Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / June 17, 1910, edition 1 / Page 8
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fhe it l,w not vet cotteri vour share of these matdJss values, we. are glad tpay that your vanb can If you have WS5lSf Price: Dreis Goods, Laces and Embroideries, Whiteoods, Corcets. HoS UnXnve Besides these you can. save just half on hundreds or other articles not mentioned here for want of space. - ;. . - '-v.-' 1 MORRIS BROTH ERS Oepto btore ! . Is Delightful! 2 DeliciousMS IWt be s-rpri -t this fanciful hiding. 7 word, whirl, we oo.d ihtt f which exactly de.crfbe the DRINKS served at OUR FOUNTAIN. T. god Water exactly ,he n,e I- anything ele you drtnkTe Coffce-you must use the right Ingredient., otherwise the drink will not be right. There s . dfflerence In the quality of Ingredients which can bensed in Fountain dr.nl.. jt the earn. .here I a difference In Tea. and Coffees. At our Fount-in only the very highest q.ly ingredients .re used. These pure lh quality IngredlenU, together with .kill and oare fulne in drawing and serving cert-inly do prduce In all our drinks a really lellghtful IH-liciouHness. Keep this in mind when your desires demand a Fountain Drink. Abernethy - Shields Drug Company Phone 130 - The Rexall Store - 217 Realty Bldg. The Gastonia Gazette. FRIDAY, JUNE 17. 1- ARLINGTON NEWS. Correspondence of The Gazette ARLINGTON MILLS, June U. Fine seasonable weather, neither hot nor cold, we're having now; gardens are promising for something to eat, for a while at least; regular work, but no money to plant or In vert in "T. R." hides; plenty of news of interest to those who never read anything and do not care to gee it in print. It is said that Satan is the' prince of the air. If so there must be something wrong In the wind, at 'some places, as manifested by a dis play of too much fashion, using the unruly tongue too much, tattlers carrying tales, meddling and inflam ing the fires of passion, the same that ls referred to in the Scriptures as the fire of destruction and "hell fire." There are some contagious dis eases of which the existing germ cannot be seen and the presence of which Is not suspected until the bit ter effects are revealed. Pos3ibly spiritual germs of an invisible form exist, either of a good or evil nature, either where ignorance predominates or the origin is through contempt; in which may be found a fertile place in which the evil germ may lodge and develop. There is a ma terial substance and there is an im material substance. The material "can be seen, the immaterial cannot he seen. No one doeth anything In dependently; if it be good, it is of the God that is good, who is the giv HOW ABOUT That Old BUGGY? It still has lots of good wear in it, but looks battered and worn because the paint has all worn off. Have it painted over and get another year's use out of it We can make it look new and attractive at a small cost Our painters and repairers are expert work men and we-, guarantee a first class job. Erea if yon are not ready yet. to lure the work" done drop in and let its fire you a price. You will be surprised to find it will cost you so Utile. Wny put it off longer? ' R. C. WARREN Near tie County Court House : GASTONIA, N. C er. If it be evil. It Is of Satan (the adversary), the father of all lies and all wickedness whatsoever. Wheat and ham meat that we wish to eat. Wheat has been standing for some time at 93 to 95 cents per bushel and flour still selling at a high price. $3.25 and up, when it should be from $2.40 up. .What is wrong? Who is getting this profit? Why are small hanA so nicely can vassed by a packing house? It ap pears that they are thus fixed so the customers cannot see what he is buying. These hams may be bought at from 17 to 18 cents per pound and the poorer classes are usually the customers for small hams. If we pay about 70 cents for a four pound ham and On opening It find about two and a half pounds of bone and one pound of paper and canvass, how much meat would we get and how much would we pay per pound for It? Mr. and Mrs. Oates Howell, of Belmont, spent part of the past week with the family of their son, Mr. John Howell, here. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Trull, on May 19, 1910, a son. The next comet will arrive soon. The greatest effect will be visible about New York city. The "tale" extends across the Atlantic all over Europe and to the Interior of Africa. Lowell Locals. Correspondence of The Gazette. LOWELL, June 16. Mr. Dave Groves has sold his house and lot to Mr. William Wright and expects to move to Greensboro next week. Mr. Matthew Titman, of Lowrys ville, Is visiting his father, Mr. A. Titman, here this week. Miss Beth Lowry, daughter of ,Mr. John Low- ry, has been quite HC - Messrs. Harley Gaaton, Claud Tit man and Hugh Miller attended a party in Belmont at the residence or Mr. Beam Tuesday night- Different games were played and delicious re freshments were sorted by the host ess in her hospitable manner. Mrs. Flowers, an aged lady here who had a stroke of paralysis more than a week ago, has regained con sciousness. Misses Maggie Hall and Clarabel Crawford, of Belmont, were visitors here Monday. A series of meetings Is being held In the Baptist church this wjeek. The pastor is assisted by Rev. Mr. Caswell. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Nip per left Thursday to spend a week or ten days with relatives at Union, S. C. i TKOUBLK AT VANDERBILT. College Trustees Refuse to Recog nize Men Elected at Methodist General Conference Bishop Wil son Resigns. Nashville, Tenn, June 15. By a, vote of 19 to 8, the Board of trust ees of Vanderbilt University this af ternoon refused to recognize the three men elected toy the General Conference of the M. E. Church, South, at the Ashevllle meeting to fill the vacancies on the board. The rejected candidates are Nat E. Har ris, Augusta, Ga.; A. Godbey, Aus tin Tex., and A. W. Biggs, Memphis, Tenn. The Board of Trustees later elect ed the following eight members, filling that body to Its full quota; Claude Waller. Nashville; R. F. Jackson. Nashville; Bishop W. B, Murrah. Jackson, Miss.; J. A. Rob- bins, McKenzie, Ten.; Bishop W. R. Lambuth. Nashville; W. C. Rat- cliffe, Little Rock; W. R. Millsaps, Jackson, Miss.; Allen R. Carter. Louisville. Following the vote refusing to seat the conference elected mem bers, Bishop A. W. Wilson tendered his resignation as a member of the board, which was accepted. By re- rusing to recognize the selactloas made by the Methodist Conference, the Board of Trust put Itself on rec ord as standing for a self-perpetuat ing board. The board at Its meeting this mdrning repealed a clause In the by laws which provided that elections to its membership must be approved by the General Education Board it the Methodist Church. In taking this step the majority of the, board claimed that the clause had already been nullified by the General Con ference through the course pursued at the Ashevllle meeting. It would not be a surprise to see the institu tion of mandamus proceedings to compel the Board of Trust to rec ognize as members those men des ignated as such by the General Con ference. 200 GOVERNMENT EMPLOYES DISCHARGED. Sad Story Told In Blue Envelopes- Majority Are Prom South and Are Practically Penniless. Washington, May 25.-There Is a sad lesson and an equally sad moral in the statement today that on yes terday fully 200 of the fatal blue envelopes were .;. distributed among the treasury employes noting that their services would no longer be re quired after June 30, the close of the fiscal year. This means, of course, their dismissal from employment, and that means food and raiment for from 1,600 to 2,000 people. . Nearly ' 90 , per cent of , the dis charged are old men and women who have been in the government service for many years, some of them for a generation. Nearly all . of these have lived up to their. Incomes and they go out into the world , hopeless . and poverty-stricken and helpless to se cure other employment. It Is a sym pathetic, ' if not pathetic, situation, and yet there is no help for It, The trouble U that all govern ment employes have a conviction that they being under the civil serr- Ice rules will hold their places -as long as they live and they take no thought of- tomorrow and live for to day. They never think of a rainy day and very few of them save up a dollar for their old age. Then the shock -comes and finds them penni less and heartbroken and their loved ones crying for tread. There can not he anything more distressing and at the same- time there cannot be a better warning, for it should teach those who remain to econo mise and make an effort to save up something for the future. At best, these government posi tions are the most uncertain of all others. At first they are 'fins and promising, but in the end most cas es, especially with women, they bring not only other disappoint ments, but sorrow. , It is a thousand times better for a young woman to marry a trustworthy young man no matter how humble in life he may be. than to get a government clerk ship, and it is far much better for her to enter into any respectable service to make'an honest living than in the government service. It is said that a majority of the unfortunates are from the southern states. If this report is true it is not easy to understand, as the south has only three-tenth's of the employ es of the government here in Wash ington and elsewhere in the country BIG CQTTON MILL DEAL. Chicago Firm Secures Controlling Interest in Several Mills at Spray, X. C. Price not Named. Charlotte, June 14. Probably the largest deal in cotton mill stocks that has- ever been made in the South has Just been consummated by which Marshal Field & Company, of Chicago, secure s the controlling interest In several mills at Spray, this State. The purchase Includes the con trol of te American Warehousing Company, mammoth finishing plant, warehouses, etc.; the Spray woolen mills, one of the largest wool manu facturing concerns In the world; the Lily Mills; the Rhode Island Com- oanv and the Nantucket Mills. Through- the deal Field & Company acquire control of practically all the manufacturing plants at Spray, ex cept three, these being the Spray Cotton Mills, the Morehead Cotton Mills and the Leaksville Cotton Mill. The purchase price was not dis closed. The newly purchased textile plant of the Field Company embraces some of the best managed and most thor oughly equipped mills in the State. CHARLOTTE FIRM GETS CONTRACT. The J. B. Ivey Company to Furnish the Uniform Suits at Llnwood College This Coming Year. Charlotte .Observer, I6tb. The1 J. B. Ivey Company yester day secured the contract for supply ing the 'uniform suits the coming year for the students of Llnwood Female College, near Gastonia. Last year there were 110 boarding stu dents and next year with enlarged facilities the management expects a larger number. Each student is re quired to wear a uniform suit. This college is situated at the All startling, astonishing, as ' : , tounding. Has been the sale of. Bloodine during the past few days. We nev er have had such a tremendous sale on any remedy In our store. Blood ine Is ' highly endorsed by some 'of the most learned physicians . In America , for. Bright' Disease, Dia betes, Stone in the Bladder, Rheu matism, and Catarrh, and If you are suffering with any of these terrible diseases you should not fall to buy a bottle of this won- derful remedy today. Usual $1.00 size tattles for SO cents at Aberne-thy-Shielde Drug Co., or from The Bloodine. Corporation, Boston, Vasal''-'- -' -. . j-'' ABERXETHY-SHIELDS DRUG CO., . SPECIAL AGENTS. A Healing Springs and by giving board and tuition for a very small amount it Is doing a great deal of good. Rev. A. T. Lindsay and brother; Dr. Ernest Lindsay, are at the head "of the institution. . This year they have planned to open the college as a summer resort about July 11 The several different springs there have great , medicinal virtues. Some years ago , - these springs were largely patronized by Charlotte people, but the hotel was burned. ' The property was "then bought by a Northern philanthro pist, who for some years ran a school on the Industrial order. About Hght years ago Rev. A. T.'and Ern est Lindsay bought the property and almost all the'tlme since have had the school crowded to capacity. Pleasant Entertainment. Miss Florence' Carpenter delight fully entertained a number of the young people of Cherryville at her home In that place Tuesday night In honor of -her guest, Miss Mary Wil lie Quinn. Those present were Misses Maud and Annie Rudislll, Vida Mauney, Annabel Summers, Blanche Houeer. Mrs. Horace Hous er Messrs. D. R. Mauney, M. C. auney, Carl Mauney, C; H. Harrel- son, Audle Can-oil, C. L. Carroll, H. M. Houser, W. D. Beam and J. Flay Bess of Gastonia. Mr. D. W. Aderholdt, secretary and treasurer of the Henry ver Manufacturing Company, Hildebran, was a business visitor in Gastonia yesterday. Mr. E. N. Huffstetler has pur chased a lot on York street from Mr. R. N. Holland and will erect at once a. six or seven room residence Ground was broken for the foun dation Wednesday. A COPY of The Is An Invitation to You to Become a Subsqriber. If You Want All the Nevs of Gaston County You Ought to Be On our List J SAMPLE Gazette ANNOUNCEIENTS. FOR ' REPRESENTATIVE, , I hereby announce mysel4 a can didate for. , Representative . of. Gaston county In the Lower House of the next General , Assembly,, subject . to the action of the second Democratic ' primaries to be held June 25th. 8. S. MAUNEY. . FOR REPRESENTATIVE. . . I hereby announce myself a can didate for renomlnatlon for Repre sentative of Gaston county In ' the lower house of the General Assem bly, subject to the action of the second Democratic primaries - to be held June 25th. ' N. B. KENRRICK. i J' FOR SHERIFF. :V v I hereby announce myself a can didate for Sheriff, of Gaston cosnty, subject to the action of the second Democratic primaries to be held June 25th. J. D. B. McLEAN.. ; " - "T'i:" FOR SHERIFF. . I hereby announce myself a can didate for renomlnatlon for the of-, flee of Sheriff of Gaston county, sub ject to the action of the second Dem ocratic primaries to be held June 25th. - ' T. E. SHUFORD. GRAND EXCURSION SPRUCE PINE AND RETURN JUNE 21ST OVER S. A. L. AND CLINCH FIELD ROUTE BENEFIT THOMP80N ORPHANAGE GUILD , The ladles of the Thompson Or phanage Guild will operate an eatur- sion Charlotte to Spruce Pine, N. C., , and return Tuesday June 21st pick ing up passengers at all stations up to Shelby. This is a grand oppotunity to see the most wonderful railroad construction in America, and the, most beautiful scenery In the world.! It is a one days' outing at a small cost, and for the benefit of a most worthy cause, the fare for the round trip is only $2.50; children over five and under 12 years, $1.50. Tickets are now on sale at Hamilton and Martins drug store, Jordans drug store and S. A. L. City Office, and at all stations by S. A. L. agents up to Shelby. Reserved seats can be se cured without' extra charge by get ting them now. For further Infor mation call on any of the ladles of the Thompson Orphanage Guild or James Ker, Jr., manager for the la dies of the1 Thompson Orphanage Guild. Revival Services. ; Rev. Scott L. Owen, a student ol the Baldwin Industrial Institute, of Charlotte who has been conducting successful revivals during his vaca tions for several years,- is holding a series of meetings this week at the Old "Mill chapel. The attendance anjLittterest at these meetings so far have been especially good and some good results have already ' manifest- ed themselves. r The meeting will continue, through Sunday and possi bly longer. Rev, Mr. Owen . will preach tonight, Saturday night and Sunday night. Sunday morning at 11 o'clock Rev. P. T. Freeland, of Charlotte, rttt speak to fathers and mothers especially, while - - at : S o'clock Sunday afternoon he ' will hold a special children's service. . WHY SALVES FAIL , " ; ;;v TO . CURE ECZEMA. . Scientists are now agreed that the eczema germs are lodged not In the outer ksln or epidermis, but in the inner skin. Hence, a penetrating li quid ls required,; not an .outward salve that clogs the pores. We recommend to all eceema pa tients the standard prescription 'Oil of Wlntergreen as compounded ' in liquid form known as D. D. D. Pre scription. A trial bottle of this D. D.'D. "Prescription,' at only 25 cents, will instantly relieve the Itch. We have ' sold and recommended this remedy for years, and know of won derful cures from. Its use. We rec ommend It to our patrons.' J. H. Kennedy A Co. ' J17-J122 i t 1
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
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June 17, 1910, edition 1
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