Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Sept. 2, 1910, edition 1 / Page 5
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f TUESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1910. THE GASTONIA GAZETTB. fage nvn. The Eye of is the Window f . - - ' ' ' . . ( f' ' ". . . . ' . J the Soul Has just returned from the Northern markets where he purchased some matchless bargains for each and every de- Beware how you use it and how you abuse it. -r .V.;-; -. ! V . ; partment in our big- store. Almost every freight and ex press brings something new. OUR BUYER '.I W . I : I - u The Gastonia Gazette. PENNY COLUMN. ONE CENT A WORD They Brln Results; try 'em. WANTED WANTED Cosmopolitan Magazine requires the services of a repre sentative In Gastonia to look after - subscription renewals and to extend circulation toy special methods which have proved unusually successful. . Salary and commission. Previous , experience desirable bat not essen tial. Whole time or spare time. Ad dress, with references, H. C. Camp bell, Cosmopolitaln Magaslne, 1789 Broadway, New York City. . 82. FOR RENT ONE ROOM for rent, furnished. Ap ply at Gazette office. . tf. FOR RENT OR SALE One piano In Al condition. J. White Ware, Citizens National Bank building, tf. FOR RENT, Three four-room dwell ings. Gastonia Insurance & Real ty Co. . tf. FOB SALkT FOR SALE, One eight-horse-power Gasoline Engine. Suitable for pulling Shredder, Gin, Thresher, etc. Gastonia Plumbing & Heating Co. FOR SALE: Wood saw, molasses mill and peanut parcher Apply to James L. Hanna. S6p4. FOR SALE, Flfteen-horse-power single phase motor, General Elec tric. Gastonia Plumbing ft Heating Co. 2cl. FINE FARM FOR SALE, 834 acres of land on Drowning Creek, Moore county. Bargain for cash buyer. E. L. Pegram, Jackson Springs, N. C. S16 c 8. MISCELLANEOUS. WE BUY Enameled ware la solid car lots and we can give attractive prices. Let us show you our line. Gastonia Plumbing & Heating Co. . ; ' S2el. DO NOT FORGET that Coffey's Is headquarters for all kinds of wag on and buggy repairs. Horse shoe-1 ing a specialty. We put on rubber i tires. S6 c 2. "SCHOOL BOOKS AT HALF . PRICE, cash paid for all kinds of books, coins, stamps, relics, curios. We buy sell and exchange all kinds. WRITE QUICK if you want school books cheap. Largest stock, lowest prices to be found and satisfaction guaranteed. Southern Book Ex change, Raleigh, N. C". S30cl0. HAVE YOUR buggy painted at Cof - fey'fl.- We paint them right. We line, re-cover and trim tops neatly and cheaply. Satisfaction guaran teed.' " PLANT Strawberries now for full crop next spring. I have plants. Phone 232. Hampton. S2c2. I WILL BE In Gastonia Monday, i September 5 th and will be glad to i talk with any one Interested in real estate. ; I make no charge to inspect I property and tell you how to get thai most money out of It , T. M. Belk, Lancaster, S. C. . V ? 82 c3. " " MORE than 1000 books for the price nt Alia - T it. atnrtna. : VI At Aft Im stories, books ot adventure, humor, history, science and religion Just j what you like. , Membership fee $1.00, dues 10 cent per month. Gas- ' tonia Library Association. Y. M. C Priceless above all , possessions is the eye sight, deserving your highest consideration. Don't trifle with your eyes. It will cost you nothing to consult us. . Torrehce - Jewelers A. Building. tf. LET THE GAZETTE follow jrou on your summer outing. Wo will gladly change your address as often as you wish. Phone 60 or drop us a postal card. tf. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1910. Personals and. Locals. Mr. J. Math Armstrong, of Bel mont, was in Gastonia on business Wednesday. The banks of Gastonia will be closed next Monday, Labor Day, It being a national (holiday. Miss Mary Hildebran returned Wednesday from Morganton, where she spent several weeks on a visit to relatives. Mrs. J. M. Hampton is at Spar tanburg with her daughter, Mrs. H W. Link, who has been quite 111 but is now Improving. Mr. G. S. Black returned to Charlotte yesterday after a visit to his sister, Mrs. George Arney, at the Gray Mill. Misses Maude Rankin and Clara Armstrong will leave next week for Raleigh, where they will enter Peace Institute. Mr. John O. Rankin, Jr., will leave next week for Raleigh, where he will enter the North Carolina A, and M. College. Mrs. L. A. Brlttaln and Mr. Eu gene Brittain returned yesterday from a visit to relatives and friends at Morganton. Mrs. W. E. Nichols and little child returned yesterday to . their home in Chester, S. C, after a pleas ant visit to Mrs. Nlchol's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. B. McLean. Mrs. Thomas Lee Craig has as her guest Mrs. F. M. Williams, of Newton, State President of the United Daughters of the Confedera cy. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Anderson, of Morehead, Miss., are visiting at the home of Mrs. Anderson's brother, Mr. J. M. Hampton, on East Long "Gastonia's Leading Clothiers" Let Us Out-Fit Your Boy It. i never an experiment. ma Stetson u always the authcatla . , - styls o th litit. T Svan--SIater Company Out-Fitters for Morris Go. Opticians t . avenue. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. States and little son, L. A., Jr., left Wednesday for points in Illinois where they will spend three weeks with Mr. States' relatives. The trustees of the Clover high school recently awarded the contract for the installation of a heating plant in the new building to the Gastonia Plumbing & Heating Co. Mrs. Bell Scott, of Sharon. S. C, arrived In Gastonia Wednesday and is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. 6. A. Gilfillan at their home on York street. Miss Mattle Ware, of Kings Mountain, has been the guest since last Saturday of Misses Mary Ellen and Minerva Jenkins at their home on West Airline avenue. Messrs. R. C. McLean and Geo. G. Glenn, of the Gastonia Plumbing & Heating Co., have rented a build ing at Gaffney, S. C, and are open ing up a plumbing and heating busi ness there. Miss Blanche Venable leaves today for hef home In Callands, Va.; after spending some time in Gasto nia as the guest of Miss Maude Ran kin at her home on South Broad street. Rev. A. S Anderson and family returned Wednesday from Ivy Depot, Va., where they spent the month of August with Mr. Anderson's parents. He will occupy his pulpit at the Lo ray Presbyterian church at the reg ular hours Sunday. Mr. B. O. Shannon, who has been spending the summer here at the home of his father, Mr. J. R. Shannon, on route four, left yester day for Wrightsvllle, Ga., where he goes to enter upon his duties as professor of latin and mathematics n Warthen College. Messrs. Forest and Henry Groves will leave Monday for Wake Forest College to resume their stud ies at the opening of the fall session. Miss Lola Smith, of Clifton, S. C, Is the guest this week of her aunt, Mrs. Dora Lambert, at the Ozark Mill. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kirkpat For School Or College Our Fall line of Clothing, Fur nishing Goods, Hats, Etc., for both the Boys' and Young Men .is now complete. We have both styles and price to suit every taste and pocket. - We guarantee satisfaction or your money refunded.. Come in and look through oar stock for to look will I mean to bny. T Men and Boys' DRY GOODS DEPARTMENT. , In this department you will find the newest thjngs to be had In cot ton and woolen goods and at prices that are far below others. Just in, beautiful line of woolen goods, prices from 25 cents to $1.60 yard. Dont fall to see this line be fore buying. Another new shipment of Ren frew dress ginghams, beautiful pat terns, at 12 1-2 cents yd. This goods is worth more money. MEX'S AND BOYS' CLOTHING. In this department you will find a complete stock of fall and winter clothing. We appreciate faction guaranteed J M P. S.We are gald to send I l l 4n i .1 I pnone orders ruiea prompuy. rick, of Yorkvilie, S. C, passed through Gastonia yesterday after noon en route home from Hickory, where Mrs. Kirkpatrick visited rel atives while Mr. Kirkpatrick was in the North purchasing fall and winter stock for the Kirkpatrick-Belk Com pany. Mr. R. B. Babington, manager of the Piedmont Telephone & Tele graph Co., expects to move next Wednesday into his handsome hew residence on South Broad street. It has just been completed and to one of the most attractive homes in Gas tonia. Gaston county should be well represented at the annual meeting of the National Farmers Union in Charlotte Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. The railroad sched ules are such that one can go from Gastonia either on No. 44 at 5:23 a. m. or No. 36 at 9:25 a. m. Tues day and by remaining in Charlotte only one night can take in practical ly all of the two-days session. That they will be well worth the cost in time and money goes without say ing. HEART STILL HE TALKS. Apparently Dead, Man Still Talks and Gives Directions Concerning His Affairs. A Philadelphia dispatch to the New York Herald, says: Medical circles and physiological students are interested in the pecul iar phenomena accompanying the death in a private hospital here of Theodore P. Bailey, assistant man ager of the Philadelphia offices of the General Electric Company. Blood poisoning followed a delayed operation for appendicitis, appar ently caused Bailey 'a death at 11:45 o'clock last Saturday morning. At, that moment all pulsation stopped, his eyes became glazed and closed his limbs rigid, and his body cold. But for 27 minutes he continued to talk to his wife and daughter till his vocal organs became paralyzed. He continued the conversation for 18 minutes more with his daughter by means of the deaf and dumb alpha bet The story is told by his wife,' daughter and private secretary. Sev eral pnysicians proressea to see nothing Improbable in the story, though they admitted it was decid edly unusual for a person to be able to talk after his heart apparently had lost all action. Bailey, who was 47 years old, was a man of unusual nerve power and mentality. He came of a brain working family." He had been a stenographer, law student, practic ing attorney and builder up of the great electrical ..business. In this country." ; ' -'":'h v r - Never strong physically, he had carefully preserved his health ' and possessed up to the time of his last Illness a wonderfully fine-strung and highly-organized physical system, which responded Quickly and har moniously to any demand for fatig uing labor that his busy mental life put upon 1L i. We bare the strongest line of Men's Suits from $7.50 to 113.50 to be found anywhere. ' All the new things la Boys' Cloth ing, and we can fit them, prices from $1.50 to $7.00. Good line of Boys' Pants from 25 cents to $2 per pair. SHOES! SHOES! Come and take a look at ours. We have a complete stock of fall and winter shoes. New lot of Fellowcraft and Ral ston Health Shoes Just in at $3.50 and $4. The best shoes on the mar ket for the money. every dollar you spend with us. or your money back. BELK CO goods on approval but nothing ms r " J. M. U. $2.00 Robinson Shoe Company. See Window Display. Dr. Newton's Address. At Main Street Methodist church Wednesday night a good Xudlence gathered to hear Rev. Dr. J. C. C. Newton, of Japan, who delivered one qf the most thoroughly enlightening and deeply Interesting missionary lectures which has ever been heard here, his theme being the general conditions prevailing In the more important missionary fields of the world,- and the outlook for the suc cess of the missionary movement In the Orient, with especial reference to Japan.; Dr. Newton Is at the head of the theological department of the Kwanset Gakuln, a Methodist col lege at Kobe, Japan, and has a thorough insight into the general attitude of the Japanese and other oriental peoples toward Christiani ty. His explanation of the marked change which has recently taken place in the government schools . of the Japanese empire, resulting In a most favprable reception of Chrisian teachings, was especially encourag lng. Tis the song of the mother that gives the child repose; the song of the SINGER that makes Its clothes L. C. SMALL, Manager. 82. Major Charles M. Stedman, Dem ocratic candidate for Congress In the fifth district, has challenged Mr. D. H. Blair, the Republican candi date, to a Joint canvass of the dis trict. Mr. Blair has not yet made his reply. 1 , Big linof guaranteed Stoves and Ranges at Gastonia Furniture Co. A sensation was sprung at the session of the American Bar Asso ciation at Chattanooga, Tenn., Wed nesday when very grave charges of unprofessional actions ' were prefer red against Joseph H. Choate, of New York, former ambassador to England. There were six separate charges and Mr. Choate will be tried before the association. See ' owv new Crown and. new Treasure Sewing Machines, Gastonia Furniture Company. 1 WATCH OUR ADS. IT WILL DO YOU GOOD. COME TO OUR STORE OF TEN. YOrwiLL ALWAYS FIND SOMETHING NEW AND AT PRICES THAT WILL MAKE YOU SMILE. AS YOU ALL KNOW, WE ARE ONE OF THE LINKS IN BELK'S CHAIN OF STORES OVER NORTH AND SOUTH CAROLINA. THIS ENABLES US TO UN DERBUY and UNDERSELL. Satis- o is charred to anvnn Tcle- ' Per Pair y This is the price placed on our entire line of Ladies' Russia Calf and Choc Vici Oxfords and Pumps. We have them in any size -Widths B. C. D. and Es. Call On HENRY & BRADLEY ' For doors, sash, door and win dow frames, molding, all kinds of finished lumber, shingles and rough building lumber. Our plant Is equip ped with new machinery and is sow In operation. Quick Delivery and Satisfactory Service Guaranteed HENRY & BRADLEY Phone 344 West Mala Ave. Gastonia, N. C. SIZclmo. LUMINA THEATRE TO-NIGHT "THE PURGATION,"' a fins com ic AB film, one of the best we have shown this summer. Don't fall to see it. '- "x SATURDAY "THE LAND OF OZ," A splendid Sellg film, a fancy colored reproduc- lion of doings in Wizard-land., You Should see It by all means. MONDAY, We will run all day Monday and have some fine pictures to1 show that day. While In town don't fail to . visit our moving picture theatre. Nice and codi. Ice water free, lec- trlc fans, comfortable seats. V .. ONLY FTYE CENTS W. H. Dellinger Up In the clouds there may ba bet ter and more comfortable- Farattture ' and House Furnishings, bat we dont believe ft, and haven't the time So go up to see, Gastonia Furniture Co. Come to Gastonia next Monday.
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
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Sept. 2, 1910, edition 1
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