important to have fqr run ning mate to Mr. Taft a spellbinder. Insomuch as the President’s heir is, on the stump, no match for his probable opponent. Governor Guild would have pfoved ideal In this re spect. But Sherman Is no amateur, and,no doubt win be required to bear the brunt of the oratorical content impending, for it is not likely that Mr. Taft, warned by his Memorial Day experience, may choose to avoid formal speeches' * during the cam paign, as did his illustrious prede cessors) George Washington, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. The latter, so the Federalists said, could riot talk If he wanted to. Even when elected, instead of addressing Congress in person, as his prede cessors had done, he sent iBB written message because, as his opponents charged, he was incapable of making tt speech. Neither Madison rior Monroe went on the stump, and John Quincy Ad ams was so reluctant to make an appeal for votes that he was even re fused to contradict campaign slan ders about himself. No man was ever more bitterly assailed than Andrew Jackson when he first ran for President. He was excoriated personally and abused politically, but, although he doubt less-would have liked to silence his slanderers with a pistol shot, he maintained a dignified silence, so exalted was his opinion of the odicy to which he aspired. During his sec ond campaign he was again bitterly assailed, but made no reply, leaving that task to his supporters. Van Buren, silent in two cam paigns, as candidate of the Demo crats, vfas also silent when he ran on the free soil ticket. According to Charles M. Harvey, of The St. Louis Globe*-Democrat. thg Bret candidate for President to appear on the stump wis William Henry Harrison. He is said to have, been effectively humorous. Lincoln was dbe of his boomer?, too, but had not then attained any distinction as a politician or orator. Harrison spoke in Dayton, Cleveland, Indian apolis, and Vincennes. Polk kept in the background dur ing his canvass, and Clay, his op ponent, refused many appeals, to take the stump. He wrote letters, though, and one of them, that on Texan an nexation, cost him the prize he cov eted. ^ At Charlotte this week the State Dental Association Is holding Its an nual session; Jim Neely, alias "Chicken Jim,” a convict in the Mecklenburg county camp was shot and killed'by guard Sam Patterson Wednesday. He was attempting to make his escape w£en kljled. ——————r , VALUE or WATE1 What This Great Natural Resour Means to North Carolina—I tin of the North Carolina Geologi cal Survey. There is perhaps no natural source so valuable to the State connection with her industrial de velopment as her waterpowers. . In central and western North Carolina there are abundant waterpowers. many of which have been most advan tageously developed, while others are still unharnessed. Of all the Southern States North Carolina stands first in the number and magnitude of her available wa terpower and when all factors re garding the development-lind utili zation of the waterpowers are con sidered, there is perhaps no State in the Union equal to North Carolina In this respect. The value of the numerous water powers that exist within the State cannot .be overestimated. This re fers particularly to the great number of small waterpowers frpm a few horsepower to several hundred horse power which are to be found on all the small streams in all parts of the central and western portion of the State and which are sufficient for the requirements of some local industry. They can usually be developed by a man or company of moderate means and their development and uttliza zation will mean that many small manufacturing establishments will be scattered throughout the State, whose operations are not dependent upon any fuel. Many of these waterpowere, which formerly could not be utilised on ac count of their location, can now be developed and used to advantage by installing at the waterpower an elec tric power to the point of consump tion. There are many towns io North Carolina that are now with out electric lights or power which could, at comparatively small ex-, pense,, obtain the same by the devel opment of waterpowere that are suf ficiently large for the purpose, and located close to them.- I In order-to draw more particular attention to these waterpowere of central anji western North. Carolina, a new bulletin is now being prepared on the Waterpowere of the State as a supplement to Bulletin No. 8, which was published ten years ago. Dur ing this time a large amount of new information has been collected re lating to the flow of the principal streams and tributaries so: that it will be possible to prepare tables giving the amount of available wa ter that a stream will carry and how mfich this can be Increased by stor age and reservoirs. The value of this publication will be found chiefly in the fact that it will present the results of careful scientific investi gations carried' on through a term of years so that the results given re garding the available power at all seasons of the year as computed from the known fall of the amount of wa ter .in the stream at that point may be relibd upon as accurate. THE TWO CONVENTIONS. Mr. Dooley’s Opinions of the Way Both Great Parties Act. “$Ir. Dooley,” in the American Mag azine. • "Well, sir," said Mr. Dooley, "I'd' like to go out to Denver. No, I didn’t go to th’ recent Rosenfelt grat Ideation meeting in our beautiful, city. I niver wanted to go to a Re publican convention annyhow, “Tis no good. "There’s a sign on-th’ dure readln’ ‘This way to th’ candydate,’ a Re publican clergyman prays to a Re publican Providence to keep us Dim mycrats out iv offices inttnded f’r th’ use iv Republicans, th’ platform la taken out iv th’ can an’ passed a round among th’ dlllygates, th’ con vention nommynateB a man that iv . rybody outside iv Ndw York knew^ was goin’ to be nommynated a year last Christmas, ivrybody sings 'Th' Star-Spangled Banner’ an- other Re publican ballads, an’ thin goes to their peaceful an’ highly oninther estin’ homes an* begins to pile up thim returns fr’m Northern New. York an’ Western PInnsylvania that will cause th’ Dlmmycratic hosts In th’ sthreets next llictlon night to as sault th’ United State mail wagoni. Ye say there were ructions at th’ convintton th’ other day. I don’t be lieve it. If there were they were conducted accordin’ to Roberts rules iv ordher. "But ’tis different with us Dimmy crate. Nobody ever knows what we are goin' to do, an' we don’t. We may fight on th’ sidewalks an’ em brace on th’ platform, an’ fight again on th' way’ home. No wan can say wnai anny teu LuoiuijrvniH ***»» whin they gather together f r th’ good lv th' counthry In a hall. “Yes, sir, I want to go out to Den ver, an’ I go, too. If th’ railroad Iremen wud adopt this let-ua-alone policy, an’ not chuck lumps lv coal at a gintleman on th' blind baggae. "Faith, I can see th’ Dlmmycrats now gatherin’ fr’m far an’ near. Bands are craahln’ down th’ sthreet, good Dlmmycratic bands, playin’ out lv chune an’ so that nobody can keep* step with their music, If any body wants to, which nobody does. Ye have to put ye’er name down faays in advance to get a dhrlnk at th’ bar. Th’ lobbies lv th’ hotels are full lv Tammany men, splendid fellows In stovepipe hats an’ with acetyllne lamps In their shirt fronts, an’ they are tellln’ how alsy Ivrythlng is if ye. know how.” v Riillionaire husbandman How George W. Vanderbilt Makes His Farm Pay. (Broadway Magazine. At Biltmore in North Carolina. George W Vanderbilt has.spent o ver $2,000,000 in creating the great est estate in America. He hqp torn down a mountain, built a great cas tle and owns 17 square miles of mountain country. These miles, however, arq_gll under the most care ful cultivation, either as farming, grazing or timber lands. The owner of Biltmore has the faculty of picking the right men for the right work. He induced a “book 'farmer" from Louisiana to come into thfe Carolina mountains and take charge of the fields, flocks and herds. That was'll years ago, and until Ar: thur S. Wheeler began riding up and down the hills and through the bot toms he had never known of agricul ture except from the printed page. He tested the soil of the few little worn-out plantations on the estate, he examined the hill sides. ’ He brought into play his knowledge of fertilizing the earth, of crop rota tion, of the fodder and grain which might grow here, and especially of the live stock which might thrive and yield a profit. He decided that high grade Jersey cattle would pay, in milk and butter, Slso hogs and poul try, and that the product of the soil should be first for their benefit. So the bare hills' became pastures and lots for the swine to range, ample shelter being, of course, provided. me poultry lariji was biulubu who record egg layers'of high degree, al so pigeons, for squabs are profitable. Modern incubaters hatched ohlckens by the hundreds. Everything, how ever, was conducted on strictly busi ness lines. Each ^Jersey has hei own stall and a page In the dairy record. Every time she is milked the number of quarts she gives are marked on the record, as is also the butter test—the quantity of buttei which the crdam would make. All the ensilage and other fodder she eats in a day are debited against her. When a hen In the poultry house wants to contribute to the egg fund she enter} a "trap” nest by which she shuts a gate which keeps her s prisoner until the poultry keepei finds her. He looks at the- numbei on the leather band around her neck, takes the Ugg, and then releases her Each hen also has a record page ac cording to her number, and the num ber of eggs she laysa in a month 01 year of her life are noted on th$ book at the farm office. Seventy-five farm hands are need ed for all purposes, including th( milking, which Is done by hand. The creamery has such a mechanical sy» tem that In it three men prepare o ver 1,000 qqarts of.milk daily in bot tles, in butter and In ice cream, the yield of the cows ranging from eight to 16 quarts or more a day. The Asheville people who boast of having a Vanderbilt tor's milkman have tc pay 11 cents a quart as it comes from the shiny yellow wagons bearing the Sign Biltmore Dairy, and think it ii cheap. THE CONFEDERATE SOLDIER. / _ * His Path, Unhappily, Leads But to the Grave In North Carolina. Charleston News and Courier. They have moving picture sYdfei In Charlotte, and what they call “The ^Jreat White Way.” One of the se ries of pictures reeled off during the recent State convention were pict ures of "The Blue and the Gray,” at the exhibition of which, we are told by The Charlotte Observer, "women and children cried add strong men brushed their ^ears unbidden from the corners of their eyes on the <fui et.” As the show concluded, we are told by The Observer, tbe^nlght af ter Col. Ashley Horne, an old Cod federate soldier, had been defeated for the nomination of Governor, one of his enthusiastic and loyal sup porters, himself a former Confeder ate soldier, “arose and said: ‘Its a lie. We feign sympathy, yet in less than an hour, within two blocks of this building, a Confederate soldier was defeated for the high and hon orable-office of Governor by a gentle man born since the war. Be con sistent and save -your tears.’ ” The incident Is worth noting, probably, even If it never occurred, to Illus trate the truth that the fashion of this world passeth away. Only yes terday,'so to’speak, in South’ Caro lina Wade Hampton was'defeated for re-election to the United States Senate by an even less worthy man than the nominee for Governor of North Carolina. ‘The path of glory leads but to the grave.” A handsome silk State Sag will be presented by the Daughters of the A merican Revolution to the cruiser North Carolina Saturday at Beaufort On the complaint of the Trust Company of America the Norfolk & Southern Railway was Wednesday pl&ced in the hands of receivers by United States Judge Edmund Wad dill at Norfolk. This company has extensive lines In eastern North Car olina. The State Bar Association is In session this week at Morehepd City. During Wednesday’s proceedings a topic of live diccussion was the great delay on the part of the State in get ting the acts of the Legislature pub lished. One speaker declared that North Carolina is way behind all eth er States in this matter as it is often from five to seven months after the Legislature adjourns before the law yers can get hold of the printed acts. MOST UNSATISFACTORY. Characterises Fiscal Tear Just Clos ed, From the Standpoint of Cncle Sam's Money Drawer. Washington, D. C., July 1.—From the Treasury-standpoint the fiscal year Just closed has been a most un satisfactory one. Since about the middle of October last, when the pe riod of money stringency set In and the consequent depression in busi ness began to be felt, there has been a constant falling off in government revenues up to the month just clos ed. For June a surplus Is shown of nearly *4.000,000. This fact, how ever. is not significant, as June is un failing a surplus month. Nearly all appropriations become available on the first of July and this year Treas ury officials are looking .forward to a deficit larger than usual. The a mount of cash now in the treasury vaults and available to meet expen ditures is about *70,000,000. In addition to this^here is on deposit with national banks abont *163, 8(4,000. A considerable portion bt this sum is likely to be called into the Treasury within the aex$ very few days, and it is thought that the amount will not be less than *50, 000,000. ' r Gumption on the Farm. July Farm Journal. A farm is worth twice as much ai it is worth to dollars and cents. Slowly and steadily ail day long accomplishes more than hurry and worry for a short time and then quit. One gets less tired for the same work accomplished. Tf fVnre a rn onv rOPQnf'iAO In thf cornfield, fill them with beau 01 something that can be turned to ac count. Keep every foot of youi farm growing something that will help. Now don't find fault with youi wife because she doesn’t keep pic baked all the time. Anyway, toe much pie is not healthy. An Indians man died after eating seVen pies. Stir the earth. Remember that bj agitation is the death of all politics wrongs, so is it death to weeds. Mai never devised a more use ul imple ment than the hoe In lt^ varioui forms. Your greatest aid in the harvest is your faithful team. Eee to it that your horses are not postered by files and that they are properly Jed and Watered. The/ have well earned humane treatment. Don’t be afraid of overdoing th< cultivation of the corn crop. Whei there is a lull in other work, it the stalks are not so high that there ii danger of knocking them over rut the cultivator through the field once more. Z If you want nice bright hay thai the cattle will eat up clean, and thai will do them the most good, don’ wait till the blossoms have dropped ok and the stalk Is dry and hard, cut your grass when it is Crisp and Juicy. You are not done with youc^som mer's work unless you have cut ou the brush and stuff from the corner of the fences. Perhaps you have some .that will cut a Tittle grass Save it all, you will need, it before norf Rnrinff We have usually succeeded best li having our hay baled up as 'soon ai the stacks are out of the sweat; tbei we sell at once. After this time th< ' a good deal, and mon waste must be cut from the outsldi of the stacks. When the day is particularly ho' Ind trying, and things seem^tr go bI cross purposes, think ot somethlni pleasant. Just draw a mental pie tore of the after-harvest ontlng that you and your good wife and youi boys and girls are going to have. Re member that love sweetens labor. If a farmer la not better than oth er men, It la his own fault, for he lives closer to the heart of Nature He hears the voice of God every day In sweet communion with the trees the brooks, the sky. He beholds 'the glory God has painted; he anl® fragrance from heaven. How can he help being gbod? '"It is an ill wind that blows no body good," and the hard times have eased the Remand on the labor mar ket, so thaOlt Is now possible to get workers, and the farmer and his wife may be able to find some, one to help, if It Is only long enough to tide over the extra work that har vest makes In field and house. Those whose work afield requires their early rising, enjoy the most beautiful part of the day. The pic tuYe of daybreak Illuminating the eastern sky, and the sun breaking through the mldsts of dawn, Is one never to be forgotten, and Jt Is one so illusive that painters have tried in vain adequately to put it on canvas. A tub or barrel often drops'down for want of a hoop. If everybody knew how easy it is to make a hoop from a wire,—perhaps a piece of Waste telegraph wire often seen by the roadBide,—the work would not wait. Simply bend the wire around the tub to measure it remove it and twist it fast Then drive it on like a bioop; drive it fast. It will not break, and being galvanised wifi last Indefinitely. Subscribe for The Gaiette. POR REGISTER OP DEEDS. I hereby announce myself a, can didate for the office of Register of Deeds of Gaston county subject to the action of the coming Democratic primaries and county convention. W. O’. GARDNER, Mountain Island, N. C., July 2,1908. ^ y COMING EVENTS. Jgp* Wl. 7th—Democratic National Con- .SSj mention, Denyer, Colorado. J5tb—National Prohibition Cod- .< ventlon, Columboa, Ohio. V#? 11th—rReunion of Confederate Veterans, Lincolnton. i «» .>• 18th—Ani&al Plfllc Con federathKeuniOB, Stanley. 83 rd—Presentation of Silver Service to Cratoer North Caro- , lina, Beaufort. N. C.r September. 14 th—Gaston Superior Court Convenes at Dallas. Oi^obtr. * v‘ 12-17th—North Caroling State Pair, Raleigh. * ‘ JOB PRINTING. "-O LET U8 QUOTE YOU PRICKS ON , LETTER HEADS NOTE HEADS ENVELOPES, BILL HEADS, STATE MENTS, INVOICES, INVITATIONS, CARDS, RECEIPT BOOKS, COTTON MILL BLANKS, REPORT SHEETS. PAMPHLETS, HANDBILLS, CIRCU LARS, CIRCULAR LETTERS. AND ANYTHING ELSE YOU MAY NEED IN THE PRINTING LINE. FIRST-CLASS WORK GUARAN TEED. PROMPTNESS AND NEAT | NESS IS OUR MOTTO. PRICES AS LOW AS CONSISTENT WI1« FIRST ' CLASS WORK WILL SEND SAM | PIES ON RRQUEST. * Co. ! ARRIVAL OF Carolina A SonnwwwnL s» No. 10, northbound, daily except Sunday. 9:60 a. m. ~No. 9, southbound, dally except Sunday, ,6:30 p. m. No. 63. sonthbound, mixed, dally except Sunday, arrives 4:60. p. m. No. tt, northbound, mixed, daily except Sunday, leaves 6.00 a. m. No. 61, southbound, nixed, except Sunday, leaves 8:10 a. m. No. 60, northbound, mixed, dally except Sunday, arrives 6:00 p. m. . - No. 8. northbound, Saturday 6:25 p. m. No. 9. southbound, Monday: 11:45 a. m. _~ •' 2 The Piedmont Baggy <Xw Monroe, has Just turned out believed to be the first au manufactured in the South. Mr. Zeb Walser, of mentioned as a for the Governoi Soon after the eoiuman ver the State Democratic Commttte
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
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July 3, 1908, edition 1
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