Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / May 10, 1910, edition 1 / Page 3
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TUESDAY,. MAY 10 1010. THE GASTONIA OAZKTTK PAC3 TC PROFESSIONAL GAUDS , JONES TIMBEItLAKE.' .Attorneys Mid Counselor First Floor, Realtor Building. GASTONIA. N. C. ' ; , : ,. ; . .. ' , CARPENTER A OARTENTEIl Attorneya-At-Law '. ,. , . DALLAS, N. C. . j Offlet orr Bank of Dallas. P. WOODS GARLAND, JRV t Attorney . and Counselor , Torrence-MorrU Co's. k ki Gastonla, N. C Office over Main Are. iOTlS F. BRADLEY f Land Surveyor 430 W. Franklin Ave. Phone 239-2 GASTONIA, N. a J. WHITE WARE ' Fire Insurance GASTONIA. N. C. Office Cltlsens National Bank Bid Phone 54. Purest Flour "Of thi various anslltlM of temt ob. i talned Iron tha umi wheat, the lower JT ' ffradaa ara tboaa moat contaminated with (Taaae, dirt, and objectionable l bacterial the freedom ol flour Jrom -Uwm, laoreaaea with Ita purity. The parity of William Tell flour Is due to the costiy equipment and ex ceptlonal care to keep the grain and flour cImo, f- The wheat is stored la hennetkelly sealed tanks at the big mills of Anstcd & Burk Co. Before grinding, it is cleaned six times. ' - Neither grain nor flour ever touches anything but the bright, clean sur faces of dust-proof machinery. Even the flour bags are sewed up by machinery. ' William Tell comes to you from the mills with all the brilliant bloom that only Ohio wheat can make. Ask your dealer, and insist on having special notices William Tell AWNINGS! AWNINGS! Made To Measure non't Walt Order Now Cleaning. Pressing & Tailoring CHA8. C. JOHNSON Phone 146 O. M. BOYD & CO., Distributors. M20. II. F. D. ENVELOPES. People living on rural free deliv ery routes should use return envel opes; it Is safer and Insures return nf Tour letters if addressees don't m eet them. We have them printed for every route in Gaston county; good quality of envelope, the kind you pay 10 cents per package of 23 for at the stores blank. Only 30 cents oer 100. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Use them once. you'll keep it up. Gazette Publishing Comuanr. No. 236 Main avenue. Gas LADIES LOOK Do you cut your own stencil pat terns? It's much cheaper than buy ing them already cut and you can find more desirable designs. We have the stencil cardboard, 20x24 Inches, at 25 cuts a sheet, a 'bo carbon paper about same size for 10 cents a sheet. GAZETTE PUB. X. 236 W. Main Ave. Phone 60. Imbortt'Word to -Advertisers We wish to remind advertis ers that copy for change of ad vertisements in .The Gazette must be Jn 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 give it the proper atten tion if it can be handled at all. Advertisers who get their eopy 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 ft Is to ours to have a neat, well-displayed, 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 neees sary 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. TOO LATE. 'TIs said that the words, ."It might have been" Are the saddest of ongue or pen; But to me there are otners saaaer still, And we hear them again and again. 1 Sometimes 'tis the work of a care less mind, And again 'tis but cruel fate; But the saddest words now known to me, Are these: Too late! too late! When I think of one a dear sweet girl. A stillness o'er me creeps; For while I know her slender form Beneath a fresh mound sleeps. I seem to hear that weakened voice, As she once did watch and wait Saying, do you think she 11 ever come? For soon 'twill be too late. "I'll go" I said, "some other ady" To see this friend so dear; Forgetting that to all of us, Eternity may bjnjaftv. But days passed byanme sped on At an ever-rapid rate; . And the news I had from Lizzie next, Said plainly: 'tis to,o.vlate. Now all I have, is vain regret; The cup is mine to drink; But may this teach a careless mind To glance above, and think. May others never taste the gall, Or need to mourn their fate, But rise and go whetf duty calls Don't put It off too late. MRS. E. O. WEBB. THE PLANETS. - Thsy Aft. With. Their SatslirUs. Em. (hlbit Phases tike the Moon. We are likely to regard the moon as the only thing In th. heaven that x Dibits phases such as the. quarter, the half and the full. As a matter tof fact all planets and their satellites exhibit separately such pbaiws. and tuoet of them ran be easily seen with a small powertelescope. Thus Mars and Ve nus, which are comparatively viose to the earth, show through the teltwof at' times a beautiful crescent, at others a half planet fully as brilliant. tHinsld ring the distance, as does our satellite. At' times aim. the plauets suiter eclipse, just as the earth, the moon and the sun, and these eclipses are foretold with as great aceuracy. , . - As to just what causes the phases, say of the moon. Is easy to comprehend by a homely analogy. If one stands In a corner of a room, places a globe of some description In the next coruer and a light In the third corner the phenom enon of the bairmoon Is seeu. The light, representing the sun, shines of course on half the globe representing the moon, but the otmetver in the cor ner sees only half at the surface to ward blm Illuminated. If now the light be placed behind the observer and a little above bis bead a full moon will be seen, the "un." however, shining oh the same area of surface as Jefore. merely allowing this time a view from the "earth" of the whole amount of Illumination. All the phases xan be demonstrated in this manner by mov ing the "moon" directly outwurd from Its corner. One of the greatest discoveries of sci ence Is due to observation of the eclipses of Jupiter a moons. It wns found that when the earth was in the part of Its orbit nearest to Jupiter Plicae eclipses occurred sixteen minutes earlier than wheu It was In the far thermost part, whereas by all rules of astronomy they should have occurred at the same minute each time. It was deduced from this that light was not instantaneous and consequently took sixteen nilnutra to traverse the diam eter of the earth'sorhlt. a distance of about 200.000.000 miles, thus giving to light a velocity of 1KG.000 'miles a sec ond, which was accurately shown later by other experiments. St. Louis Republic. The more you eat Quaker Oats the better your health, will be. Practical- experi ments with athletes show Quaker Oats to be the greatest strength maker. Packed In regular alee packaaea. and la her Bvitcally aualed tine lor bat climatoa. 36 MR. MANGUM'8 CLAIMS. WATCH SPRINGS. New, Phones. Add the following new telephones to your directory. 1941 1-2, J. C. Wilson, Supt. Coutny Chain Gang. Spencer Moun tain, N. C. 340, T. A. Ratchford, residence. 267, W. C. Abernethey residence. 362,. C. Featherstone, residence. 300 3, A. B. Elliott store, Gray Mill. 200 4, H. L. Roberts & Bro. McAdenville, N. C. Please call by numbers. Legal Blanks Of Ml Kinds Warranty Deeds, Mortgage Deeds, Quitclaim Deeds, : Executor's . Deeds, f Chattel Mortgages (North and 6outb Cerollna), : s ''". . Bonds to Make- Title, -' - 'Agricultural Liens, . ';.-:!t-f: . Attachment Blanks, ad others. - ' MAO -orders TecHve prosapt ntteB. G a zette : Pu b: Co. " '' : "':.' ' " 230 Main Are., - Gaston la, IT. C CATARRH CAN QUICKLY BE CURED. A bottle of Hyomel, a hard rubber pocket inhaler that will last a life time, and simple instructions for curing catarrh make a Hyomel outfit. Into the inhaler you pour a few drops of magical Hyomel (pro nounce it HIgh-o-me). This is absorbed by the antisep tic gauze within and now you are' ready to breathe it over the germ in fested membrane where it will speed lly begin its work of killing catarrh germs. Hyomel is made of Austral ian eucalyptol combined with other antiseptics and Is very pleasant to breathe. It is guaranteed to cure catarrh, bronchitis, sore throat, croup, coughs and colds, or money back. It cleans out a stuffed up head in a few minutes. ' Sold by druggists everywhere, and by J. H. Kennedy & Co.. Com plete outfit $1.00. And' remember that extra bottles If afterwards need d cost only 60 cents. ' Breathe It. that'a all. . I;.,..: :,.''.- "-iw "To break up cold in head or chest in a few minutes, pour a teaspoon- ful of Hyomel Into a bowl of, boiling water, cover head and ' bowl Ith towel and breathe the vapor. ' A2S-M10. ' Not Surprising They Break Consider ing the Work They Do. The mainspring of a watch doea not unwind at a uniform rate, but inter mittently. It is subjected to a sudden Jerk at every tick four times per sec ond for my watch. This makes 345. 600 times per day and over t20.000.000 times per year. This operating condi tion Is analogous to others discussed in Kent's "Mechanical Pocketbook" under the heads of "Relation of the Elastic Limit of Endurance Under Re peated ;Stresses" and "Resistance of Metals to Repeated Shocks." Among other tblugs It says: "Another long known result of ex perience is the fact that rupture may be caused by a succession of shocks or Impucts none of which alone would be sufficient to cause it. Iron axles, the piston rods of steam hammers and other pieces of metal subject to contin uously repeated shocks Invariably break after a certain length of serv ice. They have 'a life which Is lim ited." Wohier fonnd in testing iron by re peated stresses (not impacts) that In one case 400,000 applications of a stress of 500 centners to the square Inqu caused a rupture, while a similar bar remained sound after 48.000.000 applications of a stress of 300 centners to the square inch. One centner equals 110.2 pounds. The mainspring of a vitch Is not only under a consider able tensile 'stress, but also under a bending stress when suddenly released, then immediately stopped by the es capement mechanism. It Is then prob able that its molecular cohesive pow er deteriorates la n manner similar to those quoted. Scientific American. , Von Bulow of Gentle Nature. Wheu Brst Von Butow was Intro duced to uie-I almost avoided blm on account of the many stories of his irascibility, his erratic disposition, bis offhand treatment of the public, bis brutality toward musicians and many other crimes of this sort. On closer acquaintance with the great pianist 1 experienced some astonishment to find blui a man of strong mind, yet gentle nature, enthusiastic, artistic to the fin ger tips and well bred, though of an exceedingly nervous temperament Irascible be might have been at times. r but I am sure that the moments of un governable anger were always provok ed by people's stupidity or by some un pardonable mistakes lir musical execu tion. From "Modjeska's Memoirs" in Century, t, - rn The Text. The minister had preached on the text. "Why hart ye between two opin ions?" aod upon little Cora's return home from . church her . grandmother asked what the text was. T don t remember exactly, answer ed Cora, "but it was something about a hawk between two pigeons." Chica go News, the Feeling the Boy. . "Why did the cow Jump over moon. paT. "I suppose It was a sort of early ex periment in aerial navigation." New Tork' Press.' . Almond OIL . : One hundred . pounds of almonds yield forty-eight pounds ef olL - j. 1 Careworn man has to an ares town vanity 40 reap dwpalr.-Uoetbe. Loyal Friends in Gastonia Present .His Nunne for Nomination by the Democracy for the Office of Solic itor. (Cleveland Star, April 12th.) Gastonla. April 6, 1910. The Democratic Convention, which will nominate a candidate for solicitor In the Twelfth Judicial District to suc ceed the present incumbent, 1b suf ficiently near to demand the earnest and serious consideration of the thoughtful Democrats of the district. To which of the five counties Ca barrus, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, comprising the 12th Judicial District, -shall the nomina tion go? Cleveland has been honor ed with the judgeship, and one of her sons served as solicitor for the term preceding that of the present incumbent; and, again, Cleveland is not asking for the nomination, Lin coln has been taken care of by plac ing one of her Elf ted-sons upon the Supreme Court bench; Mecklenburg now has the solicitorshlp, and In ad dition to this honor one of her sons is a judge upon the Supreme Court bench; Cabarrus and Gaston have heretofore given away to the claims of their sister countleB without dis sent or complaint, and, as yet have been without a share of political honors apportioned to the district. Cabarrus is not asking for the nom ination. Gas'ton does desire the nomination this time,, and is earnest ly requesting that her claims be giv en a fair and just consideration in the district. Heretofore she has stood loyally In the party ranks and has cheerfully gfven her support to the sons of sister counties in the district asking for preferment, and for herself or her sons has not sought honors, but ft this time she feels strongly that as she is the only county In the district asking for the nomination which now has no share of the political honrs allotted to the district for distribution, that her sis ter counties ought and will recog nize the justice of her request and claims, and in a spirit of equality and fairness will honor one of Gas ton's sons with the nomination for solicitor. Believing that such sentiment will dictate your course in making a ,cho!ce inj the convention, we, the undersigned, representing a few of the friends interested in the candi dacy of Mr. A. G. Mangum, of Gas tonia, present his name to you for consideration as the candidate from Gaston. Mr. Mangum has been a resident attorney of Gastonla for the past sixteen years', and has been practicing his profession during this period with ability on both the civil and criminal side of the courts in the district and State, and is well and favorably known to the bar of the district. His friends and ac quaintances throughout the county recognizing his high qualities both as a man and a lawyer, unhesitat ingly ask you to support him for nomination feeling confident that his capacity and powers will meas ure up to the full demands of the high office sought, and that he can fl-11 the same Impartially, with abili ty and dignity, reflecting honor up on the district and State. In the interest of the public good it is highly expedient that a lawyer having long experience as well as one having ability and skill, should be selected for thi high post. These qualtles should be combined to in sure a strong and . effective publjo service. Mr. Mangum, we confident ly believe, possesses these requisites, and we cordially ask you for a gen erous consideration of Gaston's claim, end your support of Mr. Man gum as Its nominee. J. Flem Johnson, Andrew E. Moore, L. P. Groves, Robert , A. Love, Gastonla; R. K. Davenport, J. "M. Springs, C. E. Hatchinson, Mt. Holly; A. a Llneberger, Tuckaseege; John P. Leeper, R. L.' Stowe, Bel mont; J. W. Kendrick, T. B. Leon hardt, Cherryrlllef . Q W. Ragan. Gastonla. Granite & Marble Works CHARLES FORD, Gattonia Agent A Marble or Granite which shows lettering well is what you need for a memorial. Our fine grained American Light Marble or our Wlnns boro Blue Granite will give you very durable, handsome monuments and distinct Inscriptions. Large stock on hand at our works. D1I worth Street Cars. Phone 1618. Boulevard A Palmer Streets, Call and see them. Take the Charlotte, N. G. Dont Hunt For Bargains Elsewhere till you see Us and get Our Prices on Groceries, Produce, Dry Goods, Etc. We carry the best lines of Flour, Coffee. Canned Goods. Etc. and will sell as cheap for cash, according to quality I as anybody. Ford Brothers PHO XE 24 220 Poplar Street Opposite Modena Mills. THE SOUTH'S BEST FARM PAPER ' Jh The Progressive Farmer and Gazette RALEIGH, N. C, and 1 r' ;i STARKVILLE, MISSISSIPPI 3 ; TRY IT 10 Weeks-10 Cents vVe've got the kind of articles in our paper that you have been hankerin' for not guess-work talk, but the kind that steers you right. We want you to read the following series How to Double Your Corn Yields. How to Grow Live Stock in the South. $1,000 in Prizes for Our Com Club Boys. Short Talks About Fertilizers. "CROPS DOUBLED WITH HALF THE LABOR." I. T. CROWDER. MnUenbarg Co., V. i You are publishing the be agricultural paper ia the Urate! BUIe of .Aaierica aad ihould boeacouncad by eVenr fanner in thu Southern land. I am now part ibiee-ujre and lea, but I neve learned how to make corn until I read The Progretave Farmer and Gazette. We fanners aU our Cm haw been, cultivating the land, but you have taught ua to cultivate the com with intelligence aad our oropa v more thaa doubled with half the labor.' TEN WEEKS TRIAL ONLY 10 CENTS ! You will be pleased and continue your subscription. Give your boys a chance to compete for the grand prizes we are offering our Corn Club Boys. Don't let ten cents stand between us don't but fill out the Coupon below and mail it at once. This Coupon is Worth 10 Cents PROGRESSIVE FARMER AND GAZETTE. DEPT. n-4 Raleigh, North Carolina. CcntUmen : I eadoM. with thit coupon. Ten Cents and the names of two persons I know to be iatewslej farm life, for which send me The ProgreMK Fanner and Gazette for 10-weeks that I may act acquainted with your paper. NAME - . POST-OFFICE STATE . ATti tf raa nme address above and enclose this coupon with lea itlj rxtt n-mm ' i "lu,c cents in stamps in a strong envelope and send direct to the office of 1H1S OllCr IS The Progressive Farmer and Gazette. Raleiah. North Carolina. Starkville. MmisaiPPi. tO NeW Sub- Send the names of two persons interested la agriculture oa separate sheet of e paper. SWllUCia UlllV Fill it in and Mail To-day Robin J. Cooper, who waa grant ed a new trial by the Tennessee Su preme Court recently when that tri bunal reversed the decision of the lower court placing a twenty year sentence on him for the murder of Senator E. W. Carmack, is to be tried in June again, the trial to be gin on the 21st. GASTONIA PRODUCE MARKET. Frya ...... . ...SOe Hens 12 1-2 c Egg S.......I0Q Butter ........ ........... ,80c Onions T5 to t6o Peas ..... ..... ... .......JJ5 Irish Potatoes ..75c Sweet Potatoes ...... 75a Cabbage 4 c lb Country hams 18c Country Shoulders 12 l-2o . RAILWAY MAIL CLERKS WANTED The Government Pays Railway Mall Clerks $800 to $1,200, and Other Employees up to $2,600 Annually. ' Uncle Sam will hold spring exam nations throughout the country for Railway Mail Clerks, Custom Hons . Clerks, Stenographers, , Bookkeepers. Departmental Clerks and other Got ornment Positions. Thousands of ap pointments win to aade. Any xnajt or woman orer 18, In City or Coun try can get Instractlon and free In formation by writing at one to tao Bureau of Instruction. 1 1 If Haalla Building,7 -Rochester, N. T.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 10, 1910, edition 1
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