Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / March 29, 1910, edition 1 / Page 7
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fvSf Wil:A-: t ON 1 o EarMKriows What's .. WATCH APRIIIL 1th NO BODY Goin to Habbf h SPECIAL NOTICES COTTON GES FOR SALE. Two cotton firing, one corn mill, boiler, engine, etc., will be sold at auction at Bessemer City on Satur day, March 26th, at 2 p. nt. C. C. MOORE, Bessemer City, N. C. M 29 p. formation by writing at once to the I There Was a Reason. Bureau of Instruction, 16 M Hamlin Philadelphia Times. Building, . Rochester, N. T. ARE YOU GOING TO NEW YORK. During the month of March? If so you can save fifty per cent on your hotel bill at a first-class hotel by see ing The Gazette before you go. Go To J. Y. MILLER'S t For Wood's Seed Irish Potatoes, onion sets and garden seeds. He keeps only the best. No. 113 South Street. LONG STAPLE COTTON SEED. I have for sale a limited quantity of Lewis' long staple cotton seed, $2.00 per' bushel. The staple is worth on this market today 25 to 26 cents per pound. First come, first served. E. P. LEWIS, Gastonia, N. C, R. P. D. 2. A 1 p 1 mo. BIG BOOK BARGAINS. One set of "The Dictionary Cyclo pedia',, 40 volumes, practically new to go at less than half price if taken Quick by cash buyer. This is a li brary of universal knowledge and an una'brldged dictionary of the Eng lish language under one alphabet. A splendid reference library in itself. Bound in cloth, good paper and clear print. A rare bargain at $10. Sample volume may be seen at our office. Good stand, made to hold this set, goes with it. Also a complete Bet of Chambers Encyclopedia, bound in leather, 10 volumes, used some but in excellent condition, to go at $12.50, consider ably less than half price. These are genuine bargains. If you want them don't delay as they will go quickly at these prices. GAZETTE PUBLISHING CO., No. 236 W. Main avenue Phone 60. R. P. D. ENVELOPES. People living on rural free deliv ery routes should use return envel opes; it is safer and insures return of your letters If addressees don't get them. We have them printed for every route in Gaston county; good quality of envelope, the kind you pay 10 cents per package of 25 for at the stores blank. Only 30 cents per 100. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Use them once. you'll keep it up. Gazette Publishing Company, No. 230 Main avenue, Gas- NOTICE. The session of New Hope Presby terian church has called a meeting to ' be held on Sunday, March 27, at 3 p.,m. The object of the meeting Is to call a temporary supply and to elect additional deacons. All mem bers of the congregation are request ed to be present. J. P. RATCHPORD. NOTICE. Members of the Gaston County Democratic Executive Committee are hereby notified that a meeting of the committee will be held at the court house In Dallas at 11 a. m. on Satur day, April 9th, to transact important business. AH members are urgent ly requested to be present. C. B. ARMSTRONG, Chairman. A 8 o 5. PRICE & PAYSSOUX South Street, Next toClty Hall HARNESS MAKERS Buggy and wagon harness kept in stock and made to order. All kinds of repairing done. Orders executed promptly and satisfaction guaran teed. Give us a trial. We can please you in work and price. South Street, Next to City Hall A 29 elm. When a negro was arrested the other day for wandering around the streets, he wore one of those invinci ble smiles. When he was taken be fore Magistrate Briggs he was still smiling. "What's your name?" asked the magistrate. "Ah don't know, sah," smiled the negro. "Where do you live?" "Ah don't know, sah." "Where do you work?" "At the Tem Hotel, sah." The magistrate thought that per haps there was some truth in the ne. gro's place of employment, so he thought be would see if the negro knew any of the students in the col lege near this particular hotel. "Do you know any of the students at Tem College?" No, sah," answered the negro, his smile bigger than ever. "Ah nebber goes in de bar!" It Saved His Leg. "All thought I'd lose my leg. writes J. A. Swenson, of Watertown Wis. "Ten yeas of eczema, that 15 doctors could not cure, had at last laid me up. Then Bucklen's Arnica TO THE PUBLIC. I have leased my Meat Market to Messrs. J. B. Boyd and R. L. Wil son, and wish to take this means of Salve cured it, sound and well." In extending to all my former custo- fallible for Skin Eruptions, Eczema, mers my thanks for their trade, and Salt Rheum, Bolls, Fever Sores to bespeak for Messrs. Boyd & Wil- Burns, Scalds, Cuts and Piles. 25c son a continuance of their patron- at all druggists. age. Respectfully, W. NEIL DAVIS. FINE COACH STALLION FOR SALE On Saturday, April 2nd, at 2:30 p. m., at Craig & Wilson's stable in Gastonia, I will sell to the highest bidder on easy terms, the celebrated French Coach Stallion, CHABLIS 4091. GASTON BREEDERS' ASSOCIA TION, A. C. STROUP, Committee. Ale 4. RAILWAY MAIL. CLERKS WANTED The Government Pays Railway Mail Clerks $800 to $1,200, and Other k Employees up to $2,500 Annually. ' Uncle Sam will hold spring exam inations throughout the country for (Railway Mail Clerks, Custom House Clerks, stenographers, Bookkeepers, Departmental Clerks and other Gov ernment Position.. Thousands of arw ' ki i n i m un i m win mA nnna n . Tnav r woman, over 18, In City or Coun- can get Instruction and free ln- A WORD TO ADVERTISERS. We wish to remind advertis ers that copy for change of ad vertisements in The Gazette must be in this office not later than 8 a. m. on Tuesdays and Fridays in order to be sure of insertion in the papers of those days. Otherwise we cannot in sure insertion. When it comes in later than this it is Impossi ble to ive it the proper atten tion if it can be handled at all. Advertisers who get their copy in by noon on Mondays and Thursdays will secure better dis plays and more satisfactory ser vice in every way as we, will then have more time to devote to them. It is as much to the advertiser's interest as It is to ours to have a neat, vwell-dis-played, correct advertisement and to this end we ask your co operation by getting copy in ear ly and giving us sufficient time in which to properly handle it. New business will, of course, be handled as well as possible and as late as possible before go ing to press. Penny column advertisements can be handled as late as 1 p. m. on Tuesdays and Fridays. These regulations . are neces- sarjr because of the constantly in creasing demand on The Ga zette's advertising department. Mr. Advertiser: Help us to give you the best possible results by giving us plenty of time on your copy. Ninety Million Citizens in United States. Boston, March 24. In looking over tbe New England census field today Dr. E. Dana Durand, the na tional superintendent, said that by June 1, he hoped to be able to report the number of inhabitants in the United States probably between 88, 000,000 and 91,000,000. The great army of enumerators consisting of 75,000 men and women, will move on April 15 and will cover the cities in fifteen days and the ru ral sections In thirty days. It will take four months to cover the man ufacturing Interests and three years to tabulate and study the vast un dertaking. Mauney-Kennedy. At the parsonage of the M. E Church, No. 746 West Airline av enue Sunday afternoon at 5 o'clock. Miss Mary E. Kennedy and Mr. Wil Ham E. S. Mauney were quietly married, the ceremony being per formed by Rev. L. J. Penley; pas tor of the M. E. Church. The home of the groom Is Kings Mountain and that of the bride Bessemer City. .The raising of the battleship Maine, now submerged in the harbor of Havana, was provided for In a bill passed by the House of Congress Wednesday. . Under the provision of this measure the wreck of the Maine can be examined to determine the manner of Its destruction. The bod ies of the sailor dead that may be found will be Interred in Arlington cemetery. A LARGE BOULDER FELL IN FRONT OF A PASSENGER TRAIN GOING AT FIFTY MILKS AN HOUR. AND IT WAS ALMOST MIRACU LOUS THAT EVERYONE OF THE TWO HUNDRED PASSENGERS WERE NOT CRUSHED TO DEATH. When you read such startling headlines in the daily papers, did you ever stop to think how many lives are being crushed out daily by stones in the bladder of hundreds of human beings, because no remedy was ever known to medical science that would remove them until blood- ine was discovered; and since blood ine has been found to be a specific for this terrible affliction. It has had the most phenomenal sale through out the East and West, of any rem edy ever known. Thousands of bot tles having been sold in a single day in many of the large cities. If you are suffering with stone in the bladder, aching pains over hips backache, sediment or deposit In ur Ine, irritation of the bladder, pain in urinating, rheumatism, uric as)d In the blood, sudden stoppage of the ur ine, highly colored or milky white urine, pass blood or mucus in urine, retention of urine, straining after urinating, thick or sluggish urine, scystitls inflammation of bladder, ca tarrh of bladder, or bowels, puffiness under eyes, voracious appetite, thirst. gall stones, ' gravel, pain in uretha, swollen ankles, dimmed vision, specks before the eyes, scanty urine. frequent calls, mouth dry, bilious ness, dribbling, lumbago weakness, loss of flesh. Irregular heart action, ulceration of the bladder, skin pale, waxy nd dry. tad odor of perspira tion, doat delay, but send to your druggist and get a bottle of bloodine, at once; if he does not keep bloodine, jrou caa secure a six weeks' treat ment, brbottlea, for $2.50, or sin gle bottles 50c, trial bottle and booklet 10c, from The Bloodine Lab oratories, Boston, Mass. Abernethy- Shlelds Drag Co., Special Agents. A Gold Mine. Tit-Bits. Sir Thomas Llpton has a keen sense of humor, and lis a good sto ry about a Scotchman who went to a horse race for the first time in bis life. 1 ought to say that he told it to a company of guests on the Shamrock III. one evening when he was lament ing the long odds against his ever winning the America's cup because of the hard rules imposed. "Well," said Sir Thomas, "this Scotchman was a feeble-minded old man, and his companions who took him to the race meeting presently persuaded him to stake a sixpence in the third race on a 40 to 1 shot. "By some amazing miracle this outsider won. "When the bookmaker gave old Sandy a go'den sovereign and his sixpence, the winner could not be lieve his eyes. " 'Do you mean to tell me,' he said, 'that I get all this for my sax pence?' " 'You do, said the bookmaker. "'Ma conscience!' muttered San dy. "Tell me, mon, how long has this thing been going on.' " Capt. Hits the generally appreciated than the suita bility of many localities for live stock raising. In the popular mind this industry is generally associated with the West, and many of the far mers living in the South do not real ize their opportunities in this line. In the days when the great cattle ranges of the West and the hog-growing re gions of the middle west produced almost unlimited supplies of cheap meat, there was no incentive for the farmer in the cotton belt to embark in cattle or hog raising on an exten sive scale. But the great Western ranges are being cut up into farms, the day of cheap cattle from the range Is rapidly passing away, and the consumption of meats of all kinds in the United States is rapidly increasing with the result that live stock farming and the growing of cattle, hogs and sheep as incidental to diversified farming will become more profitable in the South. LESS MEAT WORTH MORE MON EY. "That the consumption of meat in the United States is growing faster than the supply Is indicated by a re cent report of the department of Agriculture showing that the num ber of cattle other than milch cows on farms and ranges in the United States was 2,100,000 less on Janua ry 1, 1910, than on January 1, 1909, and that, notwithstanding this re duction in number, the aggregate iarm vaiue or sucn cattle nad m- Bogardus A again Bull's Eye. -This world famous rifle shot who holds the championship record of 100 pigeons in 100 consecutive shots is living in Lincoln. 111. Recently Interviewed, he says: "I have suf- 'reased $53,699,000 during the year fered a lonjr time with kidnev and ine Bame reDort snows a reduc bladder trouble and have used sev- t,on of 6'365.000 in the number, and eral well known kidney medicines an lncrease of $81,809,000 in the all of which gave me no relief until value of hogs on farnV and nges I started taking Foley's Kidney Pills. aurln year. During the same Brore I iiswvi fw-h KMnv Piiia t Period there was a substantial de- was subjected to severe backache c,ine ln tne exPrt8 of cattle, hogs, and Daina in mv kidneva with aim- and meat products, showing that the pression and oftentimes a cloudy voiding, while upon arising in the morning I would get dull headaches. Now I have taken three bottles of Foley's Kidney Pills and feel 100 per cent better. I am never bother ed with my kidneys or bladder and once more feel like my own self. All decline in the number of cattle and hogs and the Increase ln their farm value, aggregating $135,508,000, were due to Increased home con sumption. "This is a condition that those of us who live in cities and have to face the problem of meat bills may this I owe solely to Foley's Kidney not rellsn. but which our farmer Pills and always recommend them to fr,ends throughout the South with my fellow sufferers." J. H. Kenne- tnelr opportunities for raising cattle dy & Co. and hogs may contemplate with much satisfaction." It's the Truth. Gaffney Ledger. Many a man wants more vim in his home paper, when at the same time he is carrying a few dollars worth oPits vim In his pocket. Foley's Kidney Remedy will cure any case of Kidney or Bladder trou ble that is not beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more, J. H. Kennedy & Co. A Man of Iron Nerve. Indomitable will ' and tremendous energy are never found where stom ach, Liver, Kidneys and Bowels are out of order. If you want these qualities and the success they bring, A fire In the town of Gold Hill Rowan county, last Wednesday, burned three store rooms with a loss of about $8,000. It seems to be general opinion that S. S. McNinch, of Charlotte, will be the Republican nominee for Con- use Dr. King's New Life Pills, the matchless regulators, for keen brain gre88 t0 opcose Hon E y. Webb. ana strong body. 2oc at all drug gists. DEMAND OUTGROWS MEAT SUPPLY. Farms Cattle Decreased Two Million Last Year Hogs Decrease 6,000,- j OOO Yet the Value of the Reduc ed Supply of Hogs and Cattle Was $135,000,000 More Than the Greater Supply of One Year Pre vious Great Chance Now for Sou thern Farmers. News and Observer. Washington, D. C, March 19. President W. W. Finley of the South ern Railway Company is a great be liever in stock raising In the South. Addressing the Mississippi society in Washington he gave some interesting facts, showing the opportunity the farmer of the South has to better himself materially and help reduce the present high cost of living by turning his attention to the raising of stock and hogs. Mr. Finley called particular at tention to the fact that in many parts of the South cattle can graze practically throughont the year, while ln the Northern and Western States the season lasts only four or five months. Discussing the advan tages offered for stock raising ln the South, Mr. Finley said: " FINE OPPORTUNITIES OF SOUTH TO RAISE MEAT. ' No advantage of the South is less , Wheat Cleaned Six Times T1m equipment for wheat cleansing' la as extensive and expensive as tbat ior grinding- purposes. The freedom of floor from dirt and bacteria shows In Its appearance." Pxof. Wm. Jaoo, in national Association Review. Wheat specially selected for William Tell Flour is stored in hermetically sealed tanks, at Ansted & Bark's big mills. it is cleaned six times before grinding. Everything- even the sewinsr of the bag is done by clean, bright machinery. Note bow much pmr William Tell is than other floors. This means wheat cleaning by the most complete equip ment known to modern milling science. William Tell Flonr has the brilliant bloom such asonly Ohio wheat can make. Asa your aeaier.ana insist on having William Tell 0. M. BOYD & CO. Distributors. SEABOARD AIR LINE SCHEDULE. These arrivals, departures and connections with other companies are given only as (information. Schedule taking effect February 6, 1910, subject to change without notice. Trains leave Charlotte as follows: No. 40, dally, at 5:00 a. m., for Monroe, Hamlet and Wilmington, connecting at Monroe with 33 for Atlanta, Birmingham; with 38 for Raleigh, Weldon and Portsmouth. With 66 at Hamlet for Raleigh, Richmond, Washington, New York. No. 133, daily, at 10:35 a. m for Lincolnton, Shelby and Rutherford ton. No. 44, daily, at 5 p. m., for Mon roe, Hamlet, Wilmington and all lo cal points, connecting at Hamlet with 43 for Columbia, Savannah and all Florida points. No. 47, dally, at 4:45 p. m., for Rutherfordton and all local points. No. 132, 7:15 p. m., connecting at Monroe for all points North, carries Portsmouth sleeper. Trains arrive in Charlotte as fol lows: No. 133, 9:50 a. m., from all points North, brings Portsmouth sleeper. No. 45, daily, at 11:55 a. m.. from Wilmington and all local points North. No. 132, 7 p. m., from Ruther fordton, Shelby, Lincolnton and C. & N. W. Railway points, Johnson City. No. 46 arrives 10:30 a. m, from Rutherfordton and all local stations. No. 39, daily, at 10:50 p. m., from Wilmington, Hamlet and Monroe; also from points East, North and Southwest, connecting at Hamlet and Monroe. Cafe cars on all through trains. Ticket office Selwyn hotel. All trains run daily. For further information call on or address James KER, JR., T. P. A., Charlotte, N. C. H. S. LEARD, D. P. A., Raleigh, N. C. C. B. RYAN, G. P. A., Portsmouth, Va. Legal Blanks Of All Kinds Warranty Deeds, Mortgage Deeds, Quitclaim Deeds, Executor's Deeds, Chattel Mortgages (North and South Carolina), Bonds to Make Title, Agricultural Liens, Attachment Blanks, and others. Mail orders receive prompt atten-. tion. ; Gazette Pub. Co. 236 Main Ave., Gastonia, N. C. If you like The Gazette and think it is a good county paper. speak a good word to some friend or neighbor who is not a subscriber. If you can thus induce him to take and read The Gazette you will be doing both him and the paper a favor which will be appreciated by all parties concerned. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured y Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENY & CO., Toledo, We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and fi nancially able to carry out any obli gations made by his firm. WALDING, K INN AN A MARVIN, ' Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken la-' ternally, acting directly upon - the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, Testimonials sent fr. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by mil .' druggists. , r Take Hall's Family Pills for Con-' stipatlon. '
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 29, 1910, edition 1
7
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