Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / April 22, 1910, edition 1 / Page 6
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r AGK ux. Tim GASTOXI.l GAZETTfe 3FRIDA.Y, AITJL 22, 1810. . MONUMENTS' WE WANT A GOOD MAV TO REPRESENT US Iff GASTOX COUXTV. OXK WHO CAN GIVE HIS ENTIRE TDIK TO TUB WORK PRKFKKUKl. WE MANUFACTURE AVTHIXQ IN THE UXK OF CEMETERY WORK. MATERIAL AXO WOllKMANSIIIP Gl'AIUXTKKI. IT WILL PAY ANY ONE NEEDING ANYTHING IX OCR LINE TO GET OCR PRICES. Mecklenburg Marble & Granite Company East fteound Slwt. Phone 537. Charlotte, X. C. THETAIL OF A COMET It Pays Dearly For Its Brilliant Gaseous Display. FORMED BY LIGHT AND HEAT. CORTHIffll METAL SHINGLES ARE FIRE PROOF THEY will not burn. Will not split or curl like wood shingles. Will not crack and roll off like slate. Will not rip at the seams like plain tin. Neither will they rattle during high wind storms. They never need reairs and last as long as the building. And last of all, they make the Handsomest root ana are not expensive. LONG BROTHERS Exclusive Agents Gastonia, N. C. LA ill"""- W H BEST SUGAR FOR TEA COFFEE SandS- Sealed Boxes. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE Mecklenburg Camp Confederate Vet erans, Official Route to Re-Union, Mobile, Ala., April 1111 h, 1010 Via Seaboard Air Line Railway. The Mecklenburg Camp Confed erate Veterans has selected the Sea board Air Line as the official route to the Reunion to be held in Mobile. Ala., April 24, 1910, they will leave via Seaboard at 7:15 p. ni. April 24 and invite all Camps and friendB to accompany them, they will have special Pullman cars for the trip. The round trip rate for this occasion Is only S 1 2.65, tickets good to May 2nd and can be extended to May 19 by payment of 50 cents at Mobile and depositing tickets there, they are good to stop over on the return trip. Veterans and friends are re quested to make reservations for this trip as early as possible. For further information call on or ad dress, James Ker, Jr., Traveling Passen ger Agent, Seaboard, Charlotte, N. C. A26 c 6. ANNUAL REUNION CONFEDER ATE VETERAN'S, MOBILE, ALA., APRIL 26-2HTH, 1910. Southern Railway announces very lew rates to Mobile, Ala., and return for the above occasion. The follow ing round trip rate will apply from Gaatonia, N. C, $12.25. Approxi mately low rates from other points. Tickets on sale April 23rd, 24th nd 25th; final limit to reach start lag point May 2nd. 1910. Tickets can be extended until May 19th If deposited with Special Agent at Mo bile, Ala., on or before May 2nd, and upon payment of a fee of fifty (50) cents. ' For farther information call on any Agent Southern Railway, or write R. L. VERNON. D. P. A., A2S.. -Charlotte. NYC. Martin Crouch, a disorderly negro of Alma, a village near Maxton, was killed Sunday by Mr. Zach Thrower, while acting as officer of the law. The negro was shooting at Throwers and in return Thrower fired back with the above results. . Marble and Granite Monuments CALL AND SEE THEM. PRICES FROM $5.00 UP, ANT GIVES YOU OPPORTUNITY TO SEE WHAT YOU BUY. L Queen City Granite & Marble Wb. BaUrard A Palmar Sts. Charlotte, : : : : N. C TAKE THE DDL. WORTH STREET CARS. Chae Ford, Agent, Gastonia, N. C. Far Away the Comet Is a Globular Mass, and as It Naara the Sun the Action of That Body Untwines the Tail, Which la Nevor Reoovored. Traveling as comets do In very el on gated ellipse, with the sun lu oue of the foci, a the attracting polut Is called, most of tbelr Journey In speut In slow uneventfulnes far away from the hearth of the system hearth la just what the word focus means. They are then small globular aggregations, alugglsb and dim a little rouudlHb nebula . In look. Such (bey appear when first deserted In the telescope coming In from space, for they are rarely seen at all until tbey have eu tered wttbln the orbit of Hani. Dis tance In part, but still more tbelr own behavior till tbeu. keeps them bid. Wlthiu this uebuloftlty. known as the head, appear hm ir Dears us a bright spot, tbe nucleus Suddeuly there oc curs a complete change lu the deport ment of tbe body, oue which reuders It the observed of all observer, aud lu lens civilized rime occasionally Its be ing held the harbinger of distress, dis ease and death. As soon a tbe comet gets near enough the heat of tbe sun sets up eommotlou wlthiu It. By Very's deter ml nation of the temerHture of the tiuhlimketed sunward side of the moou we are enabled to Infer that this heat is great at the earth's distance from tbe sun In xplte of the cold of space This temperature is 3!i3 degree K. Aud as tbe comet approaches the suu this heat must lucrease' Inversely ax the s(uare of tbe distance. At half the radius of the earth orbit It Is al rendy four times as great shore abso lute rero. at a giiarter sixteen times. and so on Increasingly, the tempera ture rising Into thousands of degrees No wonder the comet acts as it does. It Ht once becomes uueasv. waxes In light and. as the spe -trow -ope reveals, disruptive electric discharges start In It which let out the imprisoned gases. Then begins that s)ectucuiar career of perihellou passage which makes the comet so kuhtI an object and for which It pays so dear Tbe gases which are thus thrust out from the Interior of the separate meteorites, to gether with such particles ot tbe iron as are made gaseous by tbe heat, fall prey to ouotber force besides gravita tion. This force Is the Impact of light itself, tbe light emitted by the sun mat so immaterial a thing as a beam of light can have power to move even a pith ball Is a conception not easy to grasp. Vet there is no doubt of the fact, theoretically calculated years ago by Clerk Maxwell from his electro-iuapuef Jc theory of llrtit. for the gaseous particles proceed to be rcelled by tbe sun at enormous sjeed. each behaving exactly as It should by math e mat lea I analysis If such were tbe oc- saaionlng cause Evidently tbe light waves have a propelling Miwer lu the direction of their own motion equal to their own seed. Why. then. Is It that the planets be tray no such effect lu spite of their size? The answer Is. because of that very size, Gravity acts on the mass. a matter of three dimensions; the light force on the surface of the body, a matter of two. As a (sidy diminishes In size, therefore. Its surface bears a greater and greater ratio to Its mass until when small enough tbe second force Is the stronger of the two. This relation Is twtra.ved In the con duct of the tall. The Imprisoned gases, heated to expulsion on tbe sun ward side of tbe comet, rise toward It In a series of exquisite mantling en velopes, as If tbe comet's head were veiling Itself from the too ardent gaze of the sun Then, after rising to a certain height tbelr Initial Impetus overcome, they fall back, repelled by the light waves, although still attract ed by gravity, and are driven out to form tbe tall of the comet, fresh en velopes taking tbelr place. Sometimes only a single tall Is form ed, but at others two or even three are shot out. aud when this Happens oue Is nearly straight, one curved aud oue greatly bent Now. calculation shows that the repelling force In tbe case ot the first is fourteen rimes t&at of grav ity. In the second two and two-tenths times, or something less, aud in tbe third only about one-fifth of gravity. But these are tbe very ratios which particles of hydrogen gas. of tbe hy drocarbons aud of Iron or sodium would respectively show. As tbe comet approaches tbe sun tbe display becomes more violent and I more spectacular. Finer and wilder grows the pageant the "hairy star" loosening Its tresses, which had stood sedately colled about Its bead amid the depths of space, to stream In gorgeous gleams behind It as It pays its orbital obeisance to tbe ruler of Ira coarse. It seemingly backs away la keeping with tbe etiquette to royal ty, turning always Its face sunward aa It retreats whence It came. But It pays dearly for Ita display'. The matter going to form the tall can never be recovered, but l driven far ther away. At each successive return to the sun some of Its mass and bril liance la thus lost, and this la why the periodic comets, those that! hsve made many visits, are each email and in-, conspicuous objects. It la ooly the comet of long elUpsea and very'dhv taut habit of which the perfbellori pageant la so fine.-Youth's Compaa ton. - ?- "Grouadhof . Food" Subject , Bo rue ' ' ." '"--. .More, i ' V . To the Editor of The Gasette: ( It seems that Mr. Huffs tetler la not satisfied .with 'the blow ,1 dealt him and hla friend, Mr. Dixon. He aaya that I, remind htm of a man that got knocked down for claiming that he was the-" beat man .In the - United States. He also aaya that I took In too much territory. . Well I am In possession' of all the territory hat I took In, and he la conceding more and more to me all along, and I bare never been knocked down either, but expect I did take In a little too much territory to suit him. In fact It would have suited him better If I had not taken In any. Now, as to your questions: I will not treat them as you did mine, that Is, side step them. As to the ground hog Smith said was a fake. .'Did Smith tell you he was a fake? ; Did you ever see It In an article that I wrote? No. I will tell you what I said; that those who claimed to be his friends were misrepresenting him (including you and Dixon). You say that I got my garden seed and planted them and it turned bit ter cold. Yea, I planted them and they are doing well. You and Dixon said the groundhog was the wiser of the two. Now if I had been you I would not have said that. I will tell you why, because you have admitted that he Is much wiser than yourself. If vour weather prophet told the truth (and this Is one time I believe he did) when he told you that he saw two groundhogs over at Booger- town on their way to my garden to get something to eat. Well who can blame the groundhogs for going where there is something to eat. It has already been proven that starva tion will be staring him in the face if be depends on your garden. There fore, I think he is the wiser than you because he goes where there is plen ty and you go to MeggeUs, S. C, (save the name) and get something that is dead. Right here is where you got your dose, and- I think you need a doctor to prescribe for you, but the Lord knows I don't want to help a doctor prescribe in your case for I think it is a hopeless one, judg ing by the name of the place you got it at. Now as to your weather prophet. If I had known that he had prophe sied at the beginning of a month what kind of weather we were going to have and then change it at the end of the month to correspond with the kind of weather we actually had, I would never have mentioned it at all. Now, Mr. Hope Adams you mention. Why did you not tell all he told you about those cabbage 1 plants? Because you could not af- ? ford to (but I can). I gave Mr. Ad ams those plants, be offered to pay me for them, but I refused to accept any pay. l told mm mat tne plants were not good; told just what they would do, or rather what was wrong with them, also told him If he want ed to use them he could do just as he pleased about it. Now as to that j Mr. Spencer you refer to. In the first place I sold no plants to any one by that name. In the second place no one by that name told me ' that he had any plants either living or dead. The only one by that name that ever mentioned cabbage plants to me was Mr. Hart Spencer. I knew that he had bought some cab bage plants last fall, and one day j saw mm in town ana asuea mm now i they were doing. He Informed me that he did not know anything about CATARRH DESTROYED pERUNA rarely falls to restore the ' appetite. Immediately upon begin ulng the use of Peruna patients begin I to eat and digest. This W t he uuiverksl ' .' testimony, coming from all parts of the Civilised world.. . :vJ'c; v -;;, v ; Catarrh is a Tory frequent cause of ' loss of appetite and disturbed digestion. ; The beneficial Influence of Peruna on ' . catarrh' completely restores tbe appe tite in such cases. v ' ' To prod the digestive organs with medicines that are merely stimulants la a poor way to remedy sueb cases. t' t "am mow cur J and their . ! ful in spirits, all through th j. agency of rtrvna, which has ' curtdmt effectually and 'rtstortd , my a f petite. "My only regret is that I did not use Peruna sooner and I would have avoided all my Pre vious suffering and misery.", sj , Mr. Joseph H. Conlan, Removed Catarrh. Restored Appetite Mr. Joseph H. Conlan, 4ST 7th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Yn writes : -"I suffered from catarrh which completely destroyed my appetite and weakened my entire system. I am now cured and cheerful In spirits, all throngh the agency of Peru na, which has cured me effectually and restored my appetite. "My only regret is that I did not use Peruna sooner and I would have svolded all my previous suffering and misery." Torpid Liver, Stomach Trouble. Mr. James O'liyrne, 628 Madison St., Topeka, Kas., conductor Ssnte Fe Rail way and member Order of Railway Con ductors, writes: "I suffered-with a torpid liver and Stomach trouble, which made my com plexion very sallow, and I felt misera ble and tired all the time. "An aunt wrote me that she was tak ing Peruna with such good results that she advised me to try it, and I finally bought a bottle, although I disliked to take patent medicines. "However, I found Peruna very agree able to take, and effective, as I felt bet ter In a week. I took only five bottles h: all and I found that was all I needed. "1 am most grateful to you for what your medicine has done for me." Dysentery Entirely Relieved. Mr. W. N. Casey, Leamington, 111., rrites: "In two weeks after beginning your treatment I was well. 1 used uiue but-1 cured me." ft AH (t Po.nnt. Xf tt ca wa Ksiural trouble or dynentery. MI also tried Peruna for a cough, ac cording todirections, and it exceeds any cough syrup I ever ued. "1 wish every one afflicted would give Peruna a trial." Pe-ru-na as a Tonic. Capt. R. B. Smith, Greensboro, Ga, writes: "After using several bottles of Peru na I can recommend it as one of the best catarrh medicines on tbe market. As a tonic it has no equal. "Peruna is all that Is claimed for it." Catarrh of Stomach. Mr. Henry Neely, First Lieutenant, Co. "F," 86th Regiment, O. V. I., Box 623, Trenton, Mo., writes: "1 suffered for years with catarrh of the stomach. Seeing an advertisement of Peruna, I bought a bottle and every dose made me feel better. Seven bottles completely CLOVER VOTES FOR SCHOOL. Little village Takes an Important Step by Voting First Bond Issue in Its History. Charlotte Observer. Yorkville, April 19. At an elec tion held at Clover lately to deter mine whether or not the town should issue $10,000 worth of bonds to be sold and' the proceeds used In erect ing a public school building, 102 votes were cast, 75 in favor of the proposition and 27 against it. Clo ver has been on the map for nearly 35 years and this Is her first bond issue. The assessed valuation of the property embraced In the school dis trict is about $400,000, and at pres ent the total tax for municipal and school purposes is 4 mills, therefore it is quite apparent that these school bonds will be In the "absolutely sa'e" class. It is generally conced ed that the building of this school house is the most important step in the history of Clover, a town that is the peer of any town of its age and l n.7.e In tho ntodmnnt nept.nn nr else where, being the home of perhaps them, that he had sold his farm soon i j the most uniformly successful cot- fter he had set them out and had ton min ln the Bouth' a young' bu.4 not seen them since. In conclusion, let me say that I am still claiming the finest cabbage patch in Gaston county. I don t care If one of my witnesses did say that he liked pie better than he did cabbage, that does not prevent him from testifying to the truth I have stated above. I am now going to add one more witness, (namely) Mr. H. Huffetetler, of Boogertown, Gas ton county, N. C, and If those two groundhogs are able to get up here once to see my cabbage I will let them testify also. T. C. SMITH. Score Was 22 to 2. At the close of a' baseball game between the Central school team and a team of town boys Wednesday af ternoon the score was found to be 22 to 2 in favor of the school team. The school boys scored nine runs in one inning and ten in another. The line-up was , as follows: . Town Scott Loughridge, p; Archie Jen kins, c; Grover Page, lb; Grady Rankin, 2b; George Vandyke, Sb, Charlie Gray, ss; Jerome Stovall, cf; James D. Moore, rf; Jim Scott. If; School F. Pearson, p; E. Mc Lean, c; W. McArver, lb; A. Mor ris ss; L Little, tb; D. Caldwell, Shi 8. Suggs, rf; O. Jenkins, If; J. White, cf. Umpires, C C. Arm strong; prof. J. B. Warren. The features of the. game were the bat ting of Morris . for the school ' team and the work of Page at first base for! the towaleam. " '. exceedingly promising cotton ol mill, one of the strongest and most suc cessful banks, a well-managed build ing and loan association, a high-ton ed, wideawake set of business men. and now, with ample school facill ties, free to all, there is no reason why the future , growth of the town should not surpass , the most san-- gulne hopes of her citizens. Clover is an "all-pull-together" town. BESSEMER MILLS WIN SUIT, Circuit Court of Appeals Affirms Low tr Court's' Decision ln Suit of Da vis & Eldridge Mills Will Recov er $300. Charlotte Observer. -Asheville. April 18. A message has been received here from tbe clerk of the United States circuit court ftf appeals at Richmond stating1 .that the higher' court has affirmed .the lower court's decision in the 'suit of Davie ft Eldridge against the Besse mer City cotton, mills. This means that the plaintiffs will "have to pay to the defendant' company $3,500 and interest from November, 1907. .Ex ecutors of Orris K.' Eldridge, a com mission man of New" York, brought suit against the "Bessemer mills for $5,000 to recover on an "alleged 'note while the' mills brought 'a counter suit for $3,500 due them by the com mission merchant The lower court threw out the claim Tor $5,000 and awarded the Bessemer City mills $3,'-600,- the amount alleged to be- due them by the- commission merchants. Arthur Lewis, a retired farmer of Vienna, Va., committed suicide Mon day in a police station in which he was locked by hanging himself with a handkerchief. Dr. J. Rush Shull, of Shelby, who is to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania in June, was elected resident physician at St. Agnes Hos pital, winning out over 36 contest ants. He also won a similar posi tion with the Alleghany Hospital of Pittsburg. - SEABOARD AIR LINE SCHEDULE. These arrivals, departures and connections with other companies are given only as information. Schedule taking effect February 8, 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 Llncolnton, Shelby and Rutherford-ton. No. 44, dally, 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, daily, 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.. froin Wilmington and ' all local point North.". No. . 132, 7 p. m from Ruther- ' fordton, Shelby, Llncolnton and C. it . N. WV Railway points, Johnson City. . No. 46 arrives 10:30 a. m , from ' Rutherfordton and all local stations. " No. 39, dally, at 10:60 p. . m.; from -Wilmington,' Hamlet and Monroe; also 'from .points East, North and -Southwest, connecting; at ' Hamlet and Monroe. Vi ; . - ' . : U - " Cafe ears on all through trauuL'".' : " Ticket efflceSelwyn hoteL ' '' v All tralns'ran daliyv ' For further r. Information call, on or address . 7 James KER JR T. P.- A -'',v ;. , . r .Cnarlotte, N. C i' H. S. LEARD, D. P. A.,Vp F , - Raleigh, a . ' -' a B. RYAN, O.P. A4 "V ' '. " Portsmouth. Va.. ;
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 22, 1910, edition 1
6
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