Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Aug. 31, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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’• :•$ • l # •• ••• • THi GASTON A ^ PUBLISHED TWICE A WEEK—TUESDAYS AND FRtDAiYS. . ■■■ :-- Devoted to the Protection of Home and the Intoreata of the Coohty. ®NT8. _ < | , ^ ■ GASTONIA, Hi. C., TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1909. * •— .- .^ • ■ »-’ Hatih Mhiia ^i>ih^aia#AAi, SEED WE HAVE A VERY LARGE STOCK OF ALL VARIETIES OF ' TrfESE SEED ARE FRESH. ___ ^ E^RQST TORRENCE & CO. Bl : DRUGGISTS | iPhone 16 - - - - phone 67 L’ D‘ PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES 1 Honey 10 Gkslbftia Ohd Gaston' County ■^■wmWtKSENT A CHAIN OF INSURANCE .COMPANIES WHICH Br"*~HAVBAGREED TO LOAN THE'LEGXI. RESERVE REQUIRED AS SB f 30RI„ BV the ’iNsdi^E cb»tMmsi6ktek OF north Caroli na. ON ALL POLICIES WRITTEN. BACK IN GASTONIA AND GASTON PL county. EACH Year; TB* COUNTY WILL THUS -BENEFIT TO | THE EXTENT OF SEVERAL THOUSAND DOLLARS WHICH WOULD L'—tn^gRWlSE BE'TAKEN OUT OF THE STATE, ONLY THE DEATH ■*' tn^ua fltlNG RETURNED. |fc' FORM OF INSURANCE WRITTEN: BL. PIRB.CASUALTY . LIVE STOCK ^^Honia Insurance 4 Realty Co. M. LUTHER HAMPTON ARCHITECTURAL * and MECHANICAL draughtsman Plana and specifications for all class es of buildings. Phone No. an GASTONIA, N. C. '___1-— . AND Vfflpp. Pall t#rm ^slll b*|^n ,S#pt. 1st 1909. Special fours# for botjf be glpp#ra gnd gdvgpced |tudentg. Al io classes jp Theory, Hgrmony *nd Sight 8 toping. Thorough Instruc tjop under the most advanced m#th od|: v. ' Addr#s# f. “W, HARVRV OVKROARSH, 600 8. TRVON, 8T„ Charlotte, V. C. • 19 0 WO. NOTJOK TO WATER AND LIGHT CUSTOMERS. Beginning September the' 1st, HOP, all water and light consumers will be furnished with their water and'light bills on tbe first of each g. -.tj month, and shall pay their water and T. tight rentals on or before the 10th of said month as required by water and light ordinance. These accounts must be paid to the City Clerk at hit office at the City Hall. City Clerk will be at his oqc# frop» 8 g. m. to 12 gpd rrpm 1 p- »• to b p, m from the let to the 19th of each month Inclusive, forth# purpose of receiving these collec tions. By tbe order of the Water and & Light Committee. , JOHN R. RANKIN, Clerk. , This the 20th day of Angnat, 1909. NEWS NOTES. L. F. Walseman, a prominent newspaper man of New Ytfrk City, died in the jail at Ocala, Fla., Sun day morning, having been found ap parently demented wandering on the streets of that city a few hours ear lier. He is supposed to have become deranged on account of the recent death of his wife. A dispatch from Washington, Ni. C., dated the 27th says: One of the largest rattlespakea on record in Beaufort' county was killed near Blount's creek a few days ago by Mr. Jesse R. IjbwIs. The snake, when stretched out, was a little over six feet long and nearly 12 Inches in circumference and had 19 rattles and a' button. A bloody man hunt near Boper ton, Ga., Friday resulted in the lynching of two negroes, the killing of one white man, a member of the posse, and the wounding of five oth ers. Among the wounded is the sheriff of Montgomery county. Ben Clark, an escaped negro convict serv ing a life sentence'in the Georgia penitentiary, was the cause of the tragic affair. Clark waB one of the negroes lynched. Their bodies were burned. YES! MONEY BACK. • * ' Parisian Sage, the Hair Renewer, is Now Sold In America on Money Back Plan. Tried them all and failed, thous ands of people will say. Try the real Parisian Sage and succeed as thousands have done. In Pari* Dr. Sabourand discovered the dandruff microbe %nd the wgy |o kilt It. In Paris tsomep have moat abund ant, beautiful, lustrous and fascinat ing hair. * They kpow about bair and Ita dis eases in Paris, far more than we do. They have institutions where the Study of the hair is made a specialty. Parisian Sage is the only certain destroyer of the dandruff microbe which is the cause of 9T per cent, of hair troubles. Parisian Sage la such an extraor dinary and quick acting rejuvenator that J. H. Kennedy A Co., who are the agents in Gastonia guarantee It to cure dandruff, stop falling hair and Itching scalp In two weeks or money back. It makes womens hair instrous and luxuriant and drives away foul odors In summer. And a large bottle of Parisian Sage costs only 60 cents at J. H. Kennedy & Co's, and at leading druggists all over America. The girl with the Auburn hair is on ev ery package. 31-S7. Dr. W. H. Wakefield ot Charlotte win be In GASTONIA at the rfalls House on SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18TH one day only His practice Is limited to the med ical and surgical treatment of dis eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat and fitting glasses. £fr4c4. Personals and Locals. —.Mr. Hoke Knight, of Charlotte, spent Sunday here with homefolks. _Mr. E. G. McLtird spent Sunday at Laurens, S. C. —Miss Lois Freeman, of Char lotte, is visiting Miss Mary Costner. —Mr. R. W. Carson attended the State reunion in Charlotte last week. —Misses Mary and Grace Hender son, of Hickory, are the guests of Miss Myra Herman. _Mr. John L. Bryan has return ed from an extended business trip to the North. —Miss Lillie May Summerlin left Saturday for Charlotte on a visit to Mrs. F. B. Ray. —Mayor E. Lee Wilson, of Dallas, was a business visitor in. Gastonia Saturday. —Mrs. H. Gilmer Winget, who has been in the GaBton Hospital for some weeks, was able to return to her home Saturday. —iMr. George Jenkins is out again after being confined to the City Hos pital for several days with appendi citis. —Mr. and Mrs. John Killian, of the Loray, are rejoicing over the ar rival of a 14-pound boy'which was bom Saturday. —Mr. W. H. Dellinger returned Saturday from a business trip to Baltimore. He went to buy fall goods for his store. —Mr. J. M. Hampton returned Friday from a .week’s business trip to Richmond, Washington and Balti more. —:There will be a called meeting of the board of atewards of Main Street Methodist church to-night at 8 o’clock. —Mrs. Jethro R. Wilson arrived last week from Lenoir to make her home here with her son, Mr. George W. Wilson. —-Mrs. Emma Ferguson, of Kings Mountain, arrived In Gastonia Sat urday on a visit to Mrs. T. G. Falls and other friends. —Mrs. Amanda Glenn and daugh ter, Miss Ruby, of Rock Hill, S. C„ are visiting Mrs. T. G. Falls at her home on Broad street. —Miss M. E. Carson, of the Pls gah neighborhood, has been visiting at the home of her brother, Mr. R. W. Carson, since last Thursday. —Mias Sudle Wilson, of Char lotte, passed through Gastonia last Friday en route to Spartanburg, S. C., on a visit to friends. —Miss Bessie Thomasson return ed Saturday from a six-weeks visit to her sister, Mrs. J. B. Meacham, at Hamer, S. C. —Mr. R. Kenneth Babtngtoh will leave to-morrow for Raleigh to re sume his studies at the A and M. College, where he is a senior this year. —Mr. Joe Shields, of Carthage, spent last Friday In Gastonia sb the guest ,of his kinsman, Mr. D. R. Shields, of the Abernethy-Shlelds Drug Company. —Manager R. B. Bahlngton, of the Piedmont Telephone and Tele graph Co., will attend the Mecklen burg Agricultural Conference at Charlotte to-morrow. —Mrs. Andrew Moore and little daughter, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Welch, returned to their home In Gastonia Moriday.— Waynesvillp Courier, 2fth, —--U*• UBTO UllUCJU^U, Ul cal staff of The Observer, was n town between trains yesterday en route to Charlotte frojn a trip «p the C, & N W. —The September term of Oaaton Superior Court will convene at Dal las op Monday, September 13th, Judge James L. Webb, of Shelby, presiding. —Mr. R, J. Durham, of Dallaa, visited hla many Shelby friends this week. For many years he was the popular and capable Register of Deeds for this county.—Cleveland Star, 27 th. —The annual meeting of the Gas ton County Bible Society will be held at Plsgah Associate Reformed Pres byterian church on Thursday of this week. The full program was given In The Gazette of August 24th. —Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Summerrow and child returned Saturday from Hendersonville. Mrs. Summerrow and child spent three weeks there and Mr. Summerrow joloned them ten' days ago. —the Poole Grocery Company la this week installing a brand-new Ho bart Electric coffee mill. Thlf Ig one of the bpst mpkes pud cap grind a barrsl of coffee In almost a Jiffy. It will occupy one of the show windows so paisersby can see It In operation. —We congratulate our friend and former pupil, Mr. J. Frank Robinson, upon his'appointment as one of the city mail carriers of Gastonia. Mr. -'Robinson is s son of Mr. F. 0. Rob inson, of Mount Creek, and has been In business in Gastonia for about three years.—Catawba County News.' McAdenville Matters. Correspondence of The Gazette. MoADENVILLE, Aug. 30.—Mr. and Mrs.-d. E. Wright, of Concord, are visiting relatives here this week. —Among those ^ho attended the Haag show In Gastonia last week were iMr. and Mrs. J. L. Webb, Cy Moore, Guss Welsh' Miss Hertie Cloninger, Miss^Maggie Wilkerson and Mr. and lire! Bennie Hooper.— Mr. Thomas Smith, of Charlotte, was a business visitor here Thursday.^— Mr. Mack Smith and son. Master No. ah, attended the circus in Gastonia Thursday.—Mr. Frank Hayes, of Charlotte, spent some time here Wednesday on business.—Mr. Ed C. Kay was a Charlotte visitor Thurs day.—Mrs. E. C.' Adcock and chil dren were Gastonia visitors Thurs day.5—Mr. Lawrence Jenkins was a Gastonia visitor Thursday.—Miss Margueritte Norman returned to her home In Charlotte Thursday after be ing the guest for several days of her cousin, Miss Grace Albea.—Messrs. W. C. Gates, and O. A. Costner and Mrs.. E. C. Adcock are visiting rela tives In Lincoln and CatAwba coun ties.—Miss Wideway, of Concord, is the guest of her friend, Miss Meta McGhee.—Miss Sallie Adcock return ed Thursday from Fort Mills, S. C., where she has been the guest of her brother, Mr. M. J. Adcock for sever al weeks.—Mrs. Frank McCaully and sister, Mrs. M. A. Harwell aqd 'Mrs. Frank Earney returned Thursday from Maiden and Catawba where they have been visiting relatives.— Messrs. G. W. Rumfelt and J. C. Walker spent Sunday afternoon In Gastonia. The newly appointed preacher for the Methodist church will preach his first sermon here Sunday morning. He comes from California Confer ence, having been transferred from that conference to the North Caro lina conference. Born Monday, August 30, 1909, to Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Poole, a daughter. Rozzelle’s Ferry Bridge. Yesterday's Charlotte Observer states that the piers and abutments in the Catawba for the Rozselle's Ferry bridge are now complete and that the work of placing the. steel frame wtll begin this week. It is ex pected that the bridge wtll be open 'or traffic by;.October. An old coal mine 130 feet below the surface of the ground caved in at Scranton, Pa.,. Sunday, and caused a settling of from two to eight feet in ■» large hill-side area', the damage probably amounting to $200,000. A large brick school building and scores of residences were so damag ed that they will have to be torn down. Monterey. Mexico, was visited last Friday night and Saturday by one of the most destructive floods ever ex perienced in northern Mexioo, caused by the overflowing of the Santa Ca tarina river. The death roll will probably reach 1,000, while the dam age to property is estimated at twelve million dollars. Thousands of fam ilies are homeless, and the bodies of the dead were guarded by soldiers while awaiting burial. IF WOMEN ONEY KNEW What a Heap of Happinees It Would Bring to Gastonia Homes. Hard to do housework with an aching baok. Brings you hours of misery at leisure or at work. If women only knew the cause— that « Backache pains come from sick kidneys, ’Twould save much needless woe. Doan's Kidney Pills cure sick kid neys, Gastonia people endorse this: Mrs. B. A. Rinehart, 93 Loray MIH Houbb. Gastonia, N. C., says: “When I say that Doan’s Kidney Kidney Pills are a valuable .remedy for kidney trouble, I am speaking from experience. I suffered a'great deal from pains In my back and was often so Weak and lame that I could ’hardly perform my housework. I always felt tired and languid and was at a loss to know how to obtain relief when Doan's Kidney Pills wer* recommended te me- 'Being Imprees ed In their favor. I procured a bo* at fhe Abernethy-Shlelda Drug Co. and beginr their use. They helped me in ‘every way and I am now free front every symptom of kidney ‘com plaint." For sale by all dealers. Price BO cents. Foeter-MHbarn GO., Buffalo, 'New York, sole agents for the United -States, Remember the ' nirtHV1 TTnufcT and take n* oths*. r-\ G.^ c.r. :7'- -i OVER THE STATE. BREESE CASE ENDED. Verdict RetonM Against Breese and Dickerson Saturday—Two Years and $2,500 Fine Imposed—Case Appealed. Asheville, Aug. 28.—William E. Breese and Joseph E. Dickerson were to-day found guilty of the charge of conspiring to defraud the First Na tional Bank of Asheville, the Jury which has heard the case since July 26, coming into court at 9:45 with a verdict which recommended the mercy of the court. Judge Newman promptly setfenced each of the de fendants to serve two years in the Atlanta penitentiary, the maximum under the statute, and to pay a fine of $2,500. Motion for a new trial and an ar rest of Judgment was made by de fendants’ counsel and set for hearing before Judge Newman September 14, each of the defendants being requir ed to give bond in the sum of $5,000 for appearance then, such bonds be ing promptly furnished. In the e vent that Judge Newman overrules these custom'ary motions pre-qutsite to appeal, the defendants will appeal to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, the appeal going to the court In the spring of next year, with a possibility of decision in May on the question of whether errors were committed in the trial or whether the law justifies the verdict. The jury, acting on instructions of the court, did not consider the case against William H. Penland, the cathler of the bank at the time of Its failure 12 years ago. Judge New man charged that Penland was not on trial. Arrested in Richmond. Hllman High, a married man a bout 40 years of age who eloped from Durham last week with a flf teen-yeaf-olff girl, -and for whom a diligent search has been made dur ing the past few days, was arresthd Sunday In Richmond, Va., where he and the girl were' found registered as man and wife. High hat' express ed a willingness to come hack to the State for trial provided he Is given ample protection from violence. It Is said that the girl’s father has threatened to shoot High on sight, and especial vigilance will be need on the part of the officers to prevent such a tragedy. Ed Oax Improving. Ed Cox, the young white map who shot and killed Reese Hacks hi the fatal rIOt at Huntersville, Mecklen burg county, on Saturday, August 31, Is reported as getting alongWell at the county jail lh Charlotte. Hls father. 'Mr. Charles Cox, Is also re covering. from his serious wounds, being at hls home In Mallard Creek township. Counterfeiters Arrested. E. R. Butner, of Tabacoovttte, Forsyth cdnnty, and hid brother-in law. W. G. LAfflrtre under arrest at Wfnstop-Salem, charged with coun terfeiting. Their offense consisted in attempting to raise one dollar hills to tons- arid two dollar bllta to twenties by using clippings from Confederate bills. Several of the "raised’’ bills werh found upon their persons. JEALOCS MAT? KILLS BRIDE. Mrs. Doctef Bolter Shot to Death by Former Employer at Spartanburg Dead Woman Formerly Wife at a North Carolinian. Charlotte Observer. Spartanburg, S. C., Aug. 29.—Mm Docier Bolter, aged 18 years, Wife, of f. R. Bolter, a farmer of Fairmont, his county, at noon to-day wan phot' and killed by Joe Bates, employed by the city as a chalagkng. guard. The shooting occurred at the. resi dence of W, P. Cox, on Thompson Street, a relative of the husband of the deceased. Boiler and bln wife had just driven In the back yard of Mr. Cox, and aa Mrs. Bolter entered the back door. Bates, It la said, ran In at the front dolt and, shot her dead, firing five times in all, though ‘only two shots. took effect,.. one "entering .the head .and the other one of her shoulders. During-the firing a bullet etruck the little daughter of Mr Cox In one of her arms, indicting. :« painful wound. Mr. Cox, attracted by the shoot ing, hurried Into the house and ’seising hold of Bates held-him until -pfillce officers arrived.. Mr. Bolter, enraged at the sight of the .dead body of his wife lying on, the floor of the back porch, mafia an .at\ck on Bates, It Is said, and would’ have used him up pretty badly but for the timely arrival of police officers. Mrs. Bolter was formerly Docier Moore, of this county. Several yeam ago abe married, Hillard Case, of [Hot Springs, N. C. Bates- and his ■ wife separated ^bout.two years .ago ’and the woman whom he shot to-fiay .was employed by hhn u fctg book. so li ii 11 ag 'i iitti i ririMiiiiT tt (rrmiii . u up.,» | a A 1 N Y DAY Come to everybody. Lite has more □pa than down*. Right now, white yon are making, yon trash t to ta saving; then whan the downs oome . d yon will have enmathlng to fall back upon. Where is the ttbffmr yon have bean ■ earning all theeeyenra? Yen-spent It and somebody slab pnt it li the bank. Why don’t yon pnt yonr own money la nhe , lrnnk-for-yorngblf— why Jet the other fellow ear*' «bat* f- yon earn? s Be We^ett «W thrt i tat Attssrf* «* _Witt * 1 The Citizens NatloAaLBsoJt/ Z --‘- - - - Dressers j ■It Is alleged, and was 1n hi* employ ■ tor two year*. Charlotte Observer. Can. yon touch .the end pf.yojir ooee—eye*-ahot—with the index fin ger of aithw>hand. first trial? It yoa cannot; you are insane, according to a decision from the bench <of-n New ■York City committing magistrate. A woman was brought before that judge the other day by her family physician, asking that she toe sent to Bellevue Hospital for .'further ex amination. The evidence produced Aid not convince the judge of the necessity for making the order. Bat jie told the woman to close her eye: and totich her nose with her right forefinger. -She failed on the first two attempts, whereupon the judge declared: "J grant the application This -teat satisfies me." We suggest to District Attorney: Jerome that he.; spring this on Hurry Tbsw during the nest insanity investigation. .-3 sanity stiiiliar to the above and;just bs simple, which w*#-w*wdT«tnMa«st in Che: past, hot Wh ether.stiH follow ed we do not. know. -This1 -la tc cause the-sabject to stand perfectly erect, with eyes dosed, hsele does together. arras straight, and tends pressed ngalnet the thighs. It 'it ■old that a person with defsetiTf brain .cannot do so, without the-body wavering or reeling. Those who reed this had bettei not-try .either test unless they are quits-saye of themseiees, tor vt would not liketo be instrumental ir making them believe they are not at strong-minded as they thought they were. ' ,. I*wacd H. Harrimaa, who return- j ed from Europe last week Jn very feeble tisafth, -was reported yester tor m bsteg toa.KUMWy toKt>TS<l - - - ■
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 31, 1909, edition 1
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